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Throne Hunters Book 1, Chapter 41

Vic left that evening on undisclosed business.

Nessa was long gone by that point.

Sam had departed without saying another word.

Harald had spent the day training as best he could. Come dusk, he fixed himself a bowl of leftovers, poured himself a glass of water from the bucket he fetched from the well, and sat before the parlor fire, slowly shoveling food into his mouth.

He wasn’t hungry, but he knew he needed to eat. To consume fuel for his body.

The house was empty, and sounded like it. Even as it settled down for the night, timbers creaking, the tenor of the silence was different. The feel.

He was alone.

Harald stared into the fire, only rising on occasion to toss in another log.

He didn’t want to spend the evening going over everything that had happened. Searching his actions for mistakes, for signs of demonic influence.

Maybe it was there, maybe it wasn’t.

But what was done was done.

Instead, he turned his thoughts to his upcoming duel.

Yeoric.

Dull anger arose in his breast. For all his work, all his sacrifices, his gains, Nessa still thought he wasn’t ready. He had - what - four or so days left before he had to duel the man?

He had to win.

Harald recalled the memory of being pinned to the floor by the larger warrior. Yeoric’s arrogance and insincere dignity.

What could he do in these next four days that would make a difference?

What would his father have done?

Unbidden, words returned to him.

Your inheritance is yours if you are worthy.

Gustav is the key. Strike with the right energy.

Kill your masters.

Harald stilled.

The right energy.

He extended his hand and summoned the Dawnblade. It appeared in his grip, wickedly sharp, its malachite blade reflecting the dancing fire.

Until he sheathed it with Abyssal Attunement.

For a long while, he simply stared at the now jet-black blade, the darkness wet and gleaming as if he’d dipped the blade into oil.

Into the living abyss.

The right energy.

Would this qualify?

There was only one way to find out.

Suddenly eager, he leaped up, dashed from the parlor, and descended to the basement, lit the lanterns, and regarded the training dummy.

“You ready, Gustav?” The depth of the room absorbed his voice and gave nothing back.

Old memories arose.

His father working the mannequin, playing with it, laughing as he evaded its blows, hammering it again and again with his blade.

Harald pursed his lips. They were some of the few memories he had of his father being happy. The only time he looked like himself, free of concerns, his impatience, his stinging sarcasm, his heavy hand, his brutal and dour outlook on life.

“You got the best of him,” said Harald to the dumb mannequin. “He was happier by far with you than with me.”

Gustav’s faceless head made no response.

A dull anger arose within Harald. There was so much his father could have told him. Taught him, if he’d given Harald the time. Instead, his father had belittled him, mocked him for his initial failures, instilled in him a fear of messing up before his dad.

“What was so much more important?” he demanded of his dead father, stalking toward the mannequin, the Dawnblade in hand. “What were you so focused on that you couldn’t see me?”

Gustav made no response.

Anger boiled up within Harald. This damned mannequin. And it was still hiding his father’s secrets. Secrets that his father could have just shared with him, sat him down and explained.

“Damn you,” he hissed, the pain, the bottled up anguish, the resentment, the bitterness all rising within him.

Without thinking, he struck with all his anger at Gustav.

The abyss flowed through him, the air grew chill, as he felt both his Active and Passive Abilities activate.

The green sword turned jet-black.

Gustav didn’t even flinch.

With a cry, Harald brought the sword cracking across the mannequin’s head, and the abyss coruscated blackly, forming a nexus of oblivion where sword met wood.

The mannequin rocked in place, and then a grinding sound came from behind Harald.

He wheeled about and saw a narrow doorway open where before he could have sworn was the thickest stone.

Harald gaped, heart pounding, then stared at his blade, at Gustav, then back to the door.

Your inheritance is yours once you are worthy.

Gustav is the key. Strike with the right energy.

Kill your masters.

So he’d been right. The abyss was the “right” energy? But how - and why - had his father keyed Gustav to such an obscure Class? How could he have guessed, known, hoped that Harald would become an Abyssal Initiate?

Harald dismissed the blade and stepped tentatively to the secret door. Just like in the dungeon, but this one was masterfully built, its edges sharp, the door having recessed and slid out of sight into a broad slot in the stone.

For a moment, Harald simply stared down the winding staircase that led into utter blackness, then he stepped aside to snag a lantern and entered his father’s domain.

The stairs rotated three times and opened into a small chamber.

No other exits.

The ceiling was low, the stonework expertly cut from the living rock.

A simple wooden shelf ran along the back wall. Upon it lay a leather folder, a thong wrapped around it several times and then tucked under itself. A small, iron bound chest was set against the wall beneath the shelf, and a weapon’s rack was bolted into the wall to Harald’s left. It held a kite shield with a protruding central boss, a slender needle of a sword only as long as Harald’s arm, a hatchet with a head of gold, and three identical daggers with curving blades of blue metal.

The silence ached.

Numb, hands shaking, Harald stepped up to the wooden shelf and set the lantern upon it.

The leather folder was dyed navy blue, but was otherwise unmarked. Harald took it up and unwound the thong, then parted the folder upon the shelf.

It contained four sheets of parchment, his father’s angular, crabbed writing scrawled across all four.

Harry,

His name at the top caused his chest to hitch, his gut to tighten, his throat to lock. His eyes swam with tears, and he heard his father’s voice, not the angry tone, the mocking one, nor even the sarcastic, belittling one.

The gruff, heartfelt way his father used to say his name while his mother was still alive.

Harald sniffed sharply, wiped angrily at his eyes, then angled the sheets toward the lantern.

Harry,

If you’re reading this, then I reckon you’ve not turned out a complete waste of my seed after all. I’ll admit the chances of that happening are slim. The boy you are as I write this is not the son I’d imagined I’d sire. But then I’ve not turned out to be the man I once dreamed of being, so I guess we’re even on that score.

“Fuck you, Dad,” whispered Harald.

The only way you’re reading this is if you’ve struck a deal with that bastard, Vorakhar. You’ve probably figured out by now that I didn’t kill him like I claimed. Get over it. I had to explain that Nightshard, and Vorakhar himself offered his finger as proof and suggested I claim the kill. It worked well enough. But this means my mistakes have fallen upon you. Well. These papers are my attempt to rectify my poor parenting.

Harald pursed his lips, even as he felt jangly excitement arise within him.

I’ll lay it out straight, as best I understand it, as I wish someone had done for me. Vorakhar is at war with his five brothers and sisters. I’ve not been introduced to any of them, thank the angels, but heard Vorakhar bitch enough to figure out some facts. The most dangerous of them is the eldest brother, Silenthros. Grimarque, one of the sisters, is almost as bad. She’s corrupted House Silvershield, I’m pretty sure. Ha! Don’t let anyone know. Lady Argent will kill half the city to preserve her reputation as a peacemaker.

“The angels wept,” whispered Harald, looking up to stare at the wall. House Silvershield was highly respected, their agents easily marked for their distinctive sky blue and silver uniforms. They were famous for seeking to broker peace between the Houses, secure alliances, and uncover the influence of… demons.

Harald grimaced. Fucking hypocrites. Though he could see the rationale behind that move. How better to hide your own corruption than pretend to seek it in others?

Seraphex is the demon I’d have chosen as my patron if I’d had my druthers, but that’s because she’s mad about warfare. Vorakhar fears her, partly because she’s unstoppable in battle, and partly because he has trouble predicting what she’ll do next.

Valthazar, I know little about. The middle brother, I saw him just once. Gold and black cloak, horns like batwings.

The last sister is Eclavistra. Vorakhar holds her in contempt. From what I gather, she’s the youngest of the lot and the weakest.

Mark my words, Son. Even Eclavistra can end your world, so don’t go thinking you can play games with them. They’re demon princes and princesses all, and Flutic has no idea what’s brewing deep beneath its streets.

Harald nodded slowly as he turned to the second page.

Now, Vorakhar, he’s the one I know best and he’s a piece of work. He got his claws in me when he brought your mother back from death. I won’t go into it, but it’s why she ceased raiding and was always so weak. In the end, it’s why she died regardless. But Vorakhar gave me six more years with her, and that’s not nothing.

Harald hissed and dropped the page. What!? He reread the top paragraph, then stepped back.

Vorakhar had brought his mother back to life? Six years before she’d died? Harald would have been… three.

That’s when their fortunes had changed, his father had become wealthy and purchased Darrowdelve Manor. That’s when his mother had become sickly, had confined herself to the manor, spending her mornings in bed, her afternoons in the garden.

Harald’s stomach turned as the pieces of his life fell into place.

I’ve no regrets, boy. What I did, I did for love. And after your mother passed, I did more from habit than anything else. I won’t defend it. But now, as I write this, I feel a reckoning coming. Vorakhar explained at her passing that our deal was for the rest of my life, not Verena’s, but that’s not how I understood it. Soon, I’ll head down to have a chat with him. We’ll see what comes of it.

Harald flicked through the pages, seeking a date for when this was written.

Nothing.

Had his father’s “chat” with Vorakhar been what had claimed his life? It had to be.

As I said, there’s a war heating up in the depths of the Fallen Angel. The demons are at each other’s throats. Grimarque’s claimed the Throne of Harmony, and Vorakhar’s got himself the Throne of Shadows. Just last year, Seraphex stole the Throne of War, and last I heard Valthazar’s about to capture the Throne of Knowledge.

That’ll leave just three Thrones left to the angels. Once they fall, and fall they will, the demons will truly turn upon each other. It’ll be a bitter first fight, but the first to claim two Thrones will gain an insurmountable advantage, and sweep the rest. The fall, when it comes, will be sudden, and that’ll be it for Flutic.

Harald reread the entirety of the second page. The demons were claiming Thrones? The Thrones of the Cosmos? What did that even mean? The Thrones were the mystical focal points that every raider carried in their own personal Cosmos, that they unlocked with sufficient scales, and which in turn fed them power with which to fuel their Abilities.

What did it mean for Vorakhar to have “got himself the Throne of Shadows”? Did that mean that every raider’s personal second Throne was a connection to Vorakhar? That couldn’t be right.

Bewildered, he reread the line about the angels. Who still held three Thrones. Was the female angel he’d seen in the dungeon part of that defensive force?

Feeling like he was going crazy, he turned to the third page.

All of this is far above our paygrade. The noble Houses are no longer generating heavy hitters as they once used to, but the demons are still keyed to activities in Flutic. They know that at any moment a fortunate soul may be rewarded by the Fallen Angel and cause problems for them, so they keep an eye on the raiders and seek to suborn those with a little promise.

Promise like I once had.

Promise, it seems, like you’ve now got.

Hence Vorakhar’s patronage, and your acquiring dark energy. I can’t guess the flavor, but he’ll have given you a Demon Seed and engineered your getting a suitable Class. The Class doesn’t matter. The Seed will warp and claim and devour it. There’s no escaping him now, Harry, but that need not be a bad thing.

The Demon Seed is given to very few. Very fucking few. It’ll set you on the path to real power if you can handle it. It got to be too much for me. I stopped my training. But if you handle it right from the beginning, then you have a chance.

A chance to kill Vorakhar, and get revenge for what he did to your mother.

Look, Son, here’s how you handle the Seed. It feeds off bloody-minded acts of willpower. It’s not enough to train hard. You’ve got to not only leave nothing on the table, you’ve got to knock the table over. It gets harder to impress with time, so enjoy the rush of rewards while they’re first coming. But if you go it alone like I did, you’ll lose yourself, just like I did after your mother died. Going solo will be mighty tempting. You’ll think friends are holding you back. Limiting you. That life will be easier without them, less complicated. That you’re an idiot for catering to their needs.

But trust me. Get yourself some good friends, raiders you can trust with your life, and tell them everything. Then charge them with keeping you on the straight and narrow. Because you’re going to become a monster, Son. That Seed will consume whatever Class you get and give you more than you can dream of.

It was too much for me.

But if you set your goals on killing Vorakhar, if you get friends to keep you aimed true, then damn. That Seed will be your only dream in hell of doing so.

The end of the third page.

Harald felt shook.

It was as if his father were in the room with him, guiding him, addressing the very problems he was facing.

He almost didn’t want to read the last page.

The powers the Seed will give you are bad news, Son. It’s designed by Vorakhar to corrupt you and lead you down a dark path. Some of it will be right welcome. The regeneration and pain immunity has helped me more times than I can remember, and the demoniac body is unbelievable. Whatever your physical stats are now, forget it, you’ve seen nothing. The combat Abilities are what allowed me to earn my reputation, but whatever aura your Class got, your Seed will warp it and turn it fucking dark.

But that’s nothing. Your Class will have “Initiate” added after it. That’s the Seed’s doing. When you evolve your Class to the next level, it’ll have “Master” added after, and that’s when you get the bad powers. The sick powers. The powers that I couldn’t stomach, and which will make you unstoppable even as they make you a thing of evil. If you can find a way to wield those powers without becoming as bad as Vorakhar, than you’re a wiser and stronger man than I.

All right, my hand’s cramping. I hate writing. I’ll come back down soon to leave some choice weapons and some scales to help you along, and then, when I’ve the stomach for it, I’ll continue this letter.

There’s so damned much to tell you.

Wish I could just sit you down now, but I can’t. You’re already fourteen, but you’re a weak, gormless idiot that wouldn’t understand the half of what I’m saying, and if you never get the Seed, if Vorakhar never takes an interest in you, why, then I’d just be wasting your time and mine.

All right. More soon.

Harald turned the sheet, then opened the leather folder again. Searched the shelf, searched the floor, then turned around, scanning the ground.

Nothing.

There were no more pages.

His father had never returned.

Comments

Community chat is live!

Phil Tucker

Niceeee

Kronos

Hey Phil. Can you setup a discord for the novel. Or a community chat on patreon to better discuss the novel?

SirWinsALot

"and the demoniac body is unbelievable." I used to pray for times like this 🙏

Traellium

Friends. You have to work as hard on that part as you are on the training, Harald. Nessa might join to become a different person. Sam will join to protect Flutic. I don't know what Vic gets out of this but he's clearly tied to countess Sonora so she's going to have to come along for the ride. I can see Sam being chosen by an angel.

Amber Gregory

No there is no Discord yet

Fast Lance

Dad is 100% still alive and I can’t wait for the eventual family reunion. Hopefully we get some father son fight scenes and then an eventual team up to kill Vorakhar once his dad has broken his oath.

Bradley Reuter

Here we go

Peter

Actually harald exposing these secrets might help nessa out a lot. Give her a goal that is hard to achieve something to distract her from her addictions and the companionship of a team working towards such a goal would do well for her

SirWins

Hey Phil do you have a discord for this novel?

SirWins

Woah what a lore dump and what a cliff.

SirWins

The plot thickens! And the story keeps getting better and better!

Manofonezerg

Finally got to see the secret passage. I am eager to see what weapons and scales he inherited. Thanks for the chapter.

MavTech

This just got even better! Was wondering when / how he’d make it into his Dad’s secret room. Very interesting stuff in that letter…..:-)

Lorenz

Damn I’m glad I decided to stay up and read this chapter as it came through! But Phil, what about the scales??? How many were left?

Mark Timmony


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