Read A Darkness Forged in Fire Online
Authors: Chris (chris R.) Evans
"Three hundred yards to the fortress, gentlemen," Konowa shouted above the din, walking Zwindarra around the tight area within the circle. He could see his breath as he spoke, though he didn't feel particularly cold.
"Just three hundred yards, a stroll in the park."
There were a few laughs, not as many as Konowa had hoped for. He looked over at Lorian. The RSM sat tall in his saddle, the reins in his left hand, his halberd leaning against his right shoulder. He walked his horse slowly around the inside of the square, nodding approval at what he saw. It was now or never.
"Keep it tight, keep it strong, and don't run! Now let's
get out of here. Regiment…forward march!"
The square lurched forward. Konowa knew the trouble would come from the rear, which was forced to march backward. Lorian was already on it, shouting encouragement to the men and giving a tap with the butt of his halberd to those who needed a bit more.
They quickly outpaced the bara jogg, who continued to scratch and spike their way forward, the first of them crawling over the abandoned firing position. The rakkes were another matter. Their frenzy peaked with long, drawn-out howls, and then they charged as one, converging on both the Iron Elves and the elfkynan.
Many rakkes held crude wooden blades in their hands, the weapons little more than large, splintered chunks of the
sarka har
. The pieces of wood dripped black ichor, the frost that covered the ground sizzling wherever a drop landed. Konowa had been prepared to let the rakkes get within seventy-five yards before giving the command to fire, but then one of the rakkes let out a great mewling cry and threw its splinter at the square. The soldiers facing the rakke saw it coming and ducked, but those facing the opposite direction did not.
The wood caught one soldier high in the back, running him through and slamming his body to the ground. Black frost began to grow on the wood immediately and soon covered the soldier's body. The square faltered as soldiers turned to look.
"Halt! Face out! Hold your positions! On my command, the outer rank will volley…fire!" The muskets sounded like deep ice breaking up, the cold air lending a clarity to their violence. Sparks flew and gray smoke roiled outward from all points of the compass. Dull, wet thwacks marked the striking of flesh by iron, and scores of rakkes went down, the rest retreating to a safer distance to howl in rage.
The attack against the elfkynan circle made more progress, the discipline of the native warriors not as strong as the Iron Elves', and the rain of arrows not as lethal. As rakkes charged and threw their jagged missiles, many elfkynan shifted position, breaking the integrity of the circle. Those who strayed or found themselves outside were quickly overcome by fangs and claws and dripping black splinters. The bodies were not consumed by frost fire, however; instead, roots from the nearest
sarka har
would plunge up from below, impaling the body as a new blood tree began to grow.
"Sir, we have to keep moving!" Lorian shouted, struggling to keep his horse under control. The animal's eyes showed white and it began frothing at the mouth as it chewed its bit.
Konowa knew he was right, but already a new problem was literally growing to make that more and more difficult.
"There are a lot of trees between here and the fortI can't destroy them all
myself."
Lorian looked over at the body of the fallen soldier. There was nothing left, just a dull, black stain on the ground where he had lain.
"Let's get this over with, then." The sound of spikes and scales being dragged across the hard ground grew louder as the enlarged bara jogg came on. The Iron Elves had no choice but to keep going.
Konowa shouted for Private Vulhber. The giant stepped out of line and into the center of the square. Konowa dismounted and held out Zwindarra's reins.
"Take care of him for me; the RSM and I have some work to do." It was a gift any of the soldiers would have treasured, a chance to stay within the protective center of the square. After witnessing Vulhber's heroics, Konowa figured the soldier deserved it.
Hrem looked at the reins longingly, then shook his head.
"If it's all the same to you, Major, I'd just as soon not. I've got an idea
about what you two are going to do, and I figure a third pair of hands might
come in, well, handy."
"Can you control the power well enough?" Lorian asked, dismounting.
"Better than most. Seems only a few of the lads can really work it so far and I'm one of them." There was no joy in the statement, or pride.
"That's why I'm still here. I used the frost to slow the fuse of that shell while I tried to pull it out. Still working out the kinks, but I saw what the major did with those trees back at the outpost. I'd
just as soon help you and get this over with."
"Words to live by," Konowa said, whistling for two soldiers nearby to come and take the reins of the horses. One of them was the weasel-faced private who had bayoneted the wounded elfkynan. Konowa was tempted to order him back into the line, but a chunk of black wood tumbling through the air and gouging a furrow in the ground in the center of the square got his attention.
"Lorian, Private Vulhber and I will deal with the trees; you stay here and command," Konowa said.
Lorian looked surprised. "I'll burn the damn trees, sir, I'm
not afraid of them."
Konowa gave him a quick smile. "I know you aren't, but someone has to keep the boys in shape and I'll
be rather busy."
"Then you should stay and I should go with Vulhber. You're an officer, sir, you should stay in the center and command. It's your proper place," he finished.
"I'm no Prince, RSM. I'll lead them back through the trees; you have command of the square. Take Zwindarra, you'll have a better view," he said, taking the reins from weasel-face and handing them to Lorian. Konowa then saluted, forcing Lorian to return it.
"Let's go, Private," Konowa said, sheathing his saber and stepping through the side of the square facing the fortress.
"You, too," he said, pointing at weasel-face, who was trying to wrest the reins of Lorian's horse from another private.
"Me, sir?" Zwitty asked, shock registering on his face.
"You'll be our scout. If you see trouble, let us
know."
Private Vulhber slung his musket on a broad shoulder and grabbed Zwitty by the arm, propelling him through the square.
"I didn't volunteer!" Zwitty shouted, panic breaking his voice.
Konowa grabbed him by the front of the jacket and jerked him onto his toes. Frost radiated out from the point where his hand held the cloth and up to the collar of the soldier's jacket.
"Oh, but you did. As soon as I saw you use that bayonet, I knew you were just the man for the job. Now you keep your eyes peeled and watch our backs, or you won't
get a chance to volunteer for anything again."
Konowa released his grasp and the frost evaporated in a swirling mist. He turned and motioned to Private Vulhber.
"You'll hear screaming; just squeeze harder."
Without waiting for a reply, Konowa looked back to Lorian, now sitting astride Zwindarra. He waved his arm, then turned and walked toward the first tree.
A howl rose from the rakkes at the sight of the three Iron Elves outside the bristling wall of bayonets. Konowa ignored them, focusing his attention on the tree in front of him. Musket fire from the fortress sounded for the first time, a short rippling burst that was quickly swallowed by the night. A single arrow from an elfkynan archer flitted by Konowa's head, but the acorn against his chest had nothing to say on the subject.
"Regiment…march!"
Boots crunched on the brittle ground as the square inched forward again. Konowa reached the first tree, its limbs wriggling frantically at his approach, slashing at the air in an attempt to ward him off. He felt the eyes of many on him and didn't care. Power was what you made of it, and he was getting the Iron Elves home.
He grabbed the
sarka har
by the trunk and pulled. It didn't budge. A surge of cold anger flowed through it far greater than its size warranted. It was trying to overwhelm him, and he felt not just two souls, but many. He squeezed, forcing his power into it, but unlike before, the tree absorbed it with ease. Was the power of the Wolf Oak acorn failing?
The cold seeped into his blood far deeper this time, and he felt something new and unexpected. The screaming softened, beckoning instead for him to join them. A great void opened up somewhere deep within his mind, a pool of absolute nothingness. No chaos, no sensations…nothing. The temptation to dive into it weighed down on him like a mountain, and his hands began to slip from the trunk. He had almost let go when the pool rippled and vanished in a storm of light and noise. He blinked and looked over to see Private Vulhber grab a tree.
Konowa concentrated, realizing now that they weren't just attacking a single tree, but the power of the entire forest around them. Every tree was connected.
"Major, look out!" Zwitty shouted as he turned and ran back toward the square.
The shako on Konowa's head was ripped off, a chunk of wood thrown by a rakke just missing crushing his skull. He kept his hands on the tree, not knowing what else to do. There were still dozens of trees between the regiment and the fort. If the square was to maintain its integrity, Konowa had to find a way to remove the trees in its path.
The tramping of boots echoed through the ground. With each step he felt a growing strength. As the regiment got closer the power in him increased, magnified by their numbers, and their oath. He sensed the presence of Iron Elves around him, their closeness giving him incredible power. With a shout that was half growl, he ripped the tree from the earth and burned it in a triumphal blaze of black flame.
A rakke suddenly loomed before him, its yellow fangs dripping with saliva. Konowa didn't even reach for his saber. He took one step forward and drove his right fist into the creature's chest. He felt the ribs freeze and turn brittle, snapping into several pieces as they were driven into its heart, which shuddered and stopped.
More rakkes charged.
"Major, Private! Get down!"
Konowa shook his head and moved toward the rakkes. A hand like an anvil came down on his shoulder and shoved him to the ground.
"Fire!"
Muskets barked directly above him. Bitter smoke stung his nostrils, his eyes watering. He shook off the hand holding him down and stood up. Rakkes lay everywhere, trees writhed and flailed their crooked branches, and somewhere a series of bells were ringing.
"more careful! That volley would…and then what…"
Konowa watched Vulhber's lips moving, but only caught a few words. He realized the ringing in his ears was from the last volley. Slowly, his hearing came back.
"you okay?"
Konowa nodded and moved forward again toward the next tree.
"Stay close; use their power," he said, pointing to the regiment behind them.
Private Vulhber shook his head. "There's no point,
sir."
Konowa snarled. "Don't go soft on me now."
Vulhber pointed to the trees. "Look."
Konowa turned. Dark figures moved across the ground, long, two-handed swords gleaming like lightning dancing above the ground. They drifted in and out of sight, more shadow than substance, making it difficult to keep them in focus. Their swords rose and fell with untiring violence. Black frost sparked into black flame wherever their swords cut, consuming the
sarka har
in a chorus of screams that echoed in Konowa's head. One of the figures paused, its blade held high above its head. It turned slowly, its gaze sweeping across Konowa like a winter gale.
A voice crawled into his skull from somewhere impossibly far away.
"They are coming,"
the shade of Meri said.
"Run."
I
s that…" Vulhber started to ask, his voice choking.
"Get back in the square!" Konowa shouted. He drew his saber and pointed up toward the fortress.
"Lorian, get them moving! Double time!"
Lorian raised his halberd in response and relayed the order from atop Zwindarra.
Konowa trotted forward, searching. Rakkes bellowed with unmitigated fury at the sight of the shades, but for the moment were unwilling to challenge them.
The regiment picked up its pace, the men sensing the new urgency. Chunks of splintered
sarka har
still flew through the air, and three more Iron Elves fell, but the protective walls of the fortress were tantalizingly close, and cheers began to rise from the ranks. The rakkes turned their attention on the elfkynan, but though the circle wavered, the four shamans maintained the protective spell around them. Konowa knew it couldn't last, sensing the force diminishing under the intense pressure, the warmth of the spell growing cold, fading.
Konowa waved his saber forward, urging the regiment on, the feel of the cool night air in his hair reminding him that he had lost his shako.
That's when Konowa felt them.
He didn't need the surge of ice against his chest to tell him. It was like a sliver of metal slipped between the eye and the lid. The rakkes grew silent, their chests heaving as they tried to catch their breath. Even the clawing of the bara jogg on the hard earth stopped, their scaly bodies uncannily still.
Shadows slipped through the trees, long, jagged blades held in their hands.
Konowa heard their terrible cries in his head. They all did. The shades of the Thirty-fifth Regiment wailed in terror, their spirits overcome by the
sarka har.
Still, they advanced. They had become unwilling servants to Her will, soldiers in a battle no longer for their lives, but for their souls.
"Fire!"
Muskets punched through the screams. Many shades were hit, a few bursting into writhing pyres of black flame, but most continued, the effect negligible. The first reached the front rank of the square, their blades slashing through the wall of bayonets to rend flesh.
Men screamed as frost fire burst over them. Others hacked and stabbed furiously with their bayonets, but it was like spearing water. The sides of the square began to buckle, the square collapsing in on itself as soldiers backed away from the relentless shadow warriors. The square was moments from collapsing altogether when the shades of the Iron Elves turned from the destruction of the trees and filled the ranks of the fallen in the square.
Now, shadow met shadow.
A howitzer shell hurtled skyward, a trail of sparks scribing its flight against the night. It appeared to get caught in a wind, though Konowa felt none. The shell veered far to the right, coming down not among the shades, but near the trees. The explosion radiated a brilliant white light. Several rakkes were scattered in the blast, their bodies flung about like rag dolls.
Konowa sensed something else then, a pure, exquisite malice that surpassed even the
sarka har
. More figures emerged from the trees, and though they moved as if they were shadow, their bodies were indeed corporeal, if twisted. The ground beneath Konowa swayed, or perhaps it was him, he could no longer tell.
Flame from a torch guttered and flared briefly, illuminating the area in front of him. An elf stood there, its black ear tip an obsidian beacon in the night. It held a longbow ready in its hands. Hunger…rage…anguish…extremes of emotion radiated outward from the elf, all of them driven by something bitter and vengeful. They had been left on the plains to die, mere babies, abandoned by their tribe. Death should have found them; a ravening wolf, carrion birds, a hunting dragon. But
She
found them, and took them for Her own, creating the
dyskara
, the tainted ones.
Brilliant black eyes glittered, searching, hunting. Konowa knew they looked for him. He would not bend his knee to Her, so he would die.
Bows creaked as their strings were pulled back, arrows of dark and wicked creation aimed straight at his heart. Lorian shouted at the regiment to fire. The elf hissed between its teeth.
Powder sparked.
Bowstrings sang.
Musket balls and arrows criss-crossed the open ground. Konowa waited for the impact, wondering what his death would feel like. Sudden warmth spread over him, and he recognized the sensation of elfkynan magic.
They were trying to protect him.
The surprise was still registering in his mind when the arrows hit.
"We've got to get in there!" Yimt shouted, his knuckles whitening as he gripped his shatterbow. They stood at the edge of the forest looking out across the open ground to the unnatural black wall that barred them from Luuguth Jor. Musket fire crackled amid screams and howls, but the dark trees blocked everything except the rough outline of the fort atop the hill.
Alwyn fidgeted with the strap on his musket, his enthusiasm not as strong. He'd still go, he didn't care how scared he wasand he was terrifiedbut he was in no rush to do it. Surprisingly, Miss Red Owl didn't seem overly eager, either.
"Patience, master dwarf," Chayii said, her fingers gently brushing a strand of hair from her eye.
"The
sarka har
have created a wall that is not easily broached. They are preparing a new forest for Her. The ground grows cold as the roots delve deep. A moment's
thought now may bear fruit long after."
Yimt's right eyebrow shot up as he stomped over to the elf.
"And I think the time for thinking is over. That's our regiment in there, and we're going in. If you folk don't want any part of it, fine, but you aren't
stopping us."
Teeter and Scolly nodded while Inkermon stared blankly ahead, his ruined book still clutched in his hand. Alwyn heard many bowstrings grow taut around them. Miss Red Owl glared down at the dwarf, then smiled.
"It is not my intent to stop you," Chayii said, shaking her head slightly. The bowstrings relaxed, but arrows remained notched.
"In speaking with the others, it is clear to me that we fight the same foe, and
allies against Her will are a welcome boon. Still, a little prudence would not
be out of place. How will we get through?"
"We can hack our…" Yimt trailed off as his hand grasped only air when he reached for his drukar. He huffed, but finally nodded.
"Fine, what do you have in mind?"
In answer, Chayii held out her hand, palm up. The flying squirrel suddenly flew out of the night to land gently on it, swiveling its ears with every musket shot. She spoke to it, her voice the perfect imitation of its squeaking. It twitched its nose and jumped onto her shoulder, waiting.
"It seems, master dwarf, that I have need of a favor," Chayii said.
"Is your skill with your weapon as good as you claim?"
Yimt looked suspicious. "You mean Lil' Nipper? You saw
what I did in the forest to that beastie."
Chayii nodded. "A good shot from a short distance, but I am talking about a much longer distance now, over the
sarka har
."
Yimt looked past her toward the battle. "I suppose I could get a shot over them from here if I use one of them black arrows. But I can't see what I'm
shooting at on the other side of the trees."
"You'll be aiming at the next ball of flame," she said, making a graceful arc with her hand mimicking the flight of a howitzer shell.
Yimt started shaking his head vigorously. "That'd be like threading an orc through a needle. You're the woodland folk. I'd
have bet real money that one of your lot could do something like that."
Chayii shook her head. "A few could, though it would be a difficult shot, to be sure. But what we need to do is redirect one of those balls of flame so that it lands among the
sarka har.
We will then have our passageway."
"It's a nifty idea, Miss Red Owl, but it will never work," Yimt said.
"An arrow would never have the power to knock a howitzer shell off course, and even if it did, there's
no way of telling where it might land. We could do more harm than good."
"You won't be shooting an arrow," she said.
Alwyn looked from Miss Red Owl to Yimt's shatterbow, then back to Miss Red Owl, where the squirrel was sitting up on its haunches, its eyes wide as it looked up into the sky.
Oh.
"Miss Red Owl, I like the way your mind works," Yimt said, putting it together at the same time.
"Is the little fellow some kind of magical familiar?" "My husband, actually," Chayii said, ignoring the looks of astonishment.
"He has a tendency to forget himself on occasion, and it so happens that will
work in our favor now."
Alwyn watched Yimt carefully, waiting. The dwarf scratched his beard, clearly thinking this over. Finally, he shrugged his shoulders.
"Whatever you say."
Tyul suddenly appeared, his leafy camouflage rustling as he came to stand beside Yimt. He said nothing, only staring at the dwarf, his tattooed face unreadable. Chayii said something to him in elvish, but Tyul gave no indication of listening, his gaze remained fixed on Yimt.
"Maybe he'd like to do it?" Yimt ventured, trying to smile at the elf, but giving up when he got no response.
"I mean, no offense, but I've never shot anyone's husband before…in this way."
Chayii smiled. "In this case, your weapon is better
suited to the task, and he would not touch it though the need is great."
"Okay, then, but just remember," Yimt said, clearly at pains to make sure this was really what she wanted,
"I'm only doing this because you asked me to."
Yimt placed the end of the shatterbow on the ground and pulled back on the heavy bowstring, grunting with the strain. He hoisted it up and looked at Alwyn.
"Be a sport, Ally," he said, pointing to a spot a few feet away.
Alwyn dutifully walked to Yimt and bent over, allowing Yimt to rest the shatterbow across his back. The position was painful, and Alwyn hoped he wouldn't have to hold it for long.
"Ready when he is," Yimt said, sighting down the shatterbow. The squirrel chirped once and jumped the short distance to land on Alwyn's shako. He sniffed it, then quickly crawled onto his back and up onto the shatterbow, pausing to sniff different parts of it. Apparently satisfied, the squirrel settled in at the rear of the weapon, all four paws clutching the heavy string, its shoulders hunched high around its head.
Alwyn saw a bush beside him and realized Tyul had moved to stand right beside Yimt again.
"Don't squirm, Ally, you don't want me firing this
poor critter…elf, into the trees instead of over them."
The bush that was Tyul moved slightly, and Alwyn forced himself to remain very, very still. He took deep, slow breaths and hoped the howitzer would fire soon. As if in response, a familiar boom echoed from within the trees and a moment later a trail of sparks arced skyward.
"Happy landings," Yimt said, and squeezed the trigger. The bowstring hummed, flinging the squirrel into the air.
The vibration of the shot traveled up and down Alwyn's spine. He looked up to see where the squirrel was, but it was impossible to tell. He focused on the howitzer shell instead as it rose higher into the air.
This will never work.
"Your powers as a seer need more work, Alwyn of the Empire," Chayii said.
Alwyn jumped and looked again at the howitzer shell. It had reached its apex and was now falling back to earth. Was it drifting? Alwyn blinked. Yes, the trail of sparks was definitely coming down at a different angle than when it went up. It sounded like thunder and looked like lightning bursting from the earth when it landed. When Alwyn's night vision returned he saw a gaping hole in the black mass that surrounded Luuguth Jor.
"Do you think the little squirrel is okay?" Scolly asked, coming up to stand beside Tyul. The elf didn't answer, instead turning and disappearing into the night toward the opening.
"Load your muskets and fix bayonets," Yimt said. He was already pulling the bowstring back on his shatterbow.
"Now let's go find out."