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The Tomb of Angelus: Undying Lairs, #1
The Tomb of Angelus: Undying Lairs, #1
The Tomb of Angelus: Undying Lairs, #1
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The Tomb of Angelus: Undying Lairs, #1

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It's not the weekend a guy with anxiety issues needs.

 

Chris Able is as risk-averse as they come after losing his job with the Atlanta PD and his recent divorce. So he looks forward to a weekend of safe, tabletop gaming with his old college friends in the North Georgia mountains.

 

Instead, he's pulled into a dank, monster-infested fantasy dungeon, where his survival depends on mastering the skills, magic, and personality of the player-character he's possessing. At least his friends are with him but in the bodies of their own player-characters. And none of them know how they got there.

 

Chris soon learns that to get home, he and his friends must do the impossible – defeat a god-like being at the center of the dungeon who knows far too much about their Earthly lives.

 

But can they do that when they're also fighting against the wishes of the characters they inhabit?

 

THE TOMB OF ANGELUS is the first book in the Undying Lairs GameLit series, a must-read for fans of C.M. Carney, Sean Oswald, and Harmon Cooper. Grab your copy of Rob Steiner's thrilling magical adventure today.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherRob Steiner
Release dateNov 24, 2023
ISBN9798223436867
The Tomb of Angelus: Undying Lairs, #1
Author

Rob Steiner

Rob Steiner lives in Atlanta, Georgia, with his wife, daughter, and a rascal cat. He is the author of the Journals of Natta Magus series, about a wizard from an alternate twenty-first century who is stranded in Augustan Rome. Orson Scott Card's Intergalactic Medicine Show featured two stories about Natta Magus: "The Oath-Breaker's Daemon" and "The Cloaca Maxima." He also wrote the alt-history/space opera Codex Antonius series (Muses of Roma, Muses of Terra, and Muses of the Republic) about a Roman Empire that spawns an interstellar civilization. Be among the first to hear about Rob's new releases by signing up for his "New Release Mailing List" on his web site below. He won't share your info with anyone, and he'll only email you when a new book or story comes out.

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    The Tomb of Angelus - Rob Steiner

    The Tomb of Angelus

    Undying Lairs | Book 1

    Rob Steiner

    Quarkfolio Books

    Copyright © 2022 by Rob Steiner.

    All rights reserved.

    This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead is entirely coincidental. No part of this publication can be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from Rob Steiner.

    August 2022. Published by Quarkfolio Books.

    Cover illustration and design by Miblart.com (miblart.com). Editing by David Drazul (daviddrazul.com).

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    Sign up for my newsletter at www.robsteinerauthor.com to get a FREE prequel to The Tomb of Angelus, which shows how the Flat Earth's greatest heroes entered the Undying Lairs.

    You'll receive news and previews of upcoming books. Never miss a new release, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

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    Contents

    1.What’s at the door?

    2.A big blob of madness

    3.Welcome to The Tomb

    4.Questions in the dark

    5.The quest thus far

    6.Bitter enemies

    7.The shaft

    8.Nothing good slurps in the dark

    9.A new skill

    10.Remember who you are

    11.MIA

    12.Something familiar

    13.Meet the boss

    14.Time to rank up

    15.The test

    16.Worst. Test. Ever.

    17.Who’s the boss?

    18.The Adept arrives

    19.Attack of the mood killers

    20.Reunited

    21.Too close to home

    22.Ready, fire, aim

    23.I call on my Ancestral Blood

    24.Oof

    25.Another lesson, another rank

    26.Let’s be a hero

    27.Let’s be a zero

    28.Let’s make a deal

    29.Challenge accepted

    30.Mirror, mirror

    31.A bit of both

    32.Altering the deal

    33.The Battle of Dungeontown

    34.Trapped

    35.Answers and more questions

    36.Betrayed?

    37.Karaoke!

    Afterword

    Acknowledgments

    Chapter one

    What’s at the door?

    You’re not here to read about my sad life before I became a legend. You want to know how my friends and I saved everything that is and ever will be. How Barney the Just, Bloody Sonja, Constantine Trueheart, Mad Stephen, and me, General Mace Phoenix, picked a fight with the greatest evil in existence and yelled with one collective voice, You shall not pass!

    I paraphrase, but that’s basically what we did. Every kid beyond the Flat Earth knows those names, but those weren’t the ones we were born with. This is the story of how we got them.

    So as things usually start with me, the story begins with me screaming.

    My eyes were closed. Strong hands suddenly gripped my arms and shook me, which made me scream all the more.

    Mace! came a woman’s voice behind my closed eyes. For God’s sake, wake up!

    Who the hell is Mace?

    My name was Chris Able. I was about to play a new RPG game with my closest friends in a cabin in the north Georgia mountains. Barney brought The Tomb of Angelus home from a gaming convention in Eastern Europe and said it would blow our minds. Alec Bryson, Tom Ameda, Melony Hahn, and I were just happy to get together for the first time in months and agreed to let Barney GM his new game for us.

    Did I pass out? I hadn’t even finished my first beer, damn it!

    And then I remembered who Mace was. That was the name of the character I’d chosen to play.

    Mace, open your eyes, the woman said. We got a situation! Her grip tightened on my arms, and she gave me a couple of good shakes.

    Chris Able, open your goddamn eyes!

    My eyes flew open. A strange woman was holding my arms, but she looked vaguely familiar. Behind her was a dark, circular room with smooth stone blocks for walls and marbled columns arranged equidistant from each other. Every other column held an ensconced candle, and each cast a flickering orange light on the entire room.

    A commotion came from my right. Two men struggled to place log bars on a thick wooden door. Someone—or something—was pounding on the door, and I heard guttural screams and curses coming from the other side.

    Given that I had literally blinked my eyes in a cabin and then opened them to a different room without my friends, I went into mindless fight-or-flight mode. I just acted on instinct. I head-butted the woman in her nose and felt it shatter against my forehead. Her grip on my arms fell away as she cursed and stumbled backward. Her hands went up to her nose, and blood spurted through her fingers. She bumped a stone pedestal in the center of the room that looked like a birdbath with a large red jewel in the middle.

    Goddamn it, Mace, she yelled, "it’s Sonja—I mean Melony!"

    Melony? This woman wasn’t Melony, my friend and old college crush! She was about as tall as me and had long red hair tied into a single braid down her back. She wore hard, leather armor over her torso and chest, and leather bracers on her forearms. Her shoulders and upper arms were bare, and, my God, they had the popping veins of a bodybuilder. My Melony had dark brown hair and was about six inches shorter than me. She had always had the body of someone who ate right and exercised daily, but nothing like the comic book superhero in front of me.

    You’re not Melony! I growled and then almost screamed again.

    The voice that came out of my mouth was not my voice. It was much lower than mine and had a vaguely aristocratic accent.

    What’s happening? I cried. What’s wrong with my voice?

    This door won’t hold for long, yelled one of the men at the door. He had black, greasy, neck-length hair and a scraggly black beard. He wore a long robe that seemed patched together from differently colored burlap sacks. He was gaunt, had hollow eyes, and looked like a beggar from the 13th century. A rope belt circled his waist, where multiple leather sacks dangled and swayed with his movement. The one thing on his belt that drew my attention was a slotted case like a phone protector holding a small leather-bound book.

    The other guy was about two feet shorter than the beggar. He had bushy gray hair poking out from under a steel helmet and a thick gray beard on his ruddy face. He wore a tattered white cloak with golden fringes, and on his back was a bronze shield with an image of the sun.

    I swallowed once. Is that a… dwarf?

    The door only has a 1 Strength, said the beggar as he slammed the last two-by-four bar into a horizontal slot. All it’ll take is a—

    A large, black spearhead exploded through the door, causing the beggar and dwarf to dive to either side. Inhuman, green fingers with claws poked through the hole in the door and started pulling pieces away. The beggar took daggers from the sheathes on his belt and slashed at the fingers. Whatever was trying to get through issued a guttural scream and pulled them back.

    Sergar’s balls! the dwarf cursed and drew a heavy mace that was swinging on his belt.

    Constantine, Sonja growled with a nasal tone due to her broken nose, give me some healing before I choke on my own blood!

    The dwarf gathered his wits—

    Constantine, oh God, the name my friend Tom chose for the character he wanted to play in our RPG. This can’t be happening.

    —and hurried over to the woman—Melony?—and placed his right hand over her nose. Blood covered her face, and her nose was about the size of a golf ball. She winced but didn’t pull away. Constantine’s left hand grasped the golden medallion swinging from the pendant around his neck. He closed his eyes, muttered some words that I couldn’t understand, and then a golden shimmer surrounded his hand over Sonja’s—Melony’s!—nose. When the dwarf pulled his hand away, fresh blood still covered her face, but her nose looked normal.

    Did he just… was that magic? I asked the room. All I could do was stare at this woman who claimed to be Melony, whose nose I’d smashed just a moment ago and was now perfectly healed.

    Chris, look at me, she said. She sounded nothing like Melony, but there was a sudden tone or cadence in her voice that did sound like Melony. It got my attention.

    I can’t explain everything now. It’s Melony, but call me Sonja; it’ll be less confusing for everyone. Just use your sword and follow your instincts. Everything will be fine.

    My sword? I muttered.

    She nodded toward the longsword strapped to my belt. I also got a good look at my hands. They had leather gloves, and hard leather bracers covered the outside of my forearms. I could see the skin of my inner forearms beneath the straps and, well, I had bodybuilder muscles myself. My forearms were broad, and their veins popped like I’d just lifted hundred-pound dumbbells. I never had those kinds of muscles in my life, not even when I graduated from the police academy.

    And if that weren’t strange enough, I saw a list with numbers tattooed in black ink on my forearm. When I looked a little closer, the breath left my lungs in a shocked burst. The tattoos were the stats I’d just rolled up for my paladin character a few minutes ago.

    NAMES

    Character Name: Mace

    Player Name: Chris Able

    TRAITS

    Positive: Disciplined, Honorable, Merciful

    Negative: Stubborn

    CHARACTER STATS

    Rank: Apprentice

    Strength: (1) 3

    Toughness: (1) 2

    Dexterity: (1) 3

    Intelligence: (1)

    Charisma: (1)

    Hit Points: 12/12

    Magic Points: 3/3

    SKILLS

    Defense: You are experienced in the art of blocking and dodging attacks. +2 to your Dexterity.

    SPELLS

    Healing Touch: You can tap your Ancestral Blood to heal yourself or another living creature you can touch. Heal 10% of total Hit Points. Costs 2 Magic Points.

    Ancestral Smite: You can tap your Ancestral Blood to deal additional damage to creatures you hit. Add 10% extra damage to a single hit. Costs 1 Magic Point.

    EQUIPMENT:

    Ancestral Longsword (+2 to Strength when used to attack): A two-sided blade with a worn, pearl hilt and steel crossguard.

    Leather Armor (+1 to Toughness): A breastplate and bracers made of hardened leather.

    Stephen, Constantine, get behind us! Sonja shouted.

    Her frenzied yells pulled me away from staring at my tattooed arm.

    The beggar, Stephen, and the dwarf, Constantine, hurried behind Sonja and me.

    Stephen muttered some words. An oily black mist formed around his hands which he aimed at the door. The hairs on my body stood straight when I gazed at that strange dark mist, and I felt bile rise in the back of my throat. I didn’t know if this reaction came from my terror or Stephen’s magic.

    Constantine pulled the shield off his back and brandished his heavy mace. He muttered some words of his own, but all I could understand was the word Sergar again. Once he finished, a golden shimmer surrounded his entire body, and the anger that had distorted his face a moment ago turned to intense resolve.

    Sonja picked her ax up from the ground, took on a battle stance, and, I swear to God, twirled it like freakin’ Conan before letting it settle in both hands. A feral grin spread across her blood-streaked face as she stared at the door that those green, clawed fingers were viciously trying to pull apart. Screeches and guttural speech that could not have come from a human throat tore their way from the other side.

    A billion and one questions floated through my mind, but one jumped to the top of my consciousness:

    If these are my friends, how do they know what they’re doing and I haven’t a clue?

    I figured that question would take time, so I went with something more immediate.

    Are those, uh, orcs?

    Sonja snorted. I wish. She twirled her ax again and gave it a fond look. Mourner will taste more monster blood today.

    Another spearhead smashed through the bottom of the door, turning one of the slats to splinters. The guttural screeches from the other side got louder and more fevered.

    Mace, draw your sword, Sonja said over the terrifying sounds, it’s almost through.

    I don’t know how to use a sword!

    Do it! And don’t die again!

    What?

    She didn’t elaborate but stared at the splintering door.

    This is insane, I thought. Beyond insane. This has to be a dream. But I drew my longsword anyway. It pulled free from the scabbard with a metallic shing, and its blade gleamed in the meager candlelight.

    And just like that, I felt…different.

    I was still more scared and confused than I’d ever been, but those feelings faded into the background. What I mostly felt was anger. And not the kind where someone cuts you off in traffic or when your favorite baseball team loses a playoff series. No, this was an anger born of righteousness directed at whatever was clawing its way through that door. Those monsters stood against everything that I ever believed in or held dear. Honor, mercy, and discipline were the complete opposite of what those creatures were. They preyed on the innocent, reveled in their blood, laughed at their pleas for mercy. They did not deserve the gift of life, for they did everything in their power to snuff it out.

    It was my duty to end them with my Ancestral Longsword.

    The top of the door buckled inward and then exploded into shards around the bars that had held it closed. The door’s jagged bottom flew halfway across the room and slid to a stop in front of Sonja and me. Beyond the door was complete darkness, but I could see shadows flitting about in it. All was quiet, and then several long green arms with yellowed talons grabbed the two bars off their slots and threw them into the room.

    My first battle had begun.

    Chapter two

    A big blob of madness

    K rait’s fire! Stephen yelled from behind me.

    Two fireballs the size of grapefruits flew past my head and exploded in a burst of orange and yellow flames upon the creatures hidden in that darkness. Angry shrieks followed the explosions. I caught a glimpse of our enemy in that instant when the orange and yellow light flashed, and it almost made me throw up.

    I had thought several monsters were attacking the door. Instead, I saw one oozing, bubbling mound of glistening flesh about seven feet tall and five feet wide. It had long, taloned arms of different lengths and colors sprouting from all sides. Some arms held spears, some held rusty short swords, and some pulled the monster along the floor as it spilled through the broken door.

    But the worst was all the mouths and eyes covering the thing. They were different shapes and colors, as if some insane alchemist had melted a dozen other creatures and poured them into this aberration. Each eyeball was wide and mad, while the mouths laughed, sobbed, or screamed spittle-laced curses. This monster was the worst thing I’d ever seen in my life.

    At least until that point.

    The creature’s talons scratched the stone walls on either side. Now that it was almost inside the room, I could see the scorch marks left by Stephen’s fireballs. The blackened wounds looked nasty but didn’t appear to have slowed the thing down.

    Several pairs of eyes fixated on me. One pair looked as if it were pleading with me, another looked murderously angry, and another pair—I’m not kidding—twirled around in their sockets like some cartoon character knocked senseless. The mouths nearest the eyes opened, and whispers flitted around my ears like mosquitos.

    Give us a hug, Mace, they said in halting breaths. Join our party. We have pie, Mace.

    Gibbering laughter floated around my head, like a pack of hyenas with their insanity turned up to eleven.

    That’s when my righteous anger fled, and that initial fear and confusion came roaring back into my brain and body. I’m pretty sure I wet myself. I’d been in some hairy situations during my police officer days and had rarely flinched. But those were human criminals. This thing was the nightmare of a nightmare.

    I dropped my sword and turned to flee behind Stephen and Constantine.

    Mace, Sonja cried next to me, what are you—?

    I didn’t hear her finish, for something latched onto my leg with greasy fingers, and its talons dug into the flesh of my calf. The pain was indescribable. I had no time to scream because I was yanked off my feet and pulled backward toward the gibbering monster.

    My panic was mindless. All those claws are going to rip me to pieces! All those mouths will eat me! Oh God, what if I merge with it?

    The creature’s voice babbled in my ear, Come try our pie, Mace! Its laughter careened through my mind.

    I dug my fingernails into the floor as the monster’s claws dragged me toward it, but I only succeeded in ripping my nails off and leaving bloody streaks along the stone floor.

    Hold on! Sonja yelled and then charged toward the creature with a feral scream.

    Sonja charging the monster was the last thing I saw before it lifted me in the air with super-monster strength and threw me into one of the columns about twenty feet away. I hit the marble column on my left side and felt my ribs snap. I bit half my tongue off, and it flew out of my mouth. My body slid to the floor, and I lay there more in shock than pain. The pain would come later.

    As I lay on the ground with a starry haze clouding my vision, I noticed the stat tattoos on my forearm pulsating. I shifted my eyes to focus on the numbers through my shock and growing agony. The Hit Points stat blinked red and then started going down from 12 until it finally stopped:

    Hit Points: 3/12

    I also saw my Intelligence stat had dropped, and there was a note next to it:

    Intelligence: 0 (-1 due to Babbling Madness curse)

    Through my pain and terror-addled mind, I confirmed that, yes, I had no intelligence at the moment. I had trouble making sense of where I was just a few minutes ago, but holding the longsword had given me the clarity I’m sure I needed to help my friends kill this monster. Then the monster had…spoken to me, and my courage had melted. If this was real, and my friends and I were in Barney’s game, the Babbling Madness must have been one of the monster’s special abilities. But was it a permanent reduction or temporary?

    Sonja screamed. I turned to her and was relieved that she wasn’t screaming in pain. Instead, her screams were the most enraged I’d ever heard from another person in my life. She swung her ax Mourner at the monster with reckless abandon, chunks of

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