Death After Death

Chapter 91: Uninvited Guest



Slowly, he rose to his feet and began to look around. What he really needed was a window so he could look around the city and see if it was somewhere he knew or somewhere else entirely. He didn’t get that, though. Instead, the room was pitch black, and he was forced to use a word of minor light just to get across the room without tripping over furniture.

The building he’d broken into had been a temple, but this looked like an anteroom or a small hall more than anything. “Maybe this is where they view the corpses before they bury them,” he said with a shrug as he moved to the door.

The music was definitely louder when he put his ear to it, but not so loud that he thought it was directly on the other side. So he waited a minute for his light to fade out in case someone was on the other side, and then he cracked it open to take a peek.

Simon’s caution turned out to be completely unwarranted. On the other side of the door was an empty hallway with several other doors branching off from it. It had clean stone floors and paintings on both walls of rich people dressed in their finest. It definitely wasn’t a dungeon or anything like that, so there probably wasn’t anything nefarious happening.

He breathed a sigh of relief and quietly shut the door behind him as he stepped into the hallway and moved toward the next door. “If I just…” he mumbled to himself.

“Can I help you?” someone asked.

Simon whirled at the sound of the unfamiliar voice and found someone thirty feet away near the other end of the hallway. He’d been expecting a guard, and though his hand was on the hilt of his mundane longsword, he’d refrained from drawing it. That proved to be a good move because instead of a guard, it turned out to be a manservant.

“Oh, I was just…” Simon started to say before trailing off. What was he trying to do? What excuse would keep this from escalating further? He had no idea and eventually settled on “I was just lost and—”

“Oh, you’re one of the party guests,” the man said with a knowing smile. “Do try not to stray from the main rooms then, sir. The rest of the guests are right this way.”

The servant gestured with a bow and then escorted Simon the opposite way down the hallway as he decided the best thing to do was play along. He had no idea where he was being taken, but since the most dangerous thing the man escorting him had was a silver tray, he went with it.

With every door that opened, his worldview shifted. This probably wasn’t the same building he’d started in, he realized. It was too big and too nice for a temple. Where does that put me then? He wondered to himself. Am I on level 22?

Before he could decide one way or the other, the footman opened the third door on their trek, revealing a large ballroom. That was full of people. Well, strangely dressed people.

The entire room was full of men and women dancing or milling about in small knots, drinking glasses of sparkling white wine. At first, he feared he’d stick out like a sore thumb, but it was only after he took it all in that he realized why the servant had made the mistake that he did. Everyone was wearing a costume.

Though famous historical figures he didn’t recognize dominated most of the crowd in the form of heroic warriors wearing paper machete armor and beautiful queens wearing a bit too much makeup, there were monsters, too. Simon saw a few orcs, a couple of zombies, and one particularly good werewolf, but all in all, nothing to worry him.

Those closest to the door glanced at him briefly and then quickly turned back to their own conversations. He might be dressed in dirty armor with a handful of weapons, but here in this place, that looked more like a clumsy disguise than an actual threat.

The people here didn’t seem too concerned about any danger, and as he snagged a wine glass from one of the servants who walked past him, he studied the room as much as the people.

The dresses were lavish, the costumes were decadent, and though he could hear many conversations as he walked through the room, he could only understand a few bits and pieces because of the noise, and they didn’t tell him very much. The fact that he understood every language made it harder at times like this. He could understand every word, but it took a great deal of effort to figure out if those words were even part of the same language.

So, it all blended together, and in the end, he got more information from the room’s decor than the people. One of the portraits on the wall was of old King Wilden. It wasn’t as large as some of the other pictures, which made him think that he might not be the monarch here, wherever he was.

No, Simon realized as he looked again at the mammoth four-foot wide portrait, it wasn’t Wilden the first. It was Wilden the second. The same boy he’d once pretended to be the grim reaper for had not just grown. He’d grown old. Though he bore a definite resemblance to his father, he had more than a little gray in his beard now. Simon had no way of knowing how old this painting was, of course, so the man was likely older still by now. In fact, it was entirely possible that he’d already died of old age.

Simon tried to do the math as he stood there. It had to be at least forty or fifty years since level 3, so if he was on level 21 or 22 now, that was… what, 2 years a level? More? It probably wasn’t that simple, of course, but it was interesting to think that when he got to level 99, he’d probably be 200 years in the future.

Enjoying this book? Seek out the original to ensure the author gets credit.

I’m a time traveler, he thought to himself as he toasted to no one in particular.

“Oh?” a woman said, walking to his left elbow, “A man dressed as a bandit drinking to the King? Now I have seen everything.”

“I’m not a bandit. I’m more of an adventurer, really,” he said, not looking at her immediately.

“Oh? Hunting for big game perhaps?” she laughed, “The court of Varbaria is a strange place for such things, but then the room is full of more monsters than usual.”

“Monsters, huh? Then what does that make you?” He asked as he started to turn around. He realized then that he’d seen her somewhere.

“Wait, have we met?” he asked as he studied her.

The woman was a little older than him, with dark hair and a mischievous smile. She was dressed as a nymph or a wood spirit or something like that, and her green makeup matched her dress. For the life of him, he couldn’t think of who the woman might be, but still, he couldn’t shake the feeling.

Could she have been a girl in Schwarzenbruck during the zombies? He wondered. Wait, there were no zombies in this timeline. Then who…

“A monster, obviously. As to making your acquaintance, I really can’t say,” she asked in a tone that all but told him he was right. “Somehow, I always thought I’d see you again, but in the same outfit, without aging a day? That’s wild.”

“Listen,” he said, suddenly on the back foot. “I can explain that, it’s just that—”

“Later,” she said. “You keep standing in this room, and you’re going to have a really bad day, okay? We can catch up on old times after what happens next.”

The way she was dragging Simon through the room toward the nearest exit. “Bad day, huh?” he asked. “What’s going to happen?”

Whether she was familiar or not suddenly became less important; if she was up to no good, then he needed to figure out what she was going to do and stop it. When he pulled on her hand to bring her to a stop in front of the open door, her slender fingers slipped free of his grip.

“It’s your choice, Simon,” she smiled. “You can either come with me and find out who I am or stay here and find out what happens next. It’s entirely up to you.”

Then, without a backward glance, she turned and started to walk away, showing off the sinuous way her hips moved beneath her sheer green dress with every step. For a moment, he was torn, and as he stood there, the doorman started to shut the large double doors again.

Simon eventually pushed past him, though, and jogged to catch up to his mystery woman. She knew his name. Something like that had never happened before. Not in the entire time he’d been in the pit, and he had to find out who she was.

If something terrible happened to him, well - he’d just have to stop it, like always. Isn’t something terrible kind of guaranteed to happen, though? He wondered. That was kind of why he was here.

He did a double-take at that and blurted out, “Wait, the terrible things usually happen before I get there, don’t they?”

“If you say so,” she murmured, taking her hand in both of his and resting her head on his shoulder as they continued walking down the hall. “As far as I’m concerned, terrible things have been happening for far too long. I’d hoped that we would have left that behind in Adonan, but I suppose that was never Eddek’s lot in life.”

“Adonan? Eddek?” Simon murmured to himself as he thought about what she was saying. He’d definitely heard both words before. One was a place he’d never been, and the other was a name, probably. Then, in a flash of inspiration, he figured it out, but before he could speak, she interrupted him.

“And to think I thought you were the bad guy when we met on that road so long ago,” she laughed, escorting him out into the courtyard and then further out into the night. "But it turns out that not all monsters have dark shadows, and not all those with more than their share of darkness are monsters. Isn’t that interesting?”

He didn’t know where she was taking him, but at least he knew a little more about where they were. They were in some kind of large manor house or small palace that was either just outside of a larger city or had grounds so large that it might as well be surrounded by wilderness. It was hard to say.

Either way, all the places she was mentioning were to the east of the places he was more used to in the Kingdom of Brin, like Slany and Liepzen. He still hadn’t mapped where all the levels were in relation to each other, but it was a goal of his when he had the time and the resources.

“All this would be a lot more interesting to me if I knew what was going on, Kaylee,” he said, trying to redirect the conversation. “What are we celebrating, and why wouldn’t I want to stick around and find out?”

“Simon, I only meant that that wasn’t your crowd, and if they’d figured out you weren’t a noble, they might have done something harsh to you,” she lied. “After all, I should know. I’m just a maid in a borrowed dress, after all.”

“A borrowed dress, huh?” he said, not relaxing. She was clearly up to something. “Look - I’d love to catch up with you, but you need to be straight with me. You’re going to hurt those people, aren’t you? What did they do to you?”

“Me? I’m just a poor, insignificant maid. I would never dream of trying to hurt my betters,” she laughed as she sat down on a stone bench with a commanding view of the grounds. From here, they could see the lights of the party through the giant picture windows on the front of the house. “I’m glad you could be here to share this moment with me, though. Eddek would have liked that. He spoke about you often in the years after you rescued us, you know. You made a big impression on his life.”

“That’s always nice to hear,” Simon answered numbly as he tried to figure out what was going on here. The grounds were lovely, and he’d love to spend a few hours just looking at the starlit gardens and hearing this woman’s story, but he had a feeling that time was of the essence, and they’d already wasted twenty minutes of it. “So, did these nobles wrong you, or…”

“They wrong everyone,” she shrugged. “That’s their nature. Still - if they hadn’t murdered my beloved Master during one of their little intrigues, it probably never would have come to this.”

“Come to what?” he asked. As if to answer his question, he heard a scream from somewhere inside the party, and as he looked over at the building, he could see flames climbing one of the tapestries inside.

“I was never strong. Not like you or Eddek, but you don’t need to be strong to turn a key and let the wrong person in, now do you?”

Simon recoiled from the woman. In the outfit she was wearing, Kaylee was more than lovely, but whatever had happened to her had long since poisoned her soul and made her some kind of monster.

“I can’t just stand by and let this happen,” he told her as he got to his feet and pulled out his sword.

“And I can’t stop you,” she said with a shrug. “Eddek wouldn’t have wanted that. Go off and play the hero if you like. That does seem to be your role in all this…” She might have kept talking after that, but he couldn’t hear her over the sound of crunching gravel as he ran back toward the manor house and whatever butchery was happening there.


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