351 lines
18 KiB
TeX
351 lines
18 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{chapter-30-deliver}{%
|
|
\chapter{Deliver}\label{chapter-30-deliver}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\epigraph{``Don't think of it so much as a fall, but rather as an
|
|
opportunity to learn how to fly.''}{Dread Emperor Venal, in the act of succeeding his predecessor}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Of the original hundred I'd begun the evening with, there were barely
|
|
forty left. More wounded among the missing than dead, but it was a hard
|
|
man who could fight with an eye or a few fingers missing. There was only
|
|
so much I could ask of anyone without a Name, and even with mine I was
|
|
starting to feel the exhaustion set in. I'd used too much power, I
|
|
decided. I'd have to be careful about that in the future. Learn to use
|
|
my Names in ways that burned through my reserves slower that the tricks
|
|
my teacher had taught me and the ones I'd taught myself from that. I
|
|
kept us moving as fast as could be managed, guiding us through mostly
|
|
unfamiliar streets. The night was lit up in the distance by bonfires and
|
|
mageflame, as clear a beacon as I could hope for. I'd trusted Juniper's
|
|
plan to see us through this battle, and so far that trust had been
|
|
rewarded. Anything that would tip the scales for the Battle of Marchford
|
|
from here on out would be on my head: the Hellhound could forge me a
|
|
chance at victory, but I'd have to be the one to wield it.
|
|
|
|
We started hearing the fighting long before we saw it. Screams,
|
|
splintering wood and steel meeting steel. There was no other clamour
|
|
like it in all of Creation, and there was some part of me that gloried
|
|
in the sounds. Had Black seen that, when he'd chosen me? Had he stared
|
|
into my eyes and glimpsed something in there, creeping under the ideals,
|
|
that relished in the fight? It wasn't something I was proud of. I knew,
|
|
deep down, that the sword wasn't enough to change the world. Not in any
|
|
way that lasted. The real work began when the fighting was over, picking
|
|
up the pieces and trying to fit them in a better way. \emph{But, Gods
|
|
help me, fighting's the part I'm actually good at.} I put the thought
|
|
away: it wasn't a problem I'd solve tonight. If I didn't survive until
|
|
morning, it wouldn't be a problem at all.
|
|
|
|
When we came upon the Silver Spears I saw with mild surprise that they
|
|
had taken a \emph{beating.} There were corpses in the plaza Juniper had
|
|
ordered prepared and fielded with our single siege engine, but the
|
|
mercenaries had been pushed back into the avenue. There we bare a
|
|
hundred of them left. Nauk's legionaries had splattered the entire width
|
|
of the road with the blood of their enemies: the only place their
|
|
formation broke was when the shield wall had to split around the corpse
|
|
of some enormous tangled abomination of horse and man flesh. Someone had
|
|
apparently climbed on top and skewered it to death with its own lance.
|
|
Weeping Heavens, my legion was full of crazies. What was Ratface feeding
|
|
these people?
|
|
|
|
As if to make my point for me, up ahead a horse whinnied and there was a
|
|
burst of cheers from Nauk's men. I tried to look at what was happening,
|
|
but these were flat grounds and \emph{every single fucking}
|
|
\emph{legionary} in my army was was taller than me. I was one more
|
|
incident like this from having a goblin with a stepladder follow me
|
|
around everywhere, I really was. I let Farrier -- the only remaining
|
|
lieutenant in the Gallowborne, looked like -- bring my company into the
|
|
fold as I looked for a better vantage point. The ballista was on a
|
|
platform and I could see Hune standing next to it from where I stood. So
|
|
were Pickler and a handful of other goblins, but they paid me no mind as
|
|
I approached: they were lining up their next shot, my Senior Sapper
|
|
letting out a little pleased sigh when the rock scored a bloody line of
|
|
broken flesh in the Silver Spears.
|
|
|
|
``Lady Squire,'' the ogre greeted me as soon as I came close enough,
|
|
fist thumping against her armour.
|
|
|
|
``Commander,'' I replied. ``What's this with a horse?''
|
|
|
|
I scanned the battlefield even as I asked the question. Nauk's men had
|
|
pressed by the large corpse, reforming a solid shield wall. The Silver
|
|
Spear infantry was trying and failing to push them back, only retreating
|
|
in time to let what remained of the corrupted cataphracts attempt
|
|
charges. My other commander had their number, though. He was keeping his
|
|
mages ready for those, drowning the tip of the cavalry wedge in mage
|
|
fire every time they tried. I found the horse in question just as Hune
|
|
offered me an explanation.
|
|
|
|
``One of the mounts was improperly corrupted,'' the ogre told me.
|
|
``They've adopted as a\ldots{} pet.''
|
|
|
|
The last word was spoken with open distaste. Commander Hune had very
|
|
steady notions about professionalism, which was half the reason she got
|
|
on so well with Juniper. I watched as legionaries herded a horse without
|
|
visible marks of corruption on it towards the enemy -- it kicked their
|
|
shields a few times but eventually ran away and bowled over a few of the
|
|
men-at-arms, kicking one's head in and spilling dark fluids all over the
|
|
ground.
|
|
|
|
``A pet,'' I repeated, not sure whether to be amused or appalled.
|
|
|
|
``Some of your former Rat Company men are calling it `Magic Goat'. They
|
|
seem to think this amusing, for reasons that escape me. Is it magical
|
|
because it is not, in fact, a goat?'' Hune frowned.
|
|
|
|
``You use undead goats \emph{one} time and nobody ever lets it go,'' I
|
|
muttered, dodging a proper explanation.
|
|
|
|
One of my legionaries tried to mount the thing when it escaped back to
|
|
my forces, managing the feat for a solid ten heartbeats before it
|
|
whinnied in distress and tossed him back into the ranks -- he was caught
|
|
by a dozen other men, landing unharmed. Still, there was only so much
|
|
time-wasting I was willing to allow. Hakram and his picked line had been
|
|
charged with keeping an eye on the back of the enemy to ensure none of
|
|
the mercenaries split away from the mass and made a run for another
|
|
hearth where they could disrupt the ritual, but if the Silver Spears all
|
|
dispersed it wouldn't be enough. We hadn't anticipated the men-at-arms
|
|
would be able to leap like they did, and against that the barricades
|
|
Pickler had built to bar the surrounding streets would be useless.
|
|
|
|
Masego had recommended we evacuate the surroundings of all the hearths
|
|
involved in the ritual and I'd signed off on that immediately, but even
|
|
if there were no civilian casualties a third of Marchford would still be
|
|
put to the torch by the magic going wild. We'd already turned Marchford
|
|
into half a ruin, I'd rather it wasn't a smouldering one if I could
|
|
avoid it. The Silver Spears weren't giving ground at the moment, though,
|
|
even with their numbers running thin. Whenever their assaults failed
|
|
they clustered around a cataphract in the back, one who never
|
|
participated. It was more armour than man, the metal fused together
|
|
seamlessly like a carapace -- save for where the visor would have been,
|
|
where it was twisted into a maddened grin instead. I sighed. I was going
|
|
to have to take care of that one, wasn't I?
|
|
|
|
I was already gauging the fastest path to the front of the line when
|
|
Apprentice stumbled onto the scene. The dark-skinned mage was panting
|
|
and his robes were drenched in sweat, braids in disarray. A tenth of
|
|
mages followed closely behind, in much better shape.
|
|
|
|
``Masego?'' I prompted with a frown.
|
|
|
|
``Demon,'' he got out. ``Demon's in the city.''
|
|
|
|
My blood ran cold. I'd thought it would remain out in the hills, slowly
|
|
spreading its corruption.
|
|
|
|
``How did it pass the threshold?'' I asked.
|
|
|
|
The bespectacled man rested a hand on another soldier's shoulder,
|
|
pushing himself up.
|
|
|
|
``It's \emph{inside} one of them,'' he said, gesturing towards the
|
|
Silver Spears.
|
|
|
|
Oh, Hells. That was why the grinning cataphract was staying in the back.
|
|
Corruption spread almost instantly through touch, but given enough time
|
|
just standing close to my men would do the trick. Even if it lost the
|
|
battle, all it had to do was wait.
|
|
|
|
``\emph{Shit},'' I cursed, the expletive deeply heartfelt.
|
|
|
|
I closed my eyes and considered my options. The longer I let the demon
|
|
work its power, the worst the situation got. How many of my legionaries
|
|
were already beyond salvation? Yet the memory of my last fight with the
|
|
creature remained fresh: I'd gone in unprepared and been effortlessly
|
|
crushed. There was no longer anything glorious about any of the sounds
|
|
of battle: every scream was a reminder that my men were slowly being
|
|
ripped away from me.
|
|
|
|
``Are you combat ready?'' I asked Masego.
|
|
|
|
He heaved drily, then wiped his sweat-dripping mouth.
|
|
|
|
``I'll manage,'' he replied.
|
|
|
|
I cast a look at Commander Hune, who'd been observing the conversation
|
|
with an utterly expressionless face.
|
|
|
|
``Get word to Hakram,'' I ordered. ``We're taking out the grinning
|
|
cataphract.''
|
|
|
|
She nodded and strode away without comment. The direness of the
|
|
situation was not lost on her, it seemed. I waited for Masego to catch
|
|
his breath another few heartbeats, then gestured sharply for him to
|
|
follow. My Name was already roiling, preparing itself for the coming
|
|
fight, and I could feel a pulse of responding power come from
|
|
Apprentice. It felt like lightning and morning dew, something clear and
|
|
crisp and deceptively cruel -- steel under silk, the bite of it felt
|
|
only too late. Fitting, for a man whose soft exterior hid such a deep
|
|
well of merciless power. Soldiers split away for us without there being
|
|
a need for orders, driven away by the old instinct branded into the
|
|
minds of all the peoples of Creation: \emph{Named are coming}.
|
|
\emph{Stand and die, run and live.} I spared no time looking at them.
|
|
The horse from earlier whinnied plaintively.
|
|
|
|
``Butcher that beast,'' I ordered.
|
|
|
|
I had not Spoken, but my legionaries moved as if motivated by the crack
|
|
of the whip. My eyes were ahead, fixed on the enemy. There were maybe a
|
|
hundred mercenaries left, horsemen and men-at-arms mixed in an unruly
|
|
throng. I felt Apprentice at my side, breath and pace steady as his
|
|
magic crackled. The Silver Spears charged and I stilled my heartbeat,
|
|
letting the world slow down around me. The muscles of the deformed horse
|
|
at the head of the pack rippled under my dispassionate gaze, the tip of
|
|
the lance headed for my throat. I considered it with disdain, stepping
|
|
around the shaft and patiently placing my blade. Two impacts, and as a I
|
|
continued advancing the horse and the rider's heads tumbled on the
|
|
ground. The wave of corrupted flesh and steel threatened to sweep us
|
|
aside but Apprentice barked a word in some arcane tongue and a flash of
|
|
fire race along the ground in long stripes, scattering the host. Neither
|
|
of us broke our stride.
|
|
|
|
The grinning abomination was considering me. It came forward at a light
|
|
trot, only charging when it was too close to change direction. Around us
|
|
the flames formed a circle keeping us in and the enemy soldiers out,
|
|
though they tried to push through the fire and fell away with shrieks.
|
|
The demonhost wielded a lance but it used it like a staff, sweeping away
|
|
paving stones as it swung the shaft at me. I danced around it, sword and
|
|
dagger coming up to trace thin lines on the steel that bedecked horse
|
|
and rider both. The corruption ran deep in this one. A lash of lightning
|
|
left Apprentice's hands, coiling around the rider's head and trying to
|
|
drag him down. In vain: though the body convulsed, it seemed otherwise
|
|
unaffected. The horse's hooves reared up to cave in the mage's head but
|
|
bounced off a flat field of blue magic, shattering it in panes of light.
|
|
|
|
``There'll be \emph{none} of that,'' I snarled.
|
|
|
|
My sword whipped to scythe through the horse's back leg, wreathed in
|
|
shadows for the blink of an eye -- it cut through steel and grinding
|
|
bone effortlessly. Dark liquids burst out and the rider fluidly leapt
|
|
down from the falling horse, landing on its feet. It turned to meet me
|
|
without a word, unsheathing the longsword at its hip as it held its
|
|
lance with the other hand. A shrill sound resounded throughout the
|
|
battlefield and a ray of ugly black light pierced the horse's flank: its
|
|
flesh and steel shrivelled away in a matter of heartbeats, leaving
|
|
behind only an oily stain on the ground. The demonhost seemed
|
|
indifferent to the loss, its perfectly still metal grin still in place.
|
|
Its heels rose from the ground, leaving only steel-clad toes touching
|
|
it, and with swiftness I had rarely seen surpassed it struck again.
|
|
|
|
My sword parried the shaft and I ducked under the sword stroke. Not
|
|
quick enough: the sword shorn straight through the top of my helmet. I
|
|
limped back as fast as I could, dagger hand clumsily tugging off the
|
|
straps holding the helmet together. I shook it off and I fell to the
|
|
ground. Apprentice cast a spell that rang like a thunderclap, an
|
|
explosion of invisible force detonating right next to the abomination's
|
|
head. It bought me a few moments, but besides forcing it to tilt back
|
|
its neck there was no mark made by the sorcery. Masego had its
|
|
attention, though. In a single heartbeat it had crossed the distance to
|
|
the mage, sword shattering the restored blue field of light -- though a
|
|
second one came into existence it shattered it. It dropped the useless
|
|
handle and caught Apprentice by the throat, ignoring the ring of fire
|
|
that formed around its wrist and tightened instantly.
|
|
|
|
A legionary's shield impacted its side, knocking it back and breaking
|
|
its grip as Hakram entered the scene. The orc let out a guttural howl,
|
|
shield battering the demonhost down again and again in unrelenting
|
|
assault. Unharmed for all that rage, it moved back as if yanked by the
|
|
hand of some unseen god. Its toes were barely touching the ground, I
|
|
saw, and no earthly muscles were lending it the speed it had displayed:
|
|
an eldritch thing was moving it according to ways beyond that of
|
|
Creation.
|
|
|
|
``Apprentice?'' I called out.
|
|
|
|
``You are going to \emph{burn} for that, abomination,'' the mage rasped
|
|
coldly, ignoring me.
|
|
|
|
The gauntlets had left a pale mark matching the fingers on Masego's
|
|
throat, but aside from that he seemed unharmed. I worried anyhow,
|
|
knowing corruption did not always have to be visible -- but there was no
|
|
time to worry about that now.
|
|
|
|
``Though I hunger I am never sated,'' he spoke in Mthethwa, tongue
|
|
cadenced.
|
|
|
|
The grinning demonhost moved to end him, but Hakram and I knew our work.
|
|
Seamlessly I flanked the monster as Adjutant stood his ground, shield up
|
|
and short sword in the middle line. The abomination did not turn to face
|
|
me but it stomped a foot on the ground: wind howled and stone flew,
|
|
forcing me back. Hakram, though? Hakram squared his shoulder and smiled
|
|
a devil's grin.
|
|
|
|
``Come on, you bastard. Here I \textbf{\emph{Stand}},'' he laughed.
|
|
|
|
The lance, edge first, struck the scutum. Corrupted steel met the work
|
|
of goblins and was found wanting, for in that moment even if all the
|
|
Celestial Choirs had sought to move my Adjutant they would have found
|
|
their strength matched. Again and again, with mightthat split the air
|
|
and screamed havoc, the abomination tried to pierce the shield and its
|
|
strikes pattered like rain on a lake of oil.
|
|
|
|
``Through grass and ground I crawl, devouring all I behold.''
|
|
|
|
As the words left Apprentice's mouth I felt my Name howl for the first
|
|
time since I had last matched my strength to the demon's. It wanted
|
|
vengeance, for an aspect stolen. It wanted to even a scale that could
|
|
not be evened, but would settle for the harshest price that could be
|
|
exacted. A single droplet of liquid shadow fell on my blade, the ripples
|
|
spreading inky darkness until it had swallowed it whole. I sped through
|
|
the rubble and rammed it in the abomination's back, finally finding
|
|
purchase as I punched through the carapace. With a great heave I ripped
|
|
out my sword, dark pus falling to the ground in a hissing rain. I
|
|
stepped away just in time.
|
|
|
|
``My blood knows the call, my flesh the craving. Nameless eidolons,
|
|
thieves of Heaven's grace, \textbf{grant me flame}.''
|
|
|
|
Twin threads of flame sprouted above Masego's shoulders, growing into
|
|
great snakes of flame that obeyed this time without further command:
|
|
their heads the size of a chariot, they fell like hammers on the form of
|
|
the demonhost. Spellflame raged against an unseen resistance, melting
|
|
away steel until it dripped on the ground and instantly searing the soft
|
|
matter beneath. The spell had a hunger to it that had lacked at Three
|
|
Hills, an eagerness to devour the enemy whole driven by Apprentice's
|
|
implacable anger. When the fires finally gutted out, a smoking carcass
|
|
rested on the stone, trying to crawl back up. I silently stepped
|
|
forward. With unforeseen violence the demonhost raked its mutated hands
|
|
upwards, drawing lines on my cheek. I did not flinch.
|
|
|
|
``Wrong side of the face,'' I told it, still-dark sword falling down to
|
|
end the fight.
|
|
|
|
The point of my sword thrust through the thing's head and into the stone
|
|
beneath. Finally, it stopped moving. I let out a sob half relief and
|
|
half surprise, power sifting through my fingers like sand. Hakram knelt
|
|
at my side, his own legs shaking like leaves.
|
|
|
|
``It's still here,'' Apprentice said, voice bewildered.
|
|
|
|
My eyes flicked to the grinning abomination's body, but it was unmoving.
|
|
\emph{Oh, Weeping Heavens. It was never this one.} All the demon needed
|
|
to spread its plague of corruption was time and touch. Why would it have
|
|
picked the leader of the pack to serve as a cloak, blindly cunning as it
|
|
was? Subtlety was ever the mark of their kind. There'd been one
|
|
creature, harmless as it was, that my legionaries had been entertaining
|
|
this entire fight. Taking as a pet, even. I turned and watched as the
|
|
horse some poor damned soul had called the `Magic Goat' allowed its
|
|
stomach to open, spilling out guts that took the shape of a misshapen
|
|
child.
|
|
|
|
``Gods save us all,'' I whispered as I finally realized how badly I'd
|
|
been played.
|
|
|
|
How many legionaries had it corrupted with a kick or a ride, I wondered?
|
|
To how many others had the plague spread as they stood should to
|
|
shoulder in the shield wall? The demon crawled on the ground with limbs
|
|
too small for its body of gore, twisting and turning against the stone.
|
|
In the back of my head I heard a laugh that turned into a mockery we all
|
|
heard, though the abomination had no mouth to voice it. It felt like hot
|
|
knives ripping in my mind, scattering my thoughts. A heartbeat later, an
|
|
arrow nailed one of its limbs to the stone. A one-handed man wearing
|
|
clothes that were more decoration than true cover landed on the ground
|
|
beside it. His spear rose and shone with white light as he offered a
|
|
feral grin.
|
|
|
|
``Have at thee, demon,'' Hunter announced, as Archer knocked a second
|
|
arrow.
|
|
|
|
I rolled my shoulders and gestured for my own Named to follow. Do or
|
|
die, looked like. I was starting to hate how familiar that feeling was.
|