6 THE BLIGHTED PALACE
When Greg woke up his first thought was that he'd never felt so dead. Then he remembered getting stabbed in the gut with a spear, and realized that he was dead.
Nonetheless, he could still breathe and look around. Maybe being dead wasn't so bad after all. On the other hand, he was in a cell of pitch-black stone, the walls of which dripped with poisonous ichor, and he was also chained to a wall and naked. That wasn't so good.
"Hello?" he called. "Anyone there?"
"Quiet!" someone hissed.
Greg thought the voice came from nearby, but it was hard to tell. The cell was extremely dark. "Hello?" he said. "Who's there?"
"Ithuria, Priestess of the White Heights," came the reply. "Who are you?"
"Um, Greg," said Greg. "I'm a great warrior, only I think I'm dead now."
"Yes, I think so," came the reply. "Were you in the Blighted Forest when you perished?"
"Yup. You?"
"Yes, I was. I was fleeing the agents of the Duke of Filth, who enslaved me, but - alas - I seem to have ended up in an even worse place."
"Oh hey," said Greg. "Do you know a guy called Corvel the Burnt?"
"Yes, of course!" The first hint of hope crept into the maiden's voice. "He was my friend and companion, and helped me escape from the Duke. I do not know what happened to him. The tribals of the Forest have some kind of dark power that prevents magic from working... none of my spells could save me from their spears, but Corvel escaped with his life. I am sure he will find me in the country of the dead, and we will be reunited, where the Duke can never find us."
"That is absolutely inspirational," said Greg. "So, um, there's no way back to the land of the living, then?"
"I know not."
"Huh."
Greg ruminated on this for a while.
"Well," he said at last, "maybe we could escape from here?"
"I doubt it. These chains are very strong."
"Hm. Good point. Just let me try something though. IN THE NAME OF THE PRINCESS KITRA!"
He waited. Nothing happened.
"Oh well," he said, "worth a try. Um, are your chains loose at all?"
"No."
"Mine either."
He struggled for a while. It felt like a fairly pointless endeavour.
A moment later a green light filled Greg's cell, seeping in through cracks in the wall. He realized that there were no doors or windows in the cell, which made him wonder how he'd ended up there in the first place.
"Oh no," moaned the voice of Ithuria, Priestess of the White Heights. "It's one of the torturers!"
"Ooh."
"Yes. Horrible creatures that come to punish us for their filthy amusement."
"Oh jeez."
The wall opposite Greg glowed a fierce green for a moment, and then the wall faded and disappeared. Greg had a moment to be impressed by the trick. Then he saw the thing standing in the doorway: a creature formed of black bones, dripping with venom, its eighteen arms bearing whips, pokers, needles, and knives.
"Oh boy," said Greg. "Um. Hello, sir."
The torturer took a step towards him. Greg could see no discernable face to the thing: it appeared to consist solely of charred bone and instruments of pain. The green light emanated from a lantern hung from one of its appendages. Greg screwed his eyes shut.
"Okay listen," said Greg, as the thing drew closer. "Look, man, I'm not even supposed to be here, this was all Sofia's goddamn stupid idea and aaaaaaghh..."
He trailed off. Instead of excruciating agony, he'd felt only a faint prick of something slapping his skin and falling to the ground.
He opened his eyes. The monstrosity lay on the floor, shattered into twelve pieces. Behind it stood Dalile, stark naked, holding what looked like a bent iron bar.
"AAAARRRRRRRGGGHH," she said.
"Dalile!" said Greg. "Wow! Your eyes are really red!"
She smashed the iron bar against the wall. His chains shattered and he fell to the floor.
"Aaack," he said. He'd fallen right into a pile of blackish-green muck, which he didn't want to think about too much but which was now all over him. "Aaaaack."
"GREG," Dalile roared. "I AM... IN THE THROES... OF... MAAAAAADNESS!"
"Oh man," said Greg. "Can I just say, you look great. Thanks for the rescue. Are you okay?"
Dalile banged the rod against the cell wall. The sound was deafening. "I NEED BLOOD!" she screamed.
Greg was starting to feel uncomfortable. He scooped up the green lamp from the floor. "Come on," he said, "let's get out of here!"
"Are you free?" came the panicked voice of Ithuria. "Um, could you give me a hand?"
"Hang on!" said Greg. He hurried out of the cell and found himself in a black corridor that led into the unseen distance in one direction, and to a staircase in the other. Coming down the staircase was a horde of black skeletons. Unlike the last one, these had faces, and glowing green eyes. They were also carrying jagged swords. They looked angry.
"Oh shit," said Greg. "Dalile!"
"DEATH!" Dalile shrieked, and charged at the skeletons. Greg took a few steps back. As he did the lamplight shifted, and the wall of his cell re-materialized.
"Hm," he said.
Ahead of him Dalile was busily laying waste to the mob of skeletons. Greg shone the lamp at the wall beside him. It dematerialized slowly, and he saw another cell before him. On the wall hung a beautiful girl with milk-white skin and jet-black hair, naked.
"Ithuria?" he said.
"Greg!" she said, her eyes wide. "Help!"
"AAAARGH!" yelled Dalile. Greg looked to see how she was doing. The skeletons had been reduced to a pile of rubble; she was standing over them, holding the iron bar aloft.
"DEATH!" she screamed. Then she fell to the floor.
"Oh shit," said Greg. "I think she said the battle trance could kill her."
He dashed over to Dalile, who was still breathing - though shallowly. "Come on, Dalile," he said. "Stay with me, baby. We're gonna get out of here. Hopefully. I hope."
He heard a sound in front of him. He looked up. More skeletons were trooping down the stairs.
"Okay," he said. "Okay, okay. Fuck. Come on, let's go this way."
He hoisted Dalile over his shoulder and started down the corridor. Another throng of skeletons was coming from that direction.
"Oh fuck," said Greg. "Oh fuckfuckfuckfuckfuckfuckfuckfuck."
He had only half a second to think. He rushed into Ithuria's cell, dumped Dalile on the ground, picked up her iron bar, and smashed the green lantern. The light vanished. The wall rematerialized.
For a moment the only sound was that of the skeletons banging on the wall.
"It's no use," said Ithuria sadly. "Soon another torturer will come, and then we will all be subjected to incomprehensible agonies."
"Hey now," said Greg. "Let's try to be optimistic, okay? I'm sure I can think of something."