The Black Cliff. Sixteen years earlier.
That spring day Johannes was lying on a hill catching few rays that were shining through gloomy clouds. He was nibbling on a grass blade, lazily looking at a flock of sheep: yellowish and light gray wool balls were plucking juicy clover that covered the whole hill. From time to time the animals bleated at each other as if exchanging words, and tried to push their fellows away from the most delicious areas of grass.
Johann hated the Black Cliff and dreamed to leave it, break out of the mustiness of the eternal fog and head south where it was always warm as in summer, the harvest ripened faster, and the air smelled lavander and peaches. Capital people delivered groceries for sale in the villages the Black Cliff.
Spring on the north was late. And in summer it was hardly warmer. For most of the year there was a forever hazy weather, the air was filled with the aromas of dampness and decay, the night cold made you freeze up even while lying under warm sheepskins. In particularly severe frosts, fishermen found stiffened bodies of beggars in sea caves. The wretches tried to warm themselves by a miserable fire but died of cold in their sleep. A whisper went round that even sorceress’s moray eels wouldn’t crave for their bony corpses.
Reasonable residents stayed away from caves and grottoes, fearing not a cold death but meeting with the sorceress. Some imagined her as a fanged woman with a fishtale. Some – with numerous octopus’s tentacles. And rest considered her to be the fog that enveloped both the Black Cliff and the obscure castle on it all year round. Whitish smog seeped like snakes into the narrowest cracks, bringing nightmares and pulmonary sickness to homes.
On days when the fog turned into an impenetrable wall, and the windows were covered with frost, Johann sat with his father by the hearth, ate hot porridge with butter and drank warm milk. The miller looked out of the window, behind which the outlines of the black castle spires could be seen, and grumbled:
“Even if I were as rich as our butcher, I would never trade my house for this frightening thing. Icy stone. I bet inside it’s even colder than in a grave. The walls look like they're covered in soot. Windows don’t let a single sunray in. And at high tide, the basements and the lower part are flooded, turning the castle into a water dungeon. Its better to live in our simple and cozy house where there we always have a warm loaf of bread and a spicy jag of wine, and our sheep are warmer in the barn in winter than people in a rich castle. Although, what could be left of those riches? Everything has long decayed from wetness, devoured by salt or plastered with shellfish.”
Occasionally the father had to yoke a wagon and went to the southern border for bread-corn by himself. He returned late at night, in the cold, in bad weather. He brought sacks, and the mill began to creak, singing its lullaby to little Johannes. As long as Johann could remember himself, the mill had always worked. Day and night, the father ground grain to spend money on the education of his only son.
In the morning, the boy noticed white flour marks on the floor and walked along them, as if on a path, to the bedroom of his fast asleep father. He took his clothes outside and cleaned it. They have no one closer but each other. If father spent the whole day at the mill, Johannes did chores, butchered a hare he caught or a herring he bought at the market. They didn’t dare to approach the sea and take its gifts. Johann loved listening his father’s stories about the times when the element favoured their family. But after the old fisherman who after became the miller accidentally caught a black moray eel, the element turned away from him and cursed him. Then the miller didn’t know he caught the pet of the sea sorceress, fried and fed his pregnant wife with it. Johann was born prematurely and was very weak. Feeling guilty for the fate of the child and the disgrace of the sea, the miller's wife threw herself off the cliff, and the black water swallowed her. The widower didn’t dare to approach the water to find the body to bury his wife properly. So, he raised and took care of Johann by himself.
Johannes' poor health became better at the mill. He began to recover quickly and got sick as often as other children, or even less often. The sea air and physical labor toughened his body up. The boy grew up to be an attractive young man with feminine features, golden hair and deep-set gray eyes. The miller managed to give him a good education, so his son wasn't inferior to wealthy merchants' children.
The loud bleating made the young man twitch. Narrowing his eyes, he examined the flock again and, missing one sheep, got up from the grass and rushed to the animal's crying.
“Where did you get to?” Johannes was indignant, going down the hill to the protruding stone peaks. The grass became rarer, the ground parted, revealing black cracks, from which the echo of a bleating sheep could be heard.
“Sea sorceress damn you, how did you manage to fall there?” Clinging to the ledges, the young man ducked into the gap. Ducking so as not to hit his head, and treading carefully on the cracked ground, he began to descend until he reached the uneven stone steps. With each step, the smell of dampness intensified, supplemented by the smells of rotting seaweed and the sea. Johann was nauseated by the scents floating in the air, mixed with something familiar. He had seen it before in a butcher's shop. Hot blood flowing down the cutting table, hanging intestines, from which a butcher will make homemade sausage, liver, which will go for a pie. Not a single organ will be thrown away, and those that are not useful in cooking will be given to stray dogs, and a cow's tail will be a toy for children. And then they will play with it with calico kittens.
Johann swallowed a lump in his throat and pressed his palm to his trembling lips. He saw a mermaid sitting on a smooth stone. Beside her slimy tail was a clod of wool stained with blood. The unfortunate sheep was gutted on the spot. A scarlet stripe with entrails lying on the sand was running into the water, where the yellow-eyed heads of moray eels, crowned with thorns, poked out.
The mermaid gave Johann an interested look and grinned, showing blood-stained fangs. Her hands with silver scales up to the elbow were stained with blood. She clutched a sheep's heart in her claws, tearing off piece by piece and eating it like an apple.
“Well, hello, handsome.” A smooth fin stirred behind the mermaid's back. The ink-black eyes blinked, replaced by ordinary, human ones, and funny sparkles flashed in the pupils. The sheep's heart fell to the sand, rolling to Johannes' feet. “And what do you want for a meeting with a sea sorceress?”
***
Nocté
A thick fog enveloped the shore, not allowing anyone to see either the spires of the castle, or even the sky. Greenish-blue clouds spread along the black sand, hiding the footprints left by Nocté. In such weather, people hid at home, afraid to suffocate from the asphyxiating fumes, get lost and fall off the hill into the depths of the sea.
The water seemed to calm. No sound of waves. No cries of seagulls. The Black Cliff sank into sleep, disturbed only by the quiet footsteps of Nocté. The current brought warmth from the south. For a while, the sea ceased to resemble icy tentacles and now warmed the girl's bare feet. There was a faint whistle in the silence, and a light came on in the fog.
Agnes left a candle on the windowsill, taking care the lady found her way to the castle. The maid was pleased with Nocté's appetite: she had been eating normally for many days. The old woman even stopped grumbling about the bad weather, instead switching to Bastian and hurrying the cook with cooking.
Nocté smiled with pleasure – the sand seeping through her fingers allowed the pain in her legs to subside. Taking a step, the girl froze, peering at a strange silver-gray flower opening towards her and fluttering with numerous petals.
Tilting her head to the side, Nocté held her hand in front of it, and dozens of moths fluttered up in fright. Their wings were flapping, and they hit the girl's chest, poked into her face, tangled in her hair and disappeared into the fog.
Sprinkled with pollen, there was a dead newt laying on its back. The water barely concealed the sharp shoulders and hips, stirring the fin needles and protruding scales on the elbows. From chest to groin, a ruby void gaped: the whiteness of the ribs didn't hide the absence of the heart. As before, the insides were missing. Newt's once long, bronze hair had been cut short, and uneven strands stuck to his porcelain skin. On the neck there were scarlet stripes of gills, resembling long cuts. The torn lobe of the elongated ear was dusted with black sand. This sand also managed to cover one leg, as if the sea was trying to swallow its child.
Nocté bent over the unfortunate man, put her palm over his closed eyes, ran over his split lips, icy chest and slipped her fingers between his ribs. The revealed truth made her hand go numb, a shiver ran down her back.
“It’s gone! The pearl’s gone.”
Magic wandered through the veins of the sea people, while the exiles were forced to change not only externally, but also internally, gathering all their strength in a pearl grown behind the heart. Without it, a newt or a mermaid lost the ability not only to do magic, but also to breathe.
“It’s impossible to take it without killing a carrier, but who needed it?” Nocté tried to recall the first victim. “He was gutted the same way but I didn’t think about a pearl, didn’t check it.”
The girl was sure of one thing: even if this unfortunate man had faced his own kind, they would have killed him in a duel, and not dismembered him like a fish for soup, and deprived him of the last dignity which is hair.
“Sea monsters also don’t attack without a reason. If they are disturbed, they can tear you to pieces, swallow alive, but not thoroughly gutted.” A moth landed on Nocté's hand, and others flew after it, fluttering their wings over the dead.
She tried to brush them away and touched the needle on newt's elbow with her palm. Her skin instantly burst and started to bleed. Dipping the injured finger into the water, Nocté didn’t even wince.
Deceptively calm black waves began to appear through the bluish fog, carrying a flexible, long body in her direction like a snake. The drizzling rain blurred its outlines. A smooth, shimmering blue fin emerged from the water. From a distance, the inhabitants would have taken the creature for a fish, but upon contact with it, a person would instantly lose a limb.
Each monster had its own name. Nocté remembered them from childhood, drawing frightening images on the shells. Adamanda approved of her younger daughter's enthusiasm, considering the sea “guards”, as she called them, an important component of the underwater world and the main “weapon” against enemies. However, few shared the Queen's opinion. After the war with humans, the great-great-grandfather, King Potidey, built a wall from the bones of the largest Leviathans[1]. He forever separated the northern waters from the coral capital. With the help of the trident, he imprisoned dangerous pets in the bottomless abyss of Sombra, where they went into hibernation.
[1] Leviathan is a demonic sea serpent noted in theology and mythology. It is referenced in several books of the Hebrew Bible, including Psalms, the Book of Job, the Book of Isaiah, and the Book of Amos
Serpens[1] showed his scaly muzzle, opened four sapphire eyes and poked the corpse with his nose.“Last time aquapil swam to the dead, and now serpens.” Sea serpents most often surrounded Nocté, reacting to the scent of her blood. Aquapiles, on the other hand, resembled water balls, but they changed their body, merging with water and stones and thereby becoming dangerous for unwaring sailors.“If monsters are not disturbed, they can stay in hibernation for many years or even centuries, waking up at the command of the ruler's trident which vibrations reach the most remote corners of the sea.”A powerful wave hit the serpent. Another newt rose threateningly from the water. He raised his hands and, controlling the water, turned it into ice needles. One spike hurt serpens' side. Uttering a cry similar to a whale, the monster slapped the water with its fin and disappeared into the abyss.Newt shot a hateful look at N
Agnes approached the table laden with empty cups and cleared her throat, attracting the attention of her mistress. Nocté looked up at her and her black pupils that filled the gray iris constricted. The girl tilted her head to the side and winced lightly. After the second corpse, she began to suffer from insomnia to which were added frequent headaches and incredible thirst. She lost her appetite again, and after a long walk, nausea attacks kicked in.“My lady, come with me, I have something to show you”, Agnes murmured, beckoning for her.Nocté put down her pen, passed a ribbon between the pages of her diary and, taking a last sip of water from another cup, followed the maid.They passed through corridors hung with decayed tapestries that lost colours, then descended the stairs to the basement, and from there went to the wine cellar. Agnes pointed to a n
Agnes managed to grab her mistress by the hand before she went to the bottom. Pushing hard, the maid pulled the girl to the pier. There was no time to call Bastian for help.“Help me carry the lady to the bedroom” she pleaded, turning to the Chaos that had quietlyswam up. The curiosity of him became good luck for the old woman.The newt bristled his fins, hissed and, measuring the maid with a contemptuous look, dived, sliding to the exit of the grotto. A wave separated from the pier and, covering Chaos’ body, froze his limbs, surrounded him with a dense water ball and lifted him into the air.“Do as you're told, and maybe I'll help you find out who killed your brothers,” Agnes croaked, holding a clawed hand clenched above her. The rejuvenated fingers were silvered with scales. The wrinkles on her face smoothed out, returning her to her former cold beauty. Black curls fell over her shoulders, glam up her nondescript dress with its lu
Chapter 4 Johannes The sorceress was attracted by Johannes' courage and beauty. They could talk about the shepherd's dreams for hours. He didn't even notice how he told the mermaid about his fears, life with his father whom he loved endlessly. But his aspirations could be realised only in the capital of Sorfmaran - Vayle. The sorceress allowed him to come to her grotto, calling it a tiny corner of their joy. One day, a mermaid met Johann, changing her usual appearance to a human one. They had no time to talk that night. She fell in love with a passionate young man who wasn't afraid of her nature and thirsted for knowledge. When the sorceress wasn't there, he spent time alone in the grotto with old folios, studied, memorised. Especially everything related to magic, although he would never have been able to learn how to conjure. According to the mermaid, it was subject onl
Vayle The carriage stuck a little on the road among people going to the fair, and Nocté and Agnes got to the king's castle late in the evening when the masquerade ball began. The girl was the only late guest. The servant met them at the main entrance and intended to escort them to the ballroom, but under Agnes’ icy gaze, he faded away and asked nervously, trembling from something: “Would the lady like to refresh herself up?” he stretched out his hands to the valises, which the coachman thoughtfully helped to carry, and returned to the horses. “Of course! We were on the road all day! What kind of servants does His Majesty have? Who do you think you've met now? A low-born philistine? Come on, show me the way to the apartments, my dear,” Agnes stamped her foot, and the servant heard a crunch, as if something had broken in the old woman. Muttering apologies, he led them through the dimly lit corridors, puffing from
Nocté dreamed of dancing with Gottfried. They were surrounded by guests dressed in outfits of all colours of green: from dark moss green, like the marshes on the border of Sorfmarán, to bright green, like the first spring grass. At that time, dancing was the king's favourite amusement. He spent all his free time from state affairs at balls. There, imitating the queen, the court ladies were allowed not to wear corsets, not to do too complicated hairstyles and even dance barefoot. With a happy smile, Nocté circled with her husband hand in hand, pressed against his chest, watering the lapel of his coat with tears. The king looked at his beautiful wife and saw happiness in her eyes. Gottfried has never doubted his beloved, having faith that she shares his passion with great joy. But the king didn't suspect what efforts Nocté had to restrain her cry of pain. With the last of her strength, she endured, trying not t
From the records of the ship's logs: «From a distant, mariners always saw the shrouded in fog Black Cliff, as an ominous place, hovering above the earth in gloomy clouds. The captains kept their ships away from this damned cliff, fearing to run into prickly reefs and die before they wake from the terrifying collision. There were rumours that the Black Cliff has always been the refuge of the sea sorceress, however, no one has seen her for many years, and talks about her still continue to roam the lands of Sorfmarán. Local old-timers still remembered the sorceress's order: "When taking gifts from the sea, express gratitude and do not offend the dark waters with the guts of the dead." For this reason, fishermen kept boats with nets away from the water, cleaned the catch on land, and burned the remains in the fire, so as not to anger the witch and her pets — sea monsters lurking in the northern waters. After all,
Nocté scratched her foot and winced in pain. A great deal of time has passed since the sorcery, but she still walks on the ground as if on glass shards. Every step is a torture.“Sister was right. I put too much at stake and bit the dust. Why am I not as far-sighted as you, Erida?” The strange gulls’ behavior circling over the black reef attracted girl's attention. The birds attacked something hidden from Nocté's eyes, carrying away some pieces in their beaks. Putting the pain aside, the girl ran out of the bedroom, slid down the spiral staircase past Agnes carrying clean linen and got to the first floor. The maid shouted something behind her, but Nocté didn’t hear.“Maybe there was a shipwreck somewhere nearby and the victim was washed up on the rocks? Or was it a monster that attacked?” Almost colliding with a cook holding a huge basket of fresh seafood, the girl ran down the st