Worshippers of Death: Finding the Link
The scientist, wearing a grossed out expression, left the herbalist’s house with the necromancer zombie shuffling after him. Sure Saiko could have searched the body herself, but why did she have to do all the work around here? Best leave the investigation part to someone better suited for it. It certainly was not because she was annoyed at her fighting while he had been enjoying some tea.
Apparently the search had turned up some interesting items, including another strange coin and some religious tome. None of it meant anything to her though, so she just continued to relax at the herbalist’s house while the other guy did all the leg work investigating things. A few days later he apparently had found out something as he came bursting through the door excitedly.
“I’ve found a clue!” he exclaimed.
Upon entering he saw that Saiko was seated at the table eating once again. Seeing this, he quietly closed the door behind him and sat at the table, quietly waiting for her to finish her meal. He had clearly learned his lesson from last time.
“Clue?” Saiko asked after she had eaten and cleaned up her plate.
“Ah, yes,” he said, seeming to wake back up. “Apparently the man you, uh, encountered was a well known hermit from the East Woods. You should be able to find his house there, and maybe something inside will tell us what he was up to. He has not exactly been the most talkative since you brought him back.”
“Did you bring him?”“Yes, he is waiting outside.”
“Name?”“Uh… Lawrence was what I was told. No surname.”
Nodding in satisfaction, it was time for Saiko to head to the East Woods and see what she could find. Sticking the zombie Lawrence into her Morgue so as not to draw attention as she traveled, the still living necromancer began her trek toward the dead man’s home. Learning the secrets of the dead was the specialty of The Returned so she did not worry about that. It was whether she actually understood what she found that was the question. If everything was written in the same ancient language the guy’s book had been in she was out of luck.
After some time she was again pushing her way through trees and brush until she finally came across the clearing containing her target. Dilapidated was probably the best word to describe the hut and its surroundings, but she could tell it was still in use even with the holey roof and overgrown stone. Apparently the scientist was not the only lazy person around here.
In case the hut was boobytrapped Saiko resummoned Lawrence and sent him stumbling through the door. If he got blown up by his own trap, it only served him right. That scenario did not play out though, as the mindless zombie entered the hut effortlessly. Still on guard, she followed after.
The inside was somehow even more depressing. Pails under the holes to catch rain, a desk with no chair, and weather damage everywhere. Saiko could not help but look at the zombie with an expression of “what were you doing man?” If he had spent as much time taking care of his house instead of infecting plants and creating zombies maybe it would not look like utter crap inside. It was because of people like him that necromancers like her got such a bad rap.
Looking around a fancy purple book with silver designs caught her eye, but once she determined she could not read it the book got tossed on the desk. Clearly it was time to try a different method. The teenager and her zombie stomped back outside where she carefully drew a circle in the dirt. She had not tried this spell before because it could be dangerous; this seemed like a good time to try it.
“Lawrence, answer me,” she called as she stretched out her hands. Shadowy magic flowed from her to the zombie, using its rotting flesh as an anchor for the dead man’s soul. It took only a moment before the transparent form of his spirit jumped into existence with a loud shriek.
“You killed me you little bitch!” he yelled at her, swiping ineffectually at the magicked circle protecting her.
“Rude,” she said, covering her ears to protect them from his yelling. Then with her elbow she pointed to the ghost’s zombie shuffling around off to the side.
“I brought you back.”If a ghost’s face could turn red, she was sure it would have done so now. He was clearly fuming at the indignation of seeing his own walking corpse, but Saiko was tired of dealing with him.
“Calm down,” she ordered. Immediately Lawrence's spirit did, but it was obvious he was not happy about it. Spirits summoned via Forced Visitation had to obey her, but that did not make them enjoy the process.
“Behave. Reveal your secrets.”With a growl of annoyance, he turned and pointed to his garden. “That is where I was growing the plants needed by the cult for memory erasure. There are more ingredients inside.”
“...cult?” “Because my magic wasn’t very strong no one wanted me, but one day a cultist came and offered to give me purpose. Turns out I wasn’t useful to them either, so I volunteered for a mission I knew I wouldn’t come back from. And clearly I was right.”
“True, you did suck.”“...”
“Next.”Unhappily floating inside, he pointed to the desk. “There is a pink slip in that pile of documents. It is the source of all my grief! All my anguish! Those accurese-”
“Don’t care. Next.”Somewhat deflated after having a chance to blow off some steam taken away from him, he sighed and pointed to the only part of the floor that was lacking the signs of weather. “There is a secret compartment there, it has a poem to open the secret entrance at the well. The latch is under the desk.”
Finally something interesting, a secret entrance. It would have been pretty disappointing if all she had found was a book and a useless pink slip. Maybe the book had some clues to whatever magic had been used near the village, but as she could not read them it did not exactly help. With something like hope Saiko found and tripped the latch under the desk, opening the secret compartment. Reaching inside she removed a key and a piece of paper. On the paper was the promised poem:
Fate guides the willing, and drags the unwilling
Today I hear the bells, the sound clear as they ring
How could I be unwilling? With the life I’ve lived?
Hated and scorned. The tears I’ve shed.
Drawn to a new family, only to find nothing.
No one to hurt or leave. No one to sting.
I walk willingly with fate, with no regrets.
She did not get it. Was this a good poem? A bad one? All poetry sucked as far as she was concerned. It was obviously supposed to be Lawrence’s sad tale before going off to death, but really he had kind of brought it on himself so she did not feel sorry for him. On the back were some music notes, but she had no idea what they meant. Instead she turned her attention to the other object she had discovered.
“You didn’t mention a key,” she said looking at the ghost.
“...I forgot,” he replied.
“Anything else you’ve ‘forgotten?’”“...no?”
“Mmm.”That was one downside of her spell, even though she could order them to do anything they still retained their freewill. They could not lie to her, but lies of omission did not count as lies as far as the magic was able to control. This was a good lesson to keep in mind for the future should she need to use the spell again. Her wording was often vague, a problem enough with the living. Even more of a problem when trying to get useful information out of unwilling spirits.
Oh well, lesson learned. Time to move on.
“The well?” she asked.
“You read the poem in front of it and then press the lit stones in the order dictated by the music notes I wrote on the back. Ingenious, isn’t it?”
That just earned a grunt from Saiko. Not excited about the process, she never-the-less made her way out to the well and read the dead man’s poem at it. To say she felt a bit silly doing so would be a gross understatement. In the end the stones lit up like he had said though, so she could not really complain. Now for the music notes.
“Can’t read music,” she said flatley.
“Of for the love of… why do I even bother?” Clearly frustrated at the girl’s complete disregard for his carefully set up magical locks, he still had no choice but to tell her the correct order to press the stones. And then like magic (because it was) the water drained from the bottom of the well and revealed a secret entrance.
“Use the rope to get down,” he said with a harumph. “I swear if I still had my body…”
“It's still over there,” she offered helpfully, nodding her head toward the zombie.
“...I really despise you, you know.”
This earned him a shrug as she used the rope to enter the well. Most people’s opinions did not matter to her, and the opinions of a man she had killed herself mattered even less.
“Come,” she ordered instead, forcing the ghost to float down the well after her. She did not really know what was down the well, but it was clearly important. There were undoubtedly more locks or traps here given how carefully each step had been prepared thus far.
When the pair arrived at the bottom, she saw a door waiting for them. Deciding not to trust the understandably upset ghost on whether the door was safe, she used her Morgue skill to transport the man’s zombie from above ground to next to them. After that it was a simple matter to have the zombie open the door for her like she had done above.
“You’re making me test for traps now?” the ghost asked indignantly.
“Actually useful this way.”Ignoring his complaints, she entered the door to find a dark room lit only by luminescent crystals. Some proper lights would be nice, but the guy did seem to like his pointlessly dark and dreary lifestyle. At least he was consistent. Besides the glowing crystals, the only things Saiko saw was a probably gross robe and a fancy locked chest.
Seriously, who puts two locks on a single chest? That just seemed excessive. Trying the obvious solution first, Saiko tried to open the locks with the key she had found earlier. It did not work in either of the locks, which made her wonder what the heck it was even for. Probably the bathroom or something equally stupid. She tried using her rot spell, the one that had melted Mr. Dead Guy’s face off, only to find it did not work.
That was weird. It would take some serious magic to stop her own spell from turning the locks and chest to dust, and he had not been anywhere near strong enough for that. Was there someone really strong in this cult just giving out fancy chests like this to their members? They must have a lot of extra money to throw away, she decided.
“How do I open this?” she asked once it became obvious she could not open the lock herself.
“With the keys,” was the smug response.
“...where?” She was starting to get tired of the ghost making things more difficult. He was lucky it was against her policy to torture spirits, given her position as a spirit medium and all that. But oh was she tempted. Just one little summoning spell for one of her spectral knights… no, bad Saiko. No torturing the dead.
“Ugh, fine,” he finally said after a long pause, apparently trying and failing to fight against the spell keeping him under her command. “One key is under that rock over there, and the other is behind the leftmost crystal light.”
Digging around under the rock he had indicated she found the first key, the second was in a small hole just behind the light. Without knowing it was there she doubted she would have found it with the way it blended into the wall. He had not lied though, as the keys fit in perfectly and turned smoothly in their locks. Pleased with this success she started to open the chest, only to discover she still could not.
“What did you ‘forget?’”“Oh, yes, I suppose you do need more than the keys. There are buttons and such that you also need to operate to actually open the chest.”
“Show me.”With the ghost telling her the correct combination to manipulate, she pressed buttons, spun tumblers and knobs, and with a click was finally able to open up the chest. Inside she found books and another key. So many keys. She still didn’t even know what the first one was for! Reaching inside she found it to be another of the books the man had been carrying when he died, so casually tossed it over her shoulder.
“Trash.”“He-hey! That is a very important religious text. Aren’t you supposed to respect other people’s religions?”
“...no?”The second book seemed at first glance that it might be more useful, but that hope was quickly dashed when she opened it. It was just his journal, and she had already heard about his pitiful life. Just as she was about to toss that book as well the ghost intervened with a loud “Wait wait wait!”
“What?”“That is my life’s story, you should treasure it as a sign of my-wait stop!” he had to quickly interject again as she started to throw the book once more. “Look, there is a coded section saying how to get to the cult’s temple. That’s worth keeping my journal for, right?”
“What does it say?”“Oh, it just says that the entrance is in a cave near the spooky woods. The cipher is really ingenious so I doubt you could break-”
“Okay, go away now,” with a wave of her hands she dismissed the ghost allowing him to cross to the other side. Then she promptly threw his journal off to the side. Another sigh escaped her as she picked up the robe and grabbed the first book from the ground. Infiltration was not her specialty by any means, but she was sure the scientist would just make her go all the way back if she came back without checking this temple out first.
Storing the dead man’s zombie away just in case she ended up needing it, Saiko used the rope mechanism to leave the well and the dead man’s journal behind. She was not looking forward to what would come next.
2513/2500 words