The light of the dawning sun gleamed against the murky gray sea. Oars sliced into the water as the fishing boat closed in on Pyrewatch.
The hired fishermen, fully aware of the dangerous nature of our mission, had offered a prayer to a sea god before disembarking, and had not uttered a sound since. The Tombflayers, after a bit of banter on the shore, fell into silence during the journey, and focused on tending to their weapons and adjusting their armor.
Dazyar tuned his fiddle, while I spent the time distracting myself adjusting the straps of my scabbard. Xelari stood near the prow of the boat, glaring out at Pyrewatch.
Ideally, we'd have hit the island under the cover of darkness, but we couldn't risk any delays. Not only could Synrik have slipped away if we lingered too long, every minute he spent on that island was a minute he could spend raising more undead.
Of course, our timing would make it damned near impossible to actually arrive on Pyrewatch unseen. It was a very real possibility that we'd land and find ourselves swarmed by undead and whatever mortal warriors Synrik had under his command.
As we closed to within a few hundred yards, Varanthir pulled up his sleeve to reveal his runic tattoos. The other Tombflayers reached for their weapons, ready to unleash them at a moment's notice. The fishermen cast nervous glances at the mercenaries and the island.
"Our deal stands," the boat's captain muttered. "We get you to shore, sail off to a quarter mile away, wait until dusk, and no longer. We're not getting chewed up by undead on your account."
In response, Xelari gave a simple nod.
My heart pounded, and I swept my gaze over the island as we closed in. Hundreds of grave markers dotted the shore. Scores of crypts, tombs, and mausoleums occupied the rest of the island, with a few on raised hills looming large over the others. There were dozens of raised stone towers used for cremation; none of them were lit. Given the island's distance from shore and the presence of cemeteries closer to the city, we weren't expecting anyone else to be there, especially since Synrik had likely used his influence to prohibit public travel to the island to mask his activities there.
With one hand on the hilt of my curved elven blade and the other on my fury-rune, I took a deep breath. The rowers halted the ship a short distance offshore. Lescorik moved first, hopping down and splashing through the knee-high water.
The other mercenaries drew their weapons and advanced alongside the blonde warrior, with the archers lingering behind and preparing their bows to cover their comrades. Xelari, runestone in hand, jumped in at Kivessen's side; Dazyar and I quickly followed.
Nothing moved upon the shore or between the grave markers. We advanced in a loose column up the beach, with Varanthir and Xelari in the lead. To keep us safe from a potential flanking attack, I lingered near the back and activated my sight-rune, my watchful eyes sweeping over the cemetery isle. I tensed at a sudden flicker of movement to the east, until I realized it was just a gull pecking at a fish that had washed ashore.
Just after we started to push forward, Kivessen raised a hand, bringing us to a halt. He sniffed the air; the rest of us followed suit, but I caught nothing but the sent of salt from the sea.
"Death," he muttered. "Coming from that northern wind."
"Of course you smell 'death,'" Lescorik grumbled under his breath. "We're on a damned crypt isle."
"Fresh corpses, or newly unburied ones," the meadow elf said.
After a moment I caught the same stench: rot, death, decay, just barely detectable upon the salty breeze.
My enhanced vision continued to sweep for danger, honing in on the larger crypts and the gaps between them. I blinked, catching sight of something darting in between two of the larger tombs. I whistled and pointed it out, and a heartbeat later I caught another flicker. I gritted my teeth, hoping it had just been some scavenging beast, rather than a cryptwolf or a ghoul.
Most of the Tombflayers turned to face the potential new threat, but they did not leave their flanks exposed. Several of them moved to take up protective positions on the flanks in case it turned out to be a feint. Archers nocked arrows, and Varanthir brushed his fingers over his runes.
"Shit," I growled as shadowy shapes burst from behind one of the hilltop crypts.
Ten. Twenty. Thirty. Maybe more.
Not cryptwolves or ghouls, thank the gods, but simple risen dead: animated corpses that moved in shambling little bursts, powered by foul magic. The small horde writhed, crawled, and lurched between the crypts and grave markers.
I remembered the frenzied reaction of the bandits when the ghouls had assailed us in the elven temple; the contrast between the cutthroats and the Tombflayers was stunning. Though there were a few curses, nobody cried out or turned to run, even though a swim into the sea would have meant safety from the onrushing dead.
"Archers," Varanthir said coldly. "Go for the legs of the front ranks. Trip them up, slow them down."
With a clenched fist, Varanthir gave the command to fire. The handful of Tombflayer archers unleashed a small volley, and the battlemage twisted his hand, sending a surge of crackling wind into the arrows, granting them greater speed and infusing a few with flickers of lightning. The arrows sliced into the dusty legs of the foremost undead, sending several of them pitching to the ground, slowing down those behind them.
"At will," he commanded to the archers, who fired arrow after arrow into the teeming mass.
"Javelins," he said, his voice still low and calm. Most of the other Tombflayers readied their weapons, and as the faltering mass of undead shambled over the fallen and twitching corpses, he gave the command. A half dozen spears flew through the air, likewise aided by another burst of wind magic. The weapons cleaved through dusty, rotted flesh: splitting apart chests, skulls, and limbs. The undead pinned by the javelins soon fell to subsequent arrows.
Only a half dozen of the undead made it through that storm of missiles, and charged right down the hill towards us. The Tombflayers with spears and glaives stepped forward, forming a neat, disciplined little wall of steel.
The dead closed in, and the fight ended in seconds. Precise, disciplined jabs and thrusts from the polearms skewered the necks of the undead, and soon they were reduced to a twitching, dusty heaps beneath the black boots of the Tombflayers.
"Bloody Voids," Dazyar muttered. "Starting to wonder why I even tagged along. You all do damned fine work."
"That was probably just a test. Nothing more than sentries," Xelari said.
The Tombflayers, maintaining formation, stalked ahead to finish off the writhing undead and collect their javelins and arrows.