Chapter 637: The Waiting Meal
Added 2023-07-25 22:51:27 +0000 UTCFootsteps echoed through ominously quiet corridors of white stone.
Within the sanctum, the group moved cautiously, searching Uldarâs hallways, eyes constantly scanning for traps or guardians.
Though they had been assured that the place was secure by the spirit of their fallen friend, they took no chances; these were the halls of a dead god, his home, after all, and they were trespassers in them.
Claygonâs head swivelled in all directions as his great, iron bulk moved along the hallways. His war-spear was held low and at the ready. Brutusâsheathed in bone armourâsniffed the air, three pairs of eyes watching.
Theresa and Grimloch listened for the softest sound, their hands hovering near their weapons.
Their other friends and allies were tense, expecting an attack from any side.
But nothing came.
They were expecting engeli or other celestial servants to emerge from the shadows, railing against mortal blasphemy, but neither divine wards, nor divine guardians appeared to strike them with holy lightning. No ghost of Uldar suddenly sprang from the walls, smiting them or turning them to dust in his towering wrath.
No threats came.
No divine spirits cried out in grief.
Not a single soul was watching them in silence.
âThis feels less like a sanctuary and more like a tomb,â Svenia grunted, her grip tightening on her halberd.
âYeah,â Hogarth muttered. âThe tomb of a godâŠif anyone ever told me when I was a lad that Iâd be somewhere like this one day, tracking muddy boot prints across white stone floors, Iâd have called themââ His words stopped as he glanced behind them. ââHuh? Uh, Lady von Anmut?â
âWhat is it, Hogarth?â Isolde looked at him.
âItâs our tracks, theyâre uh, disappearing.â
As one, everyone turned.
To their rear, boot and foot printsâcaked with muck from the rain soaked ground outsideâmarked their trail along the hall for a good twenty pacesâŠthen beyond that, the floor was clean.
Alex looked at Claygon as mud gradually melted away from the golemâs colossal iron feet like ice on a warm spring day, and within seconds, his feet were completely clean, muddy footprints wiped from the floor. Everyoneâs tracks were vanishing in much the same way, soon the floors would be as clean as before they stampeded inside through the portal.
Alex frowned, looking around. âYou know, now that I think of itâŠthereâs no dust in here. Not a speck of dirt, not even a stray hair. Nothing. This place is immaculate.â
Watcher Hill nodded. âIt seems thereâs still power at play here. We should be especially careful.â
âAnd how exactly are we gonna be especially careful if the phantom of a pissed off, dead god comes out of a wall?â Thundar asked.
âCarey said itâs safe,â Merzhin said quietly. âAnd I believe her. AndâŠeven if we were to beâŠâ He paused, before uttering the next word. â...blessed by the presence of Uldarâs holy spirit, I am with you as are the rest of his Heroes. He would not harmâŠusâŠâ
The Saintâs last words were spoken with such uncertainty, that it seemed even he didnât quite believe them.
âEither way,â Watcher Hill said. âWe wanted to explore this place, so let's get on with it. This hall has to end at some point.â
As it turned out, they were only a few dozen paces from the end of the hallway, which was around a corner just ahead of them. Short steps down another corridor, they came to a doorway framed on each side by statues of two tall barbarian women clad in animal furs and bearing a basket of grain in one hand, and a spear, with its tip pointing toward the ceiling, in the other.
Beyond the barbarian statues, the space opened to a large hall, furnished with long tables of white stone.
It was reminiscent of an old Thameish mead hall, straight from earlier times, though formed of white stone rather than dark earth, timber and thatch, like mead halls of old once were. In the centre of the chamber stood a towering fountain shaped in Uldarâs formârising twice Claygonâs heightâholding a cornucopia above his head.
A stream of gold coloured liquid flowed from the cornucopia, and even from their distance near the doorway, the scent of sweet wine reached their nostrils. It cascaded downward, running into a basin at the foot of the statue that was deep enough to wade inâdespite being constantly fed by the statueâit wasnât overflowing.
Golden goblets were laid out around the rim of the fountain, while carved stone benches ringed its perimeter. Alex could easily imagine folkâhosted by Uldarâseated on those benches, casually chatting while dipping golden goblets into the fountain whenever thirst struck them.
âIncredible,â Khalik murmured, slowly making his way to the statue. He looked up at the cornucopia. âI have heard of decanters of infinite water, but never a fountain of endless wine.â He leaned toward the basin, using his hand to waft some of the vintageâs scent toward him. âHm. What an aroma. It smells absolutelyâŠwell, divine, I suppose.â
âDivineâŠhow appropriate, considering where we are.â Isolde stepped up beside Khalik, wafting the scent to her nostrils. âAnd you are right, it smells quite lovely.â
âTastes pretty good, too,â another voice rumbled.
âYes, that is right, Grimloch. Though we will need to be careful, in case it is poisonedââ She paused, slowly looking at the sharkman.
The others followed her gaze.
Grimloch was holding a goblet between two fingers, pouring its contents down his throat. âYeah, thatâs the best Iâve ever had. I could drink this stuff all damn day, and I donât even like wine.â
Cedric burst out laughing. âWell, donâ let no one accuse yâof beinâ a coward, Grimloch.â
âIâd eat âem if they did.â
âAyeâŠI donâ doubt yâwould too. Still, ainât this a surprise. Looks like olâ Uldar was ready tâentertain folksâŠanâ a lot of âem.â The Chosen took in the hall, pointing to the long, white tables dotting the space. âLooks like thereâs room enough tâseat anâ feed a hundred or two, by my reckoninâ. Anâ that fountain'd keep âem in wine fâever.â
Merzhin sighed deeply, his shoulders sagging. âTo think that at one time, we could have come here and supped with Uldar. If only I was born earlier. Now, that opportunity is lost forever.â
Theresa scoffed. âAt this point, I wouldnât eat with him if I was starving and he was the last being that had any food in the world.â
Merzhin shot her a heated look, glaring at the huntress.
He opened his mouth, as though to say something, but seemed to think better of it and stayed quiet.
An awkward moment of silence followed, suddenly broken by Brutusâ barking.
The cerberus padded deeper into the hall, his noses pointing toward a table at the back of the room.
âHuh,â Alex murmured, noticing what had gotten Brutus so excited.
At the end of the farthest tableâa spread of food was laid out. The meal was one that hunters in Thamelandâs earlier days would have eaten: platters of roasted venison and wild boar, plates of steamed mushrooms, sweetpeas and beans, burdock, onions, leeks and heaps of wild garlic.
âHuuuuuh.â Alex murmured again as the group approached the food. âThose vegetables look like they were just picked and cooked.â
âAnd all that foodâs still steaming hot.â Grimloch licked his lips.
âAyeâŠit looks like it came outta the kitchen jusâa wee bit aâfore we walked in here.â Cedric lifted his morphic weapon, it snapped into the shape of a spear. The Chosen looked around like he expected something to spring from under the tables. The colour drained from his face. âOi, ifân that foodâs still hotâŠanyone thinkinâ maybe Uldar just died? Maybe heâs been dead fâonly a few minutes.â His voice had dropped to a whisper.
Silence gripped the room as Merzhin quickly shook his head.
âThe foodâs hot, but that doesnât mean anything.â The Saint pointed to the fountain. âThat fountain spouts wine by Uldarâs divine will and holy decree: I can feel the divinity from it. He could have easily had the food remain hot and fresh with his divine power; the meal could have been set out centuries ago.â
âBut wait, heâs dead. Shouldnât everything be cold, rotten and mummified if itâs so old?â Grimloch asked.
âThat doesn't matter,â Merzhin said without elaborating.
Alex frowned, wondering exactly what he meant.
The Saint nodded to the food. âWe arenât focusing on what really matters. Look, there are two places set. Two goblets, two plates, though only a single fork, one knife and one spoon. Uldar expected to dine with someone else. But who?â
âMaybe some divine servant oâ his?â Cedric proposed.
âThatâs weird.â Alex scratched his head. âIâm no expert on gods, but everything Iâve read says they usually either have no divine servants, or a lot of divine servants. Having only one seems a bitâŠodd.â
âHow so?â Hart asked.
âSome deities enlist a number of divine servants. They can be heralds, bodyguards, generals, champions, or attendants.â Watcher Hill joined in. âOr even sycophants. Oreca kept dozens of powerful water elementals and high priests around to back him in battle, though he didnât truly need them, even as a demigod; for most threats in the world, his power was enough. Any threat that would have been a challenge to his power would be far stronger than his servants could handle. They would have been torn apart like wet parchment.â
âSo he kept them around to stroke his own ego?â Theresa guessed.
âExactly, and to send a message,â Watcher Hill said. âOreca wanted to put an image out to the world that he not only was power, but he was also surrounded by power that bowed to him. Many deities are like that, keeping servants for egotistical reasons: a full-on deity who has ascended from the material plane usually has to expend a lot of energy to return to it, even temporarily. Divine servants can act as their hands in their absence.â
âAnd many hands make for light work: a deity who has lots of divine servants can have them represent his or her interests across the material plane at once,â Khalik added. âBut, some deities do not bother with servants. They simply have so much confidence in their own power that they act on their own. After allââ The prince gestured around the hall. âUldar would have needed no servants to keep this place clean, or its larder stocked. His divinity could manage such mundane things with ease. And he had the church to take care of his interests on the material plane. SoâŠto have one single servant here with him would not make much sense. Young deities and demigods who are ascending might have just a single divine servant or two, butâif they wanted to cultivate a household of attendantsâone or two would be just a start. As they grew older and more powerful, they would gather and create their full complement of vassals. And since Uldar was already millennia oldââ
âHeâd probably have a bunch of servants whoâd be trying to beat the shit out of us for trespassing,â Hart said. âOr heâd have none. Am I getting that right?â
âYes,â Merzhin said. âWhich is why a feast for two seems strange.â
âWasâŠUldarâŠmarried?â Claygon asked. âDid heâŠhave aâŠlover?â
The Saint shook his head. âNothing in the holy scriptures indicates that Uldar ever had a wife or divine family.â
âAye, but them holy scriptures seem like they left a lotâoâthings out, now donât they?â Cedric pointed out. âDidnât say a damned thing about him beinâ dead, for one.â
âStill.â Merzhin gestured in the direction of the throne room. âWeâve seen a great deal of statues since entering his sanctum: all are either of Uldar, engeli, or ancient Heroes. Weâve seen no carvings of a wife or children.â
âMaybeâŠâ Claygon rumbled. âHe wasâŠexpecting a guest? MaybeâŠanotherâŠanother god or goddess? Maybe someone elseâŠ?â
âHm, that seems pretty likely, actually,â Alex mused. âDeities donât need to eat, so maybe he was putting out this food because he was going to be entertaining someone.â
âPerhaps this âguestâ was the one responsible for our godâs death,â the Saint said with a note of flint in his voice.
âItâs too early to know for sure.â Alex shrugged.
âThen we should move on.â Watcher Hill nodded to the other side of the hall. âThere are two more doors that lead out of here. Letâs see whatâs behind them.â
###
Author's Note
Hello twenty-four cool fools, almighty chosen, wise sages, and mighty champions! Thank you for your support!
And so we begin exploring Uldar's sanctum. Here I've been putting hints about Uldar and some of what's going on in the surroundings.
Man it feels wild to finally be here.
Cya tomorrow!
Comments
awesome chapter- love the mystery element
George R
2023-07-27 20:19:16 +0000 UTC"I wonder if gods taste this good"
rendterna
2023-07-26 16:11:48 +0000 UTCWouldn't it be funny if Grimloch had an 'inspiration' after drinking the golden liquid.
mant06
2023-07-26 05:47:34 +0000 UTC