10: Holvert Hill 2
Joriâs mother was quite satisfied with the progress Holvert made. Even though Holvert felt quite differently, the mother was just all too happy that Jori was spending his time constructively.
After handing over the sum she promised, she proceeded to tell Holvert over a cup of steaming bouillon, about the trouble she had with the boy. Bad at school, always hostile towards other kids, hanging around with the wrong type of crowd - you know what Iâm talking about.
Holvert listened to the womanâs troubles, going over any method he could use to get her to talk about the father. But she wasnât easily persuaded to talk about that topic, and whenever Holvert took a gander at addressing it, she easily moved around it.
âMaybe he needs a father figure?â Holvert then forced a bit more prominently.
âHe wouldnât accept anyone else in that position,â she spoke.
âWhat happened to the father then?â
âDied,â she said as if that was all to it.
Holvert considered just telling her about Joriâs request. Just to get her to come clean. But then sheâd hide the skull and ruin the relation she has with her son. That would lead neither to an answer for Jori, nor to uncovering the identity of the owner of the skull.
Holvert cut the conversation short, explaining he had many other things to do. Thankfully, she didnât notice his change in attitude was more or less cause by her being a dead-end in his new investigation.
As he left for the exit, Jori rushed over him to wish him goodbye. When his mother turned away for a moment, he took Holvertâs hand and pushed a note into it.
Once outside, Holvert unfolded his clenched claw and looked at the note. It was an address and the name âBallak Torâ written above it. The necromancer.
Ballakâs address was in Soldan, the artist island of Telleh, right between rich Pedan and the quaint Outer Rim. Soldanâs streets were nothing but large outdoor workshops, small factories, stores and galleries sharing a space never meant for large crowds. The noise of artistry and craft pervaded the vicinity until Holvert took a corner, and suddenly found himself surrounded by relative silence. Here, the galleries were small and cosy, the outdoor stores quiet and subdued and the sides of the streets occupied by painters of canvas and furniture.
Detective Hill stopped at the end of the street, in front of a fancy furniture shop by the looks of it. One you had to ring a bell before you were let in. Exclusive, unaffordable furniture.
The doorbell rang pleasantly and not long after, an old, dark-haired Kikiru opened up. He had white marks running through his facial hair and large bushy, graying eyebrows - even more than usual for someone his species. He wore a dark red tunic, accompanied by a silvery sash wrapped around his waist. From a Southern Dedati culture from the looks of it.
Without saying a word, he gestured Holvert in and led him to the main section of the store. As Holvert passed, he noticed the fresh paint on the walls and echoes of other images behind the new plaster.
âWhat can I help you with,â stated the man with a soft, pleasant voice as he walked over to various parts of the content of the store. âYou seem like a man who can appreciate a nice, sturdy desk. This particular desk has been formed from the upper middle section of a Gimmer tree. A procedure that leads to a sturdy, comfortable desk. Just feel its warm softness.â
âIâm not here for a desk, or for any piece of furniture,â Holvert stated, âI was told I could find a certain Ballak Tor here. A mageâ
The man looked bemused at Holvertâs statement and cracked a faint smile of embarrassment. The detective in return took a business card from his pocket. âI was told he can talk to skulls.â
The furniture store owner looked at the card before pocketing it. âA private detective. I had wondered when such people in the business of solving problems pertaining people would come those of my speciality. But let us seek a more proper space to discuss this.â
He gestured Holvert once more to follow him, this time leading down a sparse corridor, down a flight of metal industrial stairs until they ended in something akin to wide concrete corridors belonging to an underground depot. From there, the man led him once more through a few corridors until ending in a large, dark chamber. In the background Holvert heard the humming of heavy aircondition fans and the air smelled entirely neutral. The man turned on the lights, revealing part by part a whole chamber filled with cabinets, bookcases, white boards with incomprehensible scribbling and various ancient looking devices. Near the white boards stood a set of comfortable looking sofas, and the man gestured Holvert to sit down. As he walked over, he noticed the cabinets were filled with the bone remains of various people, each one carefully tagged and catalogued. He also noticed there was a large section of the floor covered by what seems another large white board. A crate of candles stood nearby as well as a collection of large markers.
âThis is rather more than what I expected,â Holvert said to him, âWhoâs financing this getup? Ought to take a lot of maintenance.â
âMe, my colleagues and the Fund for Pratical Occultism. This is one of the few remaining treatment chambers that Har-Ikei didnât manage to find and destroy. And as you can see, we try to keep it up to date with the latest technological and arcane developments. And this is only the study, but I doubt youâre interested in seeing the ritual room.â
Holvert indeed wasnât, âWhy? Load of dead folks?â
âThose unfamiliar with the means of necromancy are easily upset by them.â
âIâve seen autopsies performed.â
âSo a proper detective then?â
âGot my experience working with the Telleh City Guard. Specialised in tracking people down.â
âWhich is why youâre here, Iâm assuming.â
âWe share an acquittance. Jori Welkander. He told me he spoke to you about his father and that you discovered the skull did not belong to him.â
The man played with his fingers, revealing to Holvert he had various missing streaks of hair around his wrists and arms. Scars, he guessed.
âJori did come to me,â he spoke a moment later as if he had just decided to open up, âAnd yes, I examined the skull he brought and it wasnât his fatherâs. He left disappointed.â
And then quickly afterwards, as if he realised something, ânothing happened to the boy, did there?â
âJoriâs fine. Just getting himself into business he really shouldnât. But he also asked me to figure out what did happen to the dad.â Holvert reached over in his coatâs inner pocket and took his notepad out.
âCan you tell me anything about the procedure?â he asked as he whisked through the pages.
âAh!â The man veered up from his seat, as if he suddenly woke up to a little unexpected party taking place in his room.
âEach imbued skull maintains an impression of the owner. Itâs like a picture: the true, living, three dimensional person is gone, but a two dimensional image remains. Through well-established means we can âlookâ at this picture,â he continued when emphasizing âlookâ with finger-quotes, âwhich then tells us something about the deceased.â
âBut you canât talk to this thing without the name?â
âCorrect, though itâs not quite talking. One of the main skills us necromancers learn, is to listen to the various strands of thought from the deceased and how to differentiate these conversations.
Ah, imagine it like having been at a busy conference all day, many of us still hear echoes of these conversations once we try to get to sleep. Thatâs the type of speech you receive through this ritual. Though my professional attitude requires me to tell you there are more complex, more thorough ways to access this picture - but that is not what we typically engage in, due to various issues associated with it.â
For a brief moment the mage looked like he anticipated Holvert asking about these specifics, but the detective had quite enough of all this magic babble and as his eyes rested upon the remains of a half-burned Inwid skeleton, he really didnât want to think about what these mages were up to when he wasnât there. âSo, you used the name and you didnât hear anything?â
âThe name functions as a key to the conversation,â the man replied slowly recovering from the previously experienced disappointment, âYou still hear things, but without calling the name, the thoughts never crystallise into something understandable.â
âAnd non of the other bits of thoughts led to anything relating to the true identity of the skull?â
âHonestly, I didnât check. These things are routine, see. We just look at it, speak the name and listen. You can do that in a few minutes. A thorough investigation into the identity itself requires different, longer preparation. Fortunately weâre just in the space we can do that sort of thing. Do you happen to have it with you?â
âBy coincidence, I do,â Holvert spoke and put the duffel bag down before the necromancer. The man reached into it and took the bundled up package from its container. Then he took the fabrics off until the skull was revealed before him.
The necromancer held it before him and peered right into the holes that once contained the ownerâs eyes. He then carefully carried the skull towards the giant white board on the floor. He put it down in the middle and took a black marker from the collection. Then, he wrote and drew symbols and figures around the skull as if he had done this many, many times before.
Holvert observed the manâs actions and wondered which part of this was show and which necessity. Then he realised he didnât quite care. For a moment he subconsciously wanted to walk around the room to keep himself occupied, but faced with the choice to be bored, or entertain himself by looking at dead people, he choose boredom.
Once Ballak was done, he took the skull in his hands again, stood in the middle of the ritual drawing and raised it above his head.
He then released a blood curdling, boneshattering roar. Holvert by instinct covered his ears as he felt the vibration of the necromancerâs voice resonating everything around him.
Ballakâs eyes rolled back in his head and he lowered the skull to level with his. All while maintaining his vocal violence. Then it stopped. And then the skull answered.
It took Holvert a moment to realise it was the skull that created the sound. And as the necromancer explained, what echoed from the thing was indeed a kaleidoscope of words and phrases and even full conversations. It sounded archaic, some centuries old, but Holvert believed to recognise some words and some inflexions as Royal dialect. Ballak meanwhile had closed his eyes as if he needed every inch of focus to mentally sorting through the words.
No sooner than Holvert having given up to try, the voices started unifying themselves into a single phrase, over and over again.
Remember me. Please. Remember me.
The voices echoed away. Just when Holvert thought it was over, the necromancer fell down to his knees and crashed upon the board.
For a brief moment Holvert did nothing. But the longer the man didnât move, the more it crept up on Holvert that this was not the intention. He carefully walked over to the body, making sure not to wipe out any of the occult symbols.
The man was fortunately still alive, but didnât respond to any techniques Holvert knew to wake people up from fainting. The detective noticed Ballak was still having a hand over the skull, and moved it off. Still touching him. Hum.
With hesitation instilled by disgust and sense of inappropriateness, Holvert took a piece of cloth he found nearby and lifted the skull of the necromancer.
And once more the cacophony of the skullâs voices coursed through the room. Though, this time, with a different message.
Bring me my name. And I will let him go.
And so there Holvert stood. With a unconscious necromancer and a skull in his hands that demanded to be named.
Why did he insisted on staying in Telleh, he didnât know.













