Nightglass
The tendrils were snaking into Ascaros's hair and curling along his face. Where they touched him, Isiem saw his friend's skin blanch white and then go corpse-gray, while the smoke grew thicker and more solid. The russet brown of his hair, ordinarily touched with vibrant red, began to go gray too.
It was feeding on him. The shadow was stealing Ascaros's life, hoping to create its own—but it wouldn't succeed. It couldn't. The shadowcallers would crush it before it got that far ...and then his friend would have died for nothing.
And they were willing to let him die. Right here, in front of all the gathered villagers. Isiem saw that plainly. If Ascaros couldn't wrest himself free, they would let the nightglass kill him.
He rushed forward, shoving Ascaros away from the mirror. The female shadowcaller snarled, drawing a hand back to strike him, but the tall one with the circlet of chains shook his head and she froze.
"Let him try," he said. "I want to see what he does."
Isiem scarcely heard the man. The shadows had let go of Ascaros, but only so they could twine around Isiem instead. They were cold, colder than the sharpest winter wind, and the same tingling burn followed their touch. He gasped, and with watering eyes stared into the mirror ...
The Pathfinder Tales Library
Novels
Prince of Wolves by Dave Gross
Winter Witch by Elaine Cunningham
Plague of Shadows by Howard Andrew Jones
The Worldwound Gambit by Robin D. Laws
Master of Devils by Dave Gross
Death's Heretic by James L. Sutter
Song of the Serpent by Hugh Mattews
City of the Fallen Sky by Tim Pratt
Nightglass by Liane Merciel
Blood of the City by Robin D. Laws
Journals
The Compass Stone: The Collected Journals of Eando Kline edited by James L. Sutter
Hell's Pawns by Dave Gross
Dark Tapestry by Elaine Cunnningham
Prodigal Sons edited by James L. Sutter
Plague of Light by Robin D. Laws
Guilty Blood by F. Wesley Schneider
Short Stories
"Lord of Penance" by Richard Lee Byers
"The Ghosts of Broken Blades" by Monte Cook
"The Illusionist" by Elaine Cunningham
"Noble Sacrifice" by Richard Ford
"Guns of Alkenstar" by Ed Greenwod
"The Lost Pathfinder" by Dave Gross
"A Lesson in Taxonomy" by Dave Gross
"A Passage to Absalom" by Dave Gross
"Blood Crimes" by J. C. Hay
"The Walkers from the Crypt" by Howard Andrew Jones
"The Ironroot Deception" by Robin D. Laws
"Certainty" by Liane Merciel
"Two Pieces of Tarnished Silver by Erik Mona
"The Secret of the Rose and Glove by Kevin Andrew Murphy
"Blood and Money by Steven Savile
"The Swamp Warden" by Amber E. Scott
"The Seventh Execution" by Amber E. Scott
"Plow and Sword" by Robert E. Vardeman
"The Box" by Bill Ward
Nightglass © 2012 Paizo Publishing, LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means digital, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, or conveyed via the Internet or a website without prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embedded in critical articles and reviews.
Paizo Publishing, LLC, the Paizo golem logo and Pathfinder are registered trademarks of Paizo Publishing, LLC; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, Pathfinder Campaign Setting, and Pathfinder Tales are trademarks of Paizo Publishing, LLC.
Cover art by Tyler Walpole.
Cover design by Andrew Vallas.
Map by Robert Lazzaretti.
Paizo Publishing, LLC
7120 185th Ave NE, Ste 120
Redmond, WA 98052
paizo.com
ISBN 978-1-60125-440-5 (mass market paperback)
ISBN 978-1-60125-441-2 (ebook)
Publisher's Cataloging-In-Publication Data
(Prepared by The Donohue Group, Inc.)
Merciel, Liane.
Nightglass / Liane Merciel.
p. ; cm. — (Pathfinder tales)
Set in the world of the role-playing game, Pathfinder.
Issued also as an ebook.
ISBN: 978-1-60125-440-5 (mass market pbk.)
1. Imaginary places—Fiction. 2. Magicians—Fiction. 3. Good and evil—Fiction. 4. Fantasy fiction. 5. Adventure stories. I. Title. II. Title: Pathfinder adventure path. III. Series: Pathfinder tales library.
PS3613.E727 N54 2012
813.6
First printing June 2012.
Printed in the United States of America.
For Spencer Hughes.
Book One: Monsters
Prologue
You should not be here," the woman whispered. Her fingers fluttered over Feisal's face, light and erratic as blind butterflies. Fear made her eyes enormous. "You must not be here. The white ones will find you."
Feisal tried to lift his head. Couldn't. Everything from his neck down was cold and dull, utterly unresponsive to his efforts. The numbness frightened him worse than pain would have. Pain meant he was alive, if hurt. Numbness meant ...what?
Curly-furred sheepskins covered most of his torso, but they had slipped off one of his shoulders. By tilting his chin down, he could just glimpse the stiff gray flesh, puckered with withered rings as if some enormous many-mouthed leech had sucked not only the blood but the life out of his body.
"Where am I?" Feisal whispered. "What's happened to me?"
"Hush," the woman said. Her back was to the fire, and it was too dark for him to see her face, but he thought he heard kindness in her voice. Kindness, and exhaustion. And fear.
Gently, the woman lifted Feisal's head and held a wooden cup to his lips. Splintery dried leaves floated on the steaming liquid inside. "Drink."
He did. Warmth suffused him. Then a soft, suffocating heaviness.
He slept.
∗ ∗ ∗
The woman was gone when he woke.
Feisal sat up. He was in a small cottage, its single room partitioned into three smaller spaces by folding wooden screens. Paneled shutters covered the uneven windows. Although seams of daylight showed above and beneath the shutters, it was dark enough in the cottage that Feisal could only make out the general shapes of things.
He got off the pallet, intending to lift the shutters and let some light in, but stopped just before reaching the windows. Something dangled in the middle of each one, on the far side of the shutters: a crude doll-shaped fetish made of wicker bound with human hair. Their faces were blank, wrinkled balls.
What had the woman said? Something about "white ones"? She'd been terrified of them, whatever they were. Not just for herself, but because she feared they might find him.
Perhaps she'd had a reason for leaving the shutters closed. Licking his lips, Feisal stepped back.
He lit a candle instead. Holding its flame over his body, he saw that the wounds that had frightened him so badly the previous night—if it was the previous night; he had no idea how long he'd slept—looked much better. The dead grayness was gone. Welts still dappled the right side of his body in an odd looping pattern, but the flesh appeared to be a healthy pink under the layer of greasy ointment the woman had rubbed into his wounds.
What had done that to him?
The last clear thing he remembered was talking to his employer, Luswick, as they sat around a campfire waiting for the company's dinner of sourbroth and beans. They'd argued over which road to take as they neared the southern Uskwood. Feisal, mindful of
the forest's reputation, had wanted to follow the trade road that skirted its periphery. Luswick, who fancied himself the best Pathfinder in Isger, wouldn't hear of it. To him, an unmapped forest cried out for chronicling, and none of Feisal's arguments could sway him. None of the other mercenaries had even tried to dissuade the eccentric.
"The Uskwood is mapped," Feisal had protested before they crossed the border. He'd seen the inked deerskins himself. They weren't especially sophisticated, true. The Nidalese kept all the good maps to themselves and forbade their sale to foreigners, so the only maps available were those drawn by unlettered borderlanders or itinerant peddlers. But they showed the things that mattered. A forest, a few small settlements. Roads. What more was there?
Luswick had snorted hard enough to flap the ends of his bushy white mustache. "Guesses, boy. There are guesses. Scrawls and doodles by illiterate amateurs, one step removed from sailors' lies and ‘here be dragons.' Not maps. No, this place cries for an expert's hand. Besides, there's treasure to be had."
What treasure, he'd never specified. The most Luswick would tell any of his hirelings was that he was on the trail of some Desnan artifact—not enchanted, he claimed, but valuable nonetheless as a historical relic of the faith. Why the Pathfinder believed it was in the Uskwood, how he intended to find it, or what it even was, he stubbornly refused to say.
Feisal remembered little of their journey. The Uskwood had been strangely cold, strangely hushed under its canopy of unmoving leaves. Its shadows had seemed to stretch longer than they should. He'd pointed that out to Luswick and the others—how the shadows reached toward them from the wrong angles, going against the sun—but Luswick had only nodded, recorded it in his journals, and dismissed the phenomenon as a harmless curiosity.
For a while Feisal had let himself hope the chronicler could be right. The forest was an eerie place, and he never came to like it any better, but it didn't seem dangerous. Nothing disturbed their camps; they never saw so much as a pile of bear scat among the trees.
Until the night a storm brought the dark down early, trapping them inside the wood.
Eerie, that storm was. Unnatural. It hadn't touched the trees. Even Luswick, seeing that, had stopped talking and moved closer to their campfire. High overhead, wild winds raked the clouds to shreds and lightning stabbed the tatters ...but around them, silence reigned. It was as if an enormous glass dome encased the forest. It shut out any breeze, any raindrop that might have splashed into the perfect, deathly stillness.
The air had ...thickened, too. Feisal put a hand to his throat, remembering. He hadn't been able to breathe. Dizziness had overwhelmed him, and in that choking delirium he had imagined shapes moving in the dark. Snakes. Or whips, maybe. Had they moved on their own, or had someone held them? He couldn't recall. But there had been pale figures, pale faces, floating in the gloom ...and they had passed him by, because he was already dying when they came.
Then oblivion. Until he woke up here.
Putting the candle down, Feisal pulled on a spare set of trousers and a clean shirt. The clothes he'd been wearing that night were nowhere to be seen, but his other belongings—excepting his weapons, he noted sourly—were piled neatly beside his pallet.
So were some of his companions'. Luswick's sketchbook sat among his saddlebags. Feisal picked it up, flipping through the maps and notes written in the Pathfinder's blocky, familiar hand.
He tossed it away. Luswick treasured that book above his own life; he would never have abandoned it while he still drew breath. So he was dead, or as good as.
Was it worth it? For an unfinished map of the Uskwood's shallowest reaches?
Feisal turned the book over with his foot so he wouldn't have to look at its owner's mark. He was standing beside it, wondering if he dared search the cottage for his missing weapons, when the woman bustled back in. She carried firewood under one arm, a bucket of water in her other hand, and a freshly plucked chicken tied to a sash at her waist. Daylight washed over her from the open door, revealing that she was younger and more careworn than Feisal had initially realized. Her hair was soft brown without a streak of gray, but her face was deeply lined.
"I feel much better," he said. "Thank you."
"Rest," she said, not unkindly. Her accent was heavy, but Feisal couldn't quite place it. Was this how villagers spoke in the Uskwood?
She didn't look at him, instead busying herself with hanging the water bucket in the hearth and dumping the firewood on the floor. The door closed, leaving them both in shadow. "I am not surprised you feel better. The white ones' curse fades quickly if it fails to kill. But you are not well, not yet, and you will need all your strength to evade them."
"What happened to my companions?" He gestured to Luswick's book.
"Dead."
"All of them?" He knew the answer to that, or thought he did, but he wanted to hear someone else say the words. Let her be the one to make that horror real.
"Better if you think so." The woman arranged her firewood in the hearth, piled kindling beneath it, and struck a spark to the heap. "In truth, I do not know. We only found you."
"The others could still be alive?"
"No."
"But you said—"
"We found you, so you lived," she said impatiently, straightening and taking the chicken over to a bloodstained board. With swift, practiced strokes, she chopped the bird into stew-sized chunks. "Two of the others were dead: an elf woman and a young man with an old rope scar around his neck. We buried those. If anyone else was in your company, the white ones took them. They may not be dead, but they do not live."
"That doesn't make any—what do you mean?"
"They give their captives to the shadow. Or ...other things, sometimes, but most often they sacrifice to the shadow. Do not think to rescue your friends from that fate. Even if they still draw breath, they are your friends no longer."
Feisal exhaled, struggling for calm. It wasn't just frustration at her cryptic answers that beset him. It was fear. The men who had vanished were all gifted with magic; he and the dead ones were not. There was only one place in Avistan where albinos hunted wizards and fed them to the living dark. But he needed to hear it. "Where am I?"
The woman rinsed her bloody hands in a bowl of water. She emptied the water into her stewpot along with the chopped chicken. "You know that already."
"Where?"
"Nidal."
Nidal. Cursed land, cursed people. Feisal sank bonelessly onto his pallet, closing his eyes. All his strength had fled. Her answer was not a surprise—of course he was still in Nidal. He was likely still in the Uskwood, which guarded the darkest of that nation's secrets. But he had dared to hope, when he woke alive and unmaimed, that somehow a miraculous benefactor had found him and carried him away.
Because he could think of no reason that he would still be alive, and unhurt, in Nidal.
He'd heard the stories all his life. At the end of the Age of Legends, when Earthfall shattered the world and cast its sundered empires into darkness, the people of Nidal had struck a terrible bargain. In the cataclysm's wake, ash blotted out the sun; nothing green could grow. Facing an endless winter and sure starvation, the Nidalese swore allegiance to a dark and twisted power. In exchange for eternal servitude, they were granted the gift of survival. After a fashion.
Life in Nidal was not as it was elsewhere. Feisal didn't know how many of the tales were true and how many were fanciful exaggerations, but if it was one in ten thousand, it was too many for him. He had advised Luswick to give the Uskwood a wide berth for precisely that reason. Pangolais, the darkly glittering heart of Nidal, was said to lie in the depths of that forest, and to be the source from which all its terrors sprang.
Despite his best efforts, those terrors had found him after all.
His hands were shaking. Feisal concentrated on stilling them—on attaining that one small measure of control over his own terror—and failed. Completely. His hands obeyed him no more than his near-dead body had the night befor
e.
"Where?" he asked again, hoarsely. If he was close to the edge of the forest, perhaps he could slip out. Even on foot, he might make it across the border. If he was near the Menadors' passes, or a caravan road, or anywhere else he might find merchants, travelers, anyone willing to shelter a stranger in their numbers...
The woman paused before answering, probably wondering whether he was half-witted, but eventually she caught his meaning. "A village. I will not tell you its name. When the time comes, I will tell you which way to go, and that is all you need know. Anything more might bring trouble to us."
If you get caught. She didn't say it, but she didn't need to. Feisal understood her implication clearly.
"I suppose that means you won't tell me your name, either."
"No," she said, with a faint smile.
"Can I call you Lyrael?" he asked, naming one of Desna's legendary priestesses. According to the tales, she'd appeared to wayward travelers lost on starless nights, and had guided them gently through the dark to safety. Considering the circumstances, Feisal thought, it was an appropriate name for his benefactor.
The woman's smile vanished. She turned away from him abruptly, lifting her stewpot in rag-mittened hands and setting it over the fire.
"I'm sorry," Feisal said. "I didn't mean to —"
"Yes," she said. "Yes, you can call me that."
∗ ∗ ∗
Day by day, Feisal's vitality returned. He hobbled around the cottage, doing what small chores he could, but Lyrael refused to let him venture outside. Knowing where he was, Feisal felt no temptation to disobey her. If he escaped Nidal alive, it would be by Desna's good graces and hers.
He occupied himself playing with Lyrael's son, Isiem, a three-year-old boy with long white hair. Not white-blond, as many children had, but stark white. The child himself was not much darker. Head to foot, he was the color of new-fallen snow ...and of the pale ones who had hunted the Uskwood on the night of the storm.
Feisal didn't ask Lyrael about that. Neither did he ask where the child's father was, or how she eked out a living alone with one young child in her home and, judging by the bump under her apron, another on the way. It wasn't his concern, and prying would have been a poor reward for her generosity—the woman was already angry enough that her son had unwittingly told Feisal his real name. So instead he watched the boy, playing simple games and retelling the handful of stories he remembered from his own childhood. He wasn't much of a talespinner, but any story seemed to fill the child with wonder, no matter how clumsily told.