NokiMo
RinoZ
RinoZ

patreon


B3C2 - Old Friends, New Allies


Tyron pulled his cloak a little tighter around himself. A chill wind blew down the cobbled roads of Kenmor, the tall buildings providing less shelter than one thought they would. Perhaps these large stone edifices were responsible for conjuring the city's infamous breezes? He didn’t know, but travelling inside the walls at night was always particularly cold even in the summer months.

The Western Road was filled with traffic, even at this late hour. Thirty metres wide, the thoroughfare cut through the city like a knife, dividing the northern and southern sides. The one and only safe passage into the central province, it was the main artery of the city, and one could argue, all of the east.

Crossing it was always a chore, but at the newly renamed Steelarm Square, it wasn’t quite as difficult. The wide open square provided enough room for the carts and wagons to spread out, allowing foot-traffic to pass through a little more easily. Since he’d entered the walls from the dock-gate after negotiating deliveries at the Silvership warehouse, this was the obvious choice to cross.

“Hey! Watch it, idiot!”

“Sorry.”

Tyron raised a hand in apology to a wagon driver as he stepped around a temperamental horse who flared its nostrils when he stepped too close. The Mage slowed his step and moved more cautiously until he was through the worst of it. He’d been rushing, as he tended to do when heading to this part of the city. The sooner this trip was over, the better.

It wasn’t as if he didn’t have better things to do. A backlog of orders at the shop needed to be seen to before it began to cause problems. After spending his nights in the basement experimenting on corpses, his enchanting work had naturally suffered. Progress in Necromancy was important, but he couldn’t afford to let his cover slip. Two more sleepless night should allow him to catch up, so long as the cores were delivered on time tomorrow, which would push him to almost a week without sleep.

As much as he hated to lose the time, he’d need a good night of rest before resuming nis nocturnal studies. With his superhuman constitution and mental fortitude, he could go a long time without sleep, but pushing too far would begin to affect his spellwork.

Once he reached the northern side of Kenmor, his mouth twisted into a half-snarl without him realising it. The houses were larger, four or five stories, and expensively apportioned. Despite the population still being dense, the opulence only grew more decadent the further north he went.

To his right, the Magister’s Tower loomed and his fists clenched everytime he glimpsed it from the corner of his eye. Beyond that, the Noble Quarter and the Dawn Fortress, home of the baron, could still be seen outlined against the night sky. Separated from the masses by a tall dividing wall, of course.

Further north, the Gold District, another walled area of the city, but for a rather different reason. Home to the powerful slayers who had crossed the level sixty threshold before retiring, the Gold District was a gilded cage for the strongest warriors and most powerful mages in the province.

He wasn’t headed there though, he was headed to Veil Street, immediately adjacent to the slayers retirement home.

“Paper’s,” a bored guard drawled as Tyron approached.

“Lukas Almsfield, here on business,” Tyron smiled easily as he handed his papers over.

“Uh huh, that’s what they all say,” the man snorted as he leaned casually against his post, eyes flicking over the page. “Only Bronze? Can you afford it in there?”

Tyron’s smile tightened.

“I’m not a slayer, I’m an Arcanist.”

“Oh shit. Forget I said anything, you definitely can. It’s criminal how much you lot charge for the most basic shit. How hard can be to heat a fuckin’ toilet seat?”

Why don’t you try it then, idiot.

He continued to smile.

After a final glance, the guard handed back the papers, which Tyron stowed carefully away, before he turned and opened the gate.

“Welcome to Veil Street. Don’t mess with the golds. If they rip your face off, we won’t be doing much about it.”

“I appreciate the warning.”

After he stepped through the gate, Tyron repeated the process at the second checkpoint, ten metres down the road before he was actually able to step foot on Veil street. The moment he did so, he was enveloped by soft red light that emanated from the enchanted globes that hung from poles and storefronts down the length of the street.

At this late hour, the street thronged with people, laughing raucously, drinking and generally staggering about enjoying all the delights of this hedonistic paradise.

Tyron hated it.

Much as he had when crossing the Western Road, he moved cautiously through the crowd, being careful not to bump anyone or get in the way. You never knew if the man or woman you accidentally tripped was actually level sixty and might cave your chest in with one drunken punch.

Scantily clad men and women moved through the people with the grace of dancers, mysterious smiles on their faces and laughter in their eyes as they serviced the crowds. Several spoke to him as he moved past, inviting him inside for a drink, or something more, but he politely declined each time.

Eventually he reached his destination, a massive, five story edifice, painted entirely red. Somehow, the building managed to pull off the colour without looking gaudy. The contours of the walls, the tiered roof and tastefully suggestive carvings transformed the structure into a beguiling temple with just a whiff of danger about it.

Unlike most places of business on the street, there were no tables or service in front of the building, only six heavily armed guards in full armour flanking a massive double door. Held open, a steady stream of people moved in and out, along with a dark smoke that trickled through the top of the opening.

With a mixture of irritation and reluctance, Tyron squared his shoulders and moved to the door, sliding through the opening when an opportunity arrived.

The second he was inside, the scent of cloying smoke filled his nose and clung to his throat. The corridor was dark, lit from below with dim red lights projected from cores set at the joint of the wall and floor. From rooms branching to either side he glimpsed people luxuriating in lush furniture, draped over each other as they sipped from delicate glasses or gleaming metallic goblets. As elsewhere on the street, there was laughter and boisterous enjoyment, but it was different in this building. The laughter was muted, but the indulgence more intense. A feverish need gripped these people so palpably Tyron could almost feel it on his skin.

He avoided being entangled by beguiling servers dressed in form-hugging black clothing and made his way to the staircase.

On the second floor, the smoke was even thicker, the lighting even darker, the people even more frantic. Without pausing, he pushed through into a lavish room, the walls covered in padded red leather and cast his eyes across the dozens of impossibly handsome men and women waiting on the edge of the room.

When he found the one he wanted, his eyes narrowed and he approached with heavy steps. A young man eyed him approach, eyes widening with recognition and a sly smile on his face. Dressed in a vest and pants that left nothing to the imagination, with an ornate, carved black skull positioned over his crotch, he leaned back, putting his well formed physique on display as Tyron drew closer.

“You. In the back. Now,” Tyron growled.

“Why Mister Almsfield,” the young man smiled coyly, “aren’t you forceful today? Allow me to lead the way.”

He reached out to take Tyron by the hand, but the Mage slapped him away with a glare. With a hurt expression on his face and an excited gleam to his eyes, he sashayed through an open doorway and Tyron followed. Rooms on the left and right were barred with heavy, wooden doors, soft, muted sounds of passion drifting through. The pair walked past them both, until they came to an unadorned door that the young man opened and bowed, gesturing for Tyron to enter.

Within the room was a plain wooden table with four chairs, modestly lit from an ordinary globe that hung from the middle of the roof.

With a sigh, Tyron reached into his mouth and removed the filtration device he’d put in before entering. It was uncomfortable, but better than inhaling that damned smoke. He placed it on the table before he sat, adjusting his cloak and resting his hands on his lap.

“Put him on the table and fuck off,” he said tersely.

The young man pouted.

“Mr Almsfield,” he said, his voice coy, “the mistress has given her instructions and you know that I must obey her wishes.”

Tyron glared at him.

“I warned you last time. If your mistress has something to say, she can say it to me directly.”

“Why, Mr Almsfield, you put me in a very uncomfortable position.”

Yet he sounded as if he quite enjoyed it.

The Mage’s hands rose and before the teasing expression on the escort’s face could change, they flickered rapidly through a sequence of sigils.

The Necromancer’s mind crashed into the other like a smith's hammer on a pinecone. He tightened his grip cruelly.

“Put him on the table.”

As if in a dream, the young man detached the carved skull from his belt and placed it on the table, his eyes glazed over.

“Now cut yourself,” Tyron whispered, drawing a jagged line down his own face, “right here. Deep. Do it now.”

The young man nodded, drool beginning to leak from the corner of his mouth, before he turned and left the room.

“Shit, forgot to tell him to close the door,” Tyron cursed as he rose and did it himself.

He sat back down and looked at the carved onyx skull with a mix of pity and exasperation.

“I told you not to piss her off.”

“Really? Really? Are you going to open with that every time you fucking prick? How about, ‘Hello Dove, how’ve you been?’, huh? Would that break your balls? A little bit of polite chatter to open the conversation. That’s how normal people do it.”

“Normal people aren’t talking to the enslaved soul of their friend who wouldn’t stop pissing off a vampire.”

“I didn’t think she was this mad about it! Do you have any idea how much cock I’ve seen in the last year? A lot! It’s fine if that’s your scene, obviously, but I’ve never swung this way, Tyron. Now they're swinging all over me! Day and night, it never fucking stops!”

“It’s a brothel. Of course it never stops.”

“Thanks for the words of wisdom. Are you any closer to getting me out of here or what? I do not want to be used to cup any more balls.”

“I’m working on it.”

“Work faster.”

“I’m doing what I can, it isn’t easy. I’m not exactly her boss. In Necromantic terms, she captured your soul fair and square.”

“I wouldn’t have even been there if you hadn’t locked me in my own skull to start with!”

“I know! Alright? I’m trying to get you free, it’s just taking time.”

The two fell into uncomfortable silence for a long moment.

“.... Is she even coming?”

“Give her a second,” Tyron sighed.

Sure enough, several seconds later they heard someone stomping down the corridor toward the room.

“How does she do that in heels?” Dove wondered.

“How do you know she’s in heels?”

“She’s always in heels.”

“Please tell me you aren’t still staring at her feet all the time….”

“A man needs a hobby.”

“I’m never freeing you, am I?”

The door crashed open to reveal Yor in her icy majesty. Her black satin dress managed to cover everything, yet still reveal it all at the same time. Snow-white skin, raven black hair and burning red eyes, she hadn’t aged a day in the last four years, appearing exactly as she had the day Tyron had met her. Albeit, much better dressed.

Civilisation agreed with the Vampire. She’d been significantly happier in the capital than in the woods. Right now, she looked anything but happy.

“Again, Tyron?” she glared daggers at him.

“Who’s Tyron? I’m respected businessman, Lukas Almsfield.”

“Oh shut up,” she snapped before she stormed into the room, slamming the door shut behind her. “You dare to mark another of my toys?”

The Necromancer glared back.

“I warned you. Treat Dove with some respect or I’ll do worse to your slave next time. I know you can fix the cut with no scarring. If he gelds himself, I wonder how well that can be repaired with your blood magick.”

“I will do what I want with that pervert until he has paid for his actions.”

“Don’t push it, Yor, or I’ll pick him up and walk out with him tonight. Do you want to test your Mistresses patience that far?”

Be silent,” Yor growled, animalistic fury igniting in her eyes.

Tyron felt her influence try to seize hold of his thoughts. He stiffened in his chair and grit his teeth as he fought her off.

“You didn’t,” he roared as he stood, slamming his hands down.

The two glared at each other across the table.

“Mummy, daddy, stop fighting,” Dove said plaintively. “Or do with less clothes on. Angry sex is fucking hot.”

Silence hung in the room for a moment before Tyron clapped a hand to his face.

“You idiot,” he muttered before he laughed. “Why do I even bother?”

He sat down and gestured for Yor to the same. The vampire complied, her anger dissipating a little, though she shot daggers at the skull on the table.

“I still don’t understand the whole brothel thing. I thought vampires couldn’t even have sex,” Tyron shook his head.

A slight smile curved Yor’s ruby red lips.

“Sex is a weapon. Even better, it’s a weapon that can’t be used against us. Besides, in places like this, where memories are blurred and inhibitions are low, people are easily parted from their blood. My Coven is drowning in it this past year.”

She practically shivered as she said it and Tyron twisted in his seat uncomfortably.

“Just don’t go overboard. It hasn’t been easy getting you established.”

She arched a brow at him.

“Are you saying your investment has gone poorly?”

Anything but. He made almost as much money from the Red Pavilion as he did his own store. Tyron was quickly running out of things to spend his wealth on.

“I mean, you have greater ambitions than a brothel in a well-heeled part of town. If people start turning up dead, or undead, then your project is going to be burned out before it really gets off the ground.”

The vampire leaned back and pursed her lips. A distracting sight.

“You aren’t wrong and we are being careful. I’m maintaining a tight grip on my people. Very tight. It isn’t that you should be worried about.”

Tyron rolled his eyes.

“What is it this time? More planning permits? Identities need to be mocked up? I’ve been jumping through so many administrative hoops I feel like an acrobat.”

For once, Yor hesitated.

“Not… so much. This time, it’s politics,” she said the word with genteel distaste. “You have agreed to help the Court, and we appreciate your ongoing assistance, but you must recall our previous discussion about factions.”

He did. Vampires, as it turned out, bickered and squabbled between each other even more than non-immortals. To be fair, they had a lot of time on their hands and cared a great deal about hierarchy. In fact, they cared about nothing quite so much as hierarchy, if his understanding was correct.

“That’s all your side,” Tyron waved a hand to dismiss the issue, “I don’t want to get involved. You and your Mistress have my help establishing a presence in this Realm, that was the agreement. If other vampires have an issue, then you need to deal with it.”

Yor’s smile revealed a little more fang than usual.

“Oh, we have been dealing with issues. The problem will be when our rivals reach out to you directly. This realm, this empire, are ripe for our influence, like a fresh, unplucked fruit. So many potential servants, so much blood. The more others sniff around, the more they will want a slice.”

“And you’re blocking them, which means they’ll try to go around you and come straight to me.”

She nodded.

“Not all of us are quite as… socially minded as my Mistress. Others prefer a more direct approach. You will find their entreaties to be difficult to resist.”

“So the answer is?”

“Stay hidden. If they don’t find you, they will need to work with other, inferior intermediaries, people we can safely cut off.”

Thanks to agreements secured by his parents, Tyron was a little more protected and not so easily disposed of. Without that, Yor and his Mistress might have erased him already. Now that they were established, the Coven was growing in wealth and cultivating influence at an obscene rate.

Tyron leaned forward and rubbed at his temples.

“Sometimes I think this alliance is more trouble than it’s worth,” he groaned.

“You’ve only begun to scratch the surface of what the Court can do for you,” Yor purred. “We are moving forward with procuring certain knowledge for your use, as an example.”

The Necromancer perked up immediately.

“That’s… great news,” he said eagerly, eyes gleaming.

“Are you guys going to fuck or what?” Dove demanded.

Comments

I’d taken a big break to accumulate some chapters while I read some new stuff and This is what I came back to??! Damn what a good chapter! Great to see Dove back and it’s pretty funny , his current predicament. But logical. And he’s still a perve 😆.Glad to see Tyron being a bit more ruthless. Looking forward to reading the other chapters. Thank you RinoZ

M Afxarr

I saw some comments before I read the chapter and while I can see how dove being brought back runs people the wrong way, it did not happen the way I thought but honestly I think it’s a great and logical method of keeping a well liked character around.

Vash119

Everyone's talking about Dove, and I'm just debating whether I want to keep reading after the MC mind-raped a hapless minion into self mutilating. No, I don't care that it was 'easily healed'. MC seems to have left all charitable instincts with his parents' corpses, and that altruistic impulse was a lot of what made him appealing as a character.

BelligerentGnu

Even if Dove is the first and only character to be brought back it will constantly cheapen any tension placed on the side characters in the future. Also is he just going to not yearn for death anymore? Like it or not that was a core part of his character. Not to mention a core part of Tyron’s arc has been this decent into loneliness and separation from humanity. Idk I really hate it and think it’s the cheap easy option.

Spam Spamalot

I mean, I dont think Yor gives a fuck about what Dove wants. She probably finds even more enjoyment from nabbing Dove's soul because all he wanted was freedom.

Ryder-09

Huh... Weird. I trust ya though

NoodleGod

This just shows hownhreat gonna job you did in making dove so likeable. Had people have any dislike for the guy? His returned would have been the end of the novel lol it's all a matter of perception

ManguKing

I had utterly forgotten that they are presented as necromantic experts, maybe due to it never being a thing in the interactions between Yor and Ty.

Panchonki

Absolutely so. However, we as readers are given a framework by which every art in the story works by. Every case of handwaving cheapens the effort of establishing these tools of immersion. In this case; Either we are to believe Tyrions efforts, his strife, during the fighting ascent matter or they do not. We do not see where Yor is by the end of the last book. She has acted to save Tyrions life when close at hand previously, thus her absence has weight. A chance to bind him in heavy debt is previously tantalising. So either far away, making her timed soulsnatching more unlikely or close by but un-acting, creating other issues. It is similar to assuming the parents didn't just show up due to happenstance of timing, if his misery were suffered with safetynets ready as soon as he would suffer what couldn't be healed all the tension of the chase evaporates into a cheap trick. Convenience is a word given more credence by Yor having shown powers related to Strength, Speed, Hypnosis and elevated senses, fueled by blood previously ingested. Nothing related to soul manipulation, ever. We're shown revenants and ghosts are finicky things to bind, so far losing much personality in the process. Is it not seemingly hand-waved when no clue to her necromantic proficiency was given before this not unconvinient moment?

Panchonki

I don't think Dove's return is a bad thing at all. How some think it makes the story cheap, I couldn't say. It sounds like they're taking it personally. Yes, it does soften the Valor that came with his original death but his character type absolutely suits the way he's yanked around by his soul. I don't think takes much to appreciate the comical gesture that is Dove's character. Whether it is or not, I like to see his role as a stereotyped add-in done very well. This may just be for justifications sake but people in the comments have said it, Yor as a vampire had the ability to accomplish such a feat and he would make an excellent bargaining chip in Yor's(not the vampires) favor held against Lukas. All in all I believe the return is credible and, not that I'm saying it is, but nothings wrong with a sprinkle of something along the lines of fan service. Keep it up Rinoz, you're the shit.

Forrest Ogden

I think it makes sense he came back. I wouldn’t of liked it if Tyron did it. That would be cheap. But now dove is truly a slave (being enslaved by someone who doesn’t care about him). Doesn’t feel cheap to me. Was maybe a bit quick and sudden. Would of felt more appropriate if it was found out quite a bit later that Yor was imprisoning dove and this causes some drama between her and Tyron. Way it was revealed was kinda nonchalant but not awful.

Icharris

Vampires are undead themselves? It said they are the greatest necromancy experts when Yor was first introduced. She also said who else better to teach a young necromancer than the court.

Icharris

When does Dove get to become an undead summoner? Becoming one of Tyron’s Undead Generals or something like that would be awesome!

Jon Contego

Convenient? This series is literally about necromancy and soul manipulation.

alt31415

*Convenient*

Sly Lyon

I'm torn. On the one hand, I do really like Dove as a character. On the other, convenient ressurection is a slippery slope.

Panchonki

I enjoy having our beloved Dove returned to us however I more enjoy how he was brought back by Yor out of spite rather than making Tyron go back on his word.

Nathan Patrick

Dove's return and the way he's been "handled" made my day ^^

Lothor

Alot of people dont seem to like the return of Dove but honestly it makes sense. Keep pissing off a vampire who has demonstrated the ability to capture and consume souls, then a consequence of that is that she probably doesnt want you to go peacefully, plus he also becomes a bargaining chip for her on Tyron. Additionally, it was already pretty traumatic with his parents' death as well as childhood friends granted they were trying to kill him but still, it would affect your psyche. Like aside from his uncle and aunt, Tyron has no more connections to his hometown left.

Nathan Quitugua

Not at all a fan of Dove coming back. He wanted to Rest, made a great deal about wanting to move on, not wanting to exist as a skull - Tyron did so at the end of the last book and now suddenly he is back as a [Slave]. Completely cheapens the story, sadly. Also - since when did the vampire become a [Necromancer] ? We saw no hint of that.

lenkite


Related Creators