The Demon Chain: Pt. 01

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An Ancient Evil Forces Jalissa to Surrender Herself.
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LisaXLopez
LisaXLopez
139 Followers

This story is copyright of Lisa X Lopez and Tori Hamlin

Author's Note & Acknowledgement:

I want to thank my awesome co-author, Hamlin, for lending his dark noncon/reluctance twist to this story, as well as some awesome magical battle scenes. I hope you'll enjoy this first part. This installment covers the first two chapters of ten. The complete story of The Demon Chain is a 28K word novella that follows the story of Jalissa, as she is forced to serve the dark desires and will of the demon, Succubi.

Synopsis:

Thousands of years ago, seven ancient demons of incredible power were sealed away within seven magical artifacts. The demon chains were forged to contain their evil powers, but even the greatest of magic couldn't harness them fully. In time, the chains passed into legend and were forgotten by most.

In the ruins of Dar'Kasha, Jalissa hunts for lost treasures. She's a pilferer, a scavenger, wandering the world in search of artifacts to sell. When she uncovers a hidden chamber, the treasure she finds within is one that will exact a terrible price on her, instead.

Within this forgotten room, in the dusty fingers of a desiccated skeleton, is a gem-laden chain that glows with its own magical light. The thing seems to sing to her, to call to her, urging her to bear it from the darkness. What Jalissa doesn't realize, is that she's just carried forth an ancient evil. And it's one that's begun to consume her soul from the moment she touched it.

Now, she's in a race against time, fighting the demon's compulsions and her own temptation. She finds herself in the company of a less-than-competent mage, with the demon's power growing as it uses her body to feed. Before it can consume her, she'll need to find a way to free herself from its vile hold or perish in the attempt.

Chapter One: The Ruins

Jalissa stumbled into the ruined stone building, desperate for cover from the storm. Three days of dry weather had made poking about the jungle-covered ruins an excellent foray, but eventually, it had to end. The storm came up with little warning and blinding speed, dumping a deluge of rain and deafening thunder down on her within seconds.

None of the other crumbling heaps of ancient buildings had anything resembling a roof, but this one did. It was a godsend in the sudden downpour. Only a few dried flakes of what must have been a once grand set of gigantic doors lay strewn across the entrance, which was growing darker by the second.

Jalissa set her pack down and fumbled inside. The contents were blessedly dry. She set aside the carefully wrapped gems she'd been able to find, as well as the two little idols that would fetch a good price at the market in Canilia. This latest scavenging hadn't been the most profitable, but at least it wasn't a total loss. She located her catch-flint, flicked the little metal box back and forth until it sparked, and then lit one of the tallow torches from her pack.

The flickering glow threw menacing shadows across the old, weathered stone floor and walls of the place. The little bubble of light didn't reach far. She replaced the items in the pack, shouldered it, and made a quick circuit of the room. On the walls, faded artwork was mostly unrecognizable. What was left didn't provide much of a clue to the structure's purpose. Since it had a well-constructed stone roof, which had remained intact over the centuries, she supposed that it must have been a place of some importance. Little remained of the rest of the city but broken rock, swallowed by the jungle.

On the far wall, she found the only remaining piece of evidence, and it was valuable. Inlayed in the stone was a pattern of gems, laid out in the symbol for infinity. The gems glittered red under the dancing flame of her torch, and they were breathtaking. All the centuries gone, yet these beautiful stones remained? It seemed impossible. Surely other adventurers and looters had picked this place clean through the years. How had no one managed to find this?

Torch in one hand, she slid her knife from her belt and tested the edges of one of the gems. The stone around it flecked away against her work. She carefully dug at the edges of the gem, sweat beading on her brow in the suffocating heat of the enclosed space. Finally, the first of the red stones came free. She nearly dropped it as it popped out with a crack. She shoved it in a pocket for the moment and went to work on the next. This one was lodged in tighter than the other and she had to work delicately to get enough of the surrounding stone wall away to get her knife under the edge.

She managed it after a time, but as she began to work the blade around the edge something clicked in the wall. She stepped back and then turned to run back out into the storm as the building began to vibrate, and then began to shake.

"Shit!" she cursed and darted, certain that the place was about to collapse.

She hadn't gone ten paces before the shaking slowed and then suddenly stopped. She paused, one hand on the doorway, as the rain and thunder pelted the world outside. Looking back, she could feel a rush of stale air buffet her face, blowing back her hair. It carried with it the scent of... death, she thought. Still, she took a step back toward the wall, and then another, until the torchlight fell upon an even darker opening. Where once the back wall had stood, cradling the red gems, now there was an empty hole where the wall had slid back and away to reveal an entrance. Or an exit?

She thrust the torch into the portal, watching the licking flames beat back the darkness, but there was naught therein but more blackness. Jalissa hesitated, waving the torch back and forth, but no answers were forthcoming. She gave the stormy entrance behind her another look, and then stepped inside. The darkness within was like a cloying thing, clinging to her skin, devouring the light of the torch like a hungry kithrok that had been denied its kill.

The light in her hand barely broke through it, but she took another step. The feeling of the place made her skin crawl and the sweat on that skin made her itch with the instinct to turn around and run. One didn't go ruin hunting by being easily scared, though, and she wouldn't allow herself to be now. The greatest treasures often lay in the darkest places. But then, so did vamprats, lich spiders, and willow vipers.

She took another step and her foot kicked against something soft. A moment later a cloud of dust struck her face and she coughed. She leaned down, bringing the torch to the ground. The thing was a skeleton, dressed in ancient rags. Her intrusion had turned the rags into dust. She was breathing in the remains of ancient clothing and of death.

The torchlight showed her something else, though, something that glittered as none of the red gems had. Wrapped in the bony fingers of the corpse was a heavy, silver chain, and all along its length were gems of onyx and red. The stones seemed to shine from the inside with their own pale light, which was magnified by that of her torch.

"Holy shit," she whispered and even the small sound echoed around her in the darkness.

She touched the chain and the brittle fingers fell apart, as though offering her their prize. A prize that this lost adventurer had died for. What had prevented his escape? Impossible to tell after all this time. He could have been injured before he entered, poisoned, betrayed. So many possibilities.

So many ways to die.

She picked up the chain and held it up to the torchlight. No stranger to hunting ruins, Jalissa had seen her share of ancient treasures. She'd held gold coins from the ancient kingdom of Li'ath-Kit-Kenan. She'd retrieved crowns and tiara's from Silith Brele. Gems, weapons, parchments, scrolls, even a vial of death magic that she'd sold to a black-robed mage. The little chain and its gemstones, though, were something wholly new. Looking at the stones was entrancing, as though they were singing a song in her head.

It was with an effort that she pulled her eyes away from them and stuffed the chain into her pocket as she stood. She slowly padded in one direction until she came to a wall, then followed it around, measuring off the space. The room was small, barely twenty paces square. The only other thing of note was a hewn altar of solid rock, placed at the center. On the altar were shards of glass that didn't seem to hold any value.

Jalissa made for the muted gray light of the room's entrance and felt like a weight had lifted off of her the moment she was back in the main room. She examined the wall around the entrance, but couldn't find any way to close the portal and retrieve the remaining gems. She shrugged off the pack and removed the contents again, wrapping the single red gem and the silver chain, then placing everything back. Outside, the vicious storm seemed to be blowing away.

She stood by the entrance, watching the dark sheet of rain as it swallowed the sky, moving into the distance. Eventually, the sun broke through, low in the sky now. For a moment, she considered camping here, but a glance back at that dark portal changed her mind. Something about it just made her uneasy. Better a night in the jungle than next to that. She shivered and left the ruin.

***

Chapter Two: The Compulsion

The city of Canilia was built against the natural barrier of a high mountain range. On one side of the range lay dense rainforest, while on the opposite side, in the rain shadow, sat the city. Cut straight through the range was what was known as simply, "the pass," the site of a long dried-up river, that had cut its way through the mountains over millennia. The resulting pass was like a giant had cleaved the mountains in two, leaving a wide road-like traverse from one end to the next. Canilia had lain a roadway through that pass, where resources could be carted in from the rainforest.

The west end of Canilia was a filthy place, but cleaner than most slums in the ramshackle nest of viperous cities that made up Unlious, the country Jalissa called home. Decades of war, punctuated by short years of truce, had left indelible marks on every part of Unlious. Most of the cities were more slum than anything else at this point, the majority of the wealthy citizens having moved into the upper ends, what had come to be known as "fortress zones," where they could hide from their fellow man behind guarded walls.

The market of Canilia was a place of pirates and smugglers, which also brought in the other dregs. Whores plied their trade openly, while the beggars and street urchins huddled in the shadows of the dilapidated buildings. It was into one of these buildings that Jalissa entered with one hand on the hilt of her knife. In the market, you always had one hand on your knife.

From the outside, the shop was as unassuming as the rest of the tumbledown buildings. It didn't even have a sign. It didn't need one. Everyone in Canilia knew the place, no matter their station. All around the outer wall were shelves holding vials and flasks, filled with powders and liquids in so many different colors that they would have made a rainbow jealous. Some of those glowed, while others seemed to suck the very light from the room.

The floor of the shop housed tables and stands, each of them neat and organized to perfection. On those tables and stands were glass cases, locked, containing gems, small arms, and other less descript items. An unfamiliar patron might have mistaken those items for nothing more than what they appeared. However, Jalissa knew that each of those things held some kind of power. That power ranged from mundane to lethal. Among those tables were arrayed stands of cloaks, light armor, and tunics.

On the far end stood a long, polished, wooden countertop. Hanging on the wall behind this were larger swords, spears, and other instruments of violence. Between the counter and the wall stood a man, who at first glance was little more than a frail man in a drab brown robe. His skin was weathered like old parchment and the fingernails on the hand holding a gem up to the light were yellowed from smoke, as well as working with chemicals and powders. Those things were part of his trade, and that trade was the reason that he could blatantly display so many valuable artifacts openly in a place like the Canilian market.

To call Eldris Witchfire's craft a trade was to do it a disservice. It would have, in fact, been wholly inaccurate. A trade was something that a person might be proficient in, even renowned for. They used their trade for their livelihood or took it up as a hobby. Many people plied more than one trade. Eldris's craft was simply what he was. There was no greater mage of warding in the entire country, perhaps even within the next three kingdoms.

No one knew if the man had an actual surname, at least no one alive who was willing to talk about it. He was known as Witchfire, because of his part in fending off the last invasion on Canilia. That had been decades ago, before Jalissa had been born. His wardings, powerful even then, had burned men by the thousands as they laid siege to the fortress zone around the city's innermost keep. According to the stories, Eldris had stood atop the walls, alone, and laughed as men died by the score, burning alive as his green fire melted their flesh and turned their bones to ash.

In that single night, more men had died from his warding than in the previous month of the war. The event secured the last truce, which held to this day. The old man's skills may have slipped in that time. No one knew. Nobody wanted to test it by thieving from his shop. Thus, Jalissa entered it much as she had on so many occasions. Uneasy, and in a hurry to get her business done as quickly as possible.

"Jalissa," Eldris called as she entered, without even taking his eyeglass off of the jewel he examined.

"Eldris," she said back, by now used to the fact that he knew exactly who was entering his shop before they'd even stepped inside.

Used to it, she was, but not comfortable with it. One was never comfortable here.

"You've brought me something special?" he asked, setting the jewel down and giving her his attention.

"Just the usual," she said, shrugging off the pack and rooting through it.

She produced the gemstones she'd acquired in the ruins and arrayed them on the counter for his inspection. The two small idols she set next to them. The chain, she held onto for last. Eldris glanced over the gems and idols, his brows knitting, and then the look passed. Jalissa was silent as he took up each gem, inspected it with his glass, and then carefully examined the idols.

"Worthwhile vessels," he said, nodding. "I'll give you 500 lains for the lot."

"500?" Jalissa spat, sounding offended.

For the next several minutes, she haggled with him, as was their custom. They finally settled on 650 lains for her haul, both of them satisfied, but putting forth a mask of displeasure that both of them recognized as a lie. That was the way of it, though.

"What else do you have?" Eldris asked, swiping away the gems and idols. "There's something more you're not showing me. I can feel it."

Jalissa grinned and said, "There is one more thing."

She pulled the chain, wrapped in a cloth, from her pocket and set it on the counter, and unwrapped it. Eldris recoiled so violently from it that his back hit the wall and sent numerous items from the display clattering loudly to the floor. He threw up his hands and drew something in the air with practiced quickness. A green rune flared in front of him and the whole place seemed to darken. The reaction caused Jalissa to take a step back in response.

"Neesa and all the gods! Where did you get that?" Eldris exclaimed.

"In the ruins on the other side of the pass. What is it?"

"Did you touch it?" Eldris asked, his voice fearful as Jalissa had never heard it. "Did you touch the damn thing with your hand?"

"Yes," she admitted.

Eldris stared at the thing as though it were a willow viper prepared to strike. It was the look of a man who knows that death is staring back at him. He shuddered.

"Then it's already too late," he said. "You may as well put it away."

"What are you on about?" she demanded, her heart seeming frozen in her chest.

"Put it away!" he hissed.

Jalissa swiped the chain off of the counter with a trembling hand and stuffed it back in her pocket.

"It's a demon chain," Eldris said, visibly relaxing now that the thing was no longer in sight.

"A demon chain?"

"Old magic, older than most," he said, shaking his head. He actually looked sad as he said, "I've enjoyed your visits, Jalissa. I'm sorry."

"What is it?" she demanded again, the fear rising, apparent in her voice.

"Seven such chains were made, long ago, to contain seven demons," Eldris said. "You've heard of the Black Fields, yes?"

Jalissa nodded. Everyone had heard of the Black Fields. They stretched over miles, the sight of what had once been the kingdom of Rutheran. Now, all that remained of that once-great civilization were those empty fields, which were not really empty. They writhed with something black, like a sea of tar. Every now and again, they would spew forth some horror, which would assault the walls that had been built around the place. The mages that guarded that wall would lose a number of their ranks to kill whatever it was, and then the fields would go quiet again. Until the next horror.

"Rutheran's king was given what's purported to be a demon chain. That was the end of Rutheran," Eldris said. "What became of the other six, no one knew. Now, you've uncovered one. From what I can tell just from my sense of the thing, it's already part of you. Do you feel... less? Drained somehow?"

Jalissa had felt a bit tired, but weariness was nothing new. She'd just spent days in the jungle, crawling through ruins, after all. She was always tired after an excursion.

"A little tired," she admitted. "That's normal, right?"

"I can feel a consumption from it, almost a pull," Eldris said.

Jalissa recalled the way the chain seemed to sing in her head when she looked at it, as if it was drawing her in.

"When I looked at it," she said, "I felt like it was... pulling at me."

"That's because it was," Eldris said. "While I can't be absolutely certain without examining it more closely, I'd say that it's Succubi's chain."

At Jalissa's continuing, perplexed look he continued, "Succubi was an ancient demon that stole life to feed her rebirth. She could not, of course, draw life herself. She was not corporeal. Rather, she inhabited a body and used it to draw the life from others, consuming them, either in part or wholly. Ultimately, enough stolen life would give her form, and allow her to enter the physical world herself. You, I'm not at all pleased to say, are now her host."

"You're saying I'm..."

"Possessed?" Eldris finished. "Yes. That is what I'm saying."

"Fuck you!" Jalissa spat, filled with terror. "How do I get it out?"

She brushed at her clothes, looking herself over, as though she could physically wipe away the demon.

"You don't," Eldris said. "At least, I've never heard of it happening. It's been so long since anyone's dealt with something like this, though, that it's impossible for me to say."

"Do you know someone?" she asked, panicking, reaching for him.

She cried out as her hands came up against a ward, which flared green in front of the old man.

"Don't!" he commanded. "There's nothing I can do."

He paused, thinking, then said, "Wait here."

As if I could fucking move, without pissing myself, she thought.

Eldris vanished into the back of his shop, while Jalissa stood quaking. A moment later he returned and laid a coin on the table, along with a cinched, brown sack.

"She'll go away if I pay her?" Jalissa asked, incredulous.

LisaXLopez
LisaXLopez
139 Followers
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