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THE NECROMANCER’S LAST OATH

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PROLOGUE Whispers of the Veil The land of Virellyn had always been a place of quiet shadows and whispered secrets. Rolling hills gave way to jagged cliffs, dense forests stretched beyond memory, and rivers carved paths through the valleys like silver veins. Yet the beauty of this realm belied a deeper, older truth—a world shaped not only by the living but by the dead, a place where the veil between worlds was thin and restless. Those who walked blindly through its mists were often unaware that unseen eyes followed them, recording every step, every heartbeat, every shadowed intention. Edrin Vael had grown up in such a land, though he did not know it at the time. As a child, he had wandered the ruins of forgotten abbeys and graveyards, drawn inexplicably to places where life ended but memory lingered. Even then, the whispers of the dead brushed against his mind, faint and fleeting, as if testing the boundaries of his awareness. He had felt fear, yes, but also fascination—a pull toward something that called to him from the depths of time, something that promised knowledge, power, and peril in equal measure. By the age of sixteen, he understood that he was no ordinary child. While others saw tombstones as markers of finality, Edrin saw them as gateways, conduits of a force older than the mountains themselves. He could feel the residual energies left behind by those who had passed, sense the lingering memories and unfinished stories trapped in bone and stone. His talent frightened villagers and inspired awe among the few who dared to recognize it. Yet even as he honed his gift, he knew instinctively that the path he had been drawn to would be a lonely one. For a necromancer was not merely one who called the dead; he was one who bore their weight. It was in the ruined library of Eldrath Keep that Edrin first encountered the Codex Mortis. Bound in blackened leather etched with runes older than the city itself, it hummed with life—or something close to it. Its pages shimmered faintly, restless, as if aware of the reader’s gaze. He had spent hours poring over its contents, deciphering its arcane symbols and incantations, and the Codex had responded, feeding him knowledge and warning alike. He learned of the Hollow King, a being both feared and revered, whose influence stretched across centuries, shaping necromancers and mortals alike, testing the wills of those who dared approach the threshold of life and death. The Hollow King was not a tyrant in the ordinary sense; he did not simply command or punish. He observed, patient, calculating, his trials subtle yet unforgiving. Every action a necromancer took, every summoning or binding, was recorded and measured. Even the smallest lapse of focus could ripple outward, with consequences that spanned realms. And the Codex made it clear: the King did not act out of malice alone, nor benevolence. He acted to maintain a balance older than time itself, a balance that demanded constant vigilance and, often, tremendous sacrifice. Edrin’s first true test came on a night when the mists were thickest, and the air itself seemed to shiver with anticipation. A novice summoning, a simple attempt to commune with a restless spirit, had gone awry. The dead did not rise as expected; instead, shadows twisted, figures half-formed, their cries echoing through the graveyard, a mixture of anger and confusion. The Gate had responded—not violently, but curiously, as if observing his skill, patience, and resilience. It was in that moment he swore the first of his oaths: to endure, to master the threshold, to serve as the guardian of the balance between the living and the dead. The years that followed were a crucible of discipline. Edrin traveled across Virellyn, seeking knowledge buried in forgotten tombs, deciphering rituals erased from memory, and communing with spirits whose names had been lost to time. He learned that necromancy was more than summoning or control—it was listening, understanding, and negotiating with the dead. A necromancer who demanded obedience without respect for the spirits was doomed to failure. And yet, even as he honed his skills, he discovered that the Hollow King’s presence was never far, subtle yet suffocating, a reminder that his oaths were only part of the debt he owed to the threshold. Then came the night that would change everything. The Gate had pulsed with a strange energy, fractured faintly along its obsidian archway. The Codex had thrummed violently in his hands, warning him of an imbalance that stretched beyond mortal perception. He had called forth spirits to stabilize the threshold, to mend the lattice of power that maintained the divide between realms. But the Hollow King was testing him, observing the limits of his endurance. Shadows pressed against the lattice, skeletal warriors surged, and whispers of the dead became voices of warning and caution. Edrin had fought with every ounce of skill and will, binding spirits, reinforcing runes, and invoking the r

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Chapter One — The Graveyard at Moonrise
The moon hung like a pale shard above the graveyard of Virellyn, casting silver light across the uneven ground. Mist crawled between tombstones, drifting with a mind of its own, curling around broken statues and leaning mausoleums as though the dead themselves had risen to taste the night air. The scent of damp earth and mossed stone filled Edrin Vael’s nostrils as he stepped forward, lantern in hand, each breath visible in the chill, unnatural fog. In his heart, a cold knot of anticipation had settled. The Gate awaited. An arch of blackened stone, taller than any cathedral, carved with sigils older than memory. The runes pulsed faintly, like the heartbeat of the dead, and the air around them seemed to vibrate with latent energy. Edrin felt their call deep in his bones, a hum that spoke of oaths, blood, and long-forgotten promises. He moved among the graves with deliberate care, boots sinking softly into earth soft with centuries of decay. Shadows shifted unnaturally, shapes that the eye caught at the edge of vision, vanishing when looked at directly. And from the far reaches of the yard came a soft rustling, barely audible, like the whisper of bones against each other. Edrin stopped at the center, facing the Gate. The lantern’s amber light flickered in defiance of the spectral glow that began to seep from the sigils. He exhaled slowly, the sound a cloud of frost in the still air, and opened the Codex Mortis, its leather cover worn and cracked, its pages whispering with latent energy. He traced the arcane lines, feeling them writhe beneath his fingers, a living text that demanded attention, demanded obedience. The world seemed to hold its breath. The mist thickened, pooling at the base of the Gate like a sentient river. And then, faintly at first, a sound: a low, mournful groan, echoing as if from the ground itself. It was the dead stirring, testing their bounds. Edrin’s jaw tightened. This was only the beginning. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ The Weight of Memory Edrin stepped deeper into the mist, each footfall a whispered prayer to the forgotten dead. The lantern’s glow cut through the fog in slender fingers, illuminating cracked gravestones whose inscriptions were worn into illegibility by centuries of rain and time. And yet, names lingered—not written, but remembered. In the silence, he could almost hear them murmuring, calling out from beneath the earth. The memory of Maeryn struck him with sudden clarity. Her laughter, fragile and bright, filled the small chamber where they had first met. Her hands, warm and soft, had brushed against his own as if seeking to tether him to the living world. But the plague had taken her, leaving him with hollow bones and a heart heavier than any tombstone. Every spell he had cast had failed. Every prayer had echoed into nothing. In that moment, Edrin had known that the natural order could be defied—but only at a price. He crouched beside a gravestone, tracing the faint letters with a gloved hand. The cold stone reminded him of the night she had died in his arms, fever burning through her fragile body. “Forgive me,” he whispered, though no spirit lingered to hear it. “I could not save you.” The Codex Mortis had called to him then, a siren promising dominion over death itself, a chance to tether the living to the dead. He had answered. And so began his descent into a path from which there was no return. The mist thickened, and the graveyard seemed to breathe with him. Shadows lengthened unnaturally, curling like serpents across the stones. Edrin’s eyes, pale and resolute, scanned the horizon, where the Gate loomed, silent and yet impossibly alive. Every rune etched into its obsidian arch whispered of oaths and obligations that had been long forgotten by all but him. The dead were patient, eternal. They did not forgive. And they did not forget. A faint chill brushed his neck. Edrin’s hand went to the hilt of the ceremonial dagger at his belt, its steel etched with runes of binding. He knew that this night, like so many nights before, would test the limits of his resolve. The Gate pulsed faintly, as though sensing the tension in his blood, and a soft hum vibrated through the earth. Somewhere beneath the soil, the dead stirred, sensing that the boundaries of their world and his were trembling. He opened the Codex once more. Its pages shimmered with spectral light, revealing spells and incantations that had not been used for centuries. They promised protection, power, and peril in equal measure. As he chanted quietly under his breath, he could feel the air shift, charged with the energy of a thousand forgotten souls. The mist swirled around him, forming shapes that were almost human, then dissipating before he could fully perceive them. He was never truly alone; the dead followed, unseen, listening, judging, waiting. A sudden gust of wind snuffed the lantern, plunging him into darkness. The only light came from the Gate itself, now glowing brighter, blue fire licking the sigils like hungry tongues. Edrin rose slowly, the weight of centuries pressing on his shoulders. The Hollow King stirred beyond the threshold, a presence as ancient as death itself, observing, calculating. And in that gaze, Edrin felt both challenge and invitation. The oaths he had taken demanded fulfillment. The dead demanded vigilance. And the living demanded nothing but the stories they would never hear. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ The Gate Awakens The Gate’s runes pulsed with an intensity that made the very air tremble. Blue fire licked the edges of the black stone archway, coiling around symbols older than memory, and the ground beneath Edrin’s boots vibrated faintly, as though the earth itself recognized the ancient magic awakening. A low hum resonated through the graveyard, a sound that was felt more than heard, seeping into bones and stirring the senses. Shadows deepened and twisted in impossible ways, stretching and writhing as if the mist itself had grown sentience. Edrin stepped closer, lantern held high. His breath formed clouds in the cold night air, mingling with the swirling fog. The Codex Mortis lay open in his hands, pages fluttering as if eager to speak. Spells written in a language no living scholar could fully understand shimmered faintly, revealing instructions and warnings that tested even his long experience. He read carefully, intoning the words under his breath. With every syllable, the Gate responded, glowing brighter, the symbols shifting and writhing as if alive. The first tendrils of spectral energy emerged, curling like serpents toward the sky. They hissed and coalesced, forming ephemeral shapes—faces, hands, skeletal forms—before vanishing again into the mist. Edrin’s hand tightened around the hilt of his dagger, etched with binding runes, a talisman to anchor his presence and repel the uncontrolled dead. The Gate was no longer merely a barrier. It was awakening. A wind rose, carrying with it a chorus of whispers. Some were incomprehensible, tongues of the dead long forgotten; others were familiar, echoing fragments of voices Edrin had loved and lost. His chest tightened. Every spell, every oath, every sacrifice he had made coalesced in this moment. The Gate demanded attention, demanded respect, and threatened to claim him if he faltered. Then he felt it: a presence on the other side. Not tangible, not yet, but keenly aware. Something ancient, immense, and patient. The Hollow King. Its gaze was like a weight pressing against the veil of the world, a force that tested Edrin’s very soul. The air shimmered as if acknowledging the entity’s awareness. The dead stirred in response, restless hands brushing through soil, silent screams echoing beneath the stones. Edrin took a deep breath, centering himself. He began the incantation in earnest, his voice low and steady. The Codex responded, letters twisting, lifting from the page, luminous and thrumming with energy. Sparks of blue and green light danced along the runes, weaving a lattice of power between Edrin and the Gate. He could feel the threshold pulling, seeking, testing his resolve. Then the Gate spoke—not in words, but in sensation. A shiver ran down his spine, an echo in his chest. The veil shivered as if alive. A faint scream, half-human, half-otherworldly, pierced the night. Edrin’s mind raced. He had awakened something vast, something that had waited patiently for centuries. His oaths had been to guard, to control, to keep balance—but now the balance demanded more than vigilance. It demanded action. Lightning split the sky, illuminating the Gate and graveyard in brief, stark brilliance. In that flash, he saw the forms of the dead—long-forgotten warriors, mothers, children, their skeletal frames entwined in ethereal chains—watching him. Their eyes glowed faintly, reflections of the same spectral blue that burned in the Gate’s runes. Edrin’s pulse quickened. Each incantation bound some of the restless spirits, but others slipped through the gaps, testing his control. “You cannot falter, Edrin Vael,” he whispered to himself, voice lost in the roar of the storm. “The oaths are not just words. They are life and death itself.” The Gate pulsed again, stronger this time. The mist thickened, rising higher, obscuring the edges of the graveyard. The dead pressed closer, unseen yet sensed in every movement of the fog. And then, from the far side of the Gate, a voice—cold, immense, and patient—reached him. Not fully words, not fully sound, but meaning: “You have returned… as expected.” Edrin stiffened, knowing the Hollow King had acknowledged him. The balance had shifted. The night had changed. And the first true test of his oath was about to begin.

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