Heirs of the Fallen: Book 04 - Wrath of the Fallen (29 page)

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Authors: James A. West

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BOOK: Heirs of the Fallen: Book 04 - Wrath of the Fallen
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“No,” he cried. The effort brought on a fit of coughing, which in turn extended a spasming agony through every inch of him.

Muranna smiled up at Leitos. “It seems I did not need you or Ulmek to give me a crown after all.”

“Why did you betray us?” Leitos rasped.

She laughed softly, and sunlight glinted off her golden circlet. “What sort of fool would willfully live in fear of the true master of this world? Better to bow to Peropis, gain her favor
and
a crown, than to stand against her and face a death as certain and unpleasant as yours is sure to be.”

Muranna made a great show of looking over the skewered men. “A pity Ulmek is not here to see what awaits traitors. Well, that is of no matter,” she sighed, “and a mercy besides.”

At her gesture, two Alon’mahk’lar stalked into view, their black-slashed crimson hides oiled with sweat. Studded leather kilts hid their legs to the heavy sandals they wore. They halted beside the wagon, one at each end of Adham’s post. Lifting him easily, they planted the thick end of the post into a hole in the ground, and raised it up. Moaning, Adham hung upside-down. A hissing wheeze tore from his throat as they carelessly packed dirt back into the hole. The murmur from the stands rose to an excited pitch.

“Don’t do this,” Leitos begged.

“We all serve a master,
little brother
,” Muranna said in a mocking tone. “And this,” she said with a gesture toward Adham, “is demanded of me.”

The demon-born went back to the wagon. One retrieved a large golden bowl. The other drew out something that resembled a long, narrow trough of beaten silver. It was open on one end, and the other end was shaped into something akin to a flat spoon the breadth of a man’s shoulders. As the Alon’mahk’lar went to stand under Adham, the crowd became livelier still. Quiet at first, then louder, a chant filled the arena.

 

From the darkness between the stars,

Came He, the Lord of Light,

To deliver peace and safety upon all lands.

Praise the Faceless One,

He who suffers the unworthy.

Praise the Faceless One,

He who blesses the contemptible.

Bow to His wisdom,

Bow to His righteous judgment.

Praise be to the Merciful One,

Praise be to the Lord of Light and Shadow.

 

“There is no Faceless One!” Leitos howled, and fell again to coughing and gagging.

“Don’t trouble yourself with these fools and to whom they pay homage,” Muranna said. “Your hope for them, I fear, was always wasted.”

“No,” Leitos wept. He refused to accept that. He had been a slave once, and he had believed the lies his slavemasters told him. Surely the chanting slaves around him would see the truth, as well, if only he could show them.

“No?” Muranna looked at him with mock astonishment. “Why would you think differently? How many generations have given most of what they have as obligations to one merciless king after another? How long have they suffered misery and humiliation, and never once had a thought to stand against their oppressors? How long have they given their sons into bondage, and their daughters into the hands of the Alon’mahk’lar to be ravished?”

“They are humankind.”

Muranna snorted, and the twist of her lips erased her stately bearing. “They are less than shit, boy, and do not deserve the wretched lives they are allowed to have. Even base creatures will seek to escape suffering, yet these mindless fools fall on their faces and beg for punishment. Listen to them, Leitos,” Muranna invited, waving a hand over the still chanting crowd. “Even now, even knowing what is about to befall one of their own kind, they summon their master.”

Leitos struggled against the pain burning through the center of him. “I warned you of Peropis’s intentions. When she has gained the power she needs to become flesh, you will suffer eternity with the rest of us.”

Muranna shook her head. “After I cut King Rothran’s beating heart from his body, Peropis spoke to me through a ... a tear in the fabric of this world.”

Leitos chuckled, despite the searing pain in his throat. “She spoke to you from Geh’shinnom’atar—your future prison.”

“I will trust in the word of a goddess, before that of a foolish boy.”

“And so you have condemned us all.”

“You were condemned the moment you came squalling into this world. Perhaps all of us were, but I will enjoy the time I have left, while you will beg and scream.” Muranna abruptly turned and nodded to the Alon’mahk’lar.

One demon-born thrust the spoon-shaped end of the silver trough under Adham’s purpling head. The other positioned the open end over the golden bowl. As the Alon’mahk’lar closest to Adham drew its dagger and reached high, the crowds went still.

Leitos began praying to the Silent God and Creator of All. His answer was the whisper of sharp steel raking through his father’s throat, a gargling hiss, and the tinkling patter of blood spraying against beaten silver. When Adham died, he did so mouthing words only Leitos could understand.
Until our last breath, and last drop of blood.

In that moment, Leitos hated his father for standing against their slavemasters, for daring to dream that freedom could be retaken. And he hated himself for believing in the same false dream, and for fighting so hard to gain nothing. Most of all, he hated that he had convinced some few others to join him, those who hung on spikes nearby. Thinking that last brought to mind Belina. He hoped she and Nola were dead, and that they had died quickly. If there was any mercy in the unforgiving blackness of the world, perhaps it had granted them that one small blessing.

Chapter 35

 

 

 

Belina cowered in the gloom next to Nola. Both were naked and chained to iron rings bolted to the stone floor. They could move a little, but there was no hope of escape. Chance alone had brought them together in this dusty stone chamber, with its many crude altars topped with begging women, and lighted by smoky torches. Their human and Alon’mahk’lar captors had stripped them, whipped them, and fettered them. And now the latter took their bestial pleasure.

Tales told of the smell of fear. It was something Belina had never truly considered, until that reek assailed her nostrils. But it was no single odor. It was the smell of emptied bowels and urine and cooling blood. It was the particular scent of sweat oozing oil-thick from flayed skin, and the exhalation of panicked breaths over dry tongues.

But for herself, Nola, and the women around her, what drove true and inescapable fear deep into their fluttering hearts was the musky scent wafting off the clotted discharge that poured from the engorged loins of Alon’mahk’lar. That foul seed overfilled wombs, escaped to run down the trembling thighs of shattered women, and dampened the floor.

Neither was the scent of fear born of any fear of death, for what was death but the blessed escape? Fear, and the stink to which it gave rise, was birthed of the nightmare that came in the moments and hours before. Belina smelled fear on her skin, tasted it in the tears that gathered like poisoned dew upon her lips, and she prayed that she would die, that her heart would simply give out.

A woman howled in the distance.

Nola pressed close to Belina, squeezed her hand. “Did father escape?”

No, little sister, but his death was swift.
“Of course,” Belina said.

“Why are you lying?”

Belina had no breath to answer.

“Sumahn died in my arms,” Nola said. “A
man
killed him, a soldier. Sumahn was helping me fight a demon-born, and a filthy betrayer put a spear through my Sumahn. I killed him. The soldier. One cut took off his head. It was not enough for his treachery.”

Chains rattling, Belina embraced Nola. “I know, little sister, I know.”

Another woman cried out, an ululating shriek punctuated by the eager grunts of an Alon’mahk’lar.

Nola clutched Belina. “Will they do that to us, what they did to...?”

“Mother?” Belina finished for her, but could say no more. Her tears wetted Nola’s dirty shoulder.

“We cannot allow it,” Nola said, voice empty. “We must deny them the privilege.”

“How?” Belina asked, ready to escape, if her sister had found a way.

Nola held up her shackled wrists.

“I don’t understand.”

“The rivets are sharp,” Nola whispered, running a finger over a pointy bit of iron joining the chain to one of her manacles.

“I don’t see....” She trailed off, because of course she did see, and fully understood what her sister intended. Belina fingered a barbed rivet on one of her own shackles, seeking some other way to get free. Such a way might exist, but the thudding tread of an approaching demon-born destroyed her hope of finding it in time.

“Together,” Belina said fiercely, keeping her gaze on Nola’s remaining eye in order to avoid looking on the nearing Alon’mahk’lar.

Nola bobbed her head. “I love you, sister.”

“I love you,” Belina said.

Together they raised their iron bindings to their necks, gouged the rivets deep through yielding flesh. Together, in blood and pain, they found their freedom.

Chapter 36

 

 

 

Leitos avoided moving. As long as he stayed still, the pain in him remained a dull, throbbing ache. If he twitched, even a little, he felt every agonizing inch of the pole running through his body.

With unfocused eyes, he watched the Alon’mahk’lar that had cut his father’s throat take three wrought iron stands from the wagon, and carefully set them equidistant apart in the sand. Next they opened a small wooden chest and withdrew three glowing stones.
Keys
, Leitos thought. One by one, the stones—topaz, amber, and ruby—were seated into the fixtures atop the stands.

Come to me.
The soothing voice.

Leitos waited, but the harsh voice did not speak.

She cannot speak, for even now she is coming here.

As the demon-born retreated, a dazzling point of light blossomed between the stands, then became a crackling, widening....
What had Muranna called it—a tear in the fabric of the world?
That seemed fitting.

Something began to emerge from that tear, a terror of lashing tentacles, an abomination from the darkness between the stars, born here in the sight of men and demon-born. The crowds hushed. The Alon’mahk’lar dropped to their faces, and Muranna bowed.

Come to me, Leitos, before it is too late
.

Leitos watched the darkness begin to coalesce into the shape of a woman, a pale creature, her skin flawless, somehow more than flesh. She was tall, taller than most men, but far from ungainly. A cascading tumble of silver-white hair barely cloaked her nakedness. Leitos’s dry tongue seemed to wither further in his mouth. There was a perfection about her that pained him to behold. She turned slowly, taking in the sight of those in attendance. Overawed silence greeted her scrutiny.

So this is a goddess
, Leitos thought.
Peropis
. He now understood how she had captivated the long-dead Prince Varis Kilvar. She could have chosen anyone, and they would have worshiped her.

Come to me!
The voice in Leitos’s mind was not soothing now, but urgent.
She will not harm your body, not before gathering what you hold
.

Let her have what she wishes
, Leitos thought, too weak now to look any longer at his enemy, and the enemy of all humankind. There would be no heroic battles, no songs of glory, but death alone. And after, the unending horror of the Thousand Hells.

Come to me.

Let me die.

You are the last hope of the world of men.

A dry chuckle raked Leitos’s throat, bringing with it the urge to cough. He resisted, fearing the torment that would follow.
You sound like Belina.

She was right.

She was
wrong
. I am nothing. Not a man of shadow and steel, not a savior. I am a corpse too stubborn to accept the gift of death.

Silence for a time, then,
Peropis has come to you often wearing the face of the woman you loved ... the woman you killed, because she knew Zera was the one person who could persuade you. She also showed you Geh’shinnom’atar.

Leitos recalled the meeting. He had been asleep in the bottom of a Yatoan longboat, and would have counted it a dream, but for the clarity of it.

Peropis told you something of great importance.

Leitos stifled a bitter laugh.
She told me many things. All of them lies, apparently.

She told you to gather the Powers of Creation into yourself, and you have done so, whether you know it or not. That is what she seeks, what she needs, but cannot freely take.

She wore Zera’s face to deceive me? Well, the mask is off. I see her for who she is, and if you are right, then she has failed.

Your love for the woman, Zera, blinded you to a truth you would have otherwise seen—that you were being tricked to embrace powers never meant for the hands of men. Now it does not matter what face Peropis wears, for she will take what she wants form you. As well, she did not lie, not wholly.

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