With the aid of some still-loyal
knights, Soth escapes prison and heads back to his keep where he
attempts to do the right thing. His wife having disappeared, he
marries the elf lady, prepares to raise their child, and prays for
guidance from the gods of good. Yet, for some unexplained reason,
the other elf women that Soth rescued decide to play some mind games
on him: “The elven women he had once rescued now poisoned his mind
with intimations of his wife's infidelity.” Those bitches hate the
playa, not the game. All of this results in Soth letting his wife
and child burn in a fire before his very eyes, his elfbabe honey cursing him with her dying breath, and Soth
emerging as an undead monster.
Already I've got grave concerns about
where this novel is headed. Whereas Vampire of the Mists turned out
to be The Confessions of a Justified Rapist, Knight of the Black Rose
is starting out as a whole different kind of psycho-sexual Ravenloft.
Where Golden's novel casually dropped squicky sexual descriptions in
your lap like some unwanted, spittle-sodden dog's chew-toy, Lowder's
fictive universe is one in which sexuality is wrong and must
be punished. Hopefully this aspect of the novel is confined to this
prologue of inherited Dragonlance drivel, but I don't have high hopes
for where this book is about to take me.
...or maybe it will continue the trend
already initiated by Vampire of the Mists. You see, much like Jander
Sunstar, Soth has plans to re-animate Kitiara as his eternal
companion that can only be described as “a bit rape-y” and “kind
of necrophiliac-y": “After retreiving her corpse and trapping her
soul, Soth planned to abandon the fight and return to Dargaard Keep.
In the shelter of that hellish place, he could perform a rite that
would make the highlord his un-living companion for all eternity.”
Soth apparently isn't the only undead monstrosity that likes
Kitiara's bodunkadunk; the deathless guardians of the Tower of High
Sorcery seem to have groped her and stripped off her clothes as they
killed her: “Her night-blue dragonscale armor had been stripped
away by the tower's guardians, and her black, tight-fitting doublet
was shredded, revealing her tan beneath.” All the dead guys love
her; what a lucky gal!
Besides having literally unnatural
designs on Kitiara, Soth can't stand thinking about the fact that Tanis
has already tapped that ass; “Tanis had been one of Kitiara's many
lovers,” he thinks as he attempts to duel Tanis to the death. We
also get a view into the nature of Soth's curse, which turns out to
be little more than run-of-the-mill depression: “Yet the death
knight felt no joy at that realization; like many emotions, joy was
denied him by his curse.” Take some Zoloft and get over it, Soth!