The Cure
The golden disk of the sun crawled with painstaking slowness over the distant line of the horizon. Thanks to the strategic placements of window, bed, and pillow, it shone directly into Alambur’s eyes, promptly dragging him up from the blissful depths of sleep and into the waking world. As he rose to a sitting position, the temple’s resident rooster screamed in terror at the sun’s sudden and unexpected appearance and hid behind the outhouse. (Picture 1)
He rubbed his red-rimmed eyes with spindly, yellow hands, and swung himself out of the bed. After a few shaky steps, he gained his balance, and disappeared behind a dressing screen.
A few minutes later, clad in his blue and gold robes, the former Taskmage Lieutenant Alambur Saracalegus of the Resplendent Flame walked out of the room, leaning on a staff of black ebon shod with silver and carved with eldritch runes.
With his other hand, Alambur took support of the wall. All the walls in the temple were light blue, and were inlaid in a two-foot grid with the holy symbols of Hereloke, the god of physicians.
The clergy of Hereloke was a cold, detached lot, more warriors against disease and illness than actual healers. Still, Alambur preferred their care to that of those who venerated the various healing goddesses. The latter tended to be annoyingly friendly, pacifistic and dutifully considerate. A Herelokian, on the other hand, wasn’t afraid to tell you to your face that you had the mental faculties of a diseased turnip, or to give you a good beating should you deserve it. Alambur respected that.
The wizard walked through the receiving room at the temple entrance, dropping a small bag of coin on the desk without slowing down. The Herelokians had been unable to help with his ailment, but that was nothing new. Since his had been afflicted with the magical illness a year ago, among the parching sands of the Anvil of Kerak, he had aged over two decades. His research on the foul curse laid by the snake priests had been for naught, as had every cure, potion and healer he had sought out. Twice he had managed a Subei tribal ritual to steal the strength and vitality of a slain enemy, but the key part was defeating a foe in honourable single combat, which soon became impossible as the disease progressed.
After all the medicine and magic available to him had failed, he sought out those not available. From the blind diviners of the Silver Peaks to the weird Oracles of the Four Winds he had travelled, journeying three continents and five seas in his quest and expending a great deal of magic to hasten his progress.
Finally, he had come here, to an old friend, in Zalwyn.
At the temple gates, Alambur called into being a small horse, and rode it towards the sun. It had not yet reached its zenith when he saw his destination.
Rising abruptly from the flat grasslands of Zalwyn, there is a large cluster of buildings. The cluster is not as large as a city, yet the buildings themselves would conduct themselves well as any kingdom’s seats of power.
They were over a dozen of the great, imposing palaces. They were monolithic in their construction, all fashioned of a grey rock Alambur knew to be as hard as adamantine. The proximity of the place set his magically attuned senses abuzz.
Alambur had been here before, a long time ago. He did not come to the Colleges of Spellcraft lightly, for the journey was long, and his induction into the circles arcane had been in the old way, as an apprentice to an archwizard.
The mage rode, exhausted, to the cluster of buildings. They were encircled by no visible fence or wall, nor guarded by anything corporeal, yet had he not been recognised as an ally and a fellow wizard, he would have been slain a mile from the spot. No people wandered the courtyards or traversed the paved network of pathways that networked the schools. A man not acquainted with the ways of the Colleges of Spellcraft would have assumed the place abandoned.
From the shadow of what Alambur knew to be the Most Beguiling College of Enchanters and Charmcrafters emerged a young man clad in plain, functional leathers.
“Shall I take care of your horse, sir?” the young wizard asked.
“The horse takes care of itself, pupil, but you may send word to the Archwizard Crimban,” Alambur said as he dismounted the horse that dissolved into mist and blew away. “Tell him that the Resplendent Flame has arrived.”
* * *
“Hail, Alambur!” the portly, grey-clad wizard exclaimed as Alambur stepped into the foyer of the College of Puissant Summoners and Conjurers. Though the colleges were all of grey rock on the outside, what lay within varied from school to wondrous school. The conjurers’ entry hall was resplendent in blue-veined marble and polished gold.
“Hail, Crimban,” Alambur answered, smiling.
“You look like crap,” Crimban said.
“It is why I came here. You have arranged what I requested in my sendings?”
“Yes, follow me,” Crimban said, turning around. “It was not easy to get access to it. The diviners are fairly jealous of what they’ve got. They’re renting the dungeons from the conjurers, though, since their own can’t handle the damn thing. I called in a favour with High Corpsecaller Kelgore to arrange this,” Crimban explained, as he led them down a corridor and to a heavy door of adamantine, set with iron hinges and a lock of silver into a doorframe of byeshk. Crimban glanced at Alambur and continued: “He must really like you. I didn’t think he’d do it,” and pushed the door open.
Beyond, there was a deep, black corridor that sloped and curved into the earth. Before entering, Crimban produced a sunrod from his voluminous robes and struck it on a wall, bringing forth a bright, steady light.
They stepped through, and shut the door behind them. As the sunrod’s alchemically produced illumination played over the dark, stones, carved with an unbroken network of runes Alambur felt a leaden weighs settle on his brain. The runes deadened all magic in the passageway. It was but one of the safety precautions taken by the wizards when constructing the vast network of caverns that they occasionally had need of in their otherworldly workings.
“There is a group of alchemists and artificers down there already. They have been whining to get access to the creature for a long time, and now that we’re breaching the seals, they figured that they might just as well get their business done at the same time.”
The mages hustled down the passageway for half an hour, stopping occasionally that Alambur could rest his feeble legs, and every now and then passing strong vault doors made of rare materials and sealed with runes and spells. Here lay imprisoned a score of Dukes of Hell, an archdemon of pain and hatred, a fallen hound archon, a white slaad, and, some said, even a nameless demigod.
Finally, they stopped to a door of black adamantine. The lock was open, and Crimban merely had to pull it open.
The chamber they entered was large. The ceiling, from which hundreds of chains, strange tubes and ropes hung, disappeared into the shadows above. The walls were lined with strange apparatuses, where sparks jumped between copper wands, and gauges monitored the pressure in great containers of viscous, greenish fluid that bubbled occasionally.
They were greeted by a man in heavy work robes, his face obscured by a breathing mask and goggles. In his hand he carried a long, two-pronged spear.
“We have been expecting you. I am the Artificer Vyach,” he spoke curtly, his voice distorted and robbed of any tone or colour by the mask. “You will need to conclude your business with the Gzemnidai first. It will not be able to answer any questions for some time once we have had our way with it.”
“This suits me fine. Where is it?”
“They are just bringing it in,” the man – if it was a man – replied, gesturing with a hand hidden by a heavy work glove at the far wall.
A door of metal slightly less bulky than the previous one was pushed open, and two alchemists scurried in, kicking aside tubes and pipes that littered the floor. Then, the other shouted back into the doorway:
“Clear! Bring it in!”
From the doorway emerged first two men, pulling heavy chains behind them. The chain were attached to a metal rig on the floor, moving on oiled rails and itself trailing even heavier chains that trailed, taut, into the doorway. The robed men pulled the rig to a spot in the floor that was marked by deep depressions next to the rails, and then pulled down long levers on the rig, locking it firmly in place.
Then, the creature was brought in. It was chained to the rigs on the floor, yet it floated a good two feet above the oily stones. Its bulbous body, nearly fifteen feet across, was held in check by the two-pronged spears stuck in it by four alchemists in similar heavy-duty work robes.
Though Alambur knew the creature’s true nature, it took him a moment to recognise it for what it was. Its eyestalks had been pinned down against its body and fitted with metal covers. A metallic cage enveloped its entire body, keeping it weighed down. What little of its carapace and flesh could be seen was in poor condition, mottled with age and covered in pus. It reeked of a carcass three weeks dead, a sickly odour that mixed with the iron and oil of the chamber and nearly made the wizards retch.
A second chain rig was pushed in and locked into place, anchoring the monster low above the floor with little room to move. The spearmen drew back, but kept their weapons trained on the monster.
The Artificer Vyach gestured Alambur forward, indicating he could now ask his questions. The creature had been brought in back first, and the wizard had to circle around it to see its face.
Drool dribbled from a metal grate locked in front of its wide mouth that Alambur knew to be filled with long, razor-sharp teeth. Above the grate was the creature’s single eye. The bars of the cage kept its eyelids open. A copper slab, charged with a low current, extended from the cage to the eye obscured the creature’s pupil and locked it in place. It was slick with fluid. (Picture 2)
“What do you want of my perfection, inferior worm?” the creature demanded, spittle spraying from the grate.
“I seek information, Gzemnidi. Answer my questions without duplicity, lest we resort to force. I know it was you that broke the Imperial Host of the Gaelyn on the sands of Kerak. You were long the ally of the snake cults of the desert, and you know their fell rituals and curses. This I request – tell me how I may break the Sevenfold Curse of the Drought of Flesh?”
“The curse ends when your body rots. There is no cure, worm.”
“He is lying,” one of the alchemists stated flatly, examining a steel wand with a soft, red glow.
In response, two of the men with spears stepped forth and jabbed their blades into the Gzemnidi’s diseased flesh. It let out an inhuman scream of rage that quickly turned to pain when bright arcs of lightning raced up the spears’ iron shafts and struck the beast. The stench of burning flesh spread into the room, and the spears were withdrawn.
“I shall have your entrails to feats on, pitiful maggots and cattle creatures! You dare lay hand on the favoured servant of the Gas Giant! An endless
diohurr on you! I –“ it was cut off as the alchemists moved forth again, delivering a second, longer jolt.
Smoke rose from the panting Gzemnidi when they withdrew, and it was quiet for a long time.
“Very well, food. To break the curse, taste of the vampiric fruit. Its location I know not. Begone, now.”
Alambur nodded, and stepped back.
“I have what I require. You may attend to your business, Artificer Vyach. I thank for your assistance.”
The robed figure nodded.
“You may stay to watch and learn, if you wish,” the artificer said.
“Very well. What is it that you seek with the Gzemnidi?” Alambur asked, as a lower-ranking apprentice drew forth a great syringe of iron and glass.
“We will extract its vitreous fluid. It is a most potent reagent, especially from such a powerful and aged specimen.”
The Gzemnidi was forced low and immobilised by the spearmen with carefully moderated jolts of lightning, and a fifth man then slowly pushed the needle inside the creature’s central eye, withdrawing a full pint of pale, milky liquid from the enormous ocular.
“Interesting,” Alambur said.
* * *
As Alambur and Crimban walked up the dark passage some minutes later, the portly mage spoke:
“The Gzeminidi was being rather obtuse. Are you sure you know what it is that you now seek?”
“Yes, quite sure. The fruit it spoke of is the apple of the Gulthias Tree, that grew from a green stake stuck into the heart of a powerful vampire, deep in the heart of a fortress sunk into the earth centuries ago. I also know that the Tree was uprooted and planted again in a different place.”
“Where, and by whom, if I may be so bold as to inquire?”
“In the Spawnscale Castle, by none other than the Dragonlord himself.” Alambur paused to catch his breath. “It’s a good thing he owes me a favour.”
* * *
A week had passed since his encounter with the Gzemnidi, as the noonday sun found Alambur on a different continent.
He had tied himself firmly to the mule’s back to prevent falling off on the narrow mountain trails. Though he had an enspelled orichalcum ring that kept the biting chill from affecting him, the thin air of the high peaks he could not counter, and he kept physical exertion to a minimum, controlling the animal by the power of a spell of telepathy.
Slumped on the back of the animal, he glanced forward and up. Though the sun reflecting off the ice-capped peaks stung his eyes, he could already see the high gates of his destination looming above him.
A pair of short, reptilian guardsmen approached. Their hide was reddish-brown, flecked with metallic overtones. One of them addressed him in the ancient speech of dragons.
“Is the warmblood lost? What does he wish with the Dragonlord’s nests?”
“I am Alambur of the Resplendent Flame,” the wizard wheezed out, weakly. “Tell your lord and master that I am come.” The language of dragons was also the language of magic, and rare indeed was the civilised mage who was not fluent in it.
The other guard left, while the other stayed to keep an eye on him. Minutes passed, and he was admitted into the fortress. His mule, this time an animal of real flesh and blood, was taken to the stables by another short lizard man, this one clad in heavy furs. Alambur guessed the gatekeepers had a touch of the silver dragon in them, letting them ignore cold, but obviously, not all the reptilians in the castle were thus endowed.
The courtyard was wide and open, as could be expected. He was led across it, and inside the main keep, a blocky and graceless building. He could hear the sound of picks and hammers deeper in the fortress. The castle was not yet finished.
As he entered the keep, Alambur noticed he could suddenly breathe easier, and the sensation of coolness was gone. Spells had been laid in the rocks already, though the castle was still being built.
The keep was small, and he was soon in the main hall, where four men stood guard. Two of them were dwarves, one of them human, and the last one a short, scaled one. The room was dominated by a stony throne, with its back carved in the form of a rearing dragon. Upon the throne sat the Dragonlord.
“I greet you as an ally, Alambur, the Resplendent Flame,” the creature said, fixing him with a red-eyed stare and rising from his seat of power. His white scalemail, worn over his own red scales, clinked as he moved. “It has been years, but not so many. Humans age fast, but not that fast. Something ails you.”
“I greet you as well, respected Dragonlord,” Alambur replied. “My condition is why I am here. It is a curse that you have the means of breaking.”
“I do?” the Dragonlord asked. Alambur thought that had he been capable of reading its draconic features, he would have seen surprise.
“The Gulthias Tree and its fruit. I know you and Gorgoldand dug out the citadel and moved the tree here. Eating the apple will break my curse.”
“The fruit cures any ailment, illness, disease or poison, wizard. It is a powerful asset for me. Why should I give of it to you?” The Dragonlord laid a hand on the pommel of its short sword as it spoke.
“You owe me, Dragonlord. Were it not for me and my companions, you’d still be guarding your dress of mail as the kicking boy of the tribe, or more likely been killed by goblins or fed to your ward. Remember who it was that told you of the tree in the first place and killed the tribe of Durnn,” Alambur spoke, stepping forward and his staff striking sparks from the floor. A harsh edge appeared in his thin voice. “The Tree bears fruit every year. You are not even giving away anything irreplaceable.”
The Dragonlord fixed him with a long, inscrutable stare.
“Very well, Alambur of the Resplendent Flame. I owe you this, I admit, and afterwards, we are even. Come.”
They walked out of the hall, and down stairs, deep into the earth. The Gulthias Tree, grown of a vampire, could not survive sunlight.
“I cannot show you the way to the Tree, but we keep the apple here, when it is ripe,” the Dragonlord stated, pushing open a wooden door.
There lay the objective of his year-long quest – a perfect, green apple, held in a ceremonial cup carved of turquoise by the blind craftsmen of the Eastern Isles, set on a small altar decorated with vines and painted with the strange, angular runes of the dwarven script. Torchlight made its smooth, shiny skin seem like it was carved of gold, and no blemish or scar marked its surface.
Shrugging, Alambur stepped forward and took the apple.
It was delicious.