The Source by Brian Lumley

They rode the Mobius Continuum down to the plain of boulders, materializing clear of the mountains and their shadows. Up in the gloomy foothills where they met the mountains proper, there they saw dust-clouds boiling up from what could only be furious fighting. Also, amidst the rumble and roil, the occasional flash and crack! of a discharged weapon. The two Harrys moved closer, taking a short jump that brought them to the very fringe of the fighting. And already it was clear that The Dweller’s trog troops were on the retreat. A thin brave line of shuffling Neanderthals, they fell back under the massive assault of others just like them, driven ever higher into the sullen foothills. But in fact the Wamphyri trogs were not like them, because they were slaves and The Dweller’s trogs were free. Which was why they fought.

When Harry Jnr saw how it was going he groaned. ‘I’d like to save some of them if I can,’ he said.

Harry Keogh, Necroscope, closed his eyes and talked to the teeming dead of this strange world. ‘We need your help,’ he begged of them. ‘You down there, in the earth, under the soil and down where the roots twine. We need your help against a great injustice.’

Things stirred in the ground, heard the desperate voice of a friend and tried to answer him. Who? What? Help you? But how can we help?

‘Trogs!’ said Harry Jnr. ‘Before the Wamphyri, they roved over Starside at will. Thousands of them lived and died here. They were their own masters then, and this was their land.’

‘How about it?’ Harry spoke to them as he always spoke to the dead, as his friends, his equals. Even as his peers. ‘If you’re dust then you’re beyond helping us, but if you can still hear me, if you can understand, then listen.’ He told them what was required. Harry Jnr, too, answering the stumbling questions of the dead.

The Wamphyri, you say? Some of us served them in life. Many of us, many hundreds, died in their wars. False gods! Vile, terrible masters! But fight them? How? They’ll destroy us again, a second time.

‘You can’t die twice,’ Harry and The Dweller were desperate. ‘Only your brothers can die; and they’re doing it right now, dying, to hold back the troops of the Wamphyri.’

Troops? You mean trogs like us?

‘Trogs, yes,’ said The Dweller, ‘but slaves of the Wamphyri. Death holds no terrors for such as them. It is preferable to what they have now!’

The Dweller speaks truth, some of Harry Jnr’s own trogs, recently dead in the fighting, joined in. We at least know you. Dweller, and we gladly rise up again!

‘What of the rest of you?’ Harry Snr cried. ‘Will you not also rise up? Wake up now, before it’s too late. You have sons and grandsons and great-grandsons who are fighting even now. Join us in this last great battle against your immemorial vampire oppressors!’

In the cliffs backing these foothills, in ancient cavern burial grounds, the preserved, mummified bodies of a thousand trogs stirred, groped upward, tore free of the clinging soil. Under the trees, lone graves gave up their dead. Behind the massed Wamphyri trogs where they drove back the defenders, freshly dead cadavers sat up, forced their riven bodies to move, shuffled or crawled toward their vampire-controlled enemies. The stench of the pit filled the air. They came from the shadows, from mildewed graves and niches, from all their many resting places beyond life.

The Dweller’s trog forces, when they saw what now battled on their side – even though they were on their side, hemming the invaders in all about – broke in terror and fled for their secret places. No matter, the grim army of the dead would do their work for them. And they would win, for as the Necroscopes had pointed out, they couldn’t die twice.

Shrieks of terror split the night, wrenched from hundreds of Wamphyri-trog throats when they saw and understood what they were fighting. Sickened, the two Harrys turned away from the carnage. But –

‘Son,’ said Harry Snr, grasping the other’s arm. ‘Look!’

The sky was dark with Wamphyri flyers and warriors. They circled the garden, descending toward it. And some of the warriors were truly gigantic; any five of them, falling on the garden in unison, would totally obscure and obliterate it. Up there in the mountains, even now, a greater battle was about to be waged . . .

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