Hynlum was a brave
boy. He did not flee from danger. Therefore, when his mother and father both
became suddenly ill, he embarked on a fearful quest to save them. He faced
horrors that would cause even the most hardened warriors to tremble. However,
the first moment that Hynlum discovered his parents, he did not know the
severity of their condition, so he went into the local village of Stone Ridge
to summon the assistance of a healer. The healer accepted the summons, eager to
provide aid. When they arrived, the healer approached the bedside of Hynlum’s
parents. Hynlum watched as the healer's face grew solemn.
“I’m sorry, boy.
There’s nothing I can do for them. They have only days left... There’s only one
man who could save them now, but it would be a fool's hope.”
“B-b-but, my parents.
You must do something!”
“You don’t
understand, young master. None who sought the aid of the Wizard of the Marsh
have ever returned from his terrible domain.”
“Then I’ll go, you
coward!”
“Well, I’d rather be
known as a coward than remembered as a fool.” Then the healer shouted as the
boy walked out of the room, “Hynlum!” but he ignored him.
Hynlum stormed out of
his father's dwelling place and strode into the forest that lay between his
home and the marshlands. He barreled through the brush and paid no mind to
branches or spiderwebs hitting his face. He was accustomed to the impediments
of the forestlands, having spent countless hours running through them. He had
never, however, ventured through to the marshes. His heart fluttered, both in
fear for the lives of his parents and in anticipation of the trials that lay
before him.
The day was growing
dim and the forest became darker. There were noises throughout that wood that
meant fear for those who traversed it at night. Such as the sibilant sigh of
the trees in their discontent or the menacing howl of wraiths awakening to
haunt the sleepless forest. Hynlum did not heed these terrors, for he was
determined to save his family. He had two siblings, both a little younger than
he and twins to each other. They were old enough that he did not fear to leave
them alone. In fact, he would not be surprised if the healer had stayed,
feeling obligated to watch over two who might swiftly be orphaned. He was a
kind man after all.
Eventually, Hynlum
emerged from the southern rim of the forest to find himself stepping out into
nothingness. The stars and moon were obscured by clouds. Darkness reigned over
that night. Hynlum could not see and did not know that the forest ended with a
steep ridge that led down into the marshes. His whole body tingled as he fell
into inky blackness. He tumbled, limbs striking stones and fallen branches
until he felt a brief moment of free fall followed by the thick splash of mud.
His arms sunk deep into the mud and he struggled to pull them out. He thrashed
about, coating his entire body in the foul smelling muck of the marsh until
finally, his arms were free and he crawled his way onto a patch of tall grass.
He stood, cleaning
himself off as best he could. He used grass to clean his hands so that he could
wipe the mud from his eyes. He looked all around himself trying to find the
wizard’s house. After a while, his eyes adjusted enough to see the faintly
glowing outline of a small cabin in the distance. He set off towards it. The
occasional breeze engulfed Hynlum in a cold, damp fog. Whenever that happened,
he had to do his best to not stray from his course, which meant trying very
hard not to slip or step into the muddy areas. Then, whenever the fog cleared,
he would find the cabin again and realign his path.
Out of the gloomy
black, came a deep groaning. A chill ran down Hynlum’s spine and he froze in
his place, straining his ears to hear everything around him. For a while, there
was nothing but the distant creaking of trees. Then there was another groan
followed by the squelching of footsteps through the marsh. Hynlum’s heart began
to race and sweat beaded upon his brow. He had heard tales of it before, but
had never really thought it possible that draugar wandered the marshlands at
night. There was another groan, louder than before and raspy like the grinding
of stones. A draugr was approaching. Hynlum frantically felt for anything he
could use as a weapon. His hand ran along a sharp rock, opening a gash on his
thumb. Despite the pain, he rejoiced. The draugr heard him and began
approaching as fast as it could manage through the marsh. Hynlum dug out the
sharp stone and hefted it above his head, praying to the gods for a miracle. He
turned to face the sound of the draugr.
Just then, the gods
graced Hynlum with a break in the clouds. A beam of moonlight shot down just in
time to reveal the glistening dead eyes of the draugr within arms reach. The
draugr was nothing more than a thin layer of dry, flaky flesh stretched tightly
over an old skeleton, but with eyes that were partly renewed by dark magic. The
draugr’s movements were unaffected by its stiff, creaky joints as it lunged for
him, but he was ready. Hynlum brought the stone crashing down on its head. The
draugr fell but Hynlum wasn’t going to risk not finishing him off. Three wet
thuds haunted the midnight air as brittle flesh and bone were broken and beaten
into the mud.
Panting for breath,
Hynlum looked around for the cabin. He turned in circles, but saw nothing. The
break in the clouds was still illuminating much of the marsh. All around him,
there was naught but water, grass, and mud. The cabin had vanished! His breath
quickened, and panic crept in. Just then, in his peripheral vision, he caught
the glint of polished stone above him. The break in the clouds moved on and
darkness swallowed the marshlands once again. Hynlum reached up for the glimpse
of stone he had seen and his hands found a short rod that hung in
mid-air.
The stone handle was
moving slowly and Hynlum tightened his grip desperately. A stench nearly caused
him to lose it, but he held on. The magic which preserved the draugr had been
broken, so the corpse began to decay quickly and the sickening smell of death
pervaded the night air. Hynlum swallowed back the urge to vomit and looked up.
Above him, there was an area that was darker than the surrounding sky and
Hynlum presumed that was where he needed to go. He felt around until he found
another stone rung higher up. Then he reached higher and found yet another. He
climbed higher and higher, but the farther up he got, the farther the dark
blotch appeared. He guessed that the dark blotch was the cabin and that the
wizard was moving it so that he could not reach it. Yet, the wizard was also
making the magical stone ladder.
Suddenly, the stone
rungs that Hynlum was holding onto disappeared and he fell. He screamed as he
fell farther and farther down. He had not climbed all that far and he was
waiting for the ground but it never came. He quit screaming and he flailed
about until he was facing down. The air that rushed past him grew hot and a
blindingly bright light bloomed beneath him. The light grew into a vast fiery
pit. His heart tried to escape out his chest as he careened into that hell.
Just as his skin felt like it was about to catch on fire, just before he hit
the flames, the fire vanished and he landed hard onto something rather soft. As
he tried to catch his breath, he felt the substance beneath him. It felt like a
sheepskin.
Then, he opened his
eyes to find that sight could confirm what touch only pondered. He was in a
stone room lined with torches and various animal heads mounted on the walls. It
was warm and there were lush furs spread all over the floor of the room. Hynlum
was glad, finally being able to see and to be warm and comfortable. His thumb
throbbed from the gash he had sustained from his weapon.
“Why have you come?”
a quiet voice asked.
Hynlum looked around
for the source but found nothing. His stomach twisted as he realized something
more. There was no door in the room whatsoever.
“I asked you a
question, vermin,” the deep, rumbling voice said with a hint of menace.
Hynlum responded
shakily, “My name is Hyn-”
“I know your name,
fool! I asked why you are here! You do not belong in a wizard’s domain.”
“I need your help! My
parents-”
“NO! I do not help
quivering, pathetic, little boys!” the voice boomed.
Then the room began
to quake. Hynlum heard growling all around him. He looked around and saw that
the heads of bears and wolves were coming alive and staring at him, baring
their teeth.
“No!” Hynlum shouted.
“You will help me, you crotchety old wizard!”
The bear and wolf
heads on the walls began to roar and bark at Hynlum and blood began to leak out
of the eyes and mouths of all the heads, including those of the other animals.
Then the walls began to slowly close in on Hynlum, the bleeding heads getting
closer and closer. He began to panic and did the only thing he could think to
do. He ran to the head of a stag and broke off its horns. Then he used the
horns to stab the nearest bear head. The bears head screeched and its mouth
stretched wide but it didn’t stop. It just kept stretching wider and wider.
Hynlum backed away, but the wall behind him pushed him forward into the
terrible jaws of the bear. Hynlum tried to hold the walls back. He pushed
against them with all of his strength but the walls were relentless. They
forced him into the gaping maw.
He fell into darkness
once again. After a moment of falling, he landed in the marsh, but when he felt
around, he found that there were hedges hemming him in. To his right, there was
a path and he walked through it. As he walked, it seemed that the path didn’t
have any pits of mud like the rest of the marsh. It was all covered in grass,
making it much easier to walk, though still damp and soft. After a while,
Hynlum reached a point where the hedges seemed to open up and thought he might
have reached his destination, but just then, the clouds parted. The moon shone
through and revealed his surroundings. Hynlum saw that the path ahead of him
opened into a very small clearing with three different paths leading out from
it. He walked into the clearing and then turned around to see where he had come
from, but the path he had just been on disappeared. He turned back to look at
the three other choices, but when he did, he only saw two.
He cursed under his
breath and then shouted, “Quit your tricks wizard!”
Hynlum approached one
of the hedges, ready to climb and see where he needed to go. He reached a hand
in and grabbed onto a branch but quickly pulled it back, crying out in pain.
There were over a dozen thorns broken off in his palm and fingers. He had used
his good hand, thus both his hands were wounded. He screamed a long string of
futile curses at the wizard while he pulled out the thorns. Once he was
finished, there was a long moment of silence. Then the hedges began to sway and
long branches emerged to swipe at Hynlum. He ran as fast as he could down one
of the paths, trying to avoid being flogged by hedges. Then the hedges erupted
in flames, still lashing out at him.
Out of the flames,
the wizard’s voice boomed, “DO YOU KNOW WHO
I AM? I AM
KUROGWEH, MASTER
OF TELLUNE,
HOARDER OF THE NECROMANCER’S BLADE,
SLAYER OF KINGS! LEAVE ME
ALONE!”
Throughout the short
monologue, Hynlum sprinted through the maze, dodging fiery whips as he did. He
made a left and saw a door at the end of a long passage. As he bolted for it,
he responded to Kurogweh.
“I will not leave
until you help me save my parents!”
Just as Hynlum
grasped the doorknob, it turned to smoke, leaving no way to open the door. He
turned around and the blazing hedges suddenly extinguished. Smoke slowly curled
from the branches. Then the passage expanded into a wide open area. There was
absolute silence for a moment, and then the smoke that blossomed from the
hedges began to swirl together all around the circular clearing. Slowly, the
smoke solidified into a score or more versions of himself. The other Hynlums
looked at the real one with menace.
All of them spoke
simultaneously, “Why should I help you?”
Hynlum shivered when
he realized that his own mouth had spoken in unison with his smoky copies. He
wanted to vomit.
“N-no one else could
possibly help now. You’re my only hope.”
A cold laugh
reverberated from all around and from himself. When he had control of himself
again, he rushed one of the smoky copies of himself and knocked it to the
ground. It laughed in the same, malevolent way. Hynlum beat it in the face over
and over despite his injured hands. Then it screamed.
“No! Stop! Help me!
Who are you! Who- Where am I!”
Hynlum stopped and
backed away. It had changed into someone else. It was a young boy, about the
same age as his own brother. His face was marred from Hynlum’s attacks.
Hynlum’s heart began to race.
“What did you do? Who
is this?”
Kurogweh’s voice
echoed unnaturally, “You are not as noble as you would have everyone believe.
Have you not done the same to boys like this before?”
The wizard’s
mirthless laugh haunted him. It came through the voices of all those around
him. All the copies of Hynlum had transformed into people of various ages. All
of them laughing at Hynlum with cruel enjoyment of his fear. Then there was a
flash of lightning and the boom of thunder. When the flash of light hit the
people, it revealed their decayed flesh. They were draugar.
Kurogweh was clearly
more than just a wizard. He was also a necromancer and maybe many other things.
Who could tell? Who in all of Tellune knew where the wizard of the marsh had
come from. Fear ate at Hynlum’s insides. He backed away from the draugar. They
all began walking towards him. Hynlum’s back hit the door and he turned around
to pound on it. The door remained resolutely shut. Panicking, Hynlum backed up
and prepared to throw his whole body against it. He ran and threw all his
weight, shoulder first into the door, but it turned to smoke at that moment. He
tumbled through the ceiling of a dimly lit hallway and landed hard on the
wooden floor.
The
hall stretched interminably in both directions. Hynlum struggled to his feet.
His whole body ached. He heard a faint squeak and looked around. Seeing
nothing, he assumed it was from his own act of standing. The floor was wooden
and the walls were stone. There were glyphs written in blood all along the
walls. Upon gazing at them, Hynlum felt compelled in one direction down the
hall. Unsure whether the wizard desired to lead him out or in, Hynlum gave in
to the impulse. He strode down the hall.
After
a few paces, he stumbled. His eyes began struggling to focus. He couldn’t keep
them open. He was so tired. Thump-thump. How long had he been there, anyway?
The hallway never seemed to end. Thump-thump. Something was coming.
Thump-thump. He had to get out. Thump-thump! It was almost upon him!
Thump-thump! Hynlum tried to run but he was too tired. THUMP-THUMP! Hynlum fell to his knees and began
crawling and panting for breath. THUMP-THUMP!
THUMP-THUMP! The thumping sound continued to rage
and Hynlum’s chest ached. He could hardly think. He fell onto his back, giving
up.
He
took several deep breaths, hoping to enjoy his last moment as much as he could.
The thumping softened and he was not smitten. In addition, the ache in his
chest dulled. Suddenly he realized that he could feel, more than hear, the
thumping. It was his own heartbeat the whole time. Then the floor groaned and
creaked and his heart began to thump in his ears again.
Hynlum
stood, dazed and exhausted. He stumbled down the hall. A door appeared on his
left. He frantically grasped the handle and tried to open the door. He was
manic in his attempt to open it, but it was locked. He heard footsteps
approaching. He looked and saw a shadow moving towards him. The shadow of a
man, slowly walking. Hynlum hammered into the door and it finally gave way. He
sprinted through, not looking at the room he had entered. It was a well lit
room and there was a door at the other end. That was all he saw before he ran
through that door. On the other side of that door, he found a vast throne room
with doors along both sides adjacent to where he was. He didn’t stop to question
the layout. He ran through one of the doors and found himself in a small
storage room. He shut the door behind him. Hynlum waited and considered his
position, not knowing what to do. After what seemed like hours, he heard a
raspy chuckle echoing through the throne room on the other side of the
door.
The
wizard spoke with the same grating as if his throat hadn’t felt the touch of
water for weeks. “These games have been fun! Never has an intruder been quite
so entertaining.”
Hynlum
cracked the door open very slowly and peaked through. He saw the form of a man
with black tendrils swirling off of him. Kurogweh was resplendent in
darkness.
“You
are deeply devoted to your task. I can see into your heart. I have not met
anyone like you in a long time.” Then Kurogweh turned to face Hynlum and
continued, “Quit hiding, boy! Do you really think I can’t see you?”
Hynlum
tried to shut the door and back into the corner but the door flung itself open
and the room thrust him out.
“You
have done all this just to save your pitiful father and mother?”
“They
are not pitiful!” Hynlum shouted.
Kurogweh
laughed and said, “I see great potential in you, boy. There is only one more
thing that you could give up, I think. That will be the price of my
assistance.”
_____
Two
weeks later, King Derelon and Queen Thilera of Northwood awoke. They were both
sore and groggy. The king was greatly surprised to be alive. He thought that he
had contracted the plague. He thought he and his wife were doomed.
Nevertheless, he was awake and alive. More than that, he felt strong. The vigor
of youth returned to his limbs. He looked at his wife and smiled excitedly. She
had tears of joy in her eyes. They laughed together.
The
door to their chambers burst open and their twins ran in. When the little
prince and princess beheld their parents awake and laughing, they screamed and
leapt atop them. The family laughed and rolled around on the bed
together.
“Where
is my firstborn? Where is your brother?” the king asked his children.
Their
smiles faded to looks of confusion and the boy said, “We don’t know. He left
into the woods. The healer said he was getting help, but that seemed silly
because he was what the help was, right? You always say, ‘A healer’s a helper
that’s here to heal!’”
King
Derelon’s face turned grim and he asked his son, “Where is this healer?”
“He
stayed!” the princess said, “He’s a nice man. He said he wanted to keep us safe
while you and mother were sleeping.”
The
king leapt to his feet, feeling the stone beneath and relishing it. He asked
his servants and they led him to the healer, of which his children had
spoken.
“What
is your name, good healer?” Derelon asked urgently.
“I
am Bjorn of Stone Ridge, your highness.”
“What
news would you tell me, Bjorn.”
“Master,
I fear that I must be the bearer of ill tidings. For, your heir, Hynlum, has
been gone two weeks in the marshes of the wizard. He sought the aid of the
wizard and he has not returned. But behold, he must have succeeded! I am
overjoyed that you have awoken! All those of Northwood should rejoice!”
“You
mean to tell me that my son is a captive of the wizard of the marsh?” the king
asked with menace in his voice.
Bjorn’s
response came quivering in fear, “Y-y-yes, m-my lord.”
Bjorn
had bowed his head, ready to be struck down, but no blow came. Instead, King
Derelon placed a gentle hand on Bjorn’s shoulder.
“Rise,
faithful servant. My steward will see that you are compensated for remaining to
assist while myself and my wife were ill. Then you may go home.”
The
king then sought out his generals and by them, found twelve champions who would
invade the marshlands and save the king’s heir. None returned from that journey
and the king sent more of his knights after that, but again, none made it back
from that fell place.
Eventually,
the king and the queen of Northwood gave up hope of finding their lost son. They
spared the lives of their men and their second son was then named heir to the
throne.
The
twin king, as the second son of Derelon would later be known, would one day go
on to launch a daring assault upon the wizard of the marsh in order to rid
their kingdom of his presence. That assault failed and many were lost. Those
who survived the assault told tales of a powerful revenant who wept as he slew
men by the dozens. Some claimed that he was enthralled by the wizard in
exchange for the king’s life and that the revenant was prince Hynlum under the
effects of dark necromancy. Thus, he became known as the Revenant Prince. Many
tales were told through countless years of the Revenant Prince, the beast who
wept for the lives that he stole. Many tales they were, but all were tales of
woe except one.
The
End.
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