Darkin: The Prophecy of the Key (The Darkin Saga Book 2) (20 page)

BOOK: Darkin: The Prophecy of the Key (The Darkin Saga Book 2)
6.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“I’d heard that once, that he was a man in the distant past, uncorrupted by the drain of evil. Never before had I heard it from a credible man, by one who’d lived to see it.”

“Indeed he was once a friend, I daresay—but it is as you spoke; he was irretrievably lost, corrupted—Melweathren first bound his soul, tied it to his dark agenda. His spiritless corpse was left to roam long after Melweathren’s death. Now, with Vesleathren wielding the collective evil of the world again, Zesm has returned to life—no longer a mere errand slave of Grelion.”

“Perhaps Grelion works with them.”

“No, he is fled into the wild, as the rumours say; I can sense that much is true—Vesleathren would not accept his defiler into his own ranks—do not forget that before Grelion destroyed the trust of his people, he united them. He was the only reason the world did not perish in the early days of the Five Country War.”

“I know the history too well,” Peren replied. “The druids prefer to observe and study history, rather than partake in it—but mind that truth not; for when meddling is required, we are among the most valiant.”

“I can tell by the command you have over this army,” Flaer turned to look at the seven-legion troop that trailed them. “Your charisma with them—your spirit. I’ve never seen anything like it,” Flaer said, voicing his awe at Peren’s ability to be the voice of a scattered nation of refugees.

“It means more, coming from you,” Peren answered with a smile, bright as the morning sun which towered overhead. The hills continued to pass underfoot. “I am truly glad, whatever the outcome of this battle, to have met you—never would I have thought it possible: You were dead, as far as I or any others knew, though so few know truly who you are, and what you possess,” returned Peren. In reply, the Brigun Autilus at Flaer’s side shone bright red, flickering as if a wisp inside the metal had ignited temporarily. The glow wore off in a moment, leaving the sword silver again.

“If the men and women of our fair company knew that it was Vesleathren’s sword you possess, I don’t know if it would comfort or frighten them. But I understand it—I am comforted,” Peren said, gazing at the blade.

“You remind me of him,” Flaer said as they descended another hill, losing the horizon again.

“Of who?”

“Grelion Rakewinter—”

“Grelion?”

“The Grelion Rakewinter of Old. A great man, a heroic man, whom you do not remember, nor know of, for his tale is not told any longer.”

“But, how can you say that? He is a murderer, enslaver of thousands!”

“It is not so simple. But when you’ve only lived a short time, only felt a thin breadth of history, I well understand how you would see things as one-sided as you do—as most all do.”

“You speak as if defending the man,” Peren said, shocked at what he was hearing from Flaer the Slayer—Flaer Swordhand the moral and just.

“Look! They come fast!” Flaer pointed, riding to the crest of the hill in front of them, leaving Peren behind. Peren saw nothing, as the hill blocked their view still, and he wondered how Flaer had seen anything with the hill blocking, but he rushed up anyway. He reached the peak and stopped to behold: together they surveyed a vast darkness: a crawling, writhing, living mass—the war troop of the Feral Brood. Line after line slowly marched toward them from distant hills.

“How is it we did not see them before now?” Peren said, startled.

“Deceiving is the magic of Vesleathren—he cloaked them all,” Flaer surmised, “so that they could not be seen from a great distance.”

Like waves, row after row of ashen-armored trolls forsook the emerald of the hills, blanketing them as if rolling tar, one half-mile ahead. Great auras of scarlet energy danced over sections of the Feral army, low clouds of red light, and amidst the black mass Flaer recognized slithering hordes of gold-plated beasts: the Gazaran
.
There were sections of Feral army enclosed by the rest, elite variants, marching with special guards. They appeared in deep purple garb, and around them wobbled sprouting shields of ornate lightning, sparkling bright as the midday sun.

“What trickery is this,” Peren said with grave alarm, looking to Flaer for direction. Tumult ran through the ranks of the Hemlin Army as it burgeoned atop the crest where Flaer and Peren watched. The troop absorbed the horror with shock, amazed not so much that the Feral Army could appear from nowhere, but at the sheer size of it: there was no end in sight, and not a green hill could be seen beyond the first line of marching trolls. An echo rang out over the hills, followed by another, and then a third, and it soon became apparent that the Feral forces were marching to a thumping rhythm. The thunderous bass drum cascaded through the wide knolls, reaching the ears of the waiting Hemlin troop—it was a war chant of foul beats, each hit sounding a savage thirst for blood.

Erguile rode through the throng of men and to the top, avoiding the congregation of generals who stared in bewilderment. Weakhoof galloped straight for Flaer and Peren, who stood alone, ten yards farther than the others, at the point where the hill descended.

“What are those?” Erguile raged hoarsely, filled with adrenaline, eager for battle. He pointed to enormous spires within the Feral ranks that sprung skyward every fifty yards, rising to the sun from the muck of marching black. “The towers walk!”

“They are Jaigan—were Jaigan

just as those creatures marching at us are no longer trolls,” answered Flaer calmly.

“He’s corrupted the Jaigan?” Peren stammered in shock, eyes poring over the new terror Erguile had spotted.

“I’ll say it again—what are they?” Erguile repeated, unable to take his gaze from the towering creatures that stood nearly as high as the hills.

“Jaigan are the peaceful race of Great Coral, native to the Nething Sea—but
those
are but remnants of Jaigan; they are enchanted tools of evil—without foul magic, they could never leave the sea floor. They would shrivel and die at the onset of air,” Flaer explained. Several flares of wild copper light arced into the sky. A stream of energy funneled up out of the scarlet clouds that hovered over the Feral ranks; the stream formed a high bubble wherein appeared a silhouette. Floating toward the Hemlin force with great speed, the figure looked down from within its film of energy; wisps from the scarlet casing leaped off, tantrums in every direction. Lightning licked the ground and the heavens; the clapping thunder of a god-like entity drove forth.

“Stand back! Peren, order the men down, trough-ward! Quickly!” Flaer ordered, emotion suddenly returning to his voice. The Brigun Autilus flashed as Flaer drew it—the hoary slate of the blade disappeared; it was no longer metal, but a seething bolt of red-white fire. The sword had come alive of its own accord, apart from its wielder. Peren stood aghast: all his charisma fled him as he became bathed in the ruby light of the enemy, who floated above them now. A wandering tongue of lightning singed the earth where Weakhoof planted his hooves.

“Now!” roared Erguile with all the intensity he could muster. Peren awoke as from a dream; Erguile and he galloped back to the congregation of stupefied generals, issuing Flaer’s directive for retreat, which they carried out hastily. The whole of the Hemlin Army began storming back and away, receding down the southern hill face, into the trough.

Alone, Flaer craned his neck skyward and trained his eyes on the bulbous shield of scarlet housing their foe. It came to a stop, hovering directly overhead. Flaer raised his hands and placed all his fingers on the handle of the Brigun Autilus, pointing it at the airborne figure above. The red sphere snapped down tendrils of fulgurating light; sparks rained furiously, scorching the earth where he stood.    

Flaer steadied his sword against the burning assault: a sanguine bolt erupted from the Autilus, thwarting the enemy’s attack. A shield of pearl formed over Flaer’s head, through which no tendril of fire-light pierced.

“Your men may submit now, before losses are taken,” came a monster’s voice, as audible to the entire army of Hemlin as it was to Flaer, to whom the statement had been directed.

“So quickly you’ve forgotten our last encounter?” replied Flaer, grinding his feet into the dirt beneath the smoking grass, holding fast beneath a relentless volley of jacinth shards that ricocheted off the throbbing white shield projected by the Autilus.

“Quite the opposite—I learned deeply from it,” replied the omnipresent voice. For a moment, the scarlet casing disappeared, and the figure above was revealed to Flaer—he gasped in horror at what he saw—the creature within was not Vesleathren, as he’d expected, nor was it Zesm—it was someone entirely different: it was somehow both of them.

“In what forsaken magic have you meddled?” roared Flaer. “Defiler of light!” Suddenly, the pearl barrier of the Brigun Autilus washed carmine, shaping into a beam that bore straight upward. Flaer’s attack drove through the raining assault of fire, exploding toward the monster’s body—the sphere returned to protect it. A great clap sounded, and with it erupted a violent cloud of smoke that rent the sky indigo, then black. The onlookers of the Hemlin Army stood petrified by what they had witnessed; even the marching Feral force had stopped in its tracks to watch the explosion. Flaer heaved his sword into the sky after the blast, directly at the place where the floating being had been. Another clangor tore the sky; the day became night. As quickly as the light had receded, it returned, and a red orb of energy was seen falling fast to the earth atop the hill, monster inside, trailed by the Brigun Autilus.

Erguile watched in wonderment from afar: the enemy had flown in and attacked so suddenly, and had plummeted to the ground just as fast. It was happening nearly too quickly to be seen, but he was sure he saw the throbbing Brigun Autilus follow the creature back down from the sky, thrust itself into the monster where it lay, and pierce the fallen monster’s chest.

 

Flaer extended his fingers. Bits of red light leaped from his hands, and in response to its master, the Brigun Autilus struggled to break free from the body it had impaled. The victim of her enormous power lay lifeless on the ground, no longer guarded by its protective case of energy.

“Come!” Flaer yelled at his sword, willing it to return from several yards away. The Brigun Autilus broke from the being’s chest and climbed into the air, gliding of its own accord back into Flaer’s hands. From below, Peren gasped at what he saw—the great Vapoury of Flaer Swordhand was no hyperbolized lore—Vesleathren had been slain simply, decisively, quickly, right before his own eyes. Flaer gripped the hilt of the Brigun Autilus and slowly approached the fallen body. He walked with caution, alert to the hills wreathed in black, three hills out, that awaited a sign from their fallen commander.

“You sicken me

to merge with
him
,
Zesm!” Flaer roared, walking to the felled body, lying atop burnt remnants of grass. The fallen body did not stir, and its form was cloaked from view by a long cape of royal blue, coiled around a twisted frame, long enough to conceal it head to feet. Flaer put his heel on top of the monster’s hip. Glaring at the lifeless shape beneath him, angered at the lack of a response, he struck down in disgust.

Slowin rushed to Erguile’s side. The rest of the army stayed down in the valley between hills, unable to see what was happening—only Erguile, Peren and Slowin had ventured from the rest after Peren commanded each general to stay their men in the trough. Erguile watched alongside the others as Flaer held the Brigun Autilus high, then plunged the sword directly toward the slumped corpse on the charred hilltop.

As he heaved down with every bit of strength he possessed, an explosion tore at his face. The onlookers saw a violent flash that blinded them, and heard a crackling that forced them to cover their ears. Some bled from their ears, having not thrust their fingers inside in time; others winced in agony as the sharp noise reached an alien threshold, and nothing could be seen but blinding incandescence.

The light dissipated, the Hemlin forces stood in shock, foremost standing Erguile, Slowin, and Peren: the entire hill that Flaer and the monster had been on was carved anew, rent into a spherical crater, gouged out at its very mount of it—the crest disintegrated. The whole of the Hemlin Army saw directly past a pile of rubble that had once been the hill; they now saw past to where the first footsoldiers of the Feral Army peaked and descended, their dull senses unfazed by the explosion. Erguile frantically searched the rubble of the hillside, peering down into the crater at smoking piles of cinder—Flaer was nowhere to be seen. A flash of red streaked across the sky, catching Erguile’s periphery; their attacker had survived, the enemy drove in, but where was Flaer?

 

“Valiant warriors of Hemlin, prepare to put forth all courage!” Peren commanded, returning to life from the petrification of witnessing the explosion. “Generals, assume the last hill!” Peren knew the plan was to keep high ground, atop a hill, and let the mindless forces of the Feral Brood march directly into them; that avenue had been temporarily taken from them, as the nearest hill, moments ago in front of them, had evaporated—transformed to a charred hollow. Together, the generals ordered their troops to the preceding hill, turning their backs to run for high ground. One of the generals had assumed command of Flaer’s men, and they hastily following suit. Erguile was stilled by the blast, unable to follow the rest; his eyes pored over the smoldering ruins of the hill, looking for a sign of life that could be Flaer.

“Come Erguile!” called Peren. His horse reared on its hind-quarters, neighing wildly at having to stop and turn. Peren caught the bubble of scarlet in the sky, reformed, approaching his army. Slowin, shining under the midday rays, stood by Erguile, they the only two not following the command to retreat. Peren waited but one more moment, and seeing Erguile refuse to heed his call, he turned back and rode fast to reach his men, who already outpaced him on foot.

“There!” Erguile sparked to life, noticing a piece of smoking debris move at the center of the crater.

Other books

Things That Go Hump In The Night by Amanda Jones, Bliss Devlin, Steffanie Holmes, Lily Marie, Artemis Wolffe, Christy Rivers, Terra Wolf, Lily Thorn, Lucy Auburn, Mercy May
Sidelined: A Wilde Players Dirty Romance by Terri E. Laine, A.M. Hargrove
World of Aluvia 2 by Amy Bearce
Barely Undercover by Sarah Castille
Break Me In by Shari Slade
The Sweetest Thing by Cathy Woodman
Demon Singer II by Benjamin Nichols
Misplaced Trust (Misjudged) by Elizabeth, Sarah
The Dark One: Dark Knight by Kathryn le Veque