The blade of Kronmorr swung out fast as a viper’s-eye, parting the head of the degenerate, leering, gibbering cultist from his misshapen body, which – missing its wits but slightly – fought on blindly for some three breathes before collapsing in a sullen slump. The sound of its crude adze tumbled from its slackened grip with a clatter was loud in the room, for even after slaying two dozen drooling half-human wretches the breath of Kronmorr was unfettered by civilized man and remained steady and deep, a bellows powering an unstoppable engine.
A small gasp broke the silence: an irrepressible outburst from the extremely damsel chained to the altar. A mix of lingering fear, happy surprise, and growing awe. “You killed them all,” she whispered in a voice like candied honeysuckle. “The cult of the turtle-eater will surely seek vengeance.”
“They will fare no better,” said Kronmorr in his cold-stone voice. His blade flashed again and the chains fell apart with implausible ease, bronze cleaved like cheese by the steel he had claimed by conquest from the cambion-king’s crypt.
“Then might I accompany you for a time, my hero,” purred the damsel like a big sweaty languorous cat, stretching her freed limbs with liquid relief, “to share in your protection?”
In that moment, a peculiar thing happened: Kronmorr did not sigh.
But he did think about it.
Instead he nodded grimly, raised his steel, and hacked a path through the ghouls of the secret passage, out into the gullets of the beast-birds haunting the hidden cliffside staircase, and into the thick of the fish-gaunts gurgling at the ruins of the ancient docks, where he and the damsel boarded a small skiff and he rowed them twenty miles downriver to the relative safety of the harbours of the rancid city Faek-namm in great speed, for his muscles were unfettered by civilized man. There they found an inn and spent the night peacefully, until two in the morning where the damsel attempted to put a witch-blade between Kronmorr’s ribs.
“I was to be granted highest honour,” she hissed as she tugged fruitlessly against his grip on her blade-hand, uncaring of cuts and scratches and kicks. “I was to be the True Turtle of this year, to be enshrined and ascended unto his left claw!”
In that moment, a peculiar thing happened: Kronmorr did not shut his eyes.
But he did think about it.
Instead, he sprained her wrist, took the witch-blade, and sold it to get out of town in a hurry, only to wake and find the caravan he was in under siege by raiders. His blade swung out fast as a viper’s-eye, but after killing a mere sixteen of them single-handedly he was ensnared by nets and brought to meet their beautiful and deadly chieftess, who decreed he would either serve her or be fed to the Hoongrbees.
“What say you, slave?” she sneered at him from atop her gilded throne and her equally gilded outfit.
In that moment, a peculiar thing happened: Kronmorr did not say “I’m sick of this.”
But he did think it.
And after the Hoongrbees was slain and he’d stolen the emeralds from the throne and escaped into the dark with a new sword already stained with the watery blood of three dozen more hominids, he thought it again; and after a market-maid saw his sword and thought him a raider and he was imprisoned and sentenced to hang, he thought it again; and after he cut through the whole city guard and dispatched the corrupted and venal Bloat-Duke of Bloolubbar, he thought it again; and after he departed the burning city with a single horse carrying him, the Bloat-Duke’s beautiful daughter, and as much of the treasury as possible, he thought it again; and when he woke up and the Bloat-Duke’s beautiful daughter and the horse and the treasure were missing he said it aloud.
“I’m sick of this.”
And once he said it aloud, there was no taking it back. Not from the air, not from his mind. So he took his unhorsed feet and his already-worn-down raider sword and he strode down a path he remembered from so long ago.
It took sixteen days and nights without food and with the only water acquired from sucking on damp stones, but Kronmorr was unfettered by civilized man and so suffered these minor privations with ease. And when those sixteen days and nights were done, he stood before that place his mind ached to recall. Where the great loop of his life had begun, and where he had brought himself in return, as the fish might to its spawn
To the tower of the sorcerer.
***
It was tall, tall, tall – sixteen stories if it were an inch – and crafted from dark and dirtied brick. Metal spiderwebs clung to its skull-cap and its side; many windows jutted from its furrowed brows, and from one of them far away a distant clack, clack sounded, cold and dead. Its door lay open and unbarred, for who would dare enter the dwelling of a sorcerer without permission?
Kronmorr had no permission and asked for none, from the sorcerer, from anyone, from the world itself. The open door was no obstacle. No door would be an obstacle.
What was some difficulty was the moat.
It lay wide but shallow, a drifting reef of shattered sheets of paper, each crumpled and torn and scrawled on. They shuffled like leaves in a wind, but there was no wind, and they surrounded the tower of the sorcerer in a perfect ring with no drawbridge in sight.
Kronmorr did not take a deep breath, for as mentioned previously the breath of Kronmorr was always unflinchingly steady and deep. He prowled to the edge of the moat, sword in hand, and he dove with the perfect arc of a leaping salmon.
Instantly, he was buried, and though he did not sink as in water the paper nevertheless sought to draw him down. The leaves were cold and smeared with a foul blackened ink that sought to cling to skin, but Kronmorr’s hide was unfettered by civilized man and the gnawing toxic teeth of the sorcerer’s-brew found no purchase against his leathered back. The leaves were sharp at the edges and sliced and chewed at his limbs, but Kronmorr’s sinew and muscles were unfettered by civilized man and no matter how shallow and cruelly long the carving of his skin, his strokes did not falter. The leaves were endless and vision failed, but Kronmorr’s will was unfettered by civilized man and he did not slow, did not despair, did not halt, did not think. He only acted, and it may have taken ten minutes or a thousand for him to reach the other side and it did not matter which, only that he did.
He stood there for an instant at the threshold. Listening.
It was not silent. Whatever awaited him did not fear him. Life stirred within the tower of the sorcerer.
So be it. Kronmorr did not fear life either. And so, loins not even bothered to be girded, he plunged into the dim light. Down flickering halls trod the feet of Kronmorr; past endless rows of doors and murmuring voices of madness. Two staircases confronted him: one deep and dark and smelling of dungeon and rot; the other high and rickety and with steps half-broken-loose to show clear (dim, damp) air underfoot.
Kronmorr ascended. He remembered this. He remembered the squeaky floorboards on the landings, and sprang lithely over them to avoid alerting the rats. He remembered the Forbidden Third Floor and simply climbed over the bannister and leapt past it. He remembered the missing step on the sixth floor; the missing two steps on the eighth floor; the staircase ending suddenly at the tenth floor and the subsequent hunt for the new staircase, and then the eleventh floor was before him and Kronmorr knew he was almost there. He recognized the sickly bile-green of the carpeting that clung, lichenlike, to the bare soles of his feet. He recognized the lack of light; the enshrouded and dust-coated window at the end of the hallway. He recognized the door at the end of the hall.
What he didn’t recognize was the guard-beast that lurked there. It was ten feet tall and had six heads and each head had two mouths and each mouth had three forked tongues and every head was pressed against the door Kronmorr sought, whispering profane insinuations. This permitted him to remove the first two heads with very little trouble.
The beast sprang up with a roar and a tumult, but a roar is not a bite and thus Kronmorr claimed two more heads. The last were the canniest and many a blow was struck, but in the end the thing was slowed by pain and shock and self-doubt while Kronmorr was unfettered by civilized man, and so the shape of the end was itself unsurprising.
The door was wooden and warped; its principal resistance coming as much from its water-swollen frame as its lock, which Kronmorr removed with a careless nudge of his foot. He
forced his way through, into the sanctum of the building. A powerful reek of old milk and laundry assailed his keen senses, but he cared not for such things. For in the center of the room lay the forge of the sorcerer.
***
It was black, cold black, and of a metal alien to him, turned in hard square shapes and with gaping maw. From that maw jutted a hundred little insect-like arms in array, and each arm brandished a tiny plate emblazoned with a foul arcane sigil, and as each was depressed and released they barked out a sharp, brutal CLACK, CLACK, CLACK-CLICKETY-CLACK. Atop its skull roiled a sheaf of paper, scarred and torn by runes and scrawlings.
Behind the forge sat the sorcerer. He was short and balding and wore metal frames with glass in them over his eyes, perched against his nose. He was totally unarmed and hadn’t bothered to look up.
“Sorcerer,” said Kronmorr, his bare sword jutting forth like the accusatory finger of a lesser man, “it is time for us to exchange words.”
“Can’t,” said the sorcerer shortly. His voice was raspy with a tinge of mucus to it; unused, unpleasant. “Got a deadline.”
“So do I. It stretches the breadth of this blade’s edge and you will meet it if you should choose to ignore me one second longer.”
The sorcerer chuckled at that, but it was as absent as his gaze. His mind was elsewhere. “Listen, Kronmorr, whatever you want, I promise I don’t have time for it.”
“You will make time, or you will die. I wish to be free.”
“Free from what?”
“This… curse. This THING you’ve done to me. I cannot lose a fight, unless it is to render me captive and thereby bring me to a more exciting fight, which I cannot lose. I cannot find affection, only the insinuation of it that ends in inevitable betrayal. I cannot greet an old friend without them turning on me or perishing. I cannot have a moment’s rest, but that it will pass in a blur and I find myself once again on some mad quest.” The words spilled out of him like a hole had been carved into his trachea. “It extends to even the most base facts of my being. I cannot walk – I stride, or prowl, or charge. I cannot eat, only feast or gnaw. I cannot sleep – I wake with catlike reflex. I cannot enjoy a single thing; only stare with granite eyes and a grim set to my jaw. I do not have a LIFE, sorcerer, only an EXISTENCE. And it is an intolerable one. Remove your curse from me, or I will end you as surely as I slew your guard-beast.”
“Uh-huh. Well, that’s real sad, but truth is? It’s not happening. Ever.”
It was wrong. It was all wrong. The sorcerer was smiling – yellowed, bent-toothed, inescapable. The keen eyes of Kronmorr could see something brown caught in between his incisors. “That beast you slew outside my door? That wasn’t my guardian, Kronmorr. It was my JAILER. My edot’tarr. And now that he’s gone? I, too, am unfettered by civilized man.”
“No,” said Kronmorr. But it came out all wrong; stuttered and whispered and afraid, deeply afraid.
“Oh yes, buddy,” said the sorcerer. He was nodding now, nodding from the glee that could no longer be contained within his smile, letting it roll out from him and spill over the rest of his body. “It’s you and me and nothing between us now, and you best believe the ride ain’t stopping anytime soon because I have bills to pay and a whole-new-ball-game of inspiration is flowing. The vault is open and the security guard is dead and the money is pouring out into the streets. Every damsel you meet is going to be even more nubile, Kronmorr, and they’ll leave you even faster. Every foe you battle will be half-again more degenerate. Your sword is going to swing TWICE as fast as a viper’s-eye now, Kronmorr, and you’re going to swing it five times more often!”
“No…” begged Kronmorr, and oh god that was the only word, the only word to describe the way he spoke. Please no. Please, please, anything but that.
“Get ready for names to have a lot more apostrophe’s, Kronmorr. You’re going to visit cities like Jang’mar. You’re going to meet people like Che’koll’dor’oc. Every’one. Ev’ery’thi’ing.”
“No!” and it was louder but even more desperate – sputtered, a whimpering verging on a wail.
“And Kronmorr, old buddy, old pal, my old friend, my gravy train without brakes,” the terrible, awful voice dipped a little – conspiratorial, gleeful, filled with the camaraderie of the torturer to his guest – “you can kiss your muscles and sinews goodbye. Because now? Now we’re talking thews.”
“NOOOOOOOO!” screamed Kronmorr, a cry not of the enraged berserk, but of a soul torn past its bonds, and lo, his sword swung twice as fast as a viper’s-eye, only it struck naught but empty air and he was left alone with only the dust of an empty room and the memory of a gleeful, snot-ridden chuckle and the distant, inescapable, all-consuming clack-clack-clack-clickety-clack of the awful, terrible sorcerer’s machine.