stand for. It’s you who made my family suffer in the first place with your laws and taxes. And now you come to me with an offer to make their life better, bring their lives up to the level they deserve.” Liam spat on the floor. “You step on our throats, suffocate us, then act as if you were doing us a favor by letting up, allowing us to simply live. Then you have the audacity to ask me to help you suffocate the rest of Erlkazar.” He lifted the open shackle and placed it back on his wrist. “No thank you. I would rather live the rest of my life in chains than be party to such villainy.”
Lord Purdun took a deep breath. “Well, Liam, I can certainly understand your position.” He placed the key in the shackles and locked them once again. “But it’s a standing offer. If you change your mind, you know where to find me.” Purdun placed his hand on Liam’s shoulder and directed him toward the door. “Come.”
Liam didn’t budge. “Where are you taking me?”
“I’m escorting you to the front gate, Liam.” He smiled. “To make sure you make it out of Zerith Hold safely.”
Ryder sat in the bowels of Lord Purdun’s dungeon, his legs chained together, his wrists chained together, and the chains chained together. Beside him on the wooden bench were two similarly chained menone muscular and bald with the tattoo of a blue triangle on his forehead and the other skinny and sickly.
In fact, the entire dank, dripping room was filled with manacled men. They sat side by side by side, three to a bench, twelve benches in all, each man chained to the next. They all wore the same identical clothing: dirty gray baggy hemp pants and matching sleeveless shirts. Down one side of the floor a huge shirtless man, bulging with muscles, paced the narrow walkway between the prisoners. His chest was crisscrossed in old scars, and he carried a whip in his right hand.
“All right, you vermin,” started the man. “There will be no talking, no whispering, and no complaining.” He cracked his whip against the stone floor. “If you’re here it means your life is no longer worth a piss. So until we manage to find someone stupid enough to pay good money for your wasted, worthless hides, you belong to me.” He turned and paced back toward the front of the room. “And I’m none too happy about having to spend the next several months with a bunch of criminal low-lifes, inhaling your fumes and watching you wallow in your own filth. Marching several hundred miles across the open plains ain’t exactly a picnic with a fair maiden for me either. So mind that you don’t make me angry, and you might just make it to your new home in one piece.”
He stopped when he got to the front of the room. Atop a raised platform rested a pair of large drums with blackened leather harness strapsthe kind that could be hefted over a drummer’s shoulders and carried during a parade or festival. The cow hide that covered their tops was stained a deep brown, and there were several tears and holes along the sides and bottom.
Behind the drums was a pair of wooden doors held closed by a monstrous sliding bolt. As an added measure, a heavy metal lock hung from the latch. It was open and unlocked, but having the lock on the inside seemed odd to Ryder. Was there something they intended to keep out of here? Or was the taskmaster really prepared to sacrifice himself if the prisoners managed to break free?
Beside the doors, as if in answer to Ryder’s query, hung a half dozen wicked-looking knives, cleavers, clubs, and other implements of pain. Perhaps there was another reason for the latch being on the inside.
The taskmaster picked up a heavy-looking cleaver in his free hand and shook it as if testing its weight. He nodded, seemingly satisfied.
“Now, about the rest of the rules. You address no one but me, and only if you’ve been addressed first. Any talking out of turn will get you fifty lashes by my own hand.” He slapped the whip