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Now reading: Chapter 140- Necromancers In A Graveyard from Eldritch Guidance, a Horror novel by Saberfang.

Deep within the heart of an ancient, mist-shrouded forest lay a vast and forgotten graveyard, its existence erased from the mory of the living. Thick, ghostly fog curled between crumbling headstones and rusted iron fences, their once-proud structures now twisted and broken by decades of neglect. No mourners ca to this place—no candles were lit, no prayers whispered. It was a realm of silence, decay, and the restless dead.

Yet tonight, the graveyard was not empty.

Perched atop a weathered tombstone, his tattered black robes fluttering faintly in the damp breeze, sat Vrax—a necromancer of peculiar habits. His fingers drumd idly against the cold stone as he swung one leg back and forth, his feet scuffing against the moss-covered surface. From his lips ca a cheerful, lilting whistle, a jaunty tune that clashed grotesquely with the horrors unfolding just beneath him.

Three reanimated corpses—their flesh pallid and peeling, their eyes hollow voids of hunger—crouched in the dirt, their twisted forms hunched over the mutilated remains of Vrax’s latest victim. Unlike most necromancers, who relied on rot sli to strip flesh from bone, Vrax preferred a far more visceral thod. His undead servants were not just re puppets; they were ravenous beasts, and he saw no reason to deny the undead nature he had imbued them with.

With wet, tearing sounds, the creatures feasted, their jagged teeth sinking into muscle and sinew, their bony fingers clawing at the at as if starved for centuries. Blood and gore sared their lipless mouths, their grotesque chewing filling the air with a nauseating chorus of crunches and slurps. They ate with frantic, unnatural hunger, as though so lingering shred of mortal gluttony still tornted their cursed existence.

Vrax watched with mild amusent, his crimson eyes gleaming in the gloom.

Vrax: "Efficient, isn't it?" he mused aloud, though none of his mindless creations could answer. "No waiting for sli to do its work. No wasted effort. Just... natural decomposition." He chuckled, the sound as dry as the bones scattered around him.

Sowhere in the distance, a lone crow cawed, as if in protest. Vrax ignored it.

The woman’s voice cut through the damp, heavy air of the graveyard—a fragile, trembling sound, teetering between terror and despair.

Woman: "Pleaseeee..."

Not far from where Vrax lounged upon his gravestone perch, a young woman struggled against her grim restraints. Her fair skin was sared with dirt and sweat, her chestnut hair tangled and damp with mist. The simple hospun fabric of her dress was torn in places, evidence of a futile struggle. But what truly held her captive was far more horrifying than re rope or chain.

Coiled around her torso and limbs—wrapped tight enough to bruise—were the interlinked spinal cords of the long-dead, fused together into a sinuous, bonelike serpent. The unnatural bindings pulsed faintly with corruptive energy, their vertebrae shifting and tightening like the constricting grip of so skeletal python. One end of the grisly chain wound around the gnarled trunk of an ancient oak, while the other curled possessively around her throat, not quite choking her—yet—but leaving no doubt that escape was impossible.

Woman: "I-I beg you," she gasped, her voice breaking. "Let go. Please! I swear, I won’t tell anyone about you—about any of this!" Her wide, bloodshot eyes darted between Vrax and the feasting undead, her breath coming in short, panicked hitches. "I have a family! A little brother and sister! They—they need ! Please, just—"

Vrax’s whistling continued, uninterrupted. The cheerful lody danced over the wet sounds of tearing flesh and the woman’s ragged sobs, as if her pleas were nothing more than the distant buzzing of an insect.

Was he deaf to her suffering? Lost in thought? Or simply indifferent?

It was impossible to say.

The necromancer’s gaze flicked toward her for the briefest of monts—a glance so casual it was almost insulting—before he resud his idling. The undead feasted. The woman wept. And Vrax?

He just kept whistling.

The graveyard had fallen into an eerie rhythm—the wet, crunching sounds of the undead feasting, the woman’s desperate whimpers, and Vrax’s cheerful whistling weaving together into a symphony of the macabre. Then, after another ten minutes of this grim harmony, sothing shifted.

A footstep.

Then another.

The crunch of dead leaves underfoot.

Vrax’s whistling stopped mid-note, his lips curling into a wide, knowing grin.

Vince: "Ah, good. You're already here."

Erging from the thick mist like a shadow given form was Vince—Vrax’s partner in cri, a fellow artist. Clad in the sa tattered black robes, he moved with an unsettling grace, his presence as cold as the grave itself. His face was unremarkable—black hair, sharp features—but one detail stood out: a sleek black eyepatch now covered his left eye, a new addition since their last eting.

Woman: "Is soone there? Please, help !" the woman cried, her voice raw with desperation.

From where she was, bound and trembling, she couldn’t see Vince—only hear his voice. And in her terror, she latched onto it like a lifeline, unaware that the man she was pleading with was far more monstrous than the one who had captured her. If she had seen him—if she had known who he was, the things he had done—her blood would have run colder than the grave dirt beneath her.

Vince turned toward Vrax, his remaining eye glinting with intrigue.

Vince: "I didn’t know you were bringing soone?"

Vrax blinked, then let out a short, careless laugh, as if he’d just rembered a trivial errand.

Vrax: "Oh! I completely forgot about that."

With a theatrical flourish, he hopped down from the gravestone and sauntered over to the woman. A flick of his wrist, and the serpentine spine binding her slithered away, its vertebrae clicking as it retreated into the earth. She collapsed onto her knees, gasping, her body trembling from exhaustion and terror.

Vrax bent down, bringing his face level with hers. His smile stretched unnaturally wide, his crimson eyes burning with sothing between amusent and madness.

Vrax: "You’re free to go," he purred. "I suggest you leave before I change my mind. Now."

The woman didn’t hesitate. She scrambled to her feet, her breath coming in ragged bursts, and then—she ran. Her figure disappeared into the mist, swallowed by the forest’s oppressive gloom.

Vince watched her go, then turned to Vrax, one eyebrow arched in silent question.

Vince: "You just let her go?" his tone was flat, but the curiosity beneath was unmistakable.

Before another word could be spoken, a bloodcurdling scream tore through the mist—the woman's voice, shrill with fresh terror.

Woman: "AHHHH!" It was followed by the wet, guttural moans of more undead, their hungry echoes slithering through the fog.

Vrax didn't even turn his head. He simply smiled, slow and satisfied, before glancing at Vince.

Vrax: "I was in the neighborhood, looking for the bones of a maiden given false hope."

Vince let out a low chuckle, the sound rich with dark amusent.

Vince: "Ooooh. I see." His remaining eye glead with approval. It was a cruel punchline to a joke only they understood.

His gaze then drifted toward the undead still feasting nearby, their skeletal fingers clawing at sinew, their jaws working thodically through flesh.

Vince: "I see you're still using the undead to clean the bones instead of rot sli."

Vrax: "It’s faster," he said with a shrug.

Vince: "Also wasteful," he countered, clicking his tongue in disapproval. "The undead always crack the bones trying to get at the marrow. Half of them end up useless."

Vrax waved a dismissive hand.

Vrax: "Ah, but you see—with skill, you can direct them to strip the flesh without damaging the bones." He smirked. "It’s all in the control."

Vince let out a dry, rasping laugh.

Vince: "Hmm. Sounds like too much work. You’re the only necromancer I know who does it this way."

Vrax: "Then perhaps I’ll show you one day," he replied, his grin widening. "You might even co to appreciate my thod. It’s much faster than waiting for sli to do the work."

Vince shook his head, folding his arms with the air of a master sculptor regarding a child splashing in clay.

Vince: "You youngsters are always rushing things rather than taking your ti," he chided, his voice dripping with condescension. "Savor the process, Vrax. Let the artistry breathe."

Vrax rolled his eyes so hard it looked painful. "

Vrax: “Spoken like soone who takes days to kill sobody."

Vince's lips curled into a thin, knowing smile.

Vince: "Of course it takes a while. The essence of art is suffering. If you kill your subject too quickly, they can’t properly marinate in their despair. And what is art without depth? Without texture?"

Vrax: "Oh, here we go," he groaned, rubbing his temples as if warding off an oncoming headache.

Undeterred, Vince pressed on, gesturing dramatically with one hand.

Vince: "Don’t you agree that we must capture the essence of true artistry in our works? The bones I use must co from those who have suffered exquisitely. The art should reflect the agony of its creation—both the subject and the artist must endure!"

Vrax exhaled sharply through his nose.

Vrax: "Sure, suffering has its place. But there's more to art than just tornt, my friend. What about spontaneity? Chaos? The raw, unpredictable beauty of the mont?"

Vince: "Bah!" he scoffed, waving a dismissive hand. "Your surprises are amusing, I’ll grant you that. But spectacle alone is not substance. Art requires discipline. Intentionality."

Vrax threw up his hands in mock surrender.

Vrax: "Spontaneity can be intentional. But fine, whatever. I’m not having this debate with you again. Unlike so of us, I actually have duties to attend to—not to ntion preparations for the next exhibition."

Vince let out a dry chuckle, his fingers tapping idly against the hilt of the dagger at his belt.

Vince: "Sounds like Wil Valworx has you running around with your head chopped off."

Vrax sighed, rubbing the back of his neck.

Vrax: "He does keep busy."

Vince: "Ugh," he groaned, rolling his remaining eye. "How did you go from being a student of Ardien to that condescending bastard’s errand boy?"

Vrax: "You might not like him," he countered, "but his artistic vision is revolutionary. Besides—" He waved a hand, cutting off the inevitable retort. "—we’ve gotten off track. About that eye… is that the result of your task?"

Vince: "This?" He tapped the black leather eyepatch. "This was paynt for the Fateweavers."

Vrax: "Oh? So they asked for an eye in exchange for explaining why the bone readings are off?"

Vince: "Not exactly."

With a flicker of sickly yellow energy, Vince reached into the shadowy folds of his storage space and withdrew a lantern—its glass murky, its glow an ominous, pulsating gold. Inside, a faint silhouette writhed, its form twisting against the confines of its prison.

Vince: "Here," he said, handing it over. "The soul of one of their head matrons. She can explain what’s going on better than I can."

Vrax took the lantern, his fingers brushing against the warm tal. The trapped soul inside recoiled at his touch.

Vrax: "I see you got into a fight with them," he mused.

Vince: "No," he corrected, his tone almost offended. "It’s paynt. They had one of a kind bones. Ones I just had to have. So, they can’t say I never suffer for my art."

Vrax arched a brow.

Vrax: "Still sounds like you killed them and took their bones to ."

Vince: "Well, yes," he admitted with a shrug. "But I couldn’t make them suffer properly before I collected them. Ti was short." He sighed wistfully. "Still, I think they’ll work for my next piece. They’re bones were particularly…unique."

Vrax leaned in with a mischievous glint in his eye, his fingers drumming against the soul lantern's warm surface.

Vrax: "Oooh, co on—can't you give just a little hint about what you're working on?"

Vince folded his arms, his lips curling into a smirk.

Vince: "You'll have to wait until the exhibition. Besides, I thought you were the artist who always preached that true art should be a surprise. Why would I spoil it now?"

Vrax: "Hmph. I suppose you got there," he conceded, though his grin didn't fade. "Fine, keep your secrets. But at least let help with that eye. I’m excellent at necromantic transplants—could get you a fresh one from so unwilling donor, make it look and function good as new."

Vince let out a dry chuckle, touching his eyepatch almost fondly.

Vince: "Vrax, you really should learn to listen. I said I intend to suffer for my art, and suffer I shall. If I wanted a replacent, I could’ve done it myself. But this wound… the pain is exhilarating. It’s fueling ." His voice dropped to a whisper. "Every throb is a spark for my next masterpiece."

Vrax rolled his eyes again but didn’t press further.

Vrax: "Very well, martyr. If you won’t give a hint about your next piece or help out with that eye, at least tell what you learned from her." He shook the lantern slightly, making the trapped soul inside flicker in agitation.

Vince waved a dismissive hand.

Vince: "Eh, nothing too interesting. Just so cosmic nonsense. The old End Ti prophecy shifted, and now all forms of divination are completely unreliable. That’s why bone readings, star charts, and visions are useless now."

Vrax: "Ohhh," he murmured, snapping his fingers. "That explains why the Seers of Argon haven’t been seen. I thought they’d just finally died of boredom."

Vince: "Exactly. And, the closer we get to whatever new apocalypse is brewing, the more divination fails. The bones aren’t lying—they just can’t see anymore."

Vrax: "So… what are the changes?"

Vince shrugged.

Vince: "That’s the kicker—no one knows. Not even the Fateweavers. The future isn’t just unclear; it’s unwritten. This new prophecy is still forming, and from what I gathered, it’s going to be… open-ended. No set path. No predetermined ending. Just pure, delicious chaos."

For a mont, Vrax went completely still.

Then, his entire body began to tremble—not with fear, but with rapture.

Vrax: "You're telling … the future is completely unknown now?" he breathed, his voice trembling with barely contained glee.

Vince’s smirk widened.

Vince: "Yup. Even the gods are blind."

A beat of silence.

Then—

Vrax: "HAHAHAHA!"

Vrax threw his head back and howled with laughter, the sound echoing through the graveyard like a mad chorus. The undead nearby twitched at the noise, as if disturbed by the sheer joy in his mania.

Vrax: "That ans we can shock and awe even the gods with our art now!" he crowed, clutching his stomach as if he might burst from excitent. "No fate! No rules! Just us—and whatever creations we choose to unleash!"

Vince couldn’t help but chuckle.

Vince: “I thought you might like that.”

Vrax: "Oh, this is beautiful," he gasped, wiping a tears of joy from his eye. "The canvas is blank. The audience is clueless. And the show?" He spread his arms wide, his grin feral. "It’s going to be legendary."

Vince: "Anyways," he said with a dismissive wave, "you said you were busy, so I’ll leave you to it." He turned to leave, his robes whispering against the damp earth as he prepared to return to his latest grotesque masterpiece.

But Vrax, still riding the high of manic revelation, managed to reel himself in just enough to call out.

Vrax: "Wait! Vince—there’s sothing else."

Vince paused. Then, slowly, he turned back—and for the first ti since their conversation began, his expression darkened into sothing dangerous. A scowl twisted his features, his remaining eye burning with cold fury.

Vince: "I’m not Wil’s dog," he spat. "You can tell him to fuck off. When I dethrone him at the next exhibition, I’ll collect that bastard’s bones and turn them into a toilet."

Vrax held up his hands in mock surrender.

Vrax: "Co now, Vince, my friend—"

Vince: "No," Vince cut in, his voice a blade of ice. "I only tolerated that last order from Wil because you asked —and because you were a student of my dear friend Ardien. Otherwise, I would’ve added your bones to my collection the mont you opened your mouth to deliver that bastard's orders. So don’t. Push. It."

Vrax didn’t flinch. Instead, his grin only widened.

Vrax: "Please, friend, calm down. This isn’t Wil’s request. It’s mine. And think of it less as a favor… and more as a reward."

Vince exhaled sharply through his nose, his fingers twitching as if already itching to wrap around a throat.

Vince: "...What is it?"

Vrax: "There’s soone I need you to kill," he said smoothly. "And I want his bones."

Vince scoffed.

Vince: "If you want soone dead, do it yourself."

Vrax: "Normally, I would. But, I have pressing business in the Sloan Republic. Ti-sensitive, unfortunately."

Vince: "Still not my problem," he muttered, turning away again.

Vrax: "Ah, but you might find it interesting who I want dead."

With a theatrical flourish, he reached into the folds of his robes and produced a sealed envelope, thick with docunts. He held it out, letting the weight of its contents dangle between them like bait.

Vince hesitated. Then, with a sigh that was more growl than breath, he stalked back and snatched the envelope from Vrax’s grasp. He tore it open with impatient fingers, his eye scanning the pages with quick, hungry movents.

As he read, his annoyed scowl faltered. Then twisted. Then—

Vince: "Oh."

A slow, wicked smile spread across his face, the kind that promised suffering in its purest form.

Vince: "I see why you called this a reward. You should’ve led with this."

Vrax’s grin matched his.

Vrax: "So, do we have a deal?"

Vince didn't answer imdiately. The graveyard's mist curled between them like a living thing as he carefully folded the docunts, the parchnt whispering against his skeletal fingers. When he finally tucked them into the shadowed depths of his robes, the movent was deliberate—final. His remaining eye locked onto Vrax's with a gaze so cold it could have frozen the blood in a lesser man's veins.

Vince: "Unfortunately," he murmured, his voice like gravel dragged over ice, "I want that bastard's bones as well."

Vrax tilted his head, considering. The lantern's sickly glow painted his sharp features in jaundiced light as the trapped soul within twisted in silent agony.

Vrax: "I only need the head for my art piece," he countered, tapping one finger against his temple. "The rest is... negotiable."

A slow, predatory grin spread across Vince's face—the kind of smile a spider might give a fly caught in its web.

Vince: "Tell you what," he said, stepping closer until the scent of grave dirt and old blood clung to the space between them. "You clean the flesh from that bastard's bones for ... properly, not that rushed butchery you call a technique... and you can have the head. The rest of him?" A shrug, casual as a death sentence. "Is mine."

Vrax extended a hand, his grin mirroring Vince's in its vicious delight.

Vrax: "Deal."

Their hands clasped—a pact sealed in sothing far heavier than blood. Sowhere far beyond the mist, soone still walked, still breathed, still believed themselves safe.

The artists were coming.

And they would never leave their canvases unfinished.

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