In this week's writing, I finally arrived at the Fault Lands. Very excited to bring this locale to life in Demon of the Dead.
Náli knew the
moment he woke that he was home.
Ah, home.
That hellish place.
For a while,
he hadn’t dreamed; it had been only the peaceful black of true, undisturbed
sleep. But then he became aware – that lucid state that meant he had
fallen into the crack between dreams and the constant, tugging magic of the
well. He’d been made to drink that water, when he was only a little lad; he
couldn’t remember much of the first time, save its oily, mineral tang, and
spitting it all down his front, so that his mother exclaimed in dismay. He
remembered Mattias cupping his chin gently, and bringing the cup back to his
lips for a second try. That water, it’s magic, had gotten into his bloodstream.
It lived within him still, in the center of each bone, in the coils of his
brain, in the roadways of his heart, beating now sluggish and unhappy, as he
clawed up through the layers of magic and dream and blinked his eyes open.
Between its
natural cloud cover, and the constant curls of dark smoke that trickled up from
the peak of the fire mountain, the light was always a dim silver, the same
color as his hair. A light that filled his familiar bedchamber, as he turned
his head to find that nothing about it had changed in his absence. He lay on
the same four-poster, canopied bed, its gray drapes drawn back with silver
cord, the feather-tick mattresses, a stack of two, soft and downy beneath him.
The same granite floors, walls, and ceiling greeted his blurred gaze, gray
flecked with black and white, large, reddish veins running in streaks like claw
marks. He saw his trunks, and his writing desk; his table, and chairs, his
armoire, and his dressing table and silver-framed looking glass. Lying down,
his view through the three, leaded-glass windows was of a bleak sky smudged
with smoke.
He'd spent
the whole trip back here unconscious. Been washed, and dressed in a soft shirt,
and tucked beneath warm blankets and furs all without waking. His stomach
rumbled, and his tongue was dry when he flicked it across his lips. The drag of
the well was much more concentrated here; it felt as though someone was sitting
on his chest; his bones felt weighted down to the mattress.
Perhaps, he
thought, if he closed his eyes, he could fall back asleep. But that would only
delay the inevitable.
With a groan,
and no small amount of effort, he pushed himself up to a sitting position. He
wasn’t just sore, but actively in pain, bolts of it shooting up his arms and
legs. He gritted his teeth, threw back the covers, and swung his legs over the
edge of the mattress. His slippers, gray suede lined with lambswool, awaited
him on the rug below. He bit his tongue as he stepped down into them, when the
pain crackled through his feet and ankles. His body was punishing him for being
away so long, and using so much magic.
Each step he
took toward the window winnowed what little strength remained, shaved it off
slice by slice, until, when he finally reached the glass, he had to catch
himself on the granite window ledge and grip, white-knuckled, to keep from
toppling over. His head swam, and the floor tilted, and he had to squeeze his
eyes shut to keep from being sick.
When he felt
steadier, he opened them again, and then felt sick all over again when he
beheld the view.
Through the
fog of his breath on the glass, he could see the sloping plains that led down
from the Keep toward the Nár River, edged with ice-slick boulders and
half-frozen, too dangerous to cross save for at the black granite bridge that
joined Náli’s lands with the Capital Road. The snow was streaked with heavy
deposits of dried lava, layers of black coils like a vast snake basking beneath
the hidden sun. Náli’s rooms had once been his parents’: the Corpse Lord’s
suite. After his father’s death, his mother had moved to the dowager’s suite,
leaving him here, alone, in this cold stone space, with its perfect, dreaded
view of the fire mountain, in all its jagged, snow-dusted glory. It belched
smoke at an alarming rate now, angered by his long absence. The lava rock that
marred the hillsides now was evidence of small, regular trickles; a true
eruption, had Náli stayed away indefinitely, would sweep the land, fill the
river, and melt the shepherd’s crofts on the opposite bank. It was that – the
threat of innocent lives and homes lost – that drew him back here, time and
again, when all he wanted to do was climb on his horse, ride for the coast and
never look back.
He rested his
forehead against the cold glass, and let it ground him a moment, willing
himself to stop shaking – to move to his bureau, don proper clothes, his
diamonds, and go down the many staircases that would take him to the well. He
dreaded the thought – nearly as much as he dreaded the thought of encountering
his mother. All things in perspective, he supposed.
The door
whispered open behind him, and he recognized Mattias’s soft tread across the
floor.
“You’re
awake.”
“Unfortunately.”