Rise of the Horde-Chapter 619 - 618
They found Captain Baldred in a cellar beneath a chandler’s shop three miles from the abandoned Arass manor.
The discovery came through the broken lord Castellan’s confession ...the former occupant of the king’s right hand, cooperating fully in exchange for his family’s protection from the conspiracy’s remaining operatives, provided the locations of every Arass safe house, storage facility, and operational site he had knowledge of. Most were empty by the time the household guard arrived, Protocol Omega’s dispersal having scattered the network’s physical assets across dozens of locations throughout the kingdom. Supply caches had been emptied. Communication equipment had been destroyed. Financial records had been burned in fireplaces that still smelled of ash when the investigators arrived.
But the secondary detention site, where the Tekarr expedition’s surviving prisoners had been relocated when the manor was abandoned, had been overlooked in the chaos of the dispersal. The Arass practitioners who had overseen the soul-binding process had fled with the rest of the network, following Protocol Omega’s instructions to scatter and go to ground. In their haste, they had not taken time to either finish their work or release their subjects.
They had simply left.
Sir Willem led the recovery team personally. Twenty household guardsmen, three Academy mages, and two healers descended on the chandler’s shop at dawn, breaching the cellar door with the controlled violence of a unit that had practiced forced entry a thousand times. They poured through the entrance with weapons drawn and wards active, prepared for dark-arts traps, magical defenses, or armed resistance.
They found none.
What they found was worse.
The cellar was large for a chandler’s shop ...large enough to suggest it had been purpose-built or extensively modified, with reinforced stone walls and a ceiling high enough for a man to stand upright. The air was cold, stale, and carried a sweetness that the healers recognized immediately: the particular smell of flesh that has been subjected to sustained magical violation. Not rot ...the binding process preserved the body even as it consumed the mind ...but something subtler and more disturbing. The smell of humanity being slowly converted to something else.
Three men hung from chains in the center of the room, suspended from ceiling hooks that had been driven into the stone with the professional craftsmanship of people who had built such facilities before. The binding apparatus ...ritual implements, inscription tools, bottles of alchemical compounds whose purposes the Academy mages could guess at but preferred not to confirm ...lay abandoned on workbenches along the walls, their operators having departed mid-process.
Sir Willem had seen combat. He had witnessed the aftermath of battles, the results of torture, the consequences of cruelty inflicted by people who had ceased to regard their victims as human. None of it had prepared him for the sight of three soldiers ...Threian soldiers, men who had served the kingdom with courage and distinction ...suspended from chains in a cellar while purple sigils carved into their flesh pulsed with energy that should not have existed in the mortal world.
"Get them down," he ordered, and his voice was steady because steadiness was what his men needed, but his hands trembled at his sides where no one could see.
Lieutenant Gerber was the most far gone. His body bore the full inscription coverage of a nearly complete conversion ...purple-glowing sigils covering every inch of visible skin, the marks so dense that they overlapped in places, creating complex interference patterns that the Academy mages found simultaneously fascinating and horrifying. His eyes were entirely corrupted to the dark-tinted luminescence that marked full binding ...no trace of their original color remained, replaced by a flat purple glow that tracked movement with mechanical precision but showed no recognition of the people around him. 𝒇𝓻𝓮𝓮𝙬𝙚𝒃𝒏𝓸𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝓬𝓸𝒎
He was alive but unresponsive in any meaningful sense. His body functioned ...it breathed, its heart beat, its muscles responded to external stimuli. But the consciousness that had once inhabited that body, the person who had been Lieutenant Gerber of the Tekarr expedition, a young officer who had survived the orcish lands through courage and determination, was not evident. The healers who examined him could not determine whether the person who had once been Gerber still existed beneath the overlay of binding programming, or whether the consciousness had been so thoroughly overwritten that nothing of the original remained.
Lieutenant Kael was marginally better. His conversion was estimated at ninety percent ...enough to render him functionally compliant to commands embedded in the binding, but with a narrow margin of original consciousness still detectable by the Academy practitioners who assessed him. When Sir Willem spoke his name, something flickered in the purple glow of his eyes ...a brief, almost imperceptible hesitation in the mechanical tracking, as if a part of him that the binding hadn’t reached was trying to respond but couldn’t find the way.
The Academy practitioners provided a cautious assessment: the binding’s effects might be irreversible without techniques that the kingdom did not possess. The soul-binding process was not merely magical manipulation ...it was a fundamental alteration of consciousness at a level that conventional healing magic could not address. The inscriptions carved into the prisoners’ flesh were not wounds that could be cleaned and stitched. They were channels through which foreign energy had been poured into the subjects’ very identities, overwriting their autonomy with obedience, their memories with programming, their sense of self with servitude.
Captain Baldred was the revelation.
His conversion had been deliberately stalled at seventy-two percent ...Marius’s order to preserve his cognitive function for interrogation about the Keystone had, in a bitter irony, saved him from the complete binding that had consumed Gerber. The result was a man at war with himself. His right eye glowed with the purple luminescence of partial conversion, tracking movement with the mechanical precision of the binding’s programming. His left eye remained brown, fierce, and unmistakably his own ...the eye of a captain who had led his men through the Tekarr Mountains and who had refused, despite everything that had been done to him, to stop being himself.
His body bore the ritual inscriptions, but they covered only his torso and arms ...his legs and face were unmarked, the binding process halted mid-progression by an order from the man who had initiated it. The result was visible in every movement: a constant, involuntary tremor that ran through his body like a vibration in a wire strung too tight, the binding’s programming pulling him in one direction while his remaining will pulled in another.
When the guardsmen cut his chains, Baldred collapsed to the floor and lay still for a long moment. His breath came in ragged gasps, his body trembling with the accumulated trauma of weeks of torture and magical violation. The stone floor was cold against his skin, and the sensation of it ...real stone, real cold, real sensation unmediated by the binding’s filtering ...was the first fully authentic physical experience he had had since his capture.
Then his left eye focused on Sir Willem’s face, and a sound emerged from his ruined throat that might have been a laugh or a sob or something in between. A human sound, complicated and raw, carrying the full weight of everything he had endured and the single, overwhelming relief of being found.
"Took you long enough," Captain Baldred whispered.
Willem knelt beside him, stripping off his cloak to wrap it around the captain’s shoulders. "We came as fast as we could, Captain. The kingdom has been through some changes since you were taken."
"I heard," Baldred said, and the fact that he could respond coherently, could form sentences, could maintain a conversation ...that was more encouraging than any diagnostic spell the Academy mages could have performed. His mind was still there, battered and partially imprisoned but still there, still fighting.
The rescue of the prisoners created a medical crisis that the kingdom’s healers were profoundly unprepared for. The Academy practitioners convened an emergency consultation, pooling their knowledge of magical theory, consciousness studies, and the limited information available about dark-arts binding techniques. They concluded, with professional reluctance that bordered on institutional humiliation, that they lacked the expertise to reverse the binding. The techniques involved were outside their training, their theoretical frameworks, and their ethical boundaries.
Which left one option.
Lord Marius Arass, newly sentenced to life service as a consultant on dark-arts phenomena, was brought to the medical wing under heavy guard. He entered the room where Baldred lay on a cot, the captain’s mismatched eyes tracking his approach with an intensity that combined residual binding-compliance ...an involuntary recognition of the man whose will the binding had been designed to enforce ...with genuine, autonomous hatred.
"You did this to me," Baldred said, his voice thin but steady.
"I did," Marius acknowledged. No equivocation. No explanation. Just the blunt acknowledgment of a fact that could not be softened. "And I am here to undo it."
"Why should I trust you?"
"You shouldn’t. But the people who can reverse what was done to you are the same people who did it in the first place. That’s the bitter reality of forbidden knowledge ...only those who create the poison know the antidote. The Academy’s practitioners are skilled, but they’ve never studied soul-binding because the Church declared it heretical three centuries ago. The knowledge exists only in Arass records and Covenant research."
Baldred stared at him with his one good eye, reading the man who had ordered his torture with the same tactical assessment he had once applied to enemy positions on the battlefield. What he saw was not contrition ...Marius was too honest for the performed guilt that would have made the moment easier. What he saw was competence and commitment, delivered without warmth but also without deception.
"If you make it worse," Baldred said, "I will find a way to kill you. Binding or no binding."
"Fair enough," Marius replied, and something that might have been respect flickered across his gaunt features.
The unbinding process took eight days for Baldred. Marius worked under the constant supervision of Academy practitioners and household guardsmen, his every action monitored, his every technique documented for future reference. He narrated as he worked, explaining each step in terms the Academy mages could understand and record, translating dark-arts practice into conventional magical theory with the fluency of a man who had mastered both frameworks.
He removed the inscriptions one by one ...not by cutting them away, which would have killed the subject, but by carefully unraveling the energy patterns they channeled, disconnecting each binding link from the subject’s consciousness and allowing the natural identity to reassert itself. The process was excruciatingly precise, each inscription requiring individual attention, each disconnect carrying the risk that a cascading failure would collapse the remaining binding infrastructure and drag the subject’s consciousness down with it.
By the fourth day, the purple glow had faded from Baldred’s right eye. By the sixth, the inscriptions were dormant ...still visible on his skin as scars, networks of raised tissue that would never fully fade, but no longer channeling binding energy. By the eighth, the Academy practitioners declared him free of external influence, though they noted that the psychological effects of the experience would likely persist for years. The scars were not merely physical ...the binding had touched Baldred’s mind, his memories, his sense of self. Healing those invisible wounds would require time that no magic could compress.
Kael’s unbinding was harder. At ninety percent conversion, his original consciousness was a thin layer beneath a massive overlay of programmed compliance. Marius worked with exquisite precision, peeling away the overlay in layers, each one revealing more of the man beneath like an archaeologist uncovering a buried artifact. The process took twelve days and left Kael disoriented, confused, and prone to episodes where the binding’s residual programming surfaced briefly ...moments when his eyes would go blank and his body would stiffen, responding to commands that no longer existed, before his recovering natural will reasserted control and pulled him back to himself.
Gerber was the most difficult case. At near-complete conversion, the line between binding overlay and original consciousness had almost completely dissolved. Marius worked for three weeks, hour after painstaking hour, searching for traces of the person who had once been Lieutenant Gerber beneath the comprehensive programming that had replaced him. The work was so delicate that Marius often sat motionless for long stretches, his dark-arts senses extended to their limits, feeling along the edges of the binding for the faintest vibration of original consciousness the way a miner might feel along a rock face for the whisper of a hidden vein.
He found fragments. Memories ...disconnected, incomplete, but unmistakably Gerber’s. Emotional responses that the binding’s programming hadn’t accounted for and couldn’t fully suppress. The ghost of a personality that had been overwritten but not entirely erased, surviving in the gaps between the binding’s instructions like weeds growing through cracks in stone.
Working with these fragments, Marius reconstructed enough of Gerber’s original identity to establish a functional consciousness ...a mind that was recognizably Gerber, if not entirely the Gerber who had entered the Arass manor weeks before.
"He will never be fully the man he was," Marius told the healers, his voice carrying the exhaustion of three weeks of work that had tested the limits of his dark-arts expertise. "The binding penetrated too deeply. What I’ve restored is a foundation ...enough for him to live, to function, to make choices. But there will be gaps. Memories that don’t connect. Emotional responses that feel borrowed rather than genuine. He will spend the rest of his life rebuilding an identity that was nearly destroyed."
"And the young man?" the healers asked, referring to the young worker who had been fully converted weeks before the others.
Marius was quiet for a long moment. His gaze drifted to the corner of the medical wing where the poor guy stood with vacant eyes and slack posture ...the young man who had survived the Tekarr Mountains through courage and determination, who had been broken by the Arass family’s darkest arts, who now existed as a warning of what the binding could accomplish when carried to completion.
"He was converted to one hundred percent. The original consciousness was completely overwritten. There is nothing left to restore."
"He’s alive," the healers pointed out, and the protest in their voices was the protest of people who refused to accept the finality of what they were hearing. "He walks, he speaks, he responds to commands."
"He responds to Arass commands," Marius corrected, and the distinction was everything. "He is a puppet ...a body animated by magical programming rather than a person animated by will. I could remove the programming, but what would remain would not be him. It would be an empty vessel. A body without a mind."
"Is there nothing that can be done?"
Marius looked at the poor guy again, studying the vacant face with the focused intensity of a man searching for something he desperately wanted to find and could not. The young man stood motionless, his breathing regular, his eyes tracking movement with the mechanical precision of the binding’s final stage. Nothing in those eyes suggested awareness, recognition, or the pain that would at least have indicated that something human remained beneath the programming.
"There may be techniques beyond my knowledge," Marius said carefully. "The Covenant studied consciousness manipulation at a depth that exceeds even the Arass family’s understanding. They had facilities dedicated to binding research ...laboratories where the process was refined over centuries. If their research records can be recovered from the Church’s restricted archives ...if the Archbishop’s information leads to Covenant facilities where advanced binding and unbinding techniques were developed ...then there might be hope for him."
"Might," the healer repeated.
"Might. I cannot promise more than that."
Baldred, who had been listening from his cot with the fierce attention of a man who had just been rescued from a nightmare and was determined to ensure no one else remained trapped in it, spoke up. His voice was stronger now ...still rough, still bearing the damage of weeks of screaming and silence, but carrying the authority of a captain who had never stopped being a captain even when his mind was being consumed.
"Find the records," he said. "Whatever it takes. He survived the mountains. He survived the Arass dungeon. He was with us through terrain that killed better men. He deserves better than being a puppet for the rest of his life."
"The investigation into the Covenant’s facilities is underway," Fairfax assured him, his measured tone conveying both commitment and realism. "The Archbishop’s testimony has provided several promising leads. If the records exist, we will find them."
It was a promise made with honest uncertainty ...the kind of promise that men make when they cannot guarantee the outcome but refuse to accept the alternative. The records might exist. They might be recoverable. They might contain techniques applicable to Halveth’s condition. Each "might" was a link in a chain that could lead to salvation or dead ends, and no one in the room could predict which.
Baldred accepted it. Not because he trusted the promise, but because trust, he had learned in the hardest possible way, was the only thing that kept human beings from becoming the things that had been done to him. The binding had tried to strip him of his will, his identity, his capacity for choice. It had nearly succeeded. What had saved him was not strength or defiance but something quieter and more resilient: the stubborn, irrational conviction that the people who mattered would come for him. That the world outside the cellar still existed. That someone, somewhere, was working to set things right.
They had come. The world did exist. Things were being set right.
And even after everything ...the torture, the binding, the weeks of having his soul carved away piece by piece in a cellar that smelled of violated flesh ...Baldred still chose to trust.
It was, perhaps, the most remarkable act of courage in the entire story.







