Read On Wings of Chaos (Revenant Wyrd Book 5) Online
Authors: Travis Simmons
Tags: #new adult dark fantasy
A cudgel took out a soldier behind Astanel. The soldier fell into the boy, and Astanel stumbled, fell, and nearly lost his grip on the box, but held fast to it as if his life depended on it.
Through the vine-engraved wood he could feel the orb pulsing with power, boosting his resolve. He scurried backwards. A hand under his shoulder helped him to stand, and when he looked to see who it was, Jovian was retreating from him, helping to clear the way. He hadn’t seen that the soldier at Astanel’s feet was dead, and that the troll was focusing his eyes on Astanel.
Astanel darted to the left as the cudgel swung down again. He broke between two fighting groups, scrambled for the wall, and started following it to the stairs. He looked for Angelica and Jovian, but they were lost in the crowd. The troll hadn’t lost sight of him, however, and with a powerful swing, groups parted before him.
The troll roared and charged for him.
Astanel fell to the side. The troll rammed into the wall, and it shuddered under the pressure.
Astanel fell backward on the snow. Holding up his hand, he shot out his wyrd straight at the troll. But he was scared, and his wyrd flickered off above the wall, striking a tree that winked out of existence as if it had never been. The trees around it wavered slightly, as if the vanished tree had let out a breeze with its passing.
The troll was stunned, and Astanel took that moment to regain his feet. Gasping for air, he fled along the wall, searching for the stairs.
Hammering footfalls followed him. Just when the tension of not knowing where the troll was behind him grew too much, he darted to the left between another fighting group, barely missing the point of a thrusting sword.
The troll barreled past, noticed his deception, and turned, looking for the short teenager again. He knew that the troll wouldn’t stop now that it had his scent. It was almost like it knew what he carried with him.
A flash of red wyrd lit the night, blasted the side of the troll and drew its attention. That was his break. As it swung toward the threat, Astanel slipped back up to the wall and pursued the troll. Even though its attention was currently engaged, once it was done with the threat it would sniff Astanel out again. He had to strike, or risk being hunted.
Astanel gathered the wyrd about him. It made him shiver. Alarist wyrd wasn’t like wyrd from the well. It carried a foul taste, a shudder to the soul, an almost palpable cry of sorrow.
He felt the wyrd slip down his right arm, gather in his palm like a darkened light, and waited for the crowd to part.
The troll lifted its cudgel and swung with all its might. The ground shook, and Astanel hoped someone wasn’t on the receiving end of that attack, because they would likely be nothing but a broken pile of meat.
It swung the cudgel to the right, and Astanel saw a couple of soldiers dashed against the wall.
Then, like clouds parting to show a glimpse of the sun, the crowd before him parted long enough so he could see the troll completely, and that Angelica and Jovian were fighting it. Purple wyrd flashed from Angelica’s hands, and red wyrd oozed from Jovian. But it was the black wyrd, shattering the night, blasting out of Astanel’s hand, that did the trick. The troll vanished from sight, the alarist wyrd transporting the troll beyond the Black Gate.
Angelica stumbled, and Jovian’s red lightning shivered into the sky without effect. Before the two of them spotted Astanel, the boy saw Mag, standing a little further away, looking around as if she had felt something. Possibly his wyrd?
“Come,” Angelica said, racing toward him. She pulled him along with her and pushed Astanel toward the base of the stairs. He slipped on the first two steps, regained his footing, and raced up along the side, narrowly missing arrows twanging from bows above.
He crested the stairs and caught his breath while he looked for the opening Jovian mentioned. There, just past a line of soldiers, near the breach in the wall. Astanel set out behind the rows of archers. Some of them faced inward, toward the courtyard. They would take aim, and when they were sure it was safe, let loose with an arrow. Others stood facing the army beyond the rampart, and their volley of arrows was unrelenting. But they also had to deal with enemy archers.
An arrow whizzed by his ear and struck an archer facing inward in the back. The archer gasped, swayed, flipped over the parapet of the ramparts and plummeted to the courtyard far below. He wasn’t the only one to fall. Astanel crouched low so the parapet would protect him.
Then he was at the clearing. The parapet fell away on the courtyard side, and he didn’t want to get too close to the breach. He remembered what it was like when the troll rammed the rampart, and how it shook. Astanel could only imagine if another blow like that happened — with his luck the orb would fall into the breach and roll out into enemy hands. He sat the box down away from the breach and opened the lid.
Instantly the soothing calm of the Orb of Aldaras washed over him, strengthening his limbs and calling to his wyrd in a seductive embrace. He closed his eyes and felt the power wash over him. It filled him with resolve, filled him with power, and filled him with courage.
Astanel opened his eyes, and he saw with other eyes, with wyrded vision. The effervescent cloud of power issued from the orb and slipped over the edge of the ramparts. Like a sea of moonlight, it flowed along the bloody snow like water, and where it touched a wyrder, they seemed to shimmer with the silvery power.
Wyrd became stronger, the blasts more intense. Each touch of wyrd damaged so much more than it had before. Astanel could almost
see
the turn in the tide. Where sick wyrders had been attacking weakly, they grew stronger, healthier. Their wyrd was more focused, each blast knocking back the enemy forces. He smiled. For the first time in his entire life, Astanel knew that there was something better ahead, something he could reach for.
In the throng of people he saw Mag. Strong, filled with purpose, yelling orders that he couldn’t hear from his place on the wall. In her left hand she held a sword, slick with blood; her right hand glowed with green wyrd.
Astanel looked down at his own hands and saw the darklight of alarist wyrd there. He didn’t like it, but it was the easiest wyrd he knew how to work with. But it must have been the same way for Mag. She had been an alarist too. She’d had to overcome the wyrd she learned to wield. Now she worked with the well. He wondered if the call of the alarist wyrd was as strong within her now as it was for him, or if like any addiction the feeling would lessen with time.
As if his thoughts drew her attention, Mag glanced up, saw him, and motioned to him. She shook her head, realizing that he wouldn’t be able to get to her easily, and held her right hand to her face. She started talking into it, and when she was done, Mag tossed the orb to him.
When it reached Astanel, the orb projected her voice to him. He watched the words of her message swirl around the surface of the orb, like water circling a drain.
“I have a plan,” she said. “And you are going to help.”
As the orb recited the plan, Astanel nodded to Mag, but she wasn’t looking at him any longer; instead she fought her way to the left staircase.
The power of the orb coursed through Mag. Where she had felt the power of the egrigor like a sickness in her wyrd, this power was like a beacon of hope, empowering her, healing wounds in her wyrd that she hadn’t even known were there.
She cut a path easily before her, making her way to the left side of the ramparts. That side was smaller. When the angel attacked the wall, it was on the left side. In fact, if it hadn’t been for snow that had been piled up there, Mag wouldn’t even have been able to reach the stairs. She struggled through the snow, flashing the occasional blast of wyrd behind her as enemy forces charged at her. The wyrd easily forced them back.
Finally she reached the stairs and pulled herself up onto them. Huffing, she crested the top of the ramparts. There were no archers on this side, and there was little protection from the parapets either. She crawled along the floor, trying to avoid arrows. Nothing would break her concentration more than taking an arrow in the shoulder — or the head.
When she reached the edge, Mag laid her sword down and started willing her wyrd out of her hands, weaving it as one would a tapestry. She let the green wyrd slip through her fingers, braiding in it a vision of what she wanted it to accomplish: a barrier, a protective ooze of sorts around the edges of the walls and the ground of the breach. Mag ordered her wyrd to act, and even as she wove the strands of her wyrd together, she felt it take shape.
It nearly exhausted everything she had, because she was already tired from the battle. And everyone in the courtyard was feeling that exhaustion. They struggled and fought the enemy forces as they poured through the breach, but the enemy seemed tireless. More and more new, refreshed trolls and dwarves came through the hole constantly. It was a never-ending battle, like trying to soak up the contents of the ocean with a rag.
Finally Mag felt her wyrd take shape. It pulsed once along her spine, telling her that her will had been carried out. She hazarded a peek over the edge with wyrded vision. Each stone glowed with a soft green light, like an encasement rested around each. The ground between the breach was bathed with her wyrd.
She nodded to Astanel. Mag hadn’t been able to train him yet in the workings of wyrd, but he could harness the alarist wyrd within him better than she could now that she hadn’t used it in ages. That’s all she needed from him, and she hoped her wyrded barrier would work the way wax held acid away from metal.
She winced as the first bit of his alarist wyrd slipped along the wall encased in her wyrd, but nothing happened. Mag half-feared the wall would vanish completely, but it didn’t. Her wyrd worked well with keeping his at bay. She’d had the thought because she remembered Sara telling her that Astanel had battled with her, and he’d shot forth black wyrd, and she had shielded against it. Mag didn’t think anything about that until she had gotten a feel for Astanel’s wyrd and realized it was magenta. It was the first she had really heard of an alarist attack being thwarted with a barrier.
Mag shook herself back to the present and watched as the black wyrd started filling up the hole in the wall like a tub with water. It was working just as she wanted. Where the black wyrd rested, no enemies could pass. They tried, and they vanished, transported beyond the Black Gate. Mag smiled, wondering what kind of stir was happening in the Otherworld this moment with all the living creatures just suddenly appearing there.
“Perfect,” she whispered once the flow of enemy forces stopped completely. Mag eased back along the rampart. Once behind the protection of the parapet, she formed another message orb and whispered into it. She tossed the orb behind her and felt it grow larger in the courtyard, bellowing her instructions to the soldiers.
“DON’T APPROACH THE BREACH IN THE WALL. IT IS CLOSED. CLEAN UP THE STRAGGLERS.”
The noise in the courtyard deafened Joya as she stepped out of the entrance hall and into the melee. She could see bodies everywhere. Their side had taken hea
vy losses, but across the clearing, through the fighting groups of enemies and allies, Joya could see the glowing darklight boundary that closed the breach in the wall. Cianna stood beside her, hand on her rapier. They had arrived just in time to hear Mag instruct everyone to clean up the stragglers.
“You ready for that?” Cianna asked.
“More than ready,” Joya agreed.
There was a strange noise from beyond the wall that Joya didn’t recognize — a grunt, and then something large was arcing up over the parapet. The archers followed it with their bows. Twangs filled the air as arrow after arrow was released from their weapons, sinking solidly into the object. Even the wyrded fire and lightning blasting at the object from wyrders on the ground didn’t stop it from coming.