Delver Magic II: Throne of Vengeance - Jeff Inlo (diy ebook reader .txt) 📗
- Author: Jeff Inlo
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Delver Magic Book II
Throne of Vengeance
Jeff Inlo
All rights Reserved
120090925
* Chapter 1
* Chapter 2
* Chapter 3
* Chapter 4
* Chapter 5
* Chapter 6
* Chapter 7
* Chapter 8
* Chapter 9
* Chapter 10
* Chapter 11
* Chapter 12
* Chapter 13
* Chapter 14
* Chapter 15
* Chapter 16
* Chapter 17
* Chapter 18
* Chapter 19
* Chapter 20
* Chapter 21
* Chapter 22
* Chapter 23
For everyone that believes in Magic,
and for Joan, because you believed in me!
I wish to thank Christine Bell for continuing to review my work in the Delver Magic series. Her generous contributions serve as an inspiration and confirmation that goodwill and thoughtfulness are not as rare as I might otherwise believe. Once more, I would also like to thank you for continuing to read the Delver Magic series.
King Bol Folarok rigidly kept his back to his son. He stared vacantly at the stone wall before him.
“I am leaving Dunop,” he said. The tone rang hollow, his emotions encased in a vacuum. He spoke as if it were some well-rehearsed line he had already repeated a thousand times. The announcement, though cold, remained firm, and it indicated more than just a temporary absence. The finality of the statement slowly took substance, and it lingered in the dimly lit chamber.
The words fell upon Prince Jon Folarok’s senses like a lead weight. He looked upon Bol’s back, impatiently waiting for further explanation. He was offered nothing. He stared breathlessly into the dark space between him and his father.
This was no time for the king to leave. What could be more pressing than the current and growing unrest? Bol was needed here, needed now. He couldn’t leave. Jon wanted answers, but the back of his father wouldn’t reply. Face me! But Bol would not turn. The dwarf prince squinted as if hoping to see clearly through a dense fog.
“Where are you going?” Jon stammered.
“Does it truly matter?”
The temperature seemed to drop several degrees.
“When are you coming back?”
“I’m not coming back,” King Bol replied with the same sterile tone as before. If he had sympathy for his son’s confusion, he would not show it. His words remained as brittle as frozen twigs. “Not ever.”
“What?” Jon felt his innards tighten, a familiar attack of anxiety. He was not a dwarf that dealt well with conflict or adversity. During the past few days, much of that was heaped upon him. Now, he faced a climax of catastrophe, and the accompanying nervous tension boiled over in his midsection. “What do you mean not ever?”
“I’m leaving Dunop and I will not be returning,” Bol repeated, still not turning to face his only surviving son.
Jon dropped his head and stared at the floor. He could not look at his father’s back for another moment as it only served to tighten the knot in his belly. The pain in his stomach was making it hard to think. His mind nearly went blank. He fought to seize upon something to say, words which might end this absurdity and set everything right. He could find nothing. He blurted out his confusion.
“I don’t understand!”
“It is simple.” Bol extended a hand to the wall in front of him. He patted the polished stone as if hoping to pull conviction from the intrinsic strength of the rock. “I can no longer stay in this place. It reminds me too much of ….” He held his tongue just before his voice cracked. He paused for long moments until his hollow tone returned. “I have made grave mistakes, mistakes I can not simply forget or erase. I can do nothing but leave.”
Jon knew instantly what his father could not say, knew that the king was referring to the decision that had sent him and his older brother, Tun, to Sanctum Mountain. They were sent to assist the elves, to destroy Ingar’s sphere which held all the magic in the land, but Tun was killed at the hands of a sand giant. That was the moment Jon first felt a hole open in his soul. An empty hollow pain was his from that day on. It now felt as if that hole was expanding.
To Jon, this was madness. He shook his head as if to scatter cobwebs from his face. “You just can’t leave. You’re the king here.”
“Am I?” A note of sarcasm edged Bol’s tone. This time, the king did not swallow his emotion. He let his bitterness spill out with his words. “Will the dwarves here even listen to me anymore? I doubt it. The separatists gain power every day. They grow in numbers even faster. They hate the monarchy and they want me out. They say I’m responsible for freeing the magic and putting them all at the mercy of the spell casters that are sure to follow. They say I have made dark alliances with the elves, and even the humans. They call me the king who murdered his own son.”
“No …” Jon cried out, but the anguish in his stomach tightened his lips.
Though Bol would still not face his son, he held up his arm to silence any further outburst. “That is what they say, and far too many believe. I can no longer be king, and I can no longer live with the memories of this place.”
The past which Bol spoke of now exerted its force upon Jon. The memories came crashing down upon the prince. An image of Sanctum’s outline pierced his mind. It once held the sphere, but now it served as a tomb for his dead brother. It seemed, however, that Sanctum’s toll had not yet been fully collected, and it now threatened to take Bol from Jon as well.
In truth, this should not have surprised the prince. He should have almost expected it. He had witnessed his father’s spirit sag since the day he had returned from Sanctum with bittersweet news. Yes, Ingar’s sphere had been destroyed, but Tun had died in the effort. Jon could still remember how the very life began to drain from Bol’s face when he reported the loss.
The entire town of Dunop wept for the death of its heir prince, but none endured as much torment as the royal family. Bol was inconsolable in his grief. From the moment Jon returned to the throne room alone, without his brother, Bol’s collapse spiraled out of control. He walked alone through empty corridors of the palace, muttering to himself. He sought no one, and what remained of his family left him to grieve.
Jon wrapped himself in his own guilt. He struggled to return to his duties, to return to the work he loved in the tunnels. Yet each cave and each dark corridor reminded him of the bowels of Sanctum, the grave of his older brother.
Bol’s wife, Queen Yave, proved even less supportive. She seemed consumed with an inextinguishable anger. She found it more fitting to blame her husband than console him. She was against assisting the elves at Sanctum from the start. To lose the son that was always willing to defend her, support her even against Bol himself, it moved her beyond grief. She burned with fury.
As Yave would make no attempt to comfort her husband, Bol slipped further into his downward spiral. With this came the end of his desire to lead. He allowed rumors to abound and did little to reaffirm his rule. The cry of the separatists was not a whisper. They had called out their near treasonous desires with frequency and fervor. Bol did nothing to quell them, as if he himself believed their venomous lies. And now it seemed, at the very least, he would give them what they wanted. He announced as much as he declared his intentions to Jon.
“I am relinquishing my right to the throne. I have already called for a scribe to prepare the notification. When he returns with the scroll, I will sign it. I, thus, banish myself from Dunop. You, being the only surviving heir, shall become king.”
No other words could have brought greater fear to Jon’s heart. His knees almost buckled at the prospect. An image came to his mind, an image of himself on the throne; weak, indecisive, and confused.
I do not want to be king!
Jon grasped at anything which might change this edict. “If the dwarves would not have you as their king, why will they accept me?”
“They do not blame you,” Bol replied sullenly, almost as if he scorned such unfairness. “I have heard nothing from the crowds against you. Perhaps they think I wished you dead as well, and it was only by luck that you survived.”
Bol steadied himself in a moment of silence. He turned and finally faced his son. His face appeared as hollow as his words. The thick skin under his eyes sank low with dark circles. His beard, ruffled and unkempt, curled unevenly in every direction. The wrinkles on his forehead appeared as if gouged with diamond-headed stone cutters. Though he looked at Jon, his focus seemed haphazard and distant.
“This is how it must be. There is nothing else I can do.”
Bol’s haggard appearance dropped Jon further into despair. He needed a moment to gather himself, but his father’s wary glance and the tightening pain in his stomach gave him no reprieve. He spoke out desperately.
“What of the queen? What about her? Are you abandoning her as well?”
Bol’s reply remained absent of any emotion. “She abandoned me long ago.”
“And what am I to do with her? What do I say? If I am king, she can no longer be queen.”
“She will have to accept this,” Bol replied almost as if he found some satisfaction in this thought. “It should be of no surprise to her, or to anyone. If I had died, such would be the case. Though it might have been better had I actually died, the result of my leaving is the same. I would not fret over it. She no longer seems content as queen. Just as I have been powerless, she has neglected her duties as well. She may actually be relieved.”
Bol was interrupted by the entrance of the scribe. Four guards and several ministers of the court accompanied him.
“Forgive me sire,” the scribe said with a shaky, uncertain tone. “but I thought it necessary to gather witnesses. In the history of Dunop, no king has ever relinquished the throne. I wanted to make sure no one would doubt your true intentions.”
“No one will question this,” the king responded. “If anything, they will question why it took me so long.”
“Are you sure you wish to do this?” the scribe pressed, wishing to make it clear to the witnesses that it was the king’s true intention and no one else’s. “Perhaps you should wait, take time to consider the proposal?”
“Nothing will change my mind. Let me have the scroll.”
For the first time in his life, the scribe delayed acting upon an order of his king. He stiffened as he opened the scroll, ignoring the king’s open hand. He began to read every word upon the parchment.
Before Tun’s death, Bol would have angrily snatched the scroll from the hand of the scribe, making it clear his
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