Lygeia Uncovers Bannruod's Plot




The night was thick with fog as I wandered the wharves of Theriopolis, where I was wont to go whenever I longed for home and the sea. The familiar smells of fish and tar stung my nose, and were a comfort.

The docks were never quiet, especially when the tide was turning. Shrimpers were casting off with their lanterns strung from the rigging to compete boldly with the rising moon and tramps put in to unload their cargo while the port master slept. Watching the stevedores bend their backs to the heavy bales and crates, I paused to lean against a rail and listened to the outgoing tide sucking at the pilings and moored ships. Across the way stood a warehouse more decrepit than average, even for this part of the docks – a derelict from some broken trading house. ‘The sea,’ I thought, ‘knows many ways to be cruel.’

I shook my head quickly to rid my whiskers of the fog droplets catching on and tickling my face with their weight, and caught sight of a hunched figure slowly moving into the deep shadows alongside the warehouse. I sighed sadly, and pushed myself away from the railing and towards the figure. Too many furres were like that, homeless and without hope.

I thought only to lighten my purse and possibly this furre’s burden, but as I entered the narrow alley, a jaundiced light flickered in the grimy window in back of the warehouse. I stepped closer to investigate, and as I moved into the unnatural glow my stomach heaved in naseous rebellion. Dizzied, I stumbled against the side of the warehouse and knocked several boards from their rusty nails in a clattering jumble of wood and furre as I fell through the wall and onto the warehouse’s dusty floor.

Fighting the miasma filling my mind, I pushed free of the lumber and stared at the cavernous room through the expoding stars in my eyes. On the floor directly in front of me were the lifeless forms of two canines, their fur matted with dried gutter slime and their bloodied teeth still bared in a deathly snarl. The bodies were twisted and propped against each other in an attitude of supplicants, their snouts almost touching the chalked circle drawn about them and their vacant eyes staring glassily at the hunched and wizened rat standing before them.

An iron brazier, supported on a tripod of mishapen skulls and held by a fractured ribcage, rose before him and belched forth its sickly light through jagged cracks. Hanging from the rat’s black robes, strands of knucklebones clacked as he spun to face me and shouted a single, gutteral word. His tongue flicked across his ruinous teeth as he leered at me before quickly returning to his brazier, apparently dismissing my presence. As well he could for I was again convulsed with nausea, unable to move. Not so the canines whose lips twitched to the rat’s chanting and whose limbs jerked to his gestures. Slowly, they rose from the floor and turned their vacant eyes toward me – the eyes of the dead, their souls long since fled. I prayed for my own soul and tried... tried desperately to summon the strength to resist the rat’s hold on me. He laughed menacingly at my struggles.

“You, lover of light, are a most fortuitous omen,” the rat said, his voice as cold and dry as tomb dust. “A gift I will offer Mirmoggin when I release the Lord of Bones from the Vault of Dread. Before Mirmoggin devours you, know that I am Bannruod and feel the power of my hunger.”

With those words, I was flung towards him by an unseen force and slammed against the warped floorboards at his feet. The canines shambled forward and, grabbing my arms with their leprous paws, jerked me upright. I closed my eyes as Bannruod drew a short, sickle-bladed knife and laid it against my throat. Feeling the flat of the blade circle my neck then move over my shoulder in a demented carress, I clutched at the canines for support, silently begging them for the strength I lacked to stand and face death bravely. The canine’s flesh began to grow warm beneath my paws and I opened my eyes to see disbelief and regret in theirs.

In that moment, Bannruod’s paw wavered and the shroud of weakness smothering me was lifted. I broke free of the canines and slapped Bannruod’s knife away. Grabbing the brazier, I dashed it to the floor where it expoded in noxious vapors and a coruscating liquid which fell smoldering on Bannruod’s chest and legs. He screamed in pain and anger as I was again brought my knees by the vapors. The light fled from the canine’s eyes and Bannruod appeared to draw on his pain for strength.

“You cost me much in time, child of weakness,” he growled through clenched teeth, “but you have no power to stop me! For each night I am delayed from releasing Mirmoggin, I will feast on a piece of your flesh. Pray to your simpering Primes that I am not long in my preparations!”

Bannruod struck me with the hilt of his knife and I collapsed unconscious to the floor. I awoke in a dank room to the hurried tugs and proddings of two thieves searching me. They paused only briefly as I blinked unfocusing eyes at them. Quietly, they fled with my purse and rings, but they had cut my bonds and placed a wineskin next to my head. My shoulder throbbed where a chunk of flesh had been cut away so, counting myself well repaid by the theives, I made my way haltingly through the warehouse.

The stench of death still thickened the air, but there was no trace of Bannruod or his foul accoutrements. As I stepped out into the bright sunlight and bustling noise of the docks, I wrapped my arms tightly around myself and shivered uncontrollably, knowing Bannruod was somewhere near – hunched in the shadows and licking his ruined teeth.



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