JACKAL AMONG SNAKES - Chapter 98: No Rest for the Wicked
Chapter 98: No Rest for the Wicked đđłđđđeđŻnđŒđ·đđ.đ૊đ¶
Argrave grabbed Annelieseâs wrist weakly. âWhen I dieâŠyou go see Orion. Youâll need his help for the jester,â he mumbled. âAfter, you should deal⊠with the war. I think. If you like Orion, help him. If you donât, help the rebels. Youâre a smart⊠cookie. Youâll do it fine.â
All while Argrave was talking, Anneliese was repeating his name time and time again. He didnât seem to hear it at all.
âJust remember to get Elenore on your sideâsheâs the Bat,â he continued, slurring. âAfter that⊠the steppes. Go there. The centaurs⊠and the elvesâŠ. Youâve gotta deal with the malfeasance⊠and the dryads. Side with the centaurs⊠theyâre better. Cooler.â
Anneliese finally shook Argrave, and his bloodshot eyes came to focus on her, open wide in surprise. âArgrave. It is over. You have been treated. You are not dying.â
He stared for a moment, mouth agape. He smacked his lips together, and his eyes rolled back into his head before coming back to attention. âThat canât be right. I feel terrible.â
âJust let him be,â Garm spoke, causing Anneliese to turn her head back. âThat spell drains a lot from the one subject to the diseaseâheâll probably need to eat and drink a lot before heâs back to working order. Even then⊠his lungs probably have some scarring. Minor, though, and it should heal given time.â
Anneliese lowered him back into the makeshift bed that Galamon had constructed. Argrave spoke, staring at Garm. âWhat are you⊠a doctor? An⊠anesthesiologist?â he spoke the word incredibly slowly, as though he could barely remember it. Once he laid back in his bed, he shifted. âShitty hospital bed⊠I want to go home. The HOBwiki is nothing⊠withoutâŠâ
Anneliese looked up at Galamon. âWhat is he talking about?â
âDoubt anyone could answer that.â Galamon crossed his arms and shook his head. âHeâs delirious. Let him be. We should prepare some easily-chewable food for himâcrush those berries, dice some of our rationed meat.â
Anneliese leaned away from Argrave, letting out a deep sigh of relief that caused the stress to veritably drain from her face. Her eyes were sunken and bloodshot, with deep dark bags beneath them.
âI hope you wonât forget our deal, sweetie, now that your little friend isnât one toe into the grave,â Garm spoke from behind her.
Annelieseâs expression tensed once more, and she looked back to Garm. âI will honor that arrangement. And⊠thank you for your tutelage.â
âDonât expect more⊠unless I benefit, somehow.â Garm smiled. âIf you think thatâs selfish, realize youâre speaking to someone worse off than a cripple.â
She turned her head away and nodded, then rose to her feet. Galamon was staring at her.
âYou should rest,â he stated. âHard to tell time here, but I estimate youâve gone two days without sleep⊠your job is done, and now you must come back to form. I will take care of things from here. Nothing will disturb us.â
âBut you must be near devoid of bloodâperhaps I shouldââ
âSleep,â he commanded. âDo not be as bad as him about taking care of yourself.â
Anneliese nodded. âWake me should anything happen. You said the Sentinels are still clearing out the lower levels of vampiresâan unideal time to be found here.â
âI know,â Galamon said. âBad for them, at least. After what we did, to be extorted like thatâŠâ Galamon clenched his fist, his gauntlets creaking against one another.
Anneliese held a hand out. âPlease, do not dwell on it. Everything turned out fine.â
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âSo⊠a talking head, huh?â Argrave said. His voice was hoarse and speaking still hurt. His mind had gathered somewhatâenough for conversation, at the very least. âMost kids bring home a pet, itâs something like a dog⊠or a cat, maybe, if youâre lucky. But Anneliese⊠a head,â Argrave outlined, then nodded his head as he let the words hang.
Anneliese let out a few small laughs through her nose.
It had taken some days for Argrave to recover enough to speak, and she seemed to be glad he was back to snuff. Galamon was off collecting some of those berries from the trees. Argrave and Anneliese sat near the wall, Argrave well-supported by a bed of cloth that Galamon had foraged from the Menagerie.
âYouâre pondering this now?â shot back Garm.
Argrave scratched his chin. âDidnât really have much room for thought when the idea was pitched. Anneliese takes the next step on the path of magic, it got me out of debt to the Sentinels⊠good enough for me.â Argrave frowned. âHow are we⊠going to bring you anywhere? Not exactly easy luggage. You pass through any city gates, the guards wonât know how much to charge for the toll. Three and a quarter? And thatâs assuming they let us in.â
âThe mind makes the man. Theyâd charge for four,â Garm said bitterly. âYes, very funny. Mock a head on a stake. Do you mock amputees? Cripples? The mentally deficient? Are you merely a classless man, or has the standard of propriety in Vasquer dropped so low after my death?â
Argrave was a bit taken aback, and he frowned, genuinely considering Garmâs situation. After a time, Argrave looked him in the eyes and nodded. âYouâre right. Itâs just⊠so ridiculous. Impossible to even think about.â
âTry living it,â Garm said poignantly. âPicture it. I canât turn my head. The only thing I can do is move whatâs on my face. If I think thereâs something behind me? All I can do is waitâmaybe conjure a ward to block. Any itch, any sensation⊠Iâm powerless. I have to be carried everywhere.â
Argrave let his imagination wander as Garm set the scene and could not help but shudder. âYouâre right. Itâs terrible,â Argrave raised his hands in surrender. âItâs just not going to be easy to bring you anywhere. Iâd say we pull out the stake, wrap you up in a⊠a blanket, or something, but even that⊠what if brain falls out? Or⊠orâŠâ Argrave shook his head, dispelling unpleasant thoughts.
âWhy is it so strange?â Garm questioned.
âAre you being serious?â Argrave asked, genuinely unsure.
âLots of Wizards walk about with their necromantic creations. I knew this man⊠he hadââ
âNecromancy is illegal, now,â Argrave said plainly, finally realizing the culture gap. âAfter the Order of the Rose fell, their creations started going out of control, and⊠well, things have been extremely unpleasant for everyone involved. Youâve seen this place,â Argrave waved his hands around. âEvery ruin of the Order of the Rose is like this.â
âEverywhere?â Garm narrowed his eyes. âThat doesnât make sense. Unless they all vanished overnight, something like this⊠makes no sense,â Garm repeated, flabbergasted.
Anneliese looked over at Argrave, curious for his answer. Argrave looked between them, then raised his arms up. âWhy are you looking at me? I donât have all the answers.â
Garm closed his eyes, looking disappointed, and Anneliese nodded as though it was the natural course of things.
âI can tell you about the last thing that I know the Order did collectively, though,â Argrave said, sitting a little straighter.
Garm opened his eyes, and Anneliese also straightened her posture, both listening intently.
âThe last recorded meeting of the Order of the Rose was called by its last Grandmaster,â Argrave began. âThis was when the southern tribes were invading the Low Way. He called together all of the High Wizards of the Order to the Low Way, in a gathering now known as the âNight of Withering.ââ Argraveâs gaze switched between Anneliese and Garm.
âNo one knows the purpose of the meeting, or what actually happened in it⊠but that night, when the southern tribes made it deep into the Low Way, trying to push into Vasquer⊠what awaited them was a river of blood. Everything in the Low Way was submerged in a great tide of blood. Some drownedâothers were torn to bits in the flood, cut apart by debris carried by the tide.â
âHad to be something Grandmaster Astran did. He was a master of blood magic and necromancy, both,â Garm contributed.
Argrave shrugged. âNo one knows what happened. Some people say the Grandmaster and the High Wizards both gave their flesh to wash away the invaders with blood strengthened by their own magic. Others say they were a victim of their own project and died in the flood just as the southern tribes did. But⊠there arenât any witnesses.â Argrave finished.
âI⊠canât picture the Wizards of the Order sacrificing themselves like that to stop a mere invasion,â Garm looked down. âI donâtâŠâ
âWe have to move again⊠tomorrow,â Argrave looked to the door of the Menagerie.
âWhat?â Anneliese questioned, surprised. âYou are still unwell.â
âGalamon mentioned the Sentinels moved to clear out the vampires,â Argrave said, gaze distant. âThey canât get their hands on the Unsullied Knife. Theyâll take it back to their fortress. We canât hope to match them there.â He looked back to Anneliese. âYou think I want to get up and move around? I feel like death itself. This conversationâs killing me, but I like talking too much.â
Anneliese sighed, rubbing her forehead. âIâm⊠if you think thereâs no other choice.â She shook her head. âPromise me you wonât overexert yourself.â
âI mean⊠itâs a little beyond myââ
âJust promise,â she insisted.
Argrave met her eyes. He found himself unable to say âno,â and so he nodded quietly.
âI think the Sentinels and I will have to enjoy another conversation,â Argrave said, tightening his hand into a fist. âThis time, though⊠this time, Iâll be the one stepping on their neck.â
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âLook at this,â Alasdair spread his arms out. âAll the knowledge of the Order of the Rose, within eyesight. The vampires stared at this for years, unable to move past⊠unable to claim it.â Alasdair reached a hand forward and tapped between the thick iron bars thrice, where the metal gauntlets met with the invisible barrier. âAnd unable to ruin it, naturally.â
âThe important bit is that the vampires are wiped out, donât you think? It took four days, and a lot of lives, but⊠itâs finally done, barring two or three that luckily managed to escape,â Ossian said, stepping up beside Alasdair. âThis victory is a lot more important than some ancient library we canât touch.â
âAnd if we could touch it?â Alasdair turned his head back.
Ossian laughed. âYou see, this is why I didnât want you to come. You say a bunch of stupid stuff all the time. The vampires have been here for centuriesâif it was as simple as that, this place wouldnât be undisturbed as it is.â
Alasdair inhaled sharply, then looked back to the library. âMaybe so. But you did something very stupid. You left that murderer roam free. I intend to correct that.â
âAre you serious?â Ossian tilted his head. âHeâs the reason we made it here to begin with, and youâre going to âcorrect that?ââ
âThat head he has,â Alasdair looked back. âIf itâs the key to these doors, it might be the key to this library. Argrave said the Wayward Thorns were mere Apprentices in the Order of the Rose, but that head⊠it was a High Wizard, no? There has to be something to that. Even if it canât get rid of this barrier⊠it definitely knows how to break it.â
âGods⊠youâre being serious. The man hands us the biggest boon to our knightly order in centuries on a silver platter, and you want to make his life harder than it already isâif, indeed, heâs even alive?â
Alasdair stepped up to Ossian. âWhat happened to your bravado, Ossian? You chased after him with the intent to kill, and then you find him and make nice? If Claude were here, Iâd petition to have you stripped of your rank.â He pressed a gauntleted finger against Ossianâs chest.
âYou do thisâgo to the MenagerieâI wonât stand for it,â Ossian swatted Alasdairâs hand away. âAnd I wonât let you do it secretly during the night, either. All I did, I did for the Sentinelsâ honor. You, though⊠Iâve got no idea what youâre thinking.â
âYou want to start a mutiny, Ossian?â Alasdair tilted his head.
âItâs no mutiny. Youâre not my leader,â Ossian said loudly and clearly. âThis is a joint expedition, for the purpose of wiping out the vampires. Nothing more,â he emphasized.
âFellas, no need to argue over me,â echoed out a hoarse voice.
The two Master Sentinels turned their heads to the side, where three figures walking beneath a ball of light slowly stepped out of the darkness and into the lower levels. Alasdair raised his fingers to his mouth, and despite the gauntlets, sounded out a perfect whistle. At once, all of the Sentinels that had been idle came to attention, facing towards the new arrivals.
âGods⊠Argrave?â Ossian said, brows furrowed in confusion and surprise both.
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