Demon of the Dead sheds new light on the mythology and history of the fantasy realm in the Drake Chronicles. It's a history Nali, like all his fellow Northmen, thought he knew well, but the truth of which will trouble them all, and further explain their enemy, the Sels.
It's also great fun to write 😊
First, the
fire we rebuilt, which took some time, and even then, the damp wood smoked and
spit and filled the longhouse with yet more noxious gray clouds. Then tea was
prepared, and poured into two wooden cups. Náli let the heat of his warm his
palms, but didn’t sip at it. The shaman bolted one cup down straight away and
poured another before he finally settled on the stool opposite and took a long,
deep breath. Though his physical features remained unchanged, he seemed to have
aged a decade since Náli saw him last. Strained and gaunt. When his gaze lifted
to meet Náli’s through the smoke, his eyes had gone that same eerie, timeless
blue again; the eyes of a man who had seen too much.
His hands
shook on his cup, but his voice was steady. “You must understand: when I speak
of ‘the bloodline,’ it’s far older than you have ever imagined. The truth of it
is something you might not receive gladly.”
“An upsetting
truth is better than never knowing,” Náli said.
“Even if it
upsets the balance of all you now know?”
He glanced
toward Valgrind, who’d coiled up just outside the open doorway, snoring lightly
in the wash of pale sunlight. “I’ve begun to think, lately, that I don’t
actually know anything at all.” He met the shaman’s gaze again. “So, yes. It’s
better. Even if it’s upsetting.”
The shaman
nodded. Took a long sip of tea, eyes closing; then opened them once more,
cleared his throat, and began. “It’s fitting that your king is descended of the
first wolves – of the Úlfheðnar, the strongest and fiercest of the clans in the
Early Days of the North. But the wolf-shirts are not the oldest clan in our
history.”
“No, that’s
the Dreki clan,” Náli said, impatient. He already knew this. “That’s why it’s
Dreki Hörgr, and not Ulf Hörgr.”
“Yes, but
what do you know of them save the fact they were the first settlers of the
Waste?”
“They…had
drakes. They bonded with them. Rode them. Just as Oliver has done, and the
Drake lords of the South before him.”
“But where
did the drakes come from?”
“I don’t
bloody know that. Am I supposed to know when the first leaf unfolded at the
dawn of time?” Náli huffed. “Can you not dispose of the questions and just get
on with it?”
Unperturbed
by his outburst, the shaman said, “There is a cavern beyond the ancestral seat.
Up high in the mountain passes, never traversed by the men of the North.”
In an
instant, Náli’s aggravation was replaced by a cold lick of fear. He recalled
waking in a cold ice cavern, the way sealed by iron bars. The Fangs with their
filed teeth, and their arena full of snow-buried dead men. They’d found
Valgrind and his mother there. Strange glowing sapphires. And a verse etched in
runes on the wall.
“What sort of
cavern?” he asked, though he already knew.
“One
glistening with ice, its light blue with the breath of cold-drakes.”
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