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Offline William Gerard Graves  
#1 Posted : Sunday, June 16, 2024 2:44:23 PM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

The tale of the wizard Asmin as he plunges the depths of the astral plane, in search of scholarly knowledge of the worlds beyond men. What he found was not what he expected, instead of returning to Etterdam as a great explorer. He found himself transformed into a demon and bound to a vengeful wizard eager to use his demonic powers on her enemies. Damned to the Abyss, Asmin must use all his wits and skills to keep his head less heaven and hell strike him down.

A progression fantasy fan fiction based on the events and setting of J. L. Langland's Demons of Astlan.
Offline William Gerard Graves  
#2 Posted : Sunday, June 16, 2024 2:49:58 PM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

Groups: Registered, Registered Users, Subscribers
Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

Chapter 1: Asmin
“This feels weird, not at all what I expected.” I commented as I floated in the astral plane. I had just completed preparations for my journey to the realms beyond flesh. Preparing the rare herbs I had painstakingly acquired; they were not cheap.

After inhaling the smoke, my body started to tingle, it was quite pleasurable. This was followed by a feeling of weightlessness, that was expected. There was no physical form in the astral plane. Strange lights and colours cascaded before me, so many variations there wasn't time to catalogue them.

It had worked, I was exhilarated and overjoyed that my dream of traversing the planes had been realised. The weightlessness and lack of gravity were something to get used to, but I could adapt. I tried to process what I was seeing, especially since I didn't have eyes or even a body.

Lacking any wizardly components, casting spells on this plane would be difficult. But I had prepared for this and so began a spell. It was a simple one, designed to assist in navigating this treacherous realm. It was similar to the spells conjurers use to locate demons for binding. It would prove useful in this endeavour, wouldn't want to encounter such dangerous entities without proper protection.

I wonder if any of my protection spells came along with me. I tried to sense my magic, it was a little tricky, and my current state was very unfamiliar. I couldn't quite sense my spells, but I did have several designed to protect my spirit, less I encountered anything.

Well, this was not exactly a venture without some measure of risk. I decided to focus on the task at hand. My dream of cataloguing the realms beyond the planes of men was in sight. Nothing of this experience shall be forgotten, I shall plunge into the depths of this hidden world for its secrets. All my desires are laid bare before me, I only need to reach out and seize it.

Joy welled up within my currently incorporeal chest. I mean what wizard would not pay any price to traverse the planes beyond the mundane. But I was dawdling for too long, it was time to explore.

Everything was far too vivid and strange to describe, it was all spirit and energy swirling around me. But with the spell, I could distinguish shapes and figures off and into the distance. I wondered if they were natives, demons or spirits of the dead. Regardless I best not approach them, assuming I figured out how to move properly.

After some experimentation, I learned that moving was a matter of will. You merely needed to think in a direction to travel there. Up, down, side to side, it didn't matter, you could go there. It felt quite freeing to be so unbound by mortal flesh. To be untethered by the oppressive force of gravity.

Yet the sensation was overshadowed by a strange pull. I could faintly hear a voice echo in the distance. It was as if the voice called to me, bidding me to follow. Curious I decided to do so, willing myself towards the voice.

“Come to me.” The voice chanted.

I stopped for a moment, willing my incorporeal body to stillness. The ominous voice was starting to concern me. What if it was a demon trying to lure me away and into its vile grip. Well, I don’t think so fiend, you were dealing with a great wizard, and I am not so easily dealt with.

“Name!” The voice shouted in his mind, jarring his thoughts.

The sensation nearly knocked me down, if there was down in such a place. Getting my bearings, I stood tall in the only way a spiritual being could do so. This creature wanted my name, and I would give it to them. They should know the name of the great wizard that would soon lay them low.

“I am Asmin the Magnificent, Traveller of Realms and Master of Magic. Fear my power whomever you are!” I was laying it on a bit thick. You had to do that with demons and entities beyond those of mortals. Traveller of Realms was a nice touch, even though it is only a single realm I have just now travelled.

The voice paused and fell into muttering. I could vaguely hear a few words here and there as an image started to clear in view. “Is that the demon’s full name or is that just it’s titles?” The entity spoke, possibly to itself.

Soon the image was clear and the face of a human, not a demon appeared before me. In fact, given the stone walls, braziers and pentagram on the floor, that was not the astral plane. I was taken aback; I recognised this kind of setup. I had done it many times before. This was a conjurer's circle, dedicated to protecting the wizard upon summoning and binding a demon.

I tried to parse what I was seeing and settled upon inspecting the wizard. She was young for a conjurer, appearing to be in her early twenties, pale fair skin and pretty. Long blonde hair flowing back and tied in a ponytail. She wore a black silk robe with red trim, so she was quite wealthy and seemed more like a noble's daughter than a wizard.

This must be an illusion, it had to be. Yes, whatever demon is attempting to capture me is trying to mess with my mind. Well, if that’s how it wants to do it, I shall return in kind. This woman likely didn't exist, a mere fabrication of the demon.

I summoned all my defensive and offensive spells, releasing the power I held in reserve. There was no time to waste or be stingy with power.

With my display of power, the woman in the image braced an impact from my offensive spell. It was a basic energy blast, something that could work on the Astral Plane. It seemed to knock her for a loop, the illusion was impressive I would have to give the demon that.

Still, my attack did no real damage, I tried again and again with no luck. Whatever the demon was using to protect itself, it was very potent. Slowly he felt cold hands reaching for his very being. The Demon was somehow reaching through his protection spell. I had tailored it to repel demonic influences, this was impossible.

The woman’s voice grew louder, screaming at him. “Asmin, by thy true name I command thee. Thy will is mine and I am thy master, submit!” She commanded with only a faint strain in her voice.

True name, what was she talking about? She was the demon, not me. It must be trying to confuse me; I need to return to my body. I tried to follow the silver cord extending from my astral form to my physical body. With it, I could leave this realm and re-enter Astlan.

As I was trying to escape, I heard the woman speak, still in my mind. “These are the rights of high binding, let none hinder our task.” The rest grew indistinct as I got further away. “Asmin, the sigil and thy name bind thee to us, as Varn in the first millennia, we control thee demon Asmin. Thou canst not escape.” She continued in an imperious tone. I recognised that tone, I had taken it as well whenever I bound a demon in servitude.

I found the irony of a demon using the same tone to devour a wizard, something I would expect from its vile machinations. Impressive really, I wouldn't have thought of such a method, but then again, I am not a demon.

“It’s a third-order demon, exactly what I need.” The voice uttered gleefully, and I ignored it, solely focused on escaping. “No, you are not escaping me demon.” That is all she said just before she started to chant.

I couldn't hear what she was saying, so focused I was on returning. Dedicated to traversing the infinite distance between myself and my body. Suddenly just as I heard my name uttered once more. I felt a horrific ripping sensation within, my everything was torn apart violently. I felt as if I was violated at the core of my being. The pain was too much to bear, and I fell to weakness.

“Asmin, appear I conjure thee, take thy true form demon. In the name of Estragalan Varn, Tamros and Unoceros, I command, show me thy hideous true form creature of evil. I command thee by your true name, appear in this room, in this castle, enter now this my domain, your spirit is mine, come to me. Come demon, I Ephemia command thee, reveal thyself before me, thy master.”

In my mind, I saw the image of a nightmarish creature. Tall, muscular humanoid form with red skin, cloven hooves and horns. The half-man half-goat had giant bat-like wings and spade tipped tail. I knew immediately what it was, I had seen drawings of such vile creatures. It was a third-order demon, and it must be the creature that had wounded me so.

I wished I had the strength to pray to any god who could hear me. But I had snubbed the church and was no true devotee and so, the demon would get my soul. My soul twisted and contorted, likely the demon playing with his new toy.

Suddenly as if for the first time in what felt like forever, I had physical sensation. I was free from the astral plane; he could feel his body and all the pain that came with it. The pain was accompanied by weird tingling sensations all over. I was utterly tired and could barely keep my eyes open.

“Asmin, I have summoned you here and you are mine. You will obey my every command, or I will visit upon you such tortures that would make the princes of the Abyss weep.” I opened my eyes to glare at the demon that captured me. Only to find the woman I had seen before.

But her beautiful yet dangerous visage was not the only thing that caught my eye. The sight of a clawed red hand before me. It was connected to a muscular arm that extended up and to my own shoulder. With horror, I realised that it was my own clawed appendage. Instead of facing a demon, I had the appendage of such a vile fiend.

Before I could process this nightmarish revelation, the women spoke coldly. “I have no use for you now, begone until I summon thee.” And with those words, I felt myself fade and disappear.
Offline William Gerard Graves  
#3 Posted : Sunday, June 16, 2024 2:51:24 PM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

Chapter 2: Ephemia
I gasped, exhausted from the night's exertions. Demon summoning was not an exercise for the weak of spirit and apparently it gave the body a rough workout to. Regardless of my own inexperience, I had managed to conjure and bind a third order demon. This I could be proud of, and I wondered if my old masters would be envious of her accomplishment.

Alas that was all in the past now, she doubted if she would ever be welcome there again. It was not that the school or the masters hated her, it was because she was exiled. Being an exiled noble generally made you persona non grata within the halls of the upper class.

Still that no longer mattered, I had made my first step in reclaiming all that was stolen from me. Obtaining a third order demon would be a boon to my dwindling forces. Not many would fight for me, loyalty was in short supply. I guess there was no loyalty in a bound demon, but it would obey, I would ensure that.

Stuck in my reverie, I barely noticed the very light-footed individual approaching. For a moment I tensed, expecting an assassin's blade to slide into my back. I was calmed by the baritone voice that followed.

“Impressive my lady, to bind a third order at your age.” He complimented in his typical back handed way.

I was not sure if it was true praise or condescension, the elderly necromancer had always looked down on the young and youthful. I had always wondered if it was envy or spite, perhaps both.

“Thank you, Lord Belus I am proud of my meagre accomplishment.” I said demurely.

The practitioner of an equally vile art chuckled evilly. “No need for that my dear, I have enough fools tip toeing around me.” He came into view, and I had a good look at his profile.

The necromancer wore a lose black robe with red trim, gaunt and scraggy fingers extended out of the wide brim cuffs. Under his hood dwelled a wrinkled face with a hooked nose, dark blue eyes and surprisingly white perfect teeth concealed behind a horrendous smile. The man should have been on his death bed, surrounded by his loved ones, assuming the distasteful man had any, she doubted it.

Before she could continue her sycophant routine, she was saved by the entrance of another. Draped in exquisite silver full plate armour, decorative sword sheathed at his side and his helm tucked under his right arm, revealing a middle-aged man. Short salt and pepper hair with dark brown eyes and sharp features.

“Best keep your hands to yourself, death monger, less your vile touch corrupts the soul of thy lady.” The knight spat contemptuously, eyes filled with disdain, alleviated when they fell upon me.

“Sir Felmun, our mistress is already corrupted.” The necromancer countered dryly, directing the noble knight to the braziers and pentagrams.

Felmun grumbled to himself, I could sense his disdain for the dark work. But there was no time for morality in such immoral times. “Leave us Belus, I wish to speak with Felmun in private.” I commanded, which was merely a pre-emptive measure against the argument the two would descend into.

The necromancer bowed flashing me a smile and turned to leave. The two glared at each other like cats, the room reduced from three occupants to two. Once Belus had closed the door behind him, I looked to Sir Felmun. I could see the disappointment plan as day, the honourable knight had never been a fan of necromancy nor demons.

I wondered if I had tarnished the vision he had of me in his heart. It was no secret his affections for me, he had always seen me as a proper lady of grace and womanhood. Now that I had devoted myself to conjury, I suspect his image of me is now tinged with darkness.

“Please, try not to antagonise him, we will need the death monger when are enemies are at our doorstep.” I pleaded, since all prior attempts to get him to understand had failed.

I suspect that knights simply don't have the flexibility required for distasteful tasks. It is a failing at least to me, but they likely see it is a virtue. I shook my head; such a line of thinking was worthless. If he did his job, he could go on disapproving all he wanted.

“Mistress, I beg you to reconsider, summoning a demon is one thing, but working with a necromancer. Both entities are evil and vile creatures, not to be trusted. They are more than likely to stab you in the back, then aid you.” The knight pleaded, making several valid points.

I sighed, less out of exhaustion and more to give myself time to think up an appropriate response. I could see his view; the death monger was not to be trusted and demons even more so. “You have made your point Sir Felmun and I tacitly agree. Belus cannot be trusted, but I need his forces if we have any chance to repel my brother's army.”

The knight shook his head, not convinced. Which makes sense, the man had greater faith in swords and the strength of a man's arm. He was a formidable knight and fought in manty battles, against major odds. That bravery was worthy of respect, but bravery would not defeat the immense odds we were against.

“Mistress please, allying with a necromancer is not wise, even more so to summon a major demon. While it is impressive to conjure a third order, to be expected from my lady.” He said proudly. “It is another potential threat added to an already dangerous situation.”

“It is a necessary evil.” I explained, placing a hand on his arm. The knight tensed from the intimacy, something I once enjoyed, but now it seemed quite petty to toy with the man's feelings. “I wouldn't have bothered with the conjury for a first or second order, but I couldn't pass up on a third order.” I added quickly before he could blush.

“Why did you want such a beast, that I cannot fathom. To deploy it in the battle?” He pleaded, trying to fathom my intentions.

Formulating a response, I tried to come up with an answer. Why did I want to summon such a powerful force of evil? Honestly, I don't know the answer, at least not a singular central reason. I did want to test myself, to see how far my skill in wizardry could take me. When I saw the third order, I knew this was the test, to see if I truly were powerful and not a weak vapourish seductress my brother painted me as.

“I do plan to deploy the demon in battle. But I had another purpose for him.” I explained, before putting some distance between us.

I glanced at the braziers, the elaborate pentagrams and other accoutrements of conjury. I was proud of my achievement and hoped that if I survived long enough, I would rub this achievement into the face of my teachers.

“The demon is an insurance policy; I want something powerful enough to contend with my enemies and with my allies.” I gestured to the exit where Belus had left a short while ago.

Realisation dawned on the knight; his frown didn't leave but at least he could see why I had summoned the demon. “While I do not agree, I will stand by you my lady, no matter what.” He made a theatrical declaration, to which I accepted.

Sir Felmun had always been a theatrical man, modelling himself off the old chivalric knights of long past. It was a point in his favour and is the main reason I trust him, despite his inflexible nature.

“Thank you, sir knight, your faith in me will not be forgotten.” I said, curtsying like a proper lady of the court.

He smiled in that devilishly handsome way, but of course he was no demon, in fact he could easily be mistaken for a saint. But that was ludicrous, as if a saint would come to this god forsaken land. I bet Tiernon himself would declare the place heretical and smite the lot of us. And yet, we endure despite all we have done.

I shook my head, letting these foolish thoughts fade away. My mind needed to be turned to more practical pursuits. I inspected the pentagram, admiring my own handywork and frowning. That demon was odd, it didn't look normal, but was a third order.

“What is it my lady?” He inquired, concern obvious in his tone.

“That summoning was strange, the demons astral form was not quite right. But I am sure it was a demon and a powerful one at that.” I answered, still puzzled.

“Is this something to be concerned?” He asked.

“I don’t think so, I will just need be careful when summoning it. I suspect there is more going on, I just cannot put my finger on it.” I pondered, eyes transfixed upon the pentagram, wondering when I should summon it again.
Offline William Gerard Graves  
#4 Posted : Monday, June 17, 2024 3:53:04 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
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Chapter 3: Asmin
I was exhausted, bone weary, I hadn’t been this tired since I went on that bender after graduation. This was like that hangover, only a thousand times worse. I had my eyes closed, they felt so heavy that it would take great effort to open them. My head felt like some barbarians put an axe to it, repeatedly and with childish glee.

I could barely fathom what had just happened, the aches and pains made it hard to think. But slowly, light and matter came into focus. Opening my eyes I was inundated with the strangest of sights. The only word that came to mind, was wasteland, a damned realm of sulphur and brimstone. If I didn’t know any better, I would have thought I was in the abyss.

But that was impossible, only demons went to the abyss, not mortals, not unless they managed to swing an abyssal gate. Even I wasn’t foolish enough to even try that. Regardless, reality was before me, or at least whatever passed for it. I sat up and examined my surroundings.

Wasteland was accurate, a barren desert covered in steep mountain ranges. I think I could see plums of sulphuric gas bellowing from whatever foul geographical construct was just past the horizon. There was no horizon, there wasn’t even a star in the sky, was this truly the abyss?

“I knew I smelt butter!” A voice declared in a very odd tone, high pitched and strange.

I cast my gaze to the source and spotted an oddly shaped demon flying towards me. It was all too clearly a fiend, but of an unfamiliar appearance. It was an octopod, four arms extended from his upper and lower torso. Instead of the typical bat-like wings, it had the buzzing wings of an insect.

“There you are.” The demon said, smiling like he just found something amusing.

It approached me and I quickly rose to full height and reached for my staff. Only there was no staff, or even any clothes. I was naked, in fact my skin was red, what happened to my body? Images of a red taloned hand flickered through my mind. Only I was not able to dwell for long as the octopod demon landed in front of me.

“I normally do this with my partner, but he is busy with his accursed master.” The demon muttered to himself. “Wizards am I right?” He added, expecting me to respond.

I didn’t respond, I mean what could I say. I was stuck in an unknown realm that can’t be the abyss, no staff nor any spell components. In front of an unbound fiend who could easily rip me apart.

“You don’t need to say anything, wizards truly are the worst. Capturing people and turning them into demons, how evil, but they sure are tasty. If only we could kill them all or better, we could invite them to dinner. They can be the main course.” The octopod cackled madly, and I was officially done with that.

The demon turned to pull something out and I saw my chance. Despite how tired I was, I ran at top speed in the opposite direction. I didn’t care where I was going, I just wanted to be far from the demon as possible.

“Hey, were you going? we were just getting to know each other.” It pleaded in the distance.

I ignored it and just kept up the speed, barely noticing how fast the world was going by. No matter how tired I felt, I just kept running. I ran and ran, leaping over rocks, sand dunes and I think I even scaled a mountain. Finally he stopped, not because I was safe, but because I could no longer go on.

My body was weighed down like an anvil, so tired and exhausted. I tried a few semantic gestures to aid me, but it was fruitless. I was done and needed to stop. Falling to my knees in a place I barely comprehended, I feel to the ground. Soft dirt met my face, but I didn’t care, I needed this.

I don’t know how long I just laid there, unceremoniously lying in the sand, oblivious to the horrific world around me. Eventually I mustered up energy from somewhere and rose, only to fall flat on my ass. “Ouch, what in the abyss was that!” I screamed, it was not a pleasant feeling.

It felt like I just sat on my own foot. I looked behind and fell silent, gawking at the inconceivable sight. This was not possible, it couldn’t be, I must be seeing things. I had a tale, a spade tipped, red-skinned tale of a demon!

“What in the abyss is happening?” I demanded anyone, even the gods that likely couldn’t hear me. I laughed maniacally, it was all I could do, I mean I am actually in the abyss. So saying what in the abyss is happening was kind of stupid, since I am already there.

Sitting in the middle of a literal hellish desert was surreal. Not as much as finding that I had a demonic tale, that has some very scary connotations. I shook my head, trying to get a grip. I needed to calm down, analyse the situation, I am a wizard for magics sake, we are methodical and logical.

Taking stock, I tried to come up with a logical explanation. Listing them would help, at least to get all the possibilities as one must be correct. Standing here in the middle of a desert, I listed all the crazy ideas that could explain this nonsensical event.

It could be an elaborate illusion perpetrated by a powerful wizard, but I don’t know any who could make such a perfect illusion. If it isn’t an illusion, then I have truly been damned to the abyss by some unknown method. Perhaps it is a newly developed spell, capable of capturing human souls and transforming them into a demon. This is both horrifying and impressive, to consign humans to the abyss as demons, truly one of our number has fallen far.

“Wait a moment, what did that fiend say?” I said to myself, transitioning to speaking aloud.

I tried to think back, much of what it said was odd. To be honest I wasn’t really paying attention beyond an unbound demon nearly killing me. He said something about wizards capturing people and turning them into demons. That was insane, we cant do that. We conjure unbound demons from the depths of the astral plane, we don’t make them!

Yet despite all that logical thought, I couldn’t help think over my own experience. Disturbing thoughts, things that could not be true, any sensible wizard would ignore such ideas. I looked at my hands, noting the crimson flesh and sharp talons. I felt the horns protruding from my head and the sharp teeth in my mouth.

I was a demon, or under the effects of a truly impressive illusion spell. Which I find more dubious then then idea of being a new resident of the abyss. I sighed, not knowing what to do. It was the first time in my life, that I was completely lost without any magic or tactic to solve this dilemma.

I mean, how does one resolve becoming a demon? I shook my head, I couldn’t let myself sink to deep into despair. I must work the problem, one step at a time, methodically and logically. If magic did this, then magic could undo it.

But I had no accoutrements of my trade, no spell components, no staff, not even a wand. I needed a place to rest and plan my next move. I looked around, noting a vast desert, but in the distance, north of my location there was a mountain range. Were there is mountains, there are caves.

It wasn’t the best option, but it was all I had at hand. With that in mind, I slowly trudged along to find a new home, still so very tired.

Offline William Gerard Graves  
#5 Posted : Tuesday, June 18, 2024 3:49:31 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Posts: 104

Chapter 4: Erik
“I hate my life!” I whined, trudging through the marsh alongside squad of zombies. Well know that I think about, I should say. “I hate my unlife.” I corrected myself, chuckling at the stupidity of the situation.

I was now literally immortal, stronger then any mortal alive and I could still whine about my situation. Yet it was not my choice at all to be turned into a vampire and made a lackey to a wacked out of his mind vampiric necromancer.

“I am a mercenary for for Illania’s sake.” I winced from that, probably best not to invoke the gods.

I am not very religious, but being unlife the Narveson Goddess of magic would probably prefer to smite me instead of answering my prayers. I needed to stop doing that, it was a habit that may prove fatal, carelessly invoking a Goddess.

She never answered my prayers before, but she may do so now that an unholy fiend was knocking at her heavenly door. I sighed dejectedly, wanting to complain to anyone who would listen and scared my sire would hear and punish me.

I knew it was a bad idea to join up with this crew. But it was such a good idea in the beginning. Working for nobles paid far better then merchants and warlords. There squabbles were also supposed to be legit, at least as legit as nobles could be.

Instead of making good silver working for some pompous perfumed Lord, I am now a vampire bitch to a mad man. Thinking back to the meeting, I knew it was sketchy. Being called personally by the lords necromancer for a job, only to arrive in his tent and offered immorality.

I mean it’s a good deal for anyone that didn’t want to die. But it wasn’t altruism on his part, he just needed to replenish his lost ranks. Apparently one of his fledglings got himself killed and he needed new recruits. I might add he didn’t strike me as a death monger that took no for an answer.

So, I have arisen from a lowly mercenary to a vampire mercenary who is under a permanent and eternal contract to his new boss. I wonder if I will get paid, probably in loot and spoils of war. I doubt he pays people he turns into undead, I am just like these poor souls, except I’m not rotting.

I looked to my zombies with pity, they were not living there best life. Well they weren’t living at all, but they were my men and I was to lead them. Even in unlife, I am a soldier, well a soldier for silver, but a soldier nonetheless.

“Come on boys, stop taking in the sights, we have a job to do.” I announced, receiving a few moans and slow shuffling feet. They were not the most talkative of lads, but you work with what you got. “All of you sorry excuse for undead attend your illustrious and powerful vampire lord.” Ok I wasn’t exactly a vampire lord, but I was a vampire and a minor noble did knock up my peasant mother.

I suppose I could be considered a vampire bastard, but lord sounded better. But none of this matter to a bunch of soulless wretches like them, they barely understood words at all.

“Left, right, left right, come on lads hop to it.” I foolishly tried to encourage corpses, they ignored me and shuffled along.

Sighing, I tried to keep my positivity, but I was failing horribly. That is what happens when your life has turned to shit, golden shit, but shit nonetheless. Well, I guess it wasn’t all bad, I mean I could pretend to be a powerful vampire overlord of an army of darkness.

Casting an eye on my troops consisting of of a dozen zombies made from peasants and outfitted with axes, maces and I think that one in the back has a farm sickle. It wasn’t exactly an army of darkness, but they don’t care what I call them and so it shall be.

“Attend me my minions.” They were not my minions, but as I said, they didn’t know that. “Your master has bid you lowly wretches the honour of completing a task worthy of.” I paused waiting for the former farmer to reach us. “Yes, worthy of your skills.” Finally my minions had a arrived and so I explained the mission.

“We shall act as a harassing force, cut off supply lines and isolate our prey.” They stared at me with those dumb undead faces. They moaned a few times, so I suppose that counts as an affirmative. “Up ahead is a caravan loaded with supplies, we are to ambush them and eliminate them with superior numbers.” I counted them again and thought that last statement might be a bit of a stretch.

I mean a dozen zombies is not a small number, but if this caravan has anyone competent defending it. Things will get tricky, these lot where not exactly the best ambushers. They were slow and you could smell them from a league away.

“Damn you Kazmir, why couldn’t you give me some ghouls or some humans.” I whined, I found I was doing that a lot these days.

Well I had to work with what I got, but how could I ambush a caravan with this sorry lot. As I wondered, one of them got stuck in the marsh and started sinking. The muck was almost up to his knee. I quickly ran over and grabbed the poor fellow, dragging him out. He moaned a thank you, at least that is how I will interpret it.

“You idiot, you were almost completely submerged, you could have.” I trailed off, retracting my statement as he was already dead.

I frowned, inspecting the state of my undead soldier and a thought occurred. The idea just sprang to mind, drawn from the depths of my psyche, triggered by the sight of this poor wretch sinking below the ground.

“I’ve got an idea.” I beamed at the zombie, he naturally moaned in response.
Offline William Gerard Graves  
#6 Posted : Wednesday, June 19, 2024 12:57:12 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

Chapter 5: Ephemia
“Ugh.” I sighed heavily, sprawling over parchments I could barely understand. “Wizard lessons and lessons on courtly manners befitting of a lady, don’t teach you how to command a castle about to be sieged.” I spat the words, disdaining the memories of how I was treated like a piece of meat.

Being desired physically is one thing, but being seen as a brood mare to be bred and promptly set aside after I popped out a male. Not exactly a pleasant idea for a woman. Oh I suppose some women would relish the opportunity to be a mother and live in a gilded cage of luxury. The amenities would appeal to most, especially peasants who don’t have a copper between them.

But to someone of my skills and station, it is intolerable. I was complaining again, I knew it. This had become a habit as of late. Very unbefitting of a lady as my dearly departed father would say. Yet before his untimely death he did honour our deal, even if my snake brother broke it before father was even in the ground.

The thought drew upon a deep dark hole, a place I dump all my frustrations and anger. I tried to calm myself, I really did, but I just couldn’t. Everything was in my grasp, I had achieved mastery in conjury as per fathers bargain. With that I should be free from any marital obligations. But brother just had to break a dead mans word, wanted to ship me off to my new husband the second he could.

I chuckled to myself, trying to soothe the anger and forget the pain. Despite father being an overbearing, patriarchal aristocrat, at least he was practical. Well he was a far better then mother, oh all the gods was she horrible. Father was at least tolerable, it was clear he didn’t believe I would succeed in making something of myself. But alas he made the deal, if only he was still alive to see his frail little daughter, summon a third order demon.

“Do you need assistance my lady?” The voice of Sir Felmun sounded behind her.

“I am fine sir knight, I am merely perusing the battle plan.” I said, my back to him, trying not to show my frustration.

He approached, traversing the distance and stood right behind me. He wouldnt dare enter an intimate range as other noble lords were fond of doing. Felmun had always been a gentlemen and sometimes I wondered if he were the only one.

“You needn’t peruse alone my dear.” He emphasised the word peruse and I could picture him smiling. But I knew the moment I turned around he would go back to his stoic self.

“It is fine, I was done already. I think it is best to summon the demon.” I sternly declared, twirling to face him. As expected he was frowning, I had succeeded in compelling an emotion from him.

I did enjoy this, drawing out his emotions with grand declarations to perform what he referred to as dangerous or unwise behaviour. Or as my brother would say, unladylike.

“Is it truly best to keep such a dangerous being on a leash. I have heard many tales of conjurers loosing their loves to such foul beings. The tales of their deaths were not pleasant ones.” He explained for the fiftieth time today.

I knew he meant well and he had always had my interest and safety at heart. He just didn’t understand how dire the situation is. “It is a necessary risk, you have seen the reports.” I directed him to the myriad of parchments strewn across my desk.

“I have read them, a modest force of human mercenaries and undead were one their way to besiege us. Lead by a necromancer of some renown.” He summarised.

“Exactly, and that is not even the sum total of my brothers forces. They are hired mercenaries and whatever that necromancer is paid in, I shutter with the thought.” I explained rather hotly. “Even if we somehow repel them with our own meagre forces, consisting of my rather small personal guard, a few student wizards I have only just begun to teach and whatever our own death monger can bring to bare.” I was pacing around, burning with anger just as I stepped into his path. “I think throwing a third order demon at them is the least we could do.” I said with finality.

My tirade obviously left him speechless, we had done this so many times that I could anticipate his reactions. As practiced I let the heat in my chest fall to embers. Straightened by surcoat, I am not going to wear a dress ever again, those things are designed to torture women.

All he could do was nod, accepting my decree as a vassal would to a queen. He was adorable when he pouted, I suppose I should be merciful. “Come now Felmun, how about you attend me in my lab, protect me from the vile creature as a knight should do for a defenceless damsel.” I offered with a little sarcasm.

He shook his head with a faint trace of a smile. “You are no damsel, my lady.” He stated firmly.

With that, the both of us left this drab office and made our way down into the bowels of the castle. Passing through the stone corridors, we met the typical castle servant, they bowed as we passed and quickly returned to their task. Approaching a locked wooden double door, layered with runic designs to keep people out. Also unknown to most, to keep something in.

Performing a few semantic gestures, the door unlocked and we entered, only to stop in our tracks. Within the dimly lit room, stood a familiar cloaked figure. Standing just to the left of the pentagram was Belus, our new necromancer ally. I seethed angrily, charging forward to the smug smiling face of his.

Poking him the chest I accused. “How did you get in here and what are you doing here?”

“Curiosity my dear and that door of yours is not as good as you might think.” The death monger explained without even a shred of remorse.

“Get out!” I yelled, noting Sir Felmun was at my side, had upon hilt.

Belus raised his hands as if in surrender. “I just want to see the demon, oh wont you humour this old man?” He pleaded in that fake, mocking manner of his.

I really wanted to tare him a new one, but I stayed my hand. Gesturing to Felmun to stand down and thought through this with a clear head. “Fine, you may observe passively. But mark my words, if you ever compromise any of my and my students workings, I will make sure you look like a zombie.” I threatened, squeezing the only sensitive spot he had.

He stepped back, aghast. The threat struck home and his hand quickly went to his check. It was as if he expected my threat to render his skin to rot. It was about the only thing that Belus feared, which was ironic given his trade. He desired lichdom, but feared losing his good looks.

With that little threat, he backed down and saner heads prevailed. Now with a spectator, I turned to more interesting pursuits and began the preparation to summon my demon.

Offline William Gerard Graves  
#7 Posted : Thursday, June 20, 2024 12:41:41 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

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Chapter 6: Asmin
“There we go.” I commented happily, inspecting my humble abode. It was not to bad for a cave inside a giant mountain. In fact it was quite cavernous and I had yet to fully explore it. This was just a base of operations, I am not sure if this would count as a home or a wizardly domain.

“I am a demon, so would it be a demonic domain?” I pondered out loud before shaking my head.

No matter what I looked like, I was a wizard at heart. Being a demon is just a minor setback, I waved it away like it was nothing. Trying desperately to make that statement true on all levels. I mean I had to look at the bright side, I was in the abyss, exploring the astral plane is one thing, but exploring the abyss is another thing entirely.

The wonders a wizard of my talents could discover. This could lead to an entirely new discipline of wizardry. I am sure the abyss has unique and exotic components that can be applied to new and interesting spells.

I put a claw to my chin, trying not to scratch myself, it was a bit of a chore. Thinking on this new avenue of study, I wondered what I should call it. “Abyssal Wizardry?” I suggested aloud, but quickly retracted the idea. This was not a new form of wizardry at least as far as my speculation suggests.

If I word to categorise this speculative study I am most definitely going to do. It would have to be a school of wizardry. “The eighth school!” I announced excitedly. “I could found the eighth school of wizardry, it would be unprecedent, oh the scholars would swoon at my accomplishment.” Envisioning my name made immortal as I changed the very fabric of wizardry.

“But what could I call it, Abyssalmancy? That doesn’t sound right, Demonomancy? That could work.” I went through a few options, not really settling on a name.

I decided to leave the decision for later. I had to develop the school first, before I could give it a good name. With a bright spot in this dark future found, I was feeling a bit happier. Being turned into a demon and damned to the abyss aside, this might work out.

I scanned the cave and wondered how in the name of gods would I get furniture in here. It was not as if I could step out to the planes of men for a shopping trip. As I was pondering the intricacies of interplanar shopping, the world started to skew oddly.

I could hear a women’s voice, inviting or perhaps demanding. The tone was familiar, I think I have spoken in such a way. I turned around, noting the world was quickly fading and my cave made way to a room.

I was being summoned, conjured like a typical demon at the beck and call of it’s master. Was this great wizard that calls me, the one that created such a spell to transform mortals into demons. I braced for the arrival, wanting to confront this master conjurer, who had revolutionised the discipline.

Instead of appearing on some opulent castle of a deranged wizard king. I found myself in a rather dank dungeon, surrounded by three figures. A woman and two men, they were arrayed before me and each had different expressions.

The woman in the centre must be the conjurer, she seemed slightly exhausted. Once my eyes adjusted I took in her presence. She was pretty, not overly sensual or curvy. She looked to be in her twenties and wore a dark surcoat with simple pants and shoes. Not the typical dress of a lady, but I suppose it was practical. Long black hair was tied up in ponytail, presenting her perfectly proportioned face and her deep ocean blue eyes.

To her left was clearly some sort of knight, I could tell from the steel plate armour and sword at his hip. Their was an insignia on his breastplate that I didn’t recognise. He looked to be in his forties, short salt and pepper hair and a chiseled jawline. He looked typical of a knight in shining armour from all these frivolous tales.

The man to her right was equally interesting, from the aura he radiated, I would say he was a necromancer. I have not met many of those, not well liked in most wizardly circles, but who was I to judge. He was elderly, probably in his late sixties or seventies. A wrinkled face with greying hair, he wore a black robe and gripped a gnarled wooden staff.

“Demon, I have summoned you and thou is mine.” The conjurer proclaimed, but she didn’t say it quite right, she needed a more imperious tone.

I ignored her, casting my gaze across the room, trying to piece together all the facts I could get. The place was typical of most seedy dungeons, but what really caught my eye was the pentagram beneath me. I was transfixed by it, I found myself tracing every line and sigil with my appraising gaze.

“You are bound demon, bound by my will and by this circle.” She explained, still not getting the tone right.

“Did you design this?” I asked, genuinely curious.

I received no immediate reply and so pulled myself away from examining it. The three looked puzzled, staring at me incredulously. “Yes demon, I crafted your containment, no matter what infernal power you bring to bare, you cannot escape.” She explained after her initial pause.

“I agree, it is impressive, truly masterful work.” I admitted genuinely, I was over awed by the intricate yet practical design. It was elegance at it’s finest and compacted into only a single pentagram.

“Thank you.” She said timidly.

“How did you do that?” I asked, tracing the design, only to realise and answer my own question. “I see, brilliant.” It was honest praise, I was so enamoured by the work, I almost didn’t hear the necromancer.

“Do you think it is odd for a demon to appreciate their masters work to bind them?” The walking corpse asked, but the question was not directed to me.

“He is probably lying, putting on a falsehood.” The knight declared, secure in his observation. The wizard remained silent, her head cocked to the side.

“Should I not give credit, where credit is due? Or do the people of this world not appreciate fine wizardry?” I asked rather haughtily.

The knight scowled, his hand tightening over the pommel of his sword. “I think we are getting off track.” She interjected and the two adhered to her words. It was clear that she was in charge.

I on the other hand took her words to heart, even though they were not meant for me. Getting distracted by the impressive work of my opponent was just pure idiocy. I needed to get my head on straight, this person was either the mastermind behind this new human to demon conversion spell or a pawn of a greater power.

“Demon!” She spoke in a commanding voice.

“Call me Asmin.” I quickly requested before she could harp on. I personally didn’t do that whole song and dance with my demons. In fact, I wonder if my bindings are even intact. Taking a quick look with wizards sight, or was it demons sight, I noted a lack of bindings.

“Alright then, Asmin. I have summoned you for a purpose and command you to reveal your capabilities to me.” She commanded and I felt a compulsion to obey.

It was quite difficult to shake it off, but I think I can work around it. “What capabilities do you want me to share, miss?” I inquired, trying to comply without fully obeying.

“You may call me mistress, Ephemia or mistress Ephemia. As for your capabilities, explain them to me relative to combat.”

“Combat, well I have a diverse skill set, I have studied several disciplines such as pyromancy, conjury, a little bit of enchantment and some rune magic. Pyromancy is probably the most useful for combat, conjury is self explanatory and enchantment not so much, but I can make some descent illusions.” I overshared, only just realising I spilled the beans.

That compulsion spell was really good, I could barely keep the words down. I decided that it was all the fault of the spell and not my desire to brag. Being a humble wizard, I just don’t do that sort of thing.

Casting a glance upon the three, I noted incredulity. I suspected they were surprised by a demon claiming to have studied wizardry. I mean demons just didn’t do that. I tilted my head, puzzled for a moment. That is a question, why couldn’t demons learn wizardry, they are mana users. I filed that away for later.

“Did this demon just claim to be a wizard?” The necromancer asked sceptically.

“He did.” The mistress affirmed.

“He must be lying, demons lie, everybody knows that.” The knight proclaimed.

I mean he was not wrong, demons did lie. But then again, I am now a demon and I was being truthful. No that is wrong, I am a human wizard, not a demon. This is just the work of a spell, I am still me, I am a very honest and a trustworthy person.

“Is this true, are you truly saying you are some sort of demon wizard?” My mistress asked.

“Yes, mistress Ephemia I am.” I replied proudly.

“But what about your demonic powers, wouldn’t they be better then learning wizardry. In fact how did you even learn it in the first place.”

“To be honest I don’t really use them.” Which was true, I had never used demonic powers before. “I prefer wizardry, I learned it on the planes of man and am quite proficient in it’s use.”

“How odd, would that mean you would require spell components?”

“Yes I would need some, I left mine on another plane. Would you be able to part with a few?” I requested as sincerely as a demon could be.

My mistress thought about it, her lips were pouting and her brows narrowed in thought. I could see the knight ready to voice his objections and the necromancer just watched curiously.

“I will think about, for now that is enough.” She gestured in a manner I recognised. “Begone Asmin, return to thy own plane.” With those words and the semantic gestures, I started to fade into the abyss.

Offline William Gerard Graves  
#8 Posted : Saturday, June 22, 2024 6:25:39 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
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Chapter 7: Erik
“I am diabolical, I might make a decent vampire overlord. Assuming I live that long.” I said, excited with the idea I came up with.

Me and my undead minions were situated near one of the roads to the enemy keep. We were setup to intercept the caravan of supplies, using a brilliant tactic by yours truly. I was camped just shy of the road behind some bushes with a few zombies.

The rest of my zombie horde were buried beneath the road, ready to reach out and seize the caravan from below.

“From beneath, they reach out with clamy hands of death!” I announced, receiving no applause until I ordered them.

That was getting annoying, they don’t react to my villainous dialogue, unless I tell them to. My undead minions were not exactly the best conversationalists, but I get by talking to myself and sometimes filling in there side.

“Hanging around undead is not good for me, hazardous for my social skills.” I said out loud and as expected, no one replied.

I sighed, accepting my fate as a poor little lonely vampire lackey to a mad man. Well at least I was getting paid, mostly in blood but some silver to. Blood, I had nearly forgotten that I needed to feed. It was something that I hadn’t really gotten used to.

If only I could store blood for later use, my sire had told me it was better to drink from the source as blood goes bad after a while. I doubt he stored blood, given the wide selection of slaves at his disposal.

Personally I was not a fan of the practice, but a growing concern was a need for blood. I might have to start purchasing slaves as a food source or hunt people. Neither of those options appealed to me, but I suppose it depended on how hungry I got.

I really should focus and its lucky I did as that was the sound of a carriage. I peered put from behind the bush, inspecting our prey. I was suprised to detect only a single a carriage drawn by two horses.

It was a typical wooden design, no insignia to denote noble rank, nor was it large enough to house necessary supplies for a seige. Very peculiar, but whatever, the job is to destroy every caravan that passes this road.

I waited patiently, observing the mundane carriage shuffling along, drawn by unimpressive horses. I tried to ignore the gnawing hunger, but soon it will be sated. Hopefully there was some guards that resist. Not a fan of killing defenceless peasents, but a man with a sword and an intention to skewer me, less of an issue.

I watched as the horses approached the point of no return. They arrived and as expected reeled up in freight, the presence of the buried dead spooking the simple animals.

The carriage jerked forward, grinding to a halt. The horses bucked, fighting against the reigns, desperate to escape the clutches of the undead. I spied the driver, he was middle aged, scraggly beard, greying hair, your typical peasent.

He managed to pull back the reigns, but was unable to calm his horses. It was too late anyway, with a command my forces burst from the earth, gnarled hands tore through wormy earth. They reached out, climbing there way to the centre of life above them.

I could sense there desire to consume flesh through our link. I quickly tugged on there metaphorical leash, reinforcing the order to capture alive. Lucky I did so, that one zombie was about to take a bite out of the driver. Instead he dragged him kicking and screaming, unceremoniously throwing him into the dirt.

The hunger welled up inside, tearing its way from control and reason, all the way up to my throat. Before rationality could dawn on me, I sped to the man with all the swiftness of a fledgling vampire. Grabbing him a little harder then I intentioned, I sank my fangs into his neck.

My fangs were not just canines for ripping flesh, they had holes for sucking up blood. I found that weird when I first learned it, but very convenient. I drank the poor driver, he struggled for a time but he hadn’t the strength to resist. I tried to ignore his body odour, focusing on the warm blood coursing through me.

Something else was annoying me, a voice, faint and indistinct. I listened and found it was the voice of a young girl, crying, pleading for someone to stop.

“Daddy! Stop please!” The voice pleaded.

I don’t know why, but that voice pulled me from the rapture of feeding. Call it what you will, pity, fear, remorse or any number of emotions. I withdrew from the mans neck, his blood dripped from my lips and he fell to the ground. My eyes were drawn to the voice, the sight pulled me from a foggy mind, back into reality.

It was a girl, no older then ten, kept at a distance by zombies. The undead held her in place, but despite the horrific entities keeping her in check. She struggled desperately, thrashing around as much as a ten year old could.

Reality came into focus and I could now see her. She was a child, long blonde hair, pale complexion, narrow green eyes and wearing a brown dress. The sight of a child snapped me back to the horrific reality of what I had done.

“Daddy!” She screamed, her gaze barely acknowledging me, only the bleeding man on the ground.

I was in shock, but I remembered my training and quickly regained a modicum of control. Without thought, I knelt down, tore a piece of the man’s shirt and bandaged the wound. I ignored the bloodstains as best I could and administered first aid.

Once I stopped the bleeding, I listened for a heart beat. It was faint but steady, that was a good sign, hopefully he lived. Rising to my feet, I inspected myself, noting the blood covered hands and stained leather armour.

The girl was still screaming for her father and I let her approach. She ignored the bloodthirsty vampire and collapsed on her father, sobbing and wailing. I left the two surrounded by zombies, ordered to stand guard.

I moved some distance away and fell into self deprecating thoughts. “Damn it all to the Abyss. I am a freaking vampire and I get squeamish about some victims daughter. How many fathers, brothers and sons have I killed in war. What’s one more to the pile! Every blade that meets flesh is a family torn appart, whats one more!” I tried to calm myself, but images of wailing children tormented me. “It is never just one more.” Someone said, perhaps the voice of my own guilt.

“I made a promise as all my brothers in arms. Never kill kids, I don’t care if I live for a thousand years, never kids.” I declared with the steely resolve of a man at war.

But what would I do now? I would pray to the Goddess for mercy and guidance, but I doubt she would answer me.

Edited by user Saturday, June 22, 2024 7:23:02 AM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

Offline William Gerard Graves  
#9 Posted : Monday, June 24, 2024 12:53:07 PM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

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Chapter 8: Ephemia
“Never would I have anticipated that one day I would be lining the walls of my keep with zombies.” I observed as shambling undead, I would not question there origin, shuffled up the stairs to the battlements.

They carted an assortment of stones taken from the nearby quarry. Apparently they would hurl them down at the besiging army. Being untiring corpses, they could continually lob stone over and over until everyone is paste.

My soldiers had gotten used to the presence of undead, well as much as living beings could. They stopped screaming and only shuddered whenever they came close.

“Mgnificient are they not?” A familiar voice spoke to my side.

I noted the black robe and the unholy staff. There was only one person that strolled around in full necromantic regalia.

“They are bunch of shambling zombies, once you have seen one, you have seen them all.” I answered, not impressed.

“So few appreciate my art and the efforts I go through to make the army presentable.” I had to concede to that, they did look far more held together then the typical rotting undead.

“I had noticed there odour was not as putrid as I expected.” It was true, from a distance they smelled like scented flowers, an odd fragrance for the walking dead.

“They are my best work, far more stable then the walking corpses that pedestrian necromancers raise.” He said that with a note of disdain, as if there was a difference between one walking corpse and another. “The embalming techniques perfected by the people of Natoor were an eye opener to those in my line of work.” He added.

I had no clue who about this Natoor he mentioned, nor this embalming technique. I shouldn’t ask, but I was far to curious a person not to.

“I am not familiar, where is this Natoor you speak of?” I asked.

He waved his hand in a direction. “It is a land adjacent to Norelon that is now ruled by the imperials. Once it was the seat of civilisation for the Nyjyr Ennead. Such a pantheon no longer holds sway, but remnaints of their efforts can be found by a discerning mind. No matter how much the darn imperials have destroyed.” He added icely.

“I have not heard of such a land. But I shall take your word for it that this technique is impressive. However this pantheon you speak of, I am not familiar and by imperial do you mean the Holy Etonian Empire?”

“They are an old pantheon, lost to time. And yes the Empire, nasty people at least according to those that remember on Natoor.”

“Yes I have heard that they have a tendency towards zealotry and putting there noses into others business.”

“Indeed, they are the holier then thou types that have setback the necromantic art by centuries by unjustly slaughtering my peers.”

I nodded, not entirely agreeing, necromancers while tolerated in the duchy, are not exactly trusted.

“I think we might have gotten off topic. What I was asking, is why they don’t smell rotten, is it to do with this embalming technique you mentioned?” I titled my head slightly, eyeing the death monger.

“Partially, the process is meant to preserve the corpse, but the scent is masked by applying a floral scent.” He explained proudly.

I looked to the man incredulously, did he just admit to using perfume on undead soldiers? I shook my head, trying to parse the thought of a death monger buying up perfume from an apothecary like some perfumed Lord or Lady.

Of course, thinking it over it made sense. Undead were not known for having a pleasant scent. Perfume would be quite handy for necromancers to keep there creations smelling tolerable.

Exceeding to his point, I continued to observe our efforts in mounting a defence. The enemy had a seasoned mercernary company and a vampire necromancer on there side. At least according to Belus who knew full well the enemy we face.

“Damn my brother to the Abyss. He doesn’t even have the common courtesy to come himself. Instead he sends sellswords and vampires.” I said angrily, to noone in particular.

“Treachery and cowardice is the stock and trade of your brother, no wonder he aligned himself with such a lowly creature as Drelem.” Belus added, scornfully.

I looked to the necromancer, he was scowling, I had not seen such a visceral reaction from him before. “You never did tell me what happened between you and Drelem.”

“That my dear is a tale of utter betrayal.”

“We have time.” I gestured for him to continue.

“As you wish my lady. Drelem was once a colleague of mine in the art of necromancy, he was almost as talented as I was. We worked together on many projects and vowed to reach for that which all in our trade do.”

“And what would that might be?” I inquired.

He turned to me with a wild look in his eyes. “Eternal life my dear, what else can any sane person desire. To achieve immortality by one’s own power!” He raised his staff theatrically, gesturing to the heaven’s.

“So he achieved immortality before you, is that why you hate him?” I asked with a smirk.

He looked at me like I just slapped him in the face. “That is no achievement, that is a shortcut, that is cheating! He broke the oath we made together, to acheive eternal life through our own power. All the years of exploring Natoor, the place of my mother’s birth. Infiltrating the Grove to pass between realms, the attempts we made to reach Nysegard and entreate with Storm Lords. All that time and he gives it up to the first vampire offering his blood!” The necromancer fumed, every word laced with boiling hot wrath. His indignation, an unfamiliar expression of raw emotion was very odd to behold.

Before his tirade could reach a crescendo, he managed to notice where he was and whom he was talking to. “Well, he is a treacherous and devious fellow. I wouldn’t trust him at his word at all.” He added cautiously.

“And I should trust you at yours?” I questioned, still with a smile.

“You can my lady, I have never wavered when it comes to my agreement’s, as others have.” He didn’t have to allude to whom he was referring.

“Does this mean your goal is to kill this vampire?” I asked, worried that any successful vengeance will lessen his desire to remain.

“Kill him, perish the thought! I would never waste my magic on someone so lowly. I will however defend your keep from all enemies, so I may have a good view upon the battlements.” He grinned evilly. “From there I shall view with tremendous joy as your pet demon tears him apart.” He proclaimed with a certainty that his will shall be done.

“I see.” I added patiently.

“However my lady, I do have a request.” He quickly added as if a thought struck him.

“Of course, ask away.”

“May I request your demon to preserve the head. I wish to mount his skull upon my staff. I would bind his soul, but I doubt it is worth anything.”

I nodded in affirmation as that seemed reasonable to me.

Edited by user Wednesday, July 3, 2024 3:09:28 AM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

Offline William Gerard Graves  
#10 Posted : Wednesday, June 26, 2024 12:58:31 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

Chapter 9: Erik
“I am so screwed.” I complained, pacing back and forth.

The girl stopped her sobbing and was just silently weeping over her prone father. Thankfully the man was not dead, but he would likely stay down for a while. I panicked, like a scared child, it was as if I had never been to war, never seen or done the horrible things that still haunt my dreams.

“Daddy.” The girl whimpered, shaking her father, desperately trying to wake him.

“He will be fine, he just needs to sleep.” I tried to reassure and she didn’t burst into tears this time.

“Why did you do this?!” She screamed, a stark contrast to her prior weeping.

I did a double take, shocked at such a young girl brazenly yelling at a literal adult vampire. The shock wore of just as I was about to respond, she started to fiddle with her dress. I was unsure what she was doing until she produced a strange pouch.

My first thought was she was trying to bribe me, but when she withdrew a stone, I was immediately puzzled. This did not last long as she started to mutter words I recognised. The girl was casting a spell, she is a wizard. I sped forward using every ounce of swiftness a vampire could muster.

I was too late, the girl could really cast a spell quickly. With her power, earth rose from the ground and launched a devastating strike. At least that is what should have happened. Instead a tiny rock shot from the ground and bounced of me harmlessly.

Shocked I stopped in my tracks, unsure what just happened. Did she just use a rock as a spell component, only to use said spell to throw another rock at me? It was a question quickly answered by her.

“Damn it, I screwed it up again.” The girl complained, stomping her feet angrily.

I was not sure what to do, but the situation slowly dawned on me. I chuckled besides myself, finding the magic conjured by this girl humorous. She must have heard my snickering and immediately glared hatefully at me.

“Don’t laugh!” She chastised and I ignored her.

“You used a rock to summon another rock to throw at me.” I observed, trying to keep my face neutral and failing miserably. “Why didn’t you just throw the rock instead of going through all of that spell work?” I asked, still unable to keep a straight face.

“Hey it took me a long time to work out that spell!” She replied indignantly. “Besides I think I did pretty well for my first try.” She added with barely a whisper, for which I heard, vampire hearing really is useful.

“What is a novice wizard doing heading to a warzone?” I asked, realising the obvious. She was clearly a young ill trained wizard heading to a castle about to be sieged.

“Warzone?” What are you talking about, my father is taking me to study under Mistress Ephemia of Narfalon.” She corrected.

“To study?” I said.

“Yes I will be a student of one of the greatest conjurers in the duchy.” The girl proclaimed proudly. “She will punish you for this!”

“I doubt that little girl.”

“My name is Emily, don’t call me little girl!” She spat.

“Well Emily, your mistress has rebelled against the barony and is about to be besieged by an army sent by the baron. So I don’t think you will be attending class this evening.” I explained as if to a child, which she was.

“What? That can’t be, we were accepted only a few days ago and have been travelling the entire time.” She explained aghast.

“That makes sense, she was declared a rebel only yesterday and the baron quickly mobilised a mercenary army that was in the region, along with a crazy vampire lord.” I added disdainfully, remembering my sire as he callously decided my fate without a second thought.

“Vampire? Like you? Are you attacking the mistress.” She quickly took a guard stance and being a child it was more adorable then threatening.

“Technically yes, but the siege wont happen until tomorrow night. You and your father need to flee as fast as you can.” I tried to explain, only to realise that it was impossible.

The roads would have already been blocked off and with her father in such a state. I looked over to his prone form, I could smell the onset of ghoulism. Why in the name of the goddess did I let myself get out of control? If he didn’t get a healer soon, he would rise as a flesh eating monster. Not exactly the best state for what I expect to be a single father.

I knew what needed to be done, but dreaded it anyway. “With all the roads blocked, the only place to go is your original destination. While it wont be safe when my people arrive, at least your father will get treatment.” I explained, trying to be as reasonable as possible.

“Treatment, daddy is sick?” She blanched.

“He will be fine once I get you to the castle, there should be healers there.” I reassured.

Emily nodded accepting the decision, she really was quick on the uptake, far smarter then a girl her age. I suppose learning wizardry so young makes her a prodigy, but I don’t know much about such things.

Now with her consent I had the zombies carry her father into the carriage, she eyed them fearfully as they placed him carefully in. I had her enter alongside her unconscious father and quickly ordered the zombies to repair any damage.

The wheel was slightly out of alignment, but was an easy fix. With the zombies pushing as the horses went nuts around the unlife. We made our way down the road and towards the keep.

It took several hours and some finesse to keep the horses on our trail. But we managed to reach the castles surrounding lands. I ordered the zombies to make there way back to the camp, reinforcing said order to leave all living things alone. I on the other hand had a greater problem, fierd was coming up and if I didn’t go to ground quickly, I would be dust.

I opened the carriage, noting Emily seated near her father, tending to him. “Emily.” I spoke, getting her attention. “Just down this road, you should reach the castle. Your horses are re-saddled and it’s just a short way.” I explained. “Do you know how to drive a carriage?” I asked, realising I was possibly leaving a young girl on the side of the road with a near dead father.

“I know how.” She answered to my relief.

“That is good, I must go, the fierdlight is almost upon me.” I gestured to the sky and the death that would claim me if I lingered.

“Before you go, may I at least have your name?” She requested timidly.

I paused not sure whether to answer, I could do so or remain a mystery. Eventually I decided to give her at least that, I did owe her and her father.

“My name is Erik, now get your father some healing.” I stated with finality before vanishing from sight.

I heard her gasp as I sped away from the fierdlight, desperately finding someplace to hide. Not finding anything, I was forced to plunge my fist into the dirt and dig my way to the underworld. Frantically I clawed and dug and ripped away anything that impeded my survival. As fierdlight rose, I felt it’s heat singe my back just as I leapt into the hole and buried myself with the dirt and worms.

Offline William Gerard Graves  
#11 Posted : Friday, June 28, 2024 2:49:53 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Chapter 10: Asmin
“This place is weird, but interesting.” I observed with wizard sight.

I noted that the abyss was steeped in mana, how that came about without the friction between the five elements was a mystery. But alas I could see so much magical energy, but a lacking of most of the major elements.

I stopped in my tracks, hovering above my cave. I was quite proud of my aerial efforts, flying was not as difficult as I anticipated. After I fell the first six times. I have not entirely mastered my demonic abilities, but have ascended to the realm of petty dabbler.

Preferring the compact efficiency of spells, I loathed this animage style. Alas nothing ventured, nothing gained. Hovering in the sky I tried again to throw fire, managing a small gout of flame. It was not bad, faster then a spell, but not as powerful nor precise.

Finding spell components was a challenge, I have expanded my radius around this barren wasteland. Haven’t found any signs of other demons, this place seems to lack any semblance of civilisation, assuming demons had such things.

I grew tired of flying and quickly descended. Entering my little cave I marvelled at my expert masonry. Demon claws can slice through stone and so I made a table. I mean I made a wizards lab for spells and mighty concoctions.

It was hard to pretend that the situation was ideal. I would kill to return to my world and ransack my lab. I mean the components of the Abyss are fascinating, nothing beats the familiar.

I shook my head, I needed to focus on the task at hand. The assembled components I managed to scrounge up would work well enough. The elements arrayed on the table along with with the etched pentagram, it was time to cast my first abyssal spell.

Of course, it is a basic scrying spell merged with an abyssal link using the law of contagion. Basically it was a seeking spell that could in theory work in the abyss. With this I could repair the broken links to my demons and locate them.

It took some work to get everything prepped, the components available are not the typical. But the Abyss is sutured with mana, still haven’t figured out how. Though I suspect the Abyss has several complex elements to provide enough friction to generate mana. Regardless of my own suspicions, this place is the best to cast spells.

I think I have it now, once the last semantic gesture was done, I managed to reconnect my links. It was very odd to be following a link from inside the abyss, but whatever works. The links now repaired, I traced them in my mind. It was similar to astral projection, something I was surprised to do.

The spell of scrying generally doesn’t do that, this feels similar to consuming the spice and projecting into the astral plane. I will study that later, focusing I could vaguely sense there presence, oddly they were gathered together in the same place.

The vague outlines gave way to colour, shape and form. I could clearly see my demons, four of them, three second orders and one first order. I noted each of them one after the other. Astragoth was there, the man sized fiend with four arms, humming bird wings and greenish red skin was chugging a rather large mug.

The odd scene soon came into focus and I noted my demons were sitting around table, each partaking in a group drinking session. The location was rather hazy, but from what I could see, wooden table, chairs and an assortment of empty mugs. It looked like your typical tavern, how very odd, I didn’t think the abyss had such establishments.

He was seated across from three other demons I recognised as Kalrun, the bipedal fiend with small bat like wings, Etragos a similar four limbed fiend to Astragoth and finally the imp Jelmak, who liked like a red-skinned gargoyle.

The four were laughing, drinking and being as merry as inebriated humans at a local tavern. It was the oddest sight, ignoring the fact they were in an abyssal tavern, I was pretty sure demons didn’t eat or drink. Even if they did, how could they get drunk?

“A toast to our accursed master!” Astragoth announced thrusting his mug in the air.

The three reciprocated with there own, clinking beverages before downing its contents.

“And to whoever did him in. I would buy them a drink for sending him to the grave.” Kalrun added gleefully.

“I wonder what killed him?” Etragos wondered.

“Who cares, he’s dead and good riddance!” Astragoth declared before waving over someone.

I couldn’t believe what I was seeing these demons were actually toasting my supposed death. I was aghast, shocked that they would. Actually now that I think about it, they are demons. Of course they would be happy if I died.

“Jelmak, stop being so gloomy, have a drink we are celebrating.” Etragos tried to cheer up the imp, obviously unsuccessful.

The imp appeared very down, sad even. I wondered why, his compatriots were ecstatic, toasting my death.

“I’m not being gloomy.” He protested. “I just don’t feel like celebrating.”

“Oh for lilith sake, are you sad our accursed master is dead.” Astragoth exclaimed.

“No, I’m just thinking that him dropping dead suddenly is not exactly the best thing for us.” The little imp replied angrily.

I didn’t see that coming, I always assumed my demons would all celebrate my death, which I had only been half right.

“Here we go again, defending our accursed master. You do know he enslaved us!”

“Yes but he wasn’t as bad as the others. You have heard the horror stories, they torture us for no reason at all. He didn’t do that, sure he had a stick up his rear and kept scribbling in that journal. But at least he didn’t torment us for the fun of it.” The little demon exclaimed, prompting shocked faces except for Etragos.

Etragos was nodding, something Astragoth noticed. “Not you to Etty.” He complained.

“What Astra, it’s not like he is wrong, our dearly departed accursed master was not that bad in comparison.” He explained.

I found Estragos words comforting, which was odd. Observing the demons in there natural habitate it was hard not to see them as people. They certainly acted like regular people just having a drink and toasting the death of an enemy. I mean that last part is unusual but not uncommon.

“Hey its not like he didn’t torture us!” Astragoth said angrily.

“Sure he tortured you with that pain spell but you did try to rip his throat out, as I heard it.” Etragos explained with a raised eyebrow and a cheeky grin.

I recalled that event, it was just after I conjured him a second time. I got to close and he nearly took my head off. I looked down at his claws, still razor sharp and deadly.

The demon looked to his companion, shocked and looked a little hurt. That did not last, he soon scowled angrily. He pointed his clawed finger at Etragos. “He had just killed me, ripped me from my mortal life and turned me into a demon. So naturally I was little ticked off.”

I froze with that statement, shocked, bewildered. I could not have heard that right. I listened some more, trying to parse this information.

“Oh right, I remember you were a new arrival unlike us.” Etragos recalled.

“Yes, not a pleasant experience, you all remember. Living life as a human, smoking some weed and boom suddenly your a slave. What’s worse you get greeted by Tizzy when you show up, that octopod has lost his marbles.”

“I don’t know, Boggy seems like a decent fellow. But yes Tizzy is crazy, I wonder why Lilith hasn’t killed him yet?” Etragos added, looking thoughtful.

After a time I tuned out there conversation, I was too shocked by there conversation. In fact I forgot to breath, what my demon, my first demon said. It matched my own experience, to the letter. I don’t know who this Tizzy or Boggy are, but he mentioned an octopod, it must have been the one I ran from.

How could this be, how could he have had the same experience. Was he transformed through this new conjury spell that Ephemia likely possesses? But I was the one that conjured him, using basic conjury spells, nothing new or ground breaking.

I was overwhelmed with ideas that could not be true, they cant be true. It must be lies, a trick, something demons are known for. And with that thought, I looked down at my hands, tracing the talons of my claws, cementing the fact that I was a demon.

“What in the Abyss!” Astragoth exclaimed loudly.

I looked to the demon, pulled from my thoughts and noticed him looking down at his mid section.

“I thought this link was broken with our accursed masters death!” He yelled, not caring about the volume of his voice.

His eyes darted around, narrowing on me. He could see me, or sense me, whatever the case, I needed to shut down the spell. Making the right semantic gestures, I quickly cancelled the scrying, the vision winked out and I was alone. Standing in the middle of a cave, shocked to me core, trying desperately to deny what evidence was providing.

Edited by user Friday, June 28, 2024 2:51:05 AM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

Offline William Gerard Graves  
#12 Posted : Monday, July 1, 2024 1:28:31 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Chapter 11: Astragoth
“There is a link on us, you guys!” I exclaimed, rather loudly.

“What are you talking about?” Etragos asked, clearly high on Denubian Choco-Coffee TM.

They had started on the beverage and shifted to strong spirits that would kill an ordinary man. It was not wise, but we were celebrating that which all demons long for. The death of their accursed master, I mean we hadn’t got to kill him ourselves, but he is dead.

“This link right here.” I pointed to my chest, trying to get them to focus there inebriated minds.

The trio did so and each of them gasped in shock. They could see my link and in fact, I could see they had links of their own. How was this possible? We all felt our accursed masters death, the links were severed only a moment ago.

“This makes no sense, he is dead, how can the links be back up?” I asked the three, not really expecting an answer.

“Maybe he is not really dead.” Etragos replied.

“Could be, he went lich on us.” Kalrun suggested.

“Maybe we got so drunk, we forget someone else bound us?” Jelmak suggested, more as a question.

“No, we haven’t even got to the black out drunk state yet. We only just started our bender.” I corrected little Jelmak, he always had the weirdest ideas.

I pondered the situation, trying to discern an answer. When none arrived I decided to do the only sensible thing. I traced the link, narrowing my focus, I tried to project my mind across the chasm between myself and whomever bound us. It took some time but eventually an outline of something came into focus.

From the little I could see, whoever was on the end of this link was not a wizard. An image of red skin, horns and cloven hooves painted an obvious picture. We were not bound by a wizard, this was worse, the link led to a demon.

I scanned the table, noticing Etragos and Kalrun coming to the same conclusion. Jelmak remained oblivious, he was nursing his drink and clutching that journal he stole from our deceased master.

“Is that what I think it is?” Kalrun muttered, shocked.

“That’s a demon, we are bound to a demon!” I collapsed into my hands, trying to will reality away.

“I don’t know what’s worse, being bound to some wizard, or being a slave to a demon lord.” Kalrun added, not helping the situation.

“But how did we get bound?” I demanded, noting Jelmak about answer. “I’m sure we weren’t that drunk.” I stopped him.

“Perhaps our dearly departed accursed master bit off more then he could chew. It wouldn’t be the first time.” Kalrun explained.

“What do you mean?” I asked, puzzled.

“Think about it, we all know our accursed master was a bit crazy. He probably tried to conjure a demon lord, screwed up and got himself dismembered.” He explained as if it was obvious.

“But how does that explain our binding.” I gestured to our shared predicament.

“The Demon Lord probably tortured our true names out of the Wizard before distributing his parts across Etterdam.” Etragos explained as if that to were obvious.

“That does sound plausible.” Jelmak shook his head sadly. “Poor accursed master, that would likely have not been pleasant.” He added.

“Well what does this mean for us? Is this good, bad or worse?” I put forth the question to the table.

The three thought it over, each focused internally, trying to find the bright side of this predicament. To be honest I didn’t see one, becoming a demon was just one train wreck after the other. Not that dissimilar to my life on earth, I suppose.

“Maybe if our demon lord is not to bad, he could let us on to the planes of men to snatch stuff we can sell.” Jelmak suggested.

“You and your kleptomania, I’m amazed our accursed master never caught you stealing his stuff.” I said with a chuckle, the little imp always had sticky fingers.

“My kleptomania had kept us afloat for many years. How else do you think we can afford all the Denubian choco-coffee TM?”

“He has a point, in fact stealing stuff from the planes of men is how we made most of our money.” Etragos chimed in.

My fellow comrades in slavery had a point, I didn’t want to admit that our summonings offered opportunities to make some coin. If I did I would have to admit to the positives of being bound to that stuffy wizard.

“How powerful do you guys think our new demon lord is?” Kalrun asked.

“Well if our accursed master could bind second order demons, he would have to be on par with a third order, major demon.” Etragos explained. “And if our new lord killed him, that means he must be more powerful.”

“A fourth order, a greater demon?” I suggested, shocked to have even considered that.

The table nodded in agreement, equally shocked at this speculation. Such demons were just below an archdemon, they were the big shots of the Abyss. How would even comprehend dealing with such an unfathomable being, so far above us.

I got chills just thinking about it. What form would this horror of the Abyss take. He would have to be twelve feet tall, covered in muscle, with claws drenched in his victims blood as he picked his teeth with the bones of his enemies.

My imagination wandered to worse horrors, how could we handle a greater demon? It was a question I had no answers for, in fact us four stayed away from big shot demons. We only came here to the Ripe Maiden Suprise to celebrate. We are country demons, the courts just don’t suit us.

“Lets switch topics, this is depressing me.” I took a swig and left the table open for discussion.

“Any gossip in the courts?” Kalrun asked Etragos, the group gossip monger.

“Not much going on in the courts beyond the typical. But I did hear Boggy killed his accursed master. I was actually hoping to see him here, but maybe we missed the bender.”

I smiled at that, good for him. I had heard that his accursed masters were horrible, at least according to Etragos. I had only met the demon once when I arrived, but we never had an occasion to share a drink.

“Another toast, to Boggy and his vengeance!” We all raised our mugs, clinking them together before downing the lot.

“How about another round for Boggy.” I suggested, riding the high.

Jelmak our resident money handler looked down at his coin purse. He frowned before placing the empty thing on the table.

“I think we are now officially poor.” The imp said, as the certainty of our dire financial situation, sank in.

Edited by user Tuesday, July 2, 2024 11:58:43 PM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

Offline William Gerard Graves  
#13 Posted : Tuesday, July 2, 2024 12:05:23 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Chapter 12: Ephemia
“A carriage has shown up outside the wall?” I questioned the sentry.

The young man was in his late teens, probably one of the village peasents that joined up with the castle guard. He looked green and far to young to have experienced war. He would soon learn of its horrors, I was sure about that.

“Yes my lady, it was driven by a young girl who handed in this scroll.” The sentry presented a wax sealed scroll, the seal was immediately recognised as my own.

I knew the contents before I broke the seal. It was a letter of admittance to one Emily and her father Johan into Wildholds School of Wizardry. I didn’t want to call my fledgling school after myself or my family. So I decided to name it after my castle.

The name Wildhold was rumoured to be given by my late father, to hold his wild child as I was known. In truth it was actually named for the fact we were on the border of the forest of Nar Woodar.

“I thought I had sent out enough letters warning my future students to stay away from the battlefield.” I stated more to myself then to the sentry.

“Bring them in, they likely didn’t receive my letter and are now stuck here. Have them taken to there rooms, there carriage and horses stabled.” I ordered and just as I was about to leave, the young man signalled there was more.

“Yes sentry?”

“She claims her father was attacked by a vampire and that same vampire helped them get here. I am not sure what she was talking about, but her father has wounds consistent with a vampire attack.’ The sentry quickly explained.

“By the Abyss, the bastards are attacking the roads already.” I cursed. “Get him into a healer, take him to Senior Gerald, he is familiar with spells to treat ghoulism. But keep your sword ready if he turns.” I added; commanding the young sentry.

He blanched in horror, the idea of a ghoul being inside the castle walls. He bowed and soon left to fullfil my orders. Making two steps before I delivered another order.

“Have the daughter sent to my office, I wish to speak to her.” I commanded, raising my voice so he could hear me.

This was not want I wanted, having my conflict with my brother effect my future students. Building a school of Wizardry had always been my dream and I had sent out letters of invitation to several prospective students noble and peasent alike. Talent for Wizardry had always been rather diverse when it came to social status. But I ended up with a modest roster of farmers and fourth born minor nobles that would inherit nothing.

I shook my head at the ill timing of my brothers vendetta. Standing in the castles courtyard, observing the bustle of men at arms, castle workers and zombies, all working towards the defence.

I sighed, recalling my current meagre roster of potential of wizards. Three new students that came early last uropian month, barely trained in the basics. Two seniors I managed to wrangle from Towmond. Senior Gerald a Thaumaturge and Senior Wilhelm a Sorcerer. And let’s include the Necromancer Belus, for as long as that shifty death monger stays loyal.

I thought upon what my demon said. “Actually if my bound demon is to believed, he is a rather skilled wizard himself. With Emily we may have a school yet.” I laughed at the absurdity of it all.

A school of Wizardry composed of four ill trained peasents, two competent seniors, a crazy necromancer, a third order demon pyromancer and little old me to teach them.

Life was getting more absurd by the day. And soon it will be getting bloody, as this was a sign a siege was imminent. Scouts report the army is camped not to far and is waiting for the night, probably tomorrow night. With there attacks on caravans they likely have blocked off all roads. We are trapped, but we are not without our advantages. I looked to my binding link, cast off towards the Abyss and my third order demon.

I sighed, turning to the inner castle and made my way to my office. Passing through corridors of bustling servants and Castle guards. I found the forever serious Sir Felmun with his deputies, planning the castles defence. Belus was there as well, seated off to the side, possibly sleeping, might be dead.

They had appropriated my office for there war planning. I didn’t mind, since I had no clue how to plan a war.

As I entered Sir Felmun and his people bowed respectfully, even Belus gave a curt nod of a respect. So he wasn’t dead, good, I don’t have time to deal with a lich right now.

“A carriage has arrived, the occupants are a father and daughter duo. The daughter is a prospective student that didn’t get my warning to stay away.” I explained as I entered and collapsed on my vacant chair. Damn this thing was comfortable.

“A student?” Felmun said phrased like a question.

“Yes she is.” I cut off my words as I dug through my desk for the appropriate papers. Withdrawing a ledger, the room waited patiently as I located the girls name. “Emily of Southmond, where ever that is, probably south somewhere. She is a Thaumaturge, excellent we need more healers in the days to come.” I added as an after thought.

“It was lucky that the enemy hadn’t got to them before they arrived.” One of Felmuns deputies said, I think his name was Gregor.

“Unfortunately they did, but oddly they let them go.” I said, shocking the entire room.

“Let them go?” Felmun wondered.

“We shall see what the girl says, then we can discuss it. She should be attending my study momentarily.” I reassured.

It wasn’t long before she arrived, a servant guided her in and the young girl was seated opposite the desk. I ordered out most of the occupants as to not overwhelm the child, leaving only Sir Felmun and Belus. I would have preferred the necromancer to vacate to, but his expertise was needed.

“Greetings Emily, I am Mistress Ephemia of the Wildholds School of Wizardry. This is Sir Felmun my personal retainer and this is Belus an associate.” I decided not to introduce him as a necromancer, likely she did see the zombies but still best not to identify their creator.

“Greetings mistress, I am glad to be here.” She muttered quietly, clearly she had been through an ordeal. Yet she was a lot calmer then I would have expected.

“Please be at ease, we just have a few questions about your ordeal. And before you ask, your father will be fine, we have our top healer tending to him.” That seemed to raise her spirits and she smiled. It was quite cute and I smiled in return, genuinely.

“You mentioned to the sentries that your carriage was attacked by vampires?” I queried, getting to the meat of the situation.

She nodded. “Only one vampire, the rest were zombies I think. They stopped our carriage and took me and father. The vampire attacked father, but stopped when I asked him to.” The girl explained and I frowned.

“The vampire stopped his feeding?” Belus chimed in, his curiosity likely peaked.

“Yes, Erik said he was sorry and tried to help father get better. Then he helped us get aboard and took us close to the mistress castle.” She replied to Belus.

“Erik?” Sir Felmun queried.

“That’s what he said his name was.”

“That is very odd, why would he tell you his name?” I said rhetorically.

What followed was several more questions from each of us. It revealed very little, the encounter she had with this Erik was very brief. Probably because fierd was rising and the vampire needed to go to ground or risk ashes.

The interview took only an hour and the girl was sent to her quarters to sleep. Meanwhile the three of us sat in silence. Each digesting the situation and trying to come up with an answer to explain things.

“Anyone got an answer?” I queried the two.

“Perhaps it is a ruse or a trap. Maybe the girl is under a spell?” Felmun suggested.

“She wasn’t, I checked during our session.” I cast a few spells in secret and examined her with wizards sight. If she was under a spell it would have to be something beyond my skills.

“Do you have an answer Belus? You are the resident expert on the undead.” I asked the necromancer.

He sait quietly for a moment, either sleeping with his eyes open or pondering his answer. Eventually he spoke after a full minute. “It’s possible this Erik is a fledgling, new to vampirism.” He suggested.

“What makes you say that?” Felmun asked.

“From what the girl said, this vampire seems to lack control, likely newly turned. And it has been documented that vampires newly turned still have a shred of there former humanity. They tend to have difficulty with the thought of drinking blood. It’s possible this Erik had a similar reaction and acted out of remorse for his actions.” The necromancer explained, it was an explanation that did fit the narrative.

“That seems odd, why would they send such a new vampire?” I asked Belus.

“It is probably because Drelem the cursed leech is hard up for volunteers. He likely needs to fill his ranks quickly ever since I destroyed his former sycophants with a cloud of disintegration.” Belus explained as if it was an after thought.

“You did what?” I questioned, shocked at his admittance.

“You know we are rivals, enemies if you will. The fool tried to turn me when I refused his offer, tried to make me his lackey. So I destroyed much of his bloodsuckers before escaping. Then I joined up with you after I learned he was working with your brother.” The necromancer explained something he really should have told me days ago.

“So he is recruiting new vampires for the army. That is actually good news, we will have less experienced vampires crawling up the walls.” I smiled as I discovered a potential advantage in the upcoming battle.

Belus nodded and then shrugged when our combined glares descended upon him.

“Can we use this Erik perhaps?” Felmun questioned Belus

“It is possible, if he is new he will likely not be as loyal as the others. Depending on the corcumstance of his turning. But since Drelem is not known for his patience. It is likely he grabbed some poor fool from a war tent and forcibly recruited the poor lad.”

His words sank in and we soon fell into discussion about the enemy and the upcoming siege.

Offline William Gerard Graves  
#14 Posted : Wednesday, July 3, 2024 2:34:52 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

Chapter 13: Erik
“Returning in failure to a vampire army, sucks. Pun intended.” I complained after I was just disciplined by our illustrious employer. Oh I suppose he was my boss, now that I have been turned by the blood.

I refuse to call him father like my so called brothers and sisters called him. Like turning me into a bloodsucker, makes me your son, is pure idiocy.

And he is not much of a dad, Lord Drelem as he styles himself wanted to have me lashed. But good old Captain Helmut went to bat for me, pun not intended that time.

“I still think he should be punished by his kin.” Lord Drelem spat, the so called vampire lord acted as if all of this was beneath him.

“You may have turned him, but he is still under my command. I will discipline him.” Helmut said sternly, with all the will an employee can muster.

My dear old captain was not happy when he learned of my turning. Drelem was quite ambivalent about the mercenary captains protests. But when he took the complaints to the baron over a mirroring. A compromise was reached, I was still under Helmuts command, but would work with Drelem as necessary.

I still never understood why Drelem turned me. I could give in to my ego and say it was my impressive battle prowess. But more then likely, he picked me at random and neglected to check if I was one of his soldiers or part of the barons mercenaries.

While we were contracted to the baron, we were under the command of his chief vassal, Lord Drelem. I was unsure if he actually worked for the baron, he seemed quite independent, nothing like the typical vassal toadies I met.

I eyed the two as they went head to head. Captain Helmut looked as strong as ever. Despite being in his late fifties he had a stocky build, toned muscles beneath his amalgamation of leather and steel plate armour.

He had that beard that every self respecting man envied and perhaps even a few dwarves would to. It was thick and full, pure black and oddly without any gray. The lads speculate that he dies it to keep himself looking young and fit. To be honest, I am not sure why he bothers, I think he would look dignified with some gray.

His square-jawed face and deep blue eyes were stern as he glared down the shorter vampire. Lord Drelem didn’t appear very intimidating at first glance. Ill-muscled, pale and pasty, the typical appearance of a city boy wizard. Shorter then the both of us, probably five feet. He had long blonde hair trailing down to his shoulders, blood red eyes like mine and wore a gaudy gothic suit of black with red trim and a white collar of a strange design.

All in all he was a short, pale, rather scrawny little man. Who could easily slaughter the entire band in a heart beat. If either of us had beating hearts.

My dear sire left the tent in a huff, his sycophants left with him. The trio of vampires glaring at me, disappointed like I was the black sheep of the family. Like I cared what those suck ups thought.

Once they left, Helmut glanced at me. “You know I have no choice.” He stated firmly.

“I understand Captain, whatever punishment you deem fit, I will accept.”

“Very well soldier, your punishment will be to clean out the latrines for the entire band.” He declared with a cheeky grin.

I sighed theatrically. “I would rather take the lashes. You know some of our brothers, well I don’t know what they eat. But it must be truly fowl.”

“But aren’t you, you know, dead.” He said with raised eyebrows.

“Undead, but I still have a sense of smell.” I complained with little force behind it.

“Well then, this is the decision of your captain. So best get to it soldier, you can sleep when your dead.” He grinned thinking he was funny.

I saluted and promptly left the tent, exiting to the night air. The camp was bustling, but not with the living, but the dead. Zombies were carrying supplies, shuffling along. I noted several of my former minions involved in the work. They were back under the control of there true master.

The camp was making ready, tomorrow night will by the time that we launch a full scale attack on the castle. I turned to the left and made my way to the edge of the camp, towards the latrines.

My heightened senses could already smell the intense odor of waste, it was putrid. This would not be fun, but perhaps my humiliation will be enough to satiate my petty sire.

It took several hours to complete the disposal of all the waste. Quite fast actually, vampire strength and speed have there advantages. However vampire senses made those few hours felt like an eternity.

My so called siblings came by, whispering criticisms and hurtful comments. Knowing full well I could hear them. They thought hurting my feelings would have an effect. They were idiots, I have fought in wars, killed men on the battlefield and sacked cities. Did they seriously think such school yard bullying would work?

I tuned out there pathetic attempts and completed my punishment in record time. I returned to the camp, covered in grime and muck. But the sight of my old comrades as I entered the tent was surely missed.

“You smell like shit.” Edmund the beefy fellow to the right said.

“Yeah your shit.” I replied with a grin.

The giant laughed, he was always the type to laugh easily. He was the nicest guy at camp, but a demon on the battlefield.

“I think we should hose you down. Where is a Sorcerer when you need one.” He exaggerated his tone, knowing full well where they could acquire such skills.

“That would be a gross allocation of my formidable powers.” Sigfried the resident wizard responded, laying on his cot, reading a book none of us could understand.

“We know Sig, you are so important.”

“If you knew it, I wouldn’t need to remind you barbarians all the time.” He complained good naturedly.

The two always bantered like this, it was something I missed. I didn’t get to talk to them much since my turning. They were still my brothers in arms, but I was a vampire now. Immortal in fact, a thought struck me that I would watch them grow old, while I remained young.

Assuming these mad men lived to be elderly, I smiled as the two continued arguing over steel being superior to a glorified waterfall. I wondered if I would miss those distant memories, or will they fade. I shook my head, I will not go down that road, not now.

“I am a sorcerer, I can do more then just throw water at people!” Sig declared.

“Yeah I know, you can see people far away.” Edmund twiddled his fingers like he was casting a spell.

“Without my scrying you would have had an arrow in your arse.”

“My hide could take it and then that cowardly archer would have an axe in his head.”

“And how will a lumbering pile of muscle like yourself find this head in order to plunge your mighty axe.” Sig queried with a cocky grin.

“He has got you there Edmund.”

“I will find him, my axe will find a way. Otherwise I will just throw an axe in every direction, surely one will meet flesh.” He explained as if it was gospel.

“How many axes do you have?” I asked.

“Enough.” Was his only reply.

“I doubt you have the money to buy that many axes?” Sig added skeptically.

“I don’t buy my axes, I take them from the corpses of my enemies. We fight barbarians a lot and they prefer axes.” Edmund explained matter-of-factly.

“Edmund, you are a barbarian.” Sig declared with a chuckle.

“Subtle difference sorcerer, my kinsmen kill each other for glory, I kill my kinsmen and everyone else for gold.”

“And that makes it better how?” I asked.

“It doesn’t, it just makes us richer.” He declared as the three of us descended into a laughter.


Offline William Gerard Graves  
#15 Posted : Wednesday, July 3, 2024 11:45:39 PM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

Groups: Registered, Registered Users, Subscribers
Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

Chapter 14: Asmin
“This sucks!” I exclaimed loudly, my booming voice was as I just realised, very loud and echoed throughout the vast cave system.

I had just learned some very disturbing information. I could declare it all demonic lies as most right-thinking folk do. Especially those priests of Tiernon and Torean. But I was a wizard dammit, we do not just accept things, we investigate, experiment and determine truth from fact.

I sighed heavily and sank down against the wall. “At least that is what wizards are supposed to be.” It was established fact, but if I were to believe everything I have experienced and heard. Either something new has come onto the wizardly scene or we were so wrong about everything from the start.

The ideas running through my mind were staggering questions, with consequences for the wizard community if ever proven. I had to stop this and think like a wizard, no matter what I looked like or where I was, this will never change.

I rose to my feet and stood proudly. It was hard to do since I was naked, something I only recently noticed. Oddly I was fine with it, but still intellectually I wanted some clothes, although how to make them survive the abyss would be tricky.

Moving over to my makeshift lab, I decided that clothes would come later. I needed to experiment and prove or disprove this disturbing notion. Raising one clawed finger in the air, I spoke aloud my thoughts.

“Hypothesis, do conjury spells have the capacity to transform mortal souls into demonic entities bound to the abyss?” Saying out loud was ridiculous, not just because it looked stupid, but because the idea was crazy.

Regardless of the insanity, I needed to disprove it. I must do this for the sake of all wizards. I paused for a moment, what about me? It was a question I hadn’t really thought of. I was so caught up in my thoughts, that I failed to acknowledge my own circumstances.

I was a demon, damned to the Abyss and unless I can reverse it, I would be reviled and feared by mortal men. In fact, the more zealot members of select churches would kill me on sight.

“Damn it all to the Abyss, I am screwed.” I wailed helplessly, forgetting for a moment who I was.

It was a rather self-deprecating moment I will endeavour not to repeat. I slapped myself, which was a bad idea as that hurt tremendously. After coming from the concussion, I wondered what that would do to a human skull. The sight of brains splattered all over a wall was all I came up with. I shuddered at the thought and resolved to be gentle with any humans I wished not to kill. Everybody else was fair game, I grinned maliciously.

After my pity party, I descended upon the noble effort of planning and study. Examining all my recent memories, everything I knew of conjury and demons, along with all I had learned since.

“I recall the pentacles when my mistress first summoned me. The memory is vague, but they seemed typical of basic conjury.” I mused aloud. “Of course they were exquisitely crafted and elegantly efficient. Yet the design was consistent with the basic ritual for a third order demon.” Making this case I mused over the rest I had discovered.

After much internal debate, I have determined, that I have lots of theories and very little controlled and repeatable evidence to support. With this in mind, the only solution is to test the theory and summon another unbound demon.

But how can I verify them as truly being a mortal soul, transformed the same as I? That was a dilemma, that I neither had an answer nor the means to obtain.

I am not sure how long I stood there, deep in thought. I barely noticed the voice calling me and my world shifting out of phase. My cave made way for a familiar dungeon, lit by braziers. I sighed, realising what just happened.

“Took you long enough.” I said a bit peeved at the timing.

I turned to notice the familiar trio, my mistress, the necromancer and the noble knight. They were truly an odd trinity, I was unsure how they functioned.

“You desire to be summoned?” The necromancer, I forgot his name asked in a tone that revealed he was sceptical.

“Well yes, scouring the Abyss for spell components is such a hassle. Days, at least I assume, of searching. I only managed to develop a single spell. Even then I had to shortcut parts of it with my demonic powers. Shortcuts, damn shortcuts.” I complained, scowling at my own lapses in the Wizardly method.

“New spells, abyssal components?” The necromancer muttered, I think his name was Belus. I will have to file that away, I am terrible with names.

“Yes, I am studying potential spell components that exist in the abyss. Groundbreaking stuff I might add.” I may have said too much.

“What kind of components exist in the abyss?” Ephemia, I knew her name, questioned.

“Honestly not much really, the place is pretty barren, lots of fire, earth, some air and animus. Water on the other hand, I have not seen, so I am not sure how mana gets generated there.”

“Interesting, I have always wondered what the abyss was like. So I take it your claims of wizardly skill were not just a joke?” Ephemia asked, smiling.

“Perish the thought my lady. I am an upstanding and learned wizard. My achievements speak for themselves, at least on other planes. I am not sure were this place is, but I am sure my feats will be spread wide.” I exaggerated a little theatrically before looking around, noting a lack of windows.

“Well that is very interesting, but we are short on time so. Demon I command thee!” She raised her voice before I cut her off.

“Stop, no need for all that, just tell me what you want.” I declared firmly.

The suggestion stunned the trio, each of them had a double take. The knight looked peeved that I interrupted his mistress, Belus appeared interested and Ephemia looked puzzled.

“Demon, what are you talking about? Do not interrupt your mistress!” The knight said angrily, reaching for his sword.

“It is fine Sir Felmun.” She waved her hand calming the knight. “Explain demon?” She added.

“Okay, we all know that you have bound me, impressive, congratulations.” I clapped trying to avoid skewering my hands. “You could easily compel me to obey with those compulsion spells of yours and for your information, I have an in depth knowledge of how they work. With that in mind, you could command me to obey, I will resist and you can turn to torture and threats. But here is the rub, do you have time to wrangle an uncooperative demon?” I tilted my head, gesturing to my mistress.

She paused and before she was about to speak, self-righteous chimed in. “Don’t listen to him my lady. Demons are all liars and tricksters!” He declared as if it were gospel. Which it was to me, at least before it was challenged by the current disturbing events.

“So what, humans lie all the time. How does not trusting me change the circumstance, I mean.” I directed their attention to Belus. “Do you trust the necromancer?” I asked the pair and then turned back to him. “No offence.”

“None taken.” Belus replied with a chuckle.

“I see were you are going with this.” Ephemia gestured her knight to silence. “Just because you are untrustworthy, does not change the situation, as we can trust your own self interest?”

“Exactly.” I nodded, joyful I made my point.

“But that is a situation were both parties are balanced. This situation, I am dominate so why should I work with you instead of compelling you to work for me. What is my incentive?” She made her point, a very valid one.

Luckily I had an answer ready, like a wand all charged up and waiting for the right trigger word. “Correct and to answer your question, time is your incentive.”

“Time?” She asked, puzzled.

“Yes, time, you don’t have a lot of time to go through the hassle of compelling an unruly demon.” She tilted her head, the other two were puzzled as well. The knight was scowling but that seemed his default expression.

“Explain?” Belus requested.

“Well it is pretty obvious you have limited time. You summoned a third order demon, inquired about my combat related abilities and this place looks like the dungeon of a fortified castle.” I gestured around the room. “All these points collated, I can only suspect you need demonic firepower for an upcoming war. Perhaps a siege that is imminent, maybe tomorrow or the next day?”

I am pretty sure I struck the nail on the head, their furtive glances and that knight having no control over his facial muscles. I think I have got it perfectly.

“So, here is what I am offering, listen to my deal. If it seems reasonable and mutually advantageous for both parties, we can get to the business at hand. If not, well have fun trying to torture me into compliance, I will resist, a lot.” I laid it all on the table and now it was up to them to accept or decline.

The trio looked at each other, trading glances before Ephemia spoke up. “We will discuss this.” As she said it, she gestured them to the other side of the room and fell into a huddled discussion.

I just stayed in place, not like I was going anywhere.


Offline William Gerard Graves  
#16 Posted : Friday, July 5, 2024 12:01:32 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

Groups: Registered, Registered Users, Subscribers
Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

Chapter 15: Ephemia
“What do you two think?” I whispered.

The three of us were huddled in the corner, the demon was standing in the pentagram and oddly covering his ears. I noted him wincing, did he just scratch himself?

“We cannot trust him, I know I have said it several times already. But history is very clear, demons are not to be trusted.” Felmun repeated, making a valid point.

“Well he is not exactly asking for trust, merely offering a deal. No different then the deal I offered you.” Belus countered.

“And I was against that as well.”

“I know you were, but we had little options. At the time I didn’t know I could conjure a major demon. But with this demons power and Belus forces, we do have a chance.” I explained, giving my knight a sympathetic glance.

He scowled, the weight of my words setting in. “But this is not the issue, what I need is your advice. Should I entertain a deal with a Demon?”

“You know my opinion on the matter.” Felmun added.

I looked to Belus for his advice, he on the other hand was frowning in thought. He stayed like that for a full minute before speaking.

“I think you should hear the demon out.” He finally suggested, prompting a rather ugly scowl from my Knight.

“Are you insane? Oh wait your a necromancer, your mental state is quite clear.” My Knight said mockingly, it was petty but I couldn’t completely disagree, yet couldn’t judge.

“Fine there is no harm in hearing him out.” I declared, quickly silencing Felmun with a glare.

With the decision made, we turned to the demon. He was standing in the pentacle, arms crossed behind his back, waiting patiently. We crossed the room and stood before him.

“Well are we going to negotiate like civilised men and women?” Felmun snorted as the Demon continued. “Or will it be threats and torture?” He asked with a truly ferocious smile.

I tried to ignore it and calmed my breathing, this was a decision I hoped would not backfire. Because the Demon was right, I summoned him too late, the enemy was nearly at the doorstep and I needed firepower. Compelling an uncooperative demon would take too long and if the Demon could be believed, he was knowledgeable about such magic.

“We will hear your proposal.” I said, resolute in my decision.

“Excellent, you won’t regret it.” The demon smiled wider, it was quite frightening but I kept my face neutral and gestured for him to continue.

“As far as I can see things, you are going to be sieged yes?” He asked and I nodded. “I see, so if that is the case, what I propose is an exchange of sorts.”

“An exchange, what does this entail?” I asked, concerned.

“I will offer my full cooperation in the coming battle, I will use every trick I have to repel whatever enemies you have.” He declared, smiling again and I think was getting used to it, not so much for Felmun.

“And what do you want in exchange?” I pressed the demon to answer.

“Nothing you will miss, just spell components.” The demon requested.

“Spell components, what for?” I inquired suspiciously.

“Well so I can perform magic of course, need to get some spells prepared for the coming battle. As I said getting components in the Abyss is quite the chore. Fascinating, but not easy.” He said, exasperated.

I did understand his annoyance, assuming demons had such feelings. I hated when you had to spell everything out for a person. Alas, I needed to be clear and precise. Dealing with a demon requires the utmost caution, if not avoided entirely.

“Is there anything else you want?” I prodded the demon, trying to pull any more useful information.

The demon looked down at himself, sighing. Naturally, my eyes descended as well, I will admit that I spared a glance at his impressive member. It was grotesque in its size and to be honest not as appealing. Of course, my old ladies-in-waiting would faint at the sight, some may even be intrigued at taking such a man or demon to bed.

I was not sure what he was implying but Sir Felmun seemed to get the wrong idea. “You foul fiend, to make such a request of my lady!” Felmun accused angrily.

I was momentarily confused before it dawned on me. I chuckled beside myself, acting like one of those vapourish court ladies, amused by something lascivious. The demon on the other hand looked puzzled, his head shifting back and forth between myself and Felmun.

“What are you taking about? I was about to request some clothes, but I was not sure if they would survive in the Abyss.” He explained, offended.

“You want clothes?” Belus asked, just as puzzled as the demon.

“Well yes, clothes maketh the man, or demon in this case. What, do you prefer me to just stroll about with all my dangly bits on full display?”

“In my experience, generally demons don’t concern themselves with clothes. Are you saying you are an outlier perhaps?”

The demon looked thoughtful, tilting his head to the side. “I suppose I would be considered an outlier, most demons I have met are just as you said.” The demon explained, shrugging in a very human manner.

I pondered his request, thinking back to the student robes I had commissioned. They were quite large and could possibly fit the demon. All through the wings would be an issue, but that was his problem.

“Fine, we will provide some clothes. Is that all?” I agreed and prodded for more requests. The more he told us, the more insight we had of his true agenda.

“That should be it, spell components probably for pyromancy, since they would be most useful and clothes as I said.” He listed his requests, before coming to another conclusion. “What exactly is the enemy composition?” He asked.

I would have answered, but honestly, I didn’t have the full picture. I turned to my dear Sir Felmun, fluttered my eyelashes and requested sweetly. “Gallant Sir Felmun, please relay what the scouts have discovered, to my demon servant.” He frowned, not wanting to engage with the demon. But my charm is hard to refuse and so he explained.

It took only a few minutes to outline the enemy composition. Sir Felmun begrudgingly gave a detailed account of the enemy's troop numbers, composition and the current state of its military readiness.

The demon frowned, at least I think he was frowning. He was silent for a short while, possibly digesting the barrage of information. Eventually, he spoke, sighing heavily.

“Vampires, they will be tricky. Human sellswords are one thing, but a vampire army with ghouls and zombies.” He shook his head before casting a glance at Belus.

“That explains the necromancer, fight fire with fire I suspect.”

“Essentially.” Belus said with a malicious smile, not unlike the demon.

“If that is the case, unless you have some grand necromantic ritual to get rid of them?” The demon gestured again to the necromancer. Belus shook his head and the demon sighed. “Well if that is the case, I will need some backup. How is your conjury supplies?” He directed his question to me.

For a moment I was shocked, did this demon just ask for conjury supplies? Did he want me to summon and bind more demons? Why in the name of the abyss would a demon want that? The idea was ridiculous.

“We have plenty, but what are you getting at?” I asked, not liking where this was going.

“Well I have around four demon minions I can summon, to aid us in battle.” The demon informed as if he was inviting some friends to a tea party.

“Minions, you have minions?” I asked, incredulous.

“Technically yes, three second orders and one first order. They have gone a bit a stray, but if I can get those conjury supplies we can summon them here.” The demon looked down at the pentagram. “Say can I use this to summon them, it will have to be one at a time though.” He requested.

“You want to use this pentagram, the one I used to conjure and bind you, to conjure and bind more demons?” I was shocked, and so were my compatriots. The mad demon was suggesting summoning and binding his fellow demons and using the very pentacles I designed to trap him.

The three of us stood there in silence, trying to process. But the demon was just smiling away, waiting patiently for our response.


Offline William Gerard Graves  
#17 Posted : Monday, July 8, 2024 12:31:01 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

Groups: Registered, Registered Users, Subscribers
Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

Chapter 16: Asmin
“So do we have a deal?” I asked cautiously.

I may have said too much. But what could I do, I needed wizard supplies. The good stuff from the planes of men, the abyssal stuff will take some time to work out. The trio did that huddle thing again, thankfully this time, they didn’t take forever.

“You plan to summon your demons?” Ephemia questioned.

“Yes, they will be useful in the upcoming battle, will they not?” I wondered.

“True, but.” She trailed off and as to why she was reticent, it dawned on me.

“You are concerned about me summoning new demons not under your control.” I confirmed.

“Yes unless you give me there true names.” She frowned the moment she said that.

“You can control that many demons and my illustrious and powerful self?” I asked, cheekily.

She frowned in concentration, staying like that for over a minute. Eventually, she shook her head in the negative, accepting her own limitations. This is understandable, even at my height I could not control a major demon and four lesser demons.

“Okay, how about this, I will summon one demon at a time. And since you have bound me and I will bind them. You will have control. Fair enough?” I suggested, it was rational and could work. A chain binding is probably the most apt term for it.

The trio went into that huddle. Now the waiting game begins again. I was very patient and let them whisper and discuss. I could guess what they were saying. The knight would be against it. Belus would be for it and my mistress will probably just do what she wants.

Eventually, they came to a decision and as expected, agreed. They would provide me with spell components, for conjury and pyromancy. I made sure they remembered to get me some clothes, and they promised to provide me with wizard robes.

“Now demon, I shall release you from your confinement. By your true name I command you, Asmin. You will not harm me, my colleagues here and anyone within my domain.” She commanded and I felt the compulsion spell.

I will admit, it was impressive. Subtle yet strong, I found it very hard to shake the order. But it was a reasonable order and I didn’t resist. Regardless, it was quite disturbing to be on the other end of this. I think I can better understand why Astragoth tried to cut my throat.

With a somatic gesture, I felt the wards give out and my prison was lifted. I stepped outside the pentagram, the trio stepped back cautiously.

“Well then, when should we start?” I asked, folding my arms and waiting.

What followed was more waiting, half terrified servants carted in familiar items and laid them out on the nearby table. I carefully walked over, inspecting the items. It was an impressive stock. Finally, a large billowy wizard's robe was laid next to the items.

I turned to inspect the apparel, noting it was a simple black robe, nothing fancy really. Carefully I picked it up, trying not to cut it to pieces with my deadly talons. Hoisting it over my head, the robe cascaded down to just above my hooves.

It was not a bad fit but it restricted my wings. I fiddled with the appendages and managed to slice gashes in the fabric, my wings jutted out from the robe and I was comfortable.

Sighing I relaxed, before noticing a belt with several loops and pouches attached. Recognising it as a wizard belt, I quickly wrapped it around my waist and was glad to see it fit.

Turning around theatrically, I did a little pose. “How do I look, dashing, the most handsome demon wizard you have ever seen?”

“You are the only demon wizard I have ever seen.” She declared cheekily, I think she is warming up to me.

“Well now that I am appropriately attired, let us get down to business.”

“What order of demon will you be summoning?” Belus asked, either concerned or intrigued, I really could not work him out.

“I think I will summon my first order, as to put you all at ease.” I suggested, gesturing to my mistress to agree.

She thought about it, looked to her knight who was scowling a little less and so she agreed. “Continue my servant.” She said imperiously like a queen to a vassal. Oddly when such commands were coming from an attractive woman, it felt weird and not just from the compulsion.

I wondered momentarily if I was one of those masochists. Those people like to be dominated, usually by a powerful woman. I shook my head, getting rid of such thoughts.

With those strange thoughts behind me, I inspected the components arrayed. It was a decent spread, I recognised most of them, with a few exotic ones I had never seen. I quickly grabbed a few, attaching them to my belt and soon I was well equipped with pyromantic spellwork.

“Well now that I am loaded up with fire magic, time to get the conjury components, let’s summon a demon.” I proclaimed, smiling widely.

“Oh joy, more demons.” The knight muttered, clearly defeated.

I gave him a shrug, got the go-ahead from the mistress and started preparing the braziers, various components and pentacles. It didn’t take too long, the majority of it was already prepared. I was ready in no time and stood before the pentagram, the three were to the side, observing.

They had weapons and spells at the ready, which was understandable, but I was only summoning Jelmak, that little demon was harmless. With a snap of my fingers, the braziers lit. That was a useful trick, pure demonic power, no wizardry at all. Cheating, but I could accept it for the little things.

I began chanting the typical spell, with a few minor variations I came up with in the abyss. Since I am not a mortal summoning a demon, but a demon myself. So the spell sounded more like a demon lord commanding a vassal, than the typical binding.

“By your true name, Jelmak. I summon thee into this chamber, I command you!” Slowly a form materialised in the centre of the pentagram, a familiar form at that.

The demon Jelmak, the pint-sized little first order I summoned years ago, phased into reality. He looked the same as usual, a tiny red gargoyle-type creature. His appearance oddly enough, was not the thing that drew my attention. What was grasped in his hands gave me pause.

“That book!” I spoke aloud, scaring the little demon.

It clutched a very familiar leather-bound book in its arms. The booming voice of a demon seemed to scare the poor creature. It ducked its head down, likely expecting a good wack or perhaps a decapitation.

Realising my mistake, I trailed back on myself, regaining my calm. “That book, is it a good read?” I asked the demon, knowing full well it was.

The book was in fact a journal, my journal. It was filled with pages upon pages of my own research. I thought it was lost when this insanity began. I quickly realised how the demon got it, thieving little bastard, I should have kept a better eye on him.

“Apologise my lord, I mean no disrespect. Please do not tear me limb from limb, I beg you for mercy!” The demon pleaded, its head lowered.

I glanced back at the three, they looked puzzled. I shrugged and turned my attention back to the demon. “You may raise your head.” I commanded, trying to keep my tone, less domineering. It was hard with this deep booming voice.

“Oh great one, thank you for your mercy.” The demon paused, its beady eyes glancing at the three others and then all around the room, finally settling on the pentagram.

“Well, I can explain this.” I quickly spoke as the demon would likely have questions.

“Great one, please forgive my impertinence, but may I ask what is happening?” Jelmak asked, timidly.

“That is a good question, good on you for the initiative. I knew selecting you as my minion was the best choice.” I play acted, taking the role of a benevolent demon lord. If there was such a thing, honestly I doubted it.

“I have summoned you for a special mission.” I explained, smiling in what I hoped was a friendly manner.

“Special mission my lord?” He asked cautiously in a very soft voice. His eyes went to the trio of humans again and he got a puzzled look.

I followed his gaze and frowned, how would I explain them? I was already going with the whole demon lord act. So revealing that I was a newbie demon bound to a wizard would not be good.

I mulled it over and eventually inspiration struck. “Yes Jelmak, me and my mortal allies are under threat from a vampire lord. We need soldiers to destroy these invaders.” I was laying on it pretty thick, but as that demon once said, go big or go home. I can’t recall which of my demons said that.

“A vampire, do you mean the unlife that drinks blood?” The little demon asked, eyes wide.

“You know of them?” I asked.

“Not me personally, never seen one. But Etragos he has seen a bunch. His accursed master used to summon him a lot to a place called Nysegard.” He explained excitedly, I on the other hand recalled the world, a place was crawling with the unlife.

“Etty used to tell stories of killing vampires, ripping them limb from limb and popping their skulls. It sounded awesome, that was until his master got killed in this big battle and poor Etty never got to kill vampires again.” Jelmak ended his tale on a sour note.

“Well then.” I interjected. “Etragos will be delighted when you tell him that he gets a chance to fight more vampires.” I informed the demon with a smile and all the demonic charisma I could muster.

“Really, oh he will be so excited.”

“Yes, so I need you to tell your companions that there demon lord will be summoning them to wage glorious war upon the undead.” I thrust my fist in the air, really getting into the groove. The little demon started jumping for joy.

I could only imagine what the trio was thinking. I hadn’t informed them of my improvisation and their new position as supposed allies to a demon lord. But demons were known to lie, perhaps I could use that to my advantage. I grinned evilly, thinking about the events to come.


Offline William Gerard Graves  
#18 Posted : Monday, July 8, 2024 11:26:26 PM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

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Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

Chapter 17: Asmin
"Okay I can explain." I turned to the trio right after I sent Jelmak to the Abyss.

"We are your allies? Oh mighty demon lord." Ephemia asked, cheekily.

"Yeah, I kind of realised that me being a bound demon may hurt the morale of the troops. So that whole song and dance just came to me. Will you be playing along?" I asked, not expecting them to do so. 

If not, well I can just shift to another set of lies. Perhaps they betrayed me and bound me. But that does not seem wise, the best lies are sort of the truth. Wait a second, I stopped in mid-thought. When did I start becoming comfortable crafting a web of lies?

"I will have to think about that. But as long as you can keep them in line and on target. I do not care how you manage them." She said, quite reasonably. "That being said, how will you explain the binding link between us? It is clearly a one way link that anyone with wizard sight or whatever demons do, will be able to identify." She added, completely toppling my tower of lies.

"Shit." That is all I could say.

"I suppose I will leave that to you. But for now, we have other matters to attend to. I command you by your true name, Asmin. You will not leave this room, nor seek to harm any of my people therein." She commanded and I felt the compulsion wash over me.

"Continue to summon your demons, I will inspect them later." With those words she left the room, the pair trailing close behind. 

What replaced them was a young man in wizardly robes. He set out a chair and stared impassively at me. He looked bored and not at all terrified. He was of average height, probably five and a half feet tall, with sandy brown hair, clean shaved and dull green eyes.

He was clearly a wizard based on the robes and his aura. I was not sure what school he studied, but based on the spell components at his waist, I would guess he was a thaumaturge. It's odd that a wizard of that profession would be so calm in the presence of a demon.

"And you are?" I asked, puzzled.

"Gerald." He answered simply, with no intention to elaborate.

"You are a thaumaturge?"

"Yeah, what's it to you?" The wizard replied, a very odd fellow.

"Just an observation, may I ask why you are so calm in the presence of a major demon?" I prodded before sitting down on a nearby chair. I sprang up instantly as my wings did not like that.

The thaumaturge chuckled, finding my reaction apparently humorous. "What's so funny?" I said, sourly.

"Did you forget you had wings demon?"

"Maybe." I grumbled. "Do you remember you have hands?" I questioned, a little annoyed.

"Valid point." He replied, a man of few words I guessed.

This wizard was weird, man of few words aside, he was chatting with a demon and I couldn't smell a trace of fear. Wait a second, I can smell fear. When could I do that, I only just noticed these odd scents and for some reason, they smelled like an emotion.

I shook my head, I needed to get back on track. "Why are you so calm?" I asked and he gave me a puzzled look, so I elaborated. "I mean I understand why your mistress was calm, being a conjurer does that. But you seem quite at ease being around a demon."

He shrugged, turning to his belt bag and withdrawing a pouch. It was small, leather-bound and tied with a string. He loosened the opening and poured out a minuscule amount of powder onto his hand. Leaning over he proceeded to snort it, making wild motions before settling into a jittery focus.

"In answer to your question." The wired thaumaturge began. "You are not the first demon I have met, in fact I have seen several major demons. The masters used to flaunt them like trophies." He put his pouch away and I got a good look at his bloodshot eyes.

I wondered what was in that pouch, but his other statement caught my attention. "What masters?" I asked, puzzled.

"The conjury masters from Towmond." He answered like it would explain everything.

"Who are they?"

"Oh yeah, your not a local." He stated the obvious. "Towmond is the preemeninte school of Wizardry in the Duchy. The masters I spoke of were the conjury masters, they loved to haul out their major demons. Pompous snobs the lot of them." He spat those words like they were poison.

"I would assume you were a student?"

"You would assume correct, demon." He confirmed, mockingly.

I liked this guy, as odd as he was. Clearly, he was a drug user, but I'm a demon so I can't judge. Moving towards him, I noticed he didn't flinch at my approach. I wondered if he had some countermeasure or was just certain his mistress command was absolute.

The wizard had nothing to fear, I had no interest in harming him. I had a different thing in mind. I sat against the table, leaning back, and resumed our conversation.

"So how did you end up in her service?" I asked.

He shrugged, a gesture he will likely repeat as we converse. "Not much of a tale, we attended Towmond. She was a nobles daughter that went into conjury and was heralded as a prodigy. I myself was just a mediocre thaumaturge that her most high took pity on and hired m."

"She hired you as what? Castle wizard or something." I suggested, not entirely certain about the relationship.

"Nope, she had this crazy idea of establishing her own school and it was probably in her reach since she was a noble. Peasents like us don't get that privilege."

"Yes, that is generally the lot in life for peasents." I felt for the man, I myself saw first-hand the unfairness of the aristocracy. But magic was always the great equaliser.

"Indeed." He nodded.

"By the way, what can you tell me about this upcoming siege? Who is the enemy?" I inquired, trying to dig up information.

"That's surprising." He exclaimed, one eyebrow raised. "Generally demons don't really care about the details, just who they can kill."

"I am not so unsophisticated, I at least want the lay of the land before I start setting it on fire." I chuckled, it was true since I'm not the sort to start flinging spells for no reason.

He nodded, accepting my point, withdrawing his pouch and snorting another line. "Well how I heard it, the besieging army is a bunch of sellswords and vampires. Hired by our mistresses dear brother, the current baron, after the two had some sort of spat after there father died."

"Her own brother sent a paid army to beseige his sister?" I said, incredulous.

"Yeah I know, some family huh." He leaned back on his chair relaxing.

"Must have been big a disagreement to warrant such a reaction."

"Oh yeah it was." He leaned forward, hunched over to speak conspiratorially. "The way I heard it, he tried to marry her off to some far off pampered lord." 

"That's it, I'm assuming she objected, but that seems hardly grounds for a civil war." I was stunned, that seemed like such a slight reason for bloodshed.

"There nobles, I'm not sure if you have any of those in the abyss. But they tend to make there personal problems, everyone else's." The Wizard made a valid point.

Even back home the nobles were no better. But they generally went to war for larger reasons, at least that is what they usually told the public.

"Yeah but there is more to it. You see the mistress and her dearly departed dad, had a pact."

"A pact?" I asked.

"Yeah some kind of deal, not sure of the specifics. But apparently if she succeeded in becoming a master wizard, she would be absolved from any family obligations, including arranged marriages." He snorted another line before continuing. "And as a bonus she got this castle out of the deal and decided to start her own wizard school. Wildholds School of Wizardry, named after the castle I think." 

"So what went wrong?" I questioned, fully engrossed.

"Dear old dad dropped dead and big brother declared the prior pact null and void. Ordering baby sister to return to the palace and hand over her castle and land to that vampire lackey of his." He chuckled, shaking his head at the ridiculousness of the situation.

"What an asshole." I spat angrily.

"You can say that twice, everything I heard about him. Asshole seems an apt description." He nodded, agreeing with my outburst.

I shook my head, trying to absorb this crazy story. If it was true, I would love to throw a fireball at him. This situation was crazy, but it felt a little better to know I wasn't alone in this crazy world.

"Crazy world we live in. But that being said, how come you are so relaxed around me? It cant be just because you have seen demons from afar." I questioned, genuinely curious.

"As I said, been around demons too much to be scared. Besides your not that bad of a conversationalist, for a demon." He complimented.

"Really, arent you worried I'm full of lies and deceit, ready to corrupt you with my demon ways." I joked.

He looked down at his pouch of drugs, snorted and clapped his hands. "You sound like those religious freaks from Eton." He mentioned a place I didn't recognise. "You can't corrupt me, I'm already on that slippery slope of immorality. Besides everybody lies, once you realise that. Demons aren't much different then our sorry excuse of a race."

I didn't wholly agree, but he wasn't wrong, humans can be duplicitous, untrustworthy and downright evil at times. But that can't be all we are, surely we aren't pure evil like demons?

I quickly realised I was a demon and if my hypothesis was proven true, then the whole demon being pure evil, would be called into serious question.
Offline William Gerard Graves  
#19 Posted : Wednesday, July 10, 2024 1:23:54 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

Groups: Registered, Registered Users, Subscribers
Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

Chapter 18: Jelmak
“Unholy Abyss, a special mission from our new demon lord!” I said excitedly.

I had just been sent back and found myself where I was first summoned. The Ripe Maiden Suprise, I was only gone for a short time, but it was enough for my friends to disperse. Bunch of drunks, but they were celebrating so I couldn’t judge.

They were pretty drunk the last I saw them. Celebrating the death of an accursed master would do that. I wasn’t really celebrating, our old master wasn’t that bad. He would always let me stick around and run errands for him.

I will admit, he tended to be a bit lax with his commands and there were several times I could have exploited a loophole.

Instead, I chose to do the work and make myself useful. A lot of demons hated wizards and I couldn’t blame them. I on the other hand rarely got tortured, simply because there was very little need to. I generally was happy to follow orders.

With a new master and this one a powerful demon lord, I was overjoyed at the idea. Excitedly I scanned the bar, noting a few patrons I recalled from before. Looks like they still had enough tokens for the Denubian Choco-Coffee TM.

The tokens the courts used had a crappy exchange rate, only procuring stuff from the planes of men was lucrative. Perhaps our new master would let me have some spoils of war. I could only dream.

“Etragos.” I called out to my friend.

I couldn’t see him at first glance, too many passed-out demons scattered around the room. I figured he could be one of them so went to inspect the lot. They were all in a sorry state.

They were mostly fiends of all sizes and shapes. We all had odd appearances, fiends being the oddest, multiple limbs, green splotchy skin and sometimes insect-like wings.

Well, it made my friends easier to identify. You couldn’t pick me out of a crowd of imps, we look too alike. Perhaps I should get something to make me stand out, like a hat or a bow tie.

That was a ridiculous idea, how would clothes hold up in the abyss and it was not like I could shapeshift clothes. Only the higher orders could do that.

Eventually, I found Etragos, passed out against a side wall, clutching an empty mug. No sign of the others, did they head off on another bar crawl? By Lilith did I screw up, have they already been summoned by the master?

I shook my head, no that was impossible, I just arrived. They are probably nearby somewhere, if I wake Etragos he should know.

I approached the prone demon, but he didn’t stir from my approach. I knelt down and carefully poked him in the shoulder. “Etty wake up.” I prodded, to no effect.

Undeterred I continued, poking, pinching and shaking. The only result was a few mumbles and a reference to buying him dinner first. Not sure what that meant, but Etty was an old fiend. I was barely a century, he has lived, what eight hundred abyssal years.

I sat down next to him, pondering my next move. I glanced at the bar, getting an idea. Our tab was already run up pretty high, might as well add. Hopefully, our new master will pay us, but I doubted it. At least we could hide out on the material planes for a while.

Purchasing the hot beverage, I passed it across Etty’s nose, he woke immediately and reached out for the Denubian Choco-Coffee TM.

“Thanks Jelly, my tab was too high to continue the bender.” He called me by my nickname. Only fair since we did the same.

Rising from his prone position he carefully drank while clutching his head with his free claw. “Ugh, I think we went to hard. But the best way to deal with a hangover is. To keep drinking.” We both finished in unison. “Exactly my dear student.” He added happily.

“Etty I have big news.” I said excitedly.

“What news?” He asked in between sips.

“I just returned from a summons by our new demon lord.” He spat his drink, such a waste.

“You were summoned? When? How?” He listed off questions.

“Just moments ago, he sent me back with a special mission, to inform the others that he will be summoning us soon.”

“Summoning us soon, that is pretty quick.” He said, puzzled.

“Yes, he was in this castle that is about to be attacked by vampires.” I excitedly recounted the event.

“Vampires, I haven’t killed them in a while. He wouldn’t happen to be on Nysegard would he?”

I thought back to the summoning and saw no indication that the world was Nysegard. But then again I don’t know much about the material planes.

“I don’t know if it was Nysegard, we were in some sort of dungeon.” The moment I said that Etty got an odd look.

He smiled mischievously, leering at me. The look made me feel very uncomfortable.

“Dungeon huh, he didn’t do weird stuff to you. Remember don’t take the candy and avoid basements.” He warned, but the cheeky grin made me think he was not serious.

“Etty our new lord will summon us soon. I need to find the others.” I pleaded, very short on time at least I think I was.

“Relax, we will just wake them up and explain the situation.” He looked around probably expecting to find them. Confusion was the first expression to arrive. “Were are they?” He asked rhetorically.

“That’s what I was trying to tell you. They aren’t here!” I said, my nerves on edge.

“By lilith were did they go?” He directed his question to the bartender, who shrugged. “They must have left to continue the bender. Let’s go find them.” He tried standing and fell almost immediately. “Maybe after I rest a bit.”

I sighed, the master will not like his demons being a bunch of hungover miscreants. I knew we should have stopped drinking the moment we found that link. Now the master will summon drunk demons who will have no clue what is going on.

This new job is going to suck if I can’t whip these idiots into shape. Less our new master decides some other form of pain infliction is necessary. I gulped, the idea scaring the horns off me.

“We need to find them!” I pleaded, worried to a high abyss about what may happen.

“Calm down its going to be fine Jelly.” He tried to reassure as he finally stood up, albeit shakily.

“How will it be alright if the new master summons passed out demons. Do you think he will be gracious, understanding and merciful?” We both shook our heads in the negative, that was very unlikely.

Demon lords were not known for being any of those things. Working in a demon army was only slightly worse than being a demon slave to a wizard.

At least your accursed master couldn’t torture you for eternity, they generally didn’t live long. Demon lords could not only drop you in a dungeon for centuries on end but could destroy you permanently.

I gulped at that idea, trying to think up any strategy that could ensure our continued pain-free life. But to be honest I rather doubted it.


Offline William Gerard Graves  
#20 Posted : Thursday, July 11, 2024 12:32:35 AM(UTC)
William Gerard Graves

Rank: Fiend

Groups: Registered, Registered Users, Subscribers
Joined: 5/23/2024(UTC)
Posts: 104

Chapter 19: Astragoth
“Were in the abyss are we?” I questioned Kal, slurring my words.

We had just left the Ripe Maiden Surprise and were walking down the seedy alleyways of the courts. We passed by all manner of debauchery, grime and muck. A typical night for demons reminded me of the streets of New York. Drenched in piss and populated by very rude people.

It was the one thing about this crazy life that reminded me of home. I wondered for a split second about my family, it was a lapse to be sure. My parents barely acknowledged my existence and my siblings escaped their insanity the moment they came of age.

My death at a drug-fueled rave probably didn’t even make the papers. Honestly, I doubt they even bothered to check if was still alive.

“Come on Astra, where is your sense of adventure?” Kal theatrically spoke, waving his hands in the air like he just didn’t care.

“Don’t call me that Kal, it’s Astragoth, sounds way more demony than my first name. Astra sounds like a hippies name.” I complained, thinking back to my cult-worshipping hippie parents and their terrible naming skills.

“Noone cares in the courts, we all have weird names here. Most of us came from weird places and now were weird demons.” He tried to reassure me, but still, I hated that name with a passion.

Try high school with a name like that and see how you feel all the way to adulthood. Oh yeah, you become a drug-using, Rockstar wannabe. I thought back to my gigs with my sorry excuse for a band. Those guys will be the ones I miss most.

Now I am a demon, so I suppose it’s a step up from a failed musician. It was better, minus the slavery. But our accursed master got himself smoked and now we are free until the next bozo captures us.

“Were are we going?” Kal slurred his words, he was quite drunk.

I on the other hand could walk straight. Being not completely drunk like mister can't hold his liquor. I chuckled, his attempt at walking was most humorous. Besides that, he was right, since I had no clue where we were or where we were going.

“No clue my friend, but I suppose we can just pick a bar at random.” I gestured to the many places of ill repute surrounding us.

What caught my eye was a figure being tossed, unceremoniously out the door. He flew with impressive speed, out of the doorway and into the street. Despite the rough handling, he got back up and made a two-finger sign before howling expletives.

“Can’t a bloke celebrate these days. It is not just you throw me out. I demand satisfaction, pistols at dawn!” The demon spat, yet the subtle trace of humour meant he likely didn’t mean it.

The other demon, likely a bouncer just shut the door without a response. The demon looked familiar and finally, his identity struck me like lightning. “Bogsworth!?” I announced rather loudly, Kal visibly winced from the volume.

Bogsworth turned a curious gaze to us, his eyes narrowed to slits before widening in joy. “Astra, Kal, my dear chaps. You two are sight for sore eyes.” Boggy greeted us happily as we approached.

Kal just strode up and embraced the demon, much to Boggy’s confusion. “I heard you offed your accursed master. I am so happy for you.” Kal sputtered, getting oddly emotional.

He was an odd drunk and tended to shift between a variety of temperaments. Sometimes he was an angry drunk, a happy drunk and then suddenly a sentimental sad drunk.

“It is good to see you to Kal and yes I am celebrating this momentous occasion. Unfortunately some establishments do not know a gentlemen drinker if he punched them in the face.” He said while prying Kal off with a metaphorical crowbar. “Say I am going to find another fine establishment to continue my celebration. Would you two fine gentlemen wish to accompany me?” He requested, smiling.

“That would be great, we are celebrating as well. Our accursed master got himself killed, somehow.” I explained, matching his enthusiasm.

“Well isn’t that a coincidence, two dead accursed masters? Too bad you didn’t get to do it yourself. But we will have to drink to it anyway.” He gestured for us to follow and being two drunk demons, we did.

Boggy brought us to a new drinking establishment and bought us a round. We sat on stools, swapping tales, particularly the tale of how he offed his accursed master.

“Then after I chopped him up, I cooked him into a nice meal. Too bad my dinner guest couldn’t fully appreciate fine cuisine. But he did finish his plate, got to give the lad some credit.” Boggy finished explaining the gruesome tale of his accursed master's death.

Demonic justice at its finest, it was truly too bad I was not able to exact my vengeance upon our accursed master. I truly wonder what happened to that asshole. Hopefully, that new demon lord tortured the crap out of him before sending him to the afterlife. Assuming there was an afterlife for wizards.

A thought occurred and looking back at my time as a demon. It had only been a few years since becoming one. Now I was calling one of the most gruesome acts of revenge, demonic justice. Times are changing for me, guess it happens to all demons.

“Sorry lads, I have been going on and on about my own revenge. How did you gentlemen attain your freedom again?” Boggy asked, puzzled as if he was trying to recall a memory in between downing one spirit after the other.

“To be honest boggy, we have no clue how he bit the dust. Our link just broke and we assumed he got himself killed.” I shrugged, it was not as exciting as his tale of triumph.

“Got himself killed? Well let us toast to whatever did him in.” We all raised our mugs and toasted to the death of all wizards.

Just as the booze touched my lips, I was shoved hard. The beverage tipped forward and spilled all over the table. “What in the abyss!” I spat angrily and turned around.

What hit me was a rather tall demon sitting at the table behind us. It looked like he had elbowed me by accident. Given the size of the demon, he was probably second maybe third order. Similar in form to us, four arms, greyish green skin, with bat-like wings. He was accompanied by a few similar second orders, each of them sloshed to the nines.

“My word sir, I think you should apologise to my man here.” Bogsworth got up from his seat and demanded.

Kal just snickered in his seat and I was signalling Boggy to stand down. The demon turned around, made a rude gesture and went back to his drinking.

“Where are your manners, apologise to my man here. Or I shall demand satisfaction.” And there he went, this would not end well.

The demon and his cronies stopped drinking and all three of them ascended. Their leader the largest of the group glared down at Bogsworth. “Or what?” The demon replied, showing a toothy grin.

“It’s fine Boggy, it was just an accident.” I tried to placate, which was a bad idea as the demon turned to me.

“Yeah just an accident, I didn’t see your little bitch.” He declared, smirking at Bogsworth with a shit-eating grin.

That was uncalled for and as I was about to reply, Boggy backhanded him across the face. That was when all hell broke loose. The demon replied and backhanded Bogsworth across the room. Before I could even do anything, Kal came in with a haymaker and decked the demon.

His buddies all rushed us at once and I ran in the opposite direction like the coward I was. Kal on the other hand, leapt into the fray, throwing wild punches at every body part. He was sent flying soon after and smashed into the bar countertop.

I was alone with several angry demons eager to rush me. Before they could pulverise me. Boggy showed up behind them with a chair and started bashing them over the head. Right there and then, I decided it was time to rumble, whether I liked it or not.

Picking up a chair, I swung wildly and missed completely. The second-order crony, instead of disarming me, removed my arm. Grabbing it by the socket, he yanked the limb out and bashed me in the head with it. The pain was horrible and I just saw red.

What followed was a blur, I believe I stabbed a demon in the eye with a chair leg. I saw Kal throw a demon through the window and Bogsworth got his ear ripped off by the big demon.

Eventually, the bouncer threw the lot of us out and onto the street. We ran in the opposite direction from some very angry demons. It took a while but we escaped them, hiding behind some dumpsters.

“Boggy you are crazy.” I said, unable to keep a grin off my face.

“We are just getting started chaps. Once my ear grows back and we reattach your arm.” He gestured to the arm I had clutched to my chest. “We can continue our celebration!” With that, he turned towards the alleyway exit and started towards the next bar.

I could partially see the outline of the door to the Ripe Maiden Surprise. We had come full circle, it funny how that ended up. I turned to Kal, wanting his help putting my arm back on and found he was gone.

Puzzled, I had no clue when he had vanished, and neither did Boggy who was almost at the door. Before I could call out, I felt the world start to fade, an unfamiliar voice called out to me.


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