《The Drowned Man》Bloodied Masque - Part 3
Advertisement
The Royal Oak stood on the corner of Merchant Road and Bulwark Street, it had a towering red bricked front that matched the buildings around it near perfectly, and rounded glass windows with curtains drawn tight. To the uneducated, it would not have stood out on the street in the slightest. This, of course, was the intention. The importance of privacy came directly after exclusivity in the members only club.
Renard had always felt the Royal Oak had an air of authority about it, not derived from an ostentatious design or a stunted, brutal architecture but from the subtle and confident aura that only the oldest and most prestigious of establishments could exude. It was as if the building itself was a member of the old nobility, it was elegant and secure in its practicality, and it certainly didn't need the garish ostentatiousness that seemed the hallmark of buildings steeped in modernity. The main entrance was a strong single door set into the stone and flanked by a set of carved marble gryphons with their wickedly sharp claws thrust forward, as if they were ready to tear apart any unwanted visitors. Renard was well aware the establishment had a number of more discreet entrances and exits - intended for use by the city's more distinguished sort and which he had sheepishly milled around in the past while waiting for Svenja to finish a lunch or meeting - but he opted for the front door, trying to fill his stride with as much confidence as he could muster.
On the other side of the door he found a lobby that was filled with muted blue carpets, elaborate tapestries, and portraits of the establishment’s former patrons, who ranged from personages such as previous Electors, Patricians and even an Emperor or two. There was a front desk of varnished walnut manned by an upright elderly attendant with a thinning grey widow’s peak, he wore a tailored suit and had blue eyes that lacked any of the cloudiness of senility.
“Ah! Mister Voclain, may I take your coat?” The attendant recognised him immediately, and Renard suddenly felt himself filled with a strange mixture of relief accompanied with the disbelief one feels in a particularly strange dream. A little part of him had thought the letter was some elaborate prank, and that he would find himself scampering out of the Royal Oak with his tail between his legs. The attendant pressed a bell on his desk, emitting a shrill ‘ping’ and then moved forward to properly greet Renard and remove his cloak. “We have you in the Jade Room this afternoon. As I understand it, this is your first time with us, is it not sir?”
“Actually I’ve been inside once before.” Renard held his arms outstretched as his cloak was taken, and then handed over to a bellboy in a purple hat - it seemed this was whom the bell had summoned - to be stowed safely away
“Really? I wasn’t aware. We try to keep a track of that sort of thing here, so that we can ensure your visits are perfectly tailored. I hope you enjoyed yourself.”
“It was only a short visit, it was to bring a message to Svenja the Sorceress.” Renard explained. The Royal Oak’s reputation was such that he knew his cloak would be returned to him - likely far cleaner than it had been that morning - when he left.
“Ah! Yes, of course. I remember now. Svenja is one of our more distinguished clients.” The attendant began to lead him away from the lobby, up a set of wide marble steps behind his desk. “It’s always a pleasure to have her here.”
Advertisement
“I’m sure.” Renard didn’t make much of an effort to hide his distaste for the woman most would consider his mother, not after what she had twisted his brother into. “I’ve never been here as a client before though.”
“In that case, welcome. The Royal Oak is an establishment which is dedicated to the privacy of our members as much as to the entertainment. Our cellars are stocked with a wide variety of wines, spirits and liqueurs as well as a number of different brands of cigar. If you do find yourself wanting for anything - anything at all - you need only ring the bell on your table, or in your case pull the tether in your private room. One of our employees will be able to provide for you.” The attendant led him past a long hallway lined with doors and expertly painted portrait after portrait with a swiftness that never quite crossed the boundary to urgency.
At one point they passed a set of open doors, leading into a common room that was filled with the misty fumes of lit cigars and the low murmur of conversation. The patrons of this room each wore the finest of gowns, and Renard recognised most of them as members of the Imperial Senate, different coloured flowers upon their lapels to mark their political allegiances, or as prominent merchants, viceroys and judges. The attendant offered him a curt smile as they passed there, “Members only, I’m afraid, sir.”
The door he was eventually led to was entirely alike to all the other ones he had passed, the attendant clasped his hands together and offered a smile. “Here we are. I shall leave you to your business, Mister Voclain. I do have to say that I look forward to serving you more directly in future. The Royal Oak knows the pressure that can come with fame like yours, and we offer services which simply cannot be matched by anyone else in the Empire.”
Renard sent a polite nod the attendant’s way. The idea was certainly a tempting one but he wasn’t going to be able to afford regular visits to The Royal Oak any time soon. Then he turned the door’s brass handle and passed through it.
The Jade Room was small, but it lived up to its name, all adorned in green curtains and a wall-to-wall viridescent carpet with intricate golden patterns sewn into the edges. The room was windowless - though it had countless mirrors lining the walls to create an illusion of bouncing images that made the room seem larger than it was - and adorned with a number of lit candelabras, along with fragrant blooming pink roses. Dominating the far side of the room was a wide, high backed sofa with a lounging figure upon it that gave Renard pause.
She wore a white silken gown in the latest fashion, and leaned back against the sofa pillows with a relaxed authority only true confidence could exude, an authority that reminded Renard very much of the Royal Oak itself. Her features were near ethereal and deathly pale, like porcelain, a beauty so impossible that the ragged red scar that ran down the side of her face seemed to enhance it rather than mar it. Her eyes were a starkly bright blue, but they had a sharpness to them which betrayed a far greater age, and most astoundingly her ears elongated into stiff, elegant points. The woman was a Vaelic Elf, one of those exotic seafarers who had fled their own doomed plane in generations passed and settled upon the isle of Parnia to the east of the Empire. That alone would have been enough to make Renard’s breath catch in his throat, but this was also a woman that he recognised from reputation.
Advertisement
Her name was Tyla Veich, and she commanded the Scarlet Robes.
“Renard, some people would say it’s rude to stand there gawking.” She purred the words out like honey, taking a delicate sip from the crystal glass of champagne that rested between her fingers. “Not that I mind, of course.”
Renard cleared his throat, half-stuttering as he tried to think of a witty response before he ended up settling on a lame sounding, “Sorry.” that echoed about the room.
“Are you just going to stand there? Come sit next to me, boy.” Tyla leaned over to pat the sofa beside her.
“Sorry.” Renard repeated, before doing as he was bid, practically scurrying to the seat beside her. “Renard Voclain.” He finally managed, offering a hand out after another few moments of staring.
“The reports never said you were shy. A rare trait in a mage - they can be asocial, but not shy - especially one who pulls off the sort of stunt you did. It’s a pleasure to finally make your acquaintance.” The Elf placed her hand out for him to kiss, expectantly, as though she were a baroness.
Renard, lacking the experience of court etiquette which his brother had taken to so quickly, took her hand in a shake, only to find that she had a surprising strength to her grip that reminded him more of Svenja’s goonish acolytes than a delicate landed lady.
The display actually made Tyla tilt her head back to laugh, and the sound was as melodious as music. “Well, now I know Svenja neglected your education. And yet despite that you’ve gotten by quite well on your own, as I understand. Come and have a drink now, Renard, I insist. You know who I am, yes?”
“You’re Tyla Veich.” There was an opened bottle of champagne nestled into a bucket of ice beside the sofa, he plucked it up and poured a modest serving into a crystal glass set beside it. “Svenja told me about you.”
“Oh, nothing but good things I trust?” A grin crossed those beautiful scarred features, and she leaned forward as if he were her co-conspirator. “What did she tell you about me?”
“She told me that you’re a spy. That you work directly for the Emperor and that you’re one of the most dangerous people in the entire Empire.” Renard neglected to drink from his own glass, continuing. “She also told me about the Scarlet Robes. ‘The Emperor shall be empowered to appoint servants who may root out hidden threats outwith and within his realm. They shall answer only to his authority’, it’s a clause that was hidden within a long, long list of laws the Senate approved just after the Black Prince was overthrown. Not many people even realise it exists.”
“Perhaps I was wrong. It seems she gave you some education after all. I’m sure she also told you that the Robes are full of jack booted thugs who beat in the heads of intelligentsia, poets and other outspoken citizens the Emperor doesn’t like.” This of course wasn’t something Renard needed to be told by Svenja, it was the order’s common order of business. “Not to mention independent minded wizards.”
“Something along those lines, yes. She was not an admirer of your organisation’s work, and I’m not entirely sure I am either. Have you ever heard of the poet Detlef of Blightmire? He’s a northerner, I was an avid enjoyer of his work before he was sentenced to hard labour in the Mervyn Peaks.”
Tyla seemed totally at ease as Renard made his less than stellar opinion of her order’s work apparent, “My organisation? I’ve never really thought of myself as quite so important. As for the esteemed Mister Detlef, well. You wouldn’t know the full story, but let me assure you that his poetry was the least dangerous thing about the man, and that he is extremely fortunate that exile was his sentence. I’m going to tell you what the true purpose of the Scarlet Robes really is.”
Renard didn’t hide his scepticism.
Tyla took a deep breath, before speaking like a lecturer before a class of new students. “As you well know, our Empire is made up of five wholly distinct kingdoms, and each is ruled by an Elector that is a king in his own right. There are only a few things that keep all of this together; firstly there is the Imperial Senate and the fact that the Electors get to vote on which member of the Imperial dynasty will inherit the throne each generation. However secondly, and even more important, is an extremely complex web of favours, debts, blackmail and political manoeuvring which must be kept in a perfectly precarious balance. The Scarlet Robes ensure the loyalty of the Electors, the safety of the Imperial dynasty, and keep the balance of that great web firmly rooted in the Empire’s direction.”
“And if it were to fall away from the Empire? Would that be such a bad thing?” Renard was a wizard, and wizards were not stereotypically regarded as great patriots.
“If anyone else were to ask that question, I would think they might be a traitor. To put it simply though, if the kingdoms were to become independent again, war, chaos and strife would be all but assured. Raiding bands of Wyrmriders would rampage through the lands from the west, the southern Commonwealth would strangle each kingdom’s trade if they stood alone, the Telarothi would ravage the northern coast, stealing men and women away for their blood rituals, and the barbaric Josuun longboats would return to gain a foothold in the west. Only united does Telavingia have the strength to oppose all of these threats.” When she spoke it was with an eloquent fire that made her eyelashes flutter, and - at least by Renard’s approximation - seemed to deepen the passionate red of her lips. Either this was a speech the Elven woman practised often, or she was a true believer.
Renard decided on the latter. Elves were long lived, which meant that it was a difficult thing to rouse the fire of passion in them, but that the flames were far brighter than that of Mankind. “You make it sound like a noble cause, certainly, but I do have to wonder why you’ve invited me here.”
Tyla put her glass down then, leaning forward to place an elbow on her knee and look him up and down with that piercing gaze. “I want to offer you a job. A very important job. The Elector Andros du Vogare is looking to hire a magical tutor for his son, and I think you would be the perfect man for the job, Renard.”
He couldn’t stop himself from scoffing at that, it sounded too good to be true. “That’s all you want me to do? Teach an Elector’s son about magic?”
“No, I couldn’t care less if you taught him anything about magic, from what I’ve heard he’s a brattish little tyrant. What I want you to do is gain access to the Du Vogare family crypt, below their manor estate outside the city.” She paused for a moment, letting him process this. “Then I want you to bring his father back from the dead, and find out if Andros the Younger is a murderer.”
Renard went white, “What? Just because I brought one man - a recently deceased man I should add - back from the dead, doesn’t mean that I can bring back a man who’s been dead for what, ten? Twenty years? Not only that, but reviving a corpse without the permission of their next of kin is highly illegal. I’m assuming you don’t have the Elector’s permission for this, correct?”
“You’re right, Renard. I don’t. But I have it on very good authority that the death of Andros’s father was extremely suspect. If anything were to go wrong, I would ensure that you were spared from all charges.” She dipped a hand off the side of the sofa, returning with a heavy aged tome that she held out with one hand. “I would also be willing to reward you. This is a book from the restricted section of the Imperial Library.”
Renard needed both his hands to heft up such a heavy tome, opening it carefully. His eyes went wide as he saw the author’s name. Syrenki. A man who was, without a doubt, the greatest practitioner of magic in the entire plane of Veranya, never mind the entire Empire. A man who had claimed the vaunted title of Magician, the secret desire of every wizard, sorcerer, warlock and two-bit hedge mage.
“I want you to have it, Renard. I’m sure once you spend some time perusing it, you’ll find that it tells you everything you need to know to call back Du Vogare’s father.” She watched him carefully, waiting for him to read through a few pages, waiting for him to come to terms with the weight of knowledge in just that single tome. “The library Renard. It is filled with Syrenki’s writings.”
Renard thought hard for a moment. He had spent his entire life scrabbling at the scraps of magical knowledge Svenja left him and now that he had the chance to access writings that rivalled her knowledge tenfold, was the price really that high?
“I agree.”
Advertisement
- In Serial15 Chapters
Shitposting in Another World
The natural born shitposter is a master of his craft, a ravenous beast constantly searching for his next kill. Yet, he does not consume flesh... he devours the attention itself. The (You)s spread throughout his body and encompass his soul, filling that seemingly endless void, but never completely satiating it. Our hero is such a monster. One fateful night, when 420s are blazing, and emotions are running high, he submits a post that changes everything. He finds himself in a world unlike his own. A world where attention itself is the greatest source of power of all, and he just so happens to be the best shitposter of all time.
8 144 - In Serial7 Chapters
The Sword God and the Eight Swords
Suddenly awakened in an abandoned mansion which later realized that it was his home; but it seems to be a vast different in what he saw before he fell unconscious. Seeing there's no one on the place anxiety and confusion filled his mind and heart. Now he set foot his journey seeking the truth of sudden change. CREDITS TO WHOM THE OWNER OF THESE BEAUTIFUL PICTURES Background - I picked up the BG because of the 8 swords. Though I removed the girl because it was some sort of a ritual and our MC is a guy. The Swordsman - His look in the description was vastly different, but just think of him as a modern guy and that person in the cover was close. IMO. BIG CREDITS TO - the person who points out the mistake of my cover. vkg313 - the person who have a keen and sharp eyesight. He could look into the truth and mistakes of anything he wanted to see. Thus, unveiling the mistake of my cover. Instead of 'Eight Swords', it turned out to be just 'Eight Sword'. So thanks for the tip, and I appreciate it.
8 136 - In Serial589 Chapters
Thief of Time
[Participant in the Royal Road Writathon challenge] Book 1: The Legend of Tot Synopsis: Claud Primus, a self-declared master thief, has a simple goal. To live forever. It's a rather easy task, for miraculous objects called lifestones are able to extend one's lifespan. These lifestones are best found in the treasuries of nobles, lovely resorts that Claud pays a visit to every so often. Unfortunately, one of those nightly visits go awry, and Claud is forced to escape with just a single lifestone and a box in hand. Normally, that's when things die down. The guards yawn, the gates close, and the night continues. But this time, the night isn't that forgiving. A dozen schemes result in the murder of someone important, and with a convenient scapegoat — Claud — at hand, it doesn't take long for him to be framed as a heinous criminal, wanted for the indirect murder of someone high up...and it just gets worse from there. Book 2: The Moon Lords' Rise Synopsis: As ordered chaos sweeps across Licencia, Claud leaves for Julan Barony, intent on making some profits there. Accompanied by the erstwhile heiress of Julan, a fellow member of the Moon Lords, the two plot against the barony's wealth...as well as a promise to bring about its downfall. Meanwhile, back home, the Moon Lords have busied themselves with digesting their gains. Eyes, however, are beginning to turn to this proverbial fish in a small pond. The fishermen are coming. When they cast their hook, what will Dia and the others do? Book 3: Murders under the Moons Synopsis: In the sleepy town of Nachtville, where Claud and Lily are forced to stop at, a set of nasty murders occurs. Victims scream out in fright, before a spear falls from the sky to end their suffering. Cowed and cautious, the master thief and his partner slink in the shadows, their objective that of home... A new task, however, has fallen on Dia. With a trusty helper at her side, she has to set off towards Nachtville itself, to solve the mystery Claud had abandoned. Faced with an enemy whose sole skillset is geared towards killing, how will they succeed? And what dark secrets will they find? Book 4: In the Dark of the Moons Synopsis: The year has ended. The four months of the full moons will soon be followed by two months of the new moons. Duke Istrel's ascension is around the corner. Amidst this political upheaval, Count Nightfall, Licencia's strongest defender, has been called away. The Moon Lords' largest task yet — to protect Licencia in the absence of its ruler — has begun. And yet, trouble is unrelenting. A distinguished personage, one that Claud fears, has been found dead in the county, his brains dug out and his body disemboweled. The inquisitors of the White Church have been dispatched to investigate and apprehend the murderer...as well as the person behind this puppet. Tormented by a call to fight, Claud directs his eyes out of the city, looking for the puppetmaster. Skulking in the shadows, the master thief will soon confront his greatest foe yet. A foe just like him. Book 5: Moonlit Tides and Darkened Seas Synopsis: A new era has begun. For the privileged, the sands of time dribble away for every passing moment, counting down to the arrival of a entity of mythical proportions. The night now harbours shadows and fog, and operatives of the Moons and the Dark clash in shadow. Claud, as usual, is investigating a spate of nasty disappearances in the city, but little does he know what these disappearances truly mean. And yet, a tide is coming. When it finally breaks, what will he do? Book 6: Secrets in Shadow Synopsis: The person behind a strike that would enter the annals of history flees his home, bringing with him the person closest to his heart into a new land and into a new world. Having left Istrel for the first time in his life, the two of them attempt to settle down in foreign lands, only to be caught in the middle of hostilities between two mighty powers grappling for dominion. Yet, none of that has anything to do with him. Following his desires, Claud eventually makes his way to the fabled Celestia Ruins, a fragment of another world. Bearing witness to truths he cannot yet comprehend, he returns from his exploration, a small break away from the machinations of destiny. One thing, however, is for certain. Destiny will not wait for him. Book 7: Reddest Rage Synopsis: Destiny churns on, heedless of mortal machinations, and Claud watches as the battlegrounds between the Moons and the Dark are drawn up. With the forces of the great Dark occupying Lostfon, Claud comes to a startling realisation — that he may have very well be a murderer of heinous proportions. Grappling with that realisation, he struggles to prepare for his Second Tutorial... Back in Istrel, Dia finds herself confronted with a perennial truth. Even in a time of writhing destiny, the machinations between nobles never cease to end — and unfortunately for her, the group once known as the Moon Lords are forced into dealing with a petty squabble between two counts. What they didn't account for, however, was the startling discovery they would soon make... And the shadow of the Red God's Holy Son behind it all. Book 8: Darkness Descends Synopsis: Nightmares haunt the horizon as Claud sinks and awakens from a seeming dream. What was once illusory begins to play out before him, in a way he cannot imagine. Dia, forced to wield arms, begins and ends a battle that opens her eyes to the vast dangers that lurk in this sundered world. Under the banner of humanity and divinity, she beholds the silent, forgotten protectors of Orb...but there is no forgetting the battle between the divinities. The Dark descends, the Moons writhe, and the horns of war blow once more. But this is not their battle. Not yet. Book 9: Moons Muster Synopsis: As more and more events fall into place, Claud finds himself desperate. Not for himself, but for the person who has turned into his world. Armed with the knowledge of a certain future, he approaches the only person that could possibly help him in his time of need, trading information for a promise of help. With that as solace, he returns to the grim task of understanding and seeking, revisiting an ancient, shattered fragment of another world...unleashing changes that he never knew was possible. Back in Istrel, Dia and the others must now navigate around a familiar spirit, who seeks to investigate the death of his master's Bearer. With them as prime suspects, the Seekers of Life must move carefully...but the Coloured Gods are not the only divinities eyeing them closely. The Moons, bristling from repeated defeats, are looking for new recruits, and the Seekers of Life are prime cannon fodder. Above all, destiny marches on, the unfeeling clock a warning to all. The Trial of Aeons will soon arrive. Book 10: Destiny Divine Synopsis: ??? Release frequency: one every few days or something, I guess. (This work is also being serialised on Webnovel under the name Revile as a trial run)
8 678 - In Serial18 Chapters
God Yuje
A man who had lost everything.Lost in his rage, nothing but the haunting memories of the past was what fueled him to move forward.Vanquishing everything that stood in his path; he was branded as the worst criminal in history.Kings and their kingdoms fell by his hands–humans or not. Due to certain circumstances, he was forced to attend an elite school while hiding his true identity.To what extent would a man who had lost everything go to get back what was lost?---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------REVISEDReader's discretion is advised. Contains some [tragedy] materials that may offend the weak-hearted. You have been warned.Additional Tags: Dark
8 156 - In Serial13 Chapters
Unwritten – The MMO Experience (Season 2)
It is the year 2026. Unable to accept the humdrum reality the young generation is desperate for a change.The heroes of our times must stand up and shout, for it is far too long that we continued being idle and indifferent.Crafting not a utopia, but simply a better world, we strive to write a narration into existence, to create meaning. Season 1 https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/25417 Season 3 https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/25738 Season 0 https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/25849
8 142 - In Serial24 Chapters
Tear You Apart
Judd BirchxOC story. Devi is numb to the world. But her new friend's older brother makes her feel lots of things
8 157

