[Enter, Antinidia Zaumtor.]
[Antinidia begins as he is, a 5th Level Necromancer with all accompanying equipment. He shares a communal cottage with several other Vesperanti mages, but he may not be there for long....]
The town of Blosgärd, in the Wildlands of former Karkova.
January 3rd, 1377 SE

Master Vorokai settled into his chair, a small throne crafted from a peculiar medley of dark wood and bone. The letter from Lord Darrovan of the House of Ainsley lay unfurled on the table before him, the candlelight sputtering from its nearby corner of the table and casting a wan light on the paper contours. Journeymen Belogi and Anyanka attended him, waiting to either side as he considered the matter.
"This letter preturbs me for some nameless reason," muttered Vorokai through heavy moustache and aged visage. "Our people did indeed benefit from Lord Heward's aid in the years following the war. He buried our dead, he rebuilt our homes, he offered jobs and wages to our starving and desperate workers. But then Lord Heward died very suddenly, and--one year later--he was joined in death by his son and his successor, Lord Darrovan. Or so I had heard. So imagine my surprise when a messenger from Bardosylvania arrived bearing this letter."
"I too had heard of the great slaughter which befell the Ainsleys," Belogi offered, ignoring Anyanka's incessant flipping and shuffling of her well-worn Vistani divination cards. "Could this possibly be a grim joke, or perhaps a hoax to excite our attentions?"
"Perhaps. Perhaps it is. But we dare not ignore this request, for the chance exists that the message is earnest. We owe a great debt to the House of Ainsley, and it now appears that they wish to collect on that debt."
A brief pause followed, a silence marred only by the candle's crackling tongue and Anyanka's dancing cards. One card fell into her waiting hand, and she stared at the card with grave realization as Master Vorokai resumed.
"But I fear that getting the Vesperanti involved in the fate of the House of Ainsley will not end well. If I gather Lord Darrovan's meaning, the next graves we dig could be our own. 'A clash between the holy and the unholy, the mortal and the immortal'...is that not what I read before me?"
"It would seem that your fears are not unfounded, Master Vorokai."
Vorokai and Belogi turned their eyes to Anyanka, who rolled a single divination card between her fingers. The Death card.
Anyanka, the master realized, had rarely been wrong with her premonitions before. And he cast his decision with affirmation. "Very well. We shall send but one of our necromancer adepts--and three aspirants to attend him--to the Bardosylvanian forestlands, to the crypts of the Ainsley family. But we shall not commit our foremost necromancers, no, not in the face of such grim portents."
He rose from his chair with purpose, his autumn body still firm with the musculature of his youth and his eyes burning with insight. "One of our necromancers shows great promise, but I fear that he harbors evil leanings. The task before him is as loathsome as his suspected lusts for the dead, yet it is necessary that the task be addressed. And through this errand shall the drow elf prove his mettle and decide for us if he bears the worth to be Vesperanti. He possesses diligence and an unrivaled intellect, true. But does he possess the temperance to work with death and the dead and walk away uncorrupted? Or have I judged him truly?"
He seized the Book of Names from the maple bookshelf behind him and took up the inked quill from the table, jotting in the book's pages furiously.
"Belogi, send for Antinidia. Anyanka, gather the aspirant laborers Jorgi Marravek, Piorr Fachaldo and Mayna Rubini. I shall personally attend to the details of his preparations for the journey. We shall congregate here in the Council Hall in half an hour's time. That will be all."
And as one thought, the three hale mages strode from the chamber to see to Lord Darrovan's request.
• • •

The dinner table had been prepared in mock fashion, with a portion of cured ham, a thick slice of pumpernickle and a half-filled goblet of Nellowswannian merlot carefully arranged on either end. The woman seated at the far end sat silently as her dark host lifted his goblet to his lips and sipped deeply. "A savory wine this is, my dear...vintage 1365. Only the best for us, my sweet. What do you think of our dinner arrangements, hmmm?"
His paramour could offer no reply, so stilled was the breath within her body. Undaunted, he strode with a genteel air to the window and gazed out across the mortuary's yard, watching the snow fall and blanket the land.
"A lovely evening this is, yes. I hope that your husband doesn't mind our torrid affair; It was
he who left such a beautiful blossom as you in my gentle care, after all. Would you like more wine?"
She did not drink, or eat, or speak, and she never would again. She could only stare through her long cornsilk locks at the warmth of the fireplace's maw with her glassy green eyes and slack lips, painstakingly dyed a ruby shade as only a mortician could. The consumption had taken her life two days prior, and the drow mortician had found her pallid skin to be a most enticing hue.
The snowlight cast a thin sheen across his bald pate as be lowered his gaze into the belly of his goblet, grinning with joyous expectation. "Oh, but our time in this world is precious, my love, every passing moment of it. And how much of this precious time we waste with words. Let us leap ahead to this dinner date's most likely outcome, shall we?"
The goblet fell from his hand and bounced across the tilework floor, denting the tin and splashing the dark red wine wildly as the mortician turned from the window and dashed at the deceased subject of his erotic attentions. With spidery gray hands he violently slung her dinner settings aside, and a perfect white slipper fell from her feet and tumbled away as he heaved her comely corpse onto the table and seized her burial gown at the shoulders, popping the buttons and tearing the garment away to leave her lifeless breasts bare....
"Adept Antinidia!" Adept Korski barked from behind the door opening into the room. "Master Vorokai wishes to see you at...oh."
Korski's startled eyes met Antinidia's wary eyes somewhere in the middle of the wake parlour where they stood. Antinidia's long and sweaty hands still grasped his half-denuded charge. And a heavy, awkward silence followed.
Antinidia >