Chapter 84: Sanctum IX (First draft)

Name:RE: Monarch Author:
Chapter 84: Sanctum IX (First draft)

Bell, having clearly run out of ideas, clamped a hand over his mouth, pulled back a fist and punched him hard in the solar plexus. Jorra shot upright. He saw me ready and looking up at the growing light coming through the window as the sand was shoveled out of the way.

A small figure dropped from the window and landed lightly on his feet. Blue-skin peaked out from beneath the shroud that covered his face. His lazy white eyes surveyed us with minimal interest, and came to rest to the empty bottles on the floor. Slowly, somberly, he removed his shroud. His face was a mess of white unkempt facial hair and his eyes were vaguely crazed, the combination reminiscent of the many drunks that wandered Topside. What didnt fit the image was his horns, coiling backwards, not unlike a rams. I wondered how old he was.

Bell suddenly bowed and popped back up. Elder Saladius? Its wonderful to see you!

Who are ya? Saladius said, scowling.

Bellarex, She said, When you were still acting as head priest of the void temple, you came to visit me and give me your blessing when I was a baby.

She recognized him from that?

The elder squinted. Erdoss girl. Good memory. Yes. Yes, I remember. He smiled for just a second, before his lips turned downward in a scowl. Fat lot of good it did.

Bellarexs face fell. But Elder Saladius was not done ranting. Drinking my wine, defiling my vacation home. He scowled and pointed first to the broken window, then to the glass fragments on the floor. Who did that particular piece of work?

Oh, that was me elder. Maya offered an awkward curtsy, but did not lower her eyes from the man.

Dont you me elder me, girl. Do you see those wee metal things up there? Saladius said. Next to the window?

Yes? Maya seemed completely off-balance.

Then, let me pose the question. Are ye daft? Maya attempted to sputter something, but Saladius spoke over her. Those little bits of engineering there are what we civilized folk call hinges. He dragged out the last word, making the two syllables sound more like six. It struck me that his accent was not dissimilar to a dwarfs. Where the hell had an infernal elder picked up a dwarven accent?

Jorra bristled. I stepped in front of him, trying to head off his temper. We apologize for the intrusion, Elder Saladius. We were looking for shelter from the storm-

Oh, He cut in. You mean the big slow movin one that took hours to get anywhere? That storm.

I ground my teeth. Yes. That storm.

I see. Saladius seemed to take me in for the first time, looking me over from head to toe. There was a shift in his stance and the atmosphere of the room changed. If I had not seen Thoth in action, had not watched Ozra through countless battles, I might have missed it entirely.

Saladiuss wrist twitched in a near-instantaneous blur. I flooded mana through the inscriptions in my legs and jumped out of the way of the flash of silver, a small, disk-like projectile moving faster than I could track. It was close, but Id managed to get out of the way.

Or so I thought, before Saladius flicked his wrist again and the projectile curved almost ninety degrees, slamming against my neck. What followed was pure muscle memory. When Jorra and I sparred with weapons, he almost always went for the same spot. If his whip secured itself the hold was practically an instant win. So Id learned how to properly respond.

I stuck my hand up flat against my throat. The wire bit into my fingers, drawing blood, but the important part was that I could still breathe. Jorras whip lashed out.

No, Saladius said, with the same casual disregard one would use decline tea. He flicked a finger and Jorra hit the back wall, emitting a painful umph, as he hit. Bell staggered behind him and took a swing at his headthough I noticed she turned the blade to strike with the flat, rather than the edge.

Nope, Saladius said again, ducking under her blade and grabbing her foot out of the air, almost casually flipping her backwards where she landed on the ground painfully.New novel chapters are published on

Okay. Jorra looked for a moment like he might leave it at that, before continuing. No, I think we should clear the air.

I sighed. Okay. Honestly, it will probably drive me crazy if I dont know. What did Nethtari tell you?

He connected the dots slowly. If youre talking about what happened with the asmodials, she didnt.

That threw me. Really? Nothing at all?

Jorra shook his head. No. Not intentionally, at least. I He hesitated, I went down to get something to drink one night and heard them both talking. My parents. Didnt hear the beginning, or the end of it, but mom seemed upset. Like, I could hear it in her voice. The flat tone wasnt there at all, she was actually inflecting. Really upset. She kept talking about how shed failed you and Maya both.

Why Maya? I said, confused, looking up ahead where Maya and Bell walked side-by-side.

I dont know. That bothered me too, so I kept listening. Dad kept telling her that she did the right thing, she did everything she could, said something about it not being her place. That just made her cry, Jorra struggled to describe it.

I understood the difficulty. There was a well of emotion in my chest as well. For as long as Id known her, Nethtari was rock-solid. I hated what Id put her through and the resulting wedge that was driven between us.

I pushed the emotion away. Im not really seeing how that connects to the friction between us.

Jorra shifted uncomfortably. Im getting to that. Mom never talked bad about you or said anything. But when she was giving me advice for the sanctum, you know, just mom stuff, shed throw in these little tidbits.

It was easy enough to fill in those blanks now. I closed my eyes.

Its not as bad as whatever youre thinking, Jorra continued. Just little stuff. Like make sure youre there for Cairn. Help share the burden if anything stressful happens. Try to be mindful of situations where he feels trapped, prioritize deescalation.

I stopped him, then. Looked him in the eye. It was hard to keep things from him. Wed trained together almost every day, and Id spent more time with him than anyone else in the enclave. Im sorry I never gave you a straight answer about what happened in the Twilight Chambers.

Dont be sorry, Jorra said, shot me a wry smile. Just tell me what happened.

I shook my head. I cant. But suffice it to say it was dark, it was bloody, and it changed things. But that only happened, Jorra, because they forced my hand. I was out of options. An entire rogue demonic legion was threatening to run rampant.

And you did something you regret? He probed.

No. I was surprised to find that even after plenty of time to think about the ramifications of my choice, it was still true. I dont regret it. But I dont want to go back there again, any more than Nethtari does. And I dont want you to feel like you have to monitor me.

I dont. Jorra said, then amended. Okay, I kind of did.

A musical yelled back to us. Boys, youre getting left behind. Bell waved at us. Saladius stood ahead, his arms crossed.

After using Vogrin to complete theaccording to him, excruciatingly painfultask of removing our a good portion of our tracks and sending another set somewhere else, We arrived at Elder Saladiuss home. Although calling it a home, was a bit generous. It was more like an oversized hut, formed with bricks of sandstone, and held together with mortar. There were two almost comically barren planters that decorated both sides of the door, any plant that had once called planters home either long gone or recently decimated by the storm.

Saladius must have seen our expressions because he offered an explanation unprompted. I got tired of rebuilding. Simple is better.

Now, it was just a matter of convincing him to help me.