Kole heard thunder roll across the sky, and imagined Linn floating down on one of her conjured currents to spirit him away. His vision faded, and he did not know if it would come back this time.
Shadow should have thanked the Sage girl. They still should have been in the blinding, cursed light of day. To the east and to the far north, where the frozen waves must eventually give way to their moving brothers and sisters, it was. Blinding and brilliant.
Here, on the borders of a tense meeting between the final Sages, the ice went from frosted white to deep blue in the gloom Linn Ve’Ran called in from faraway waters, or made out of the moisture in the air.
Shadow found her deepest brethren in the troughs between waves. She climbed in, plunging into the inky stillness and finding handholds in the shadows to speed her along. In truth, she did not know how she navigated. It wasn’t by sight. It wasn’t even smell or sound or touch. It was, rather oddly, by taste that she moved.
She tasted the dark like a serpent. To the west, there was fire and stone, and the bitter, acidic taste of ozone, like burnt rain.
When she pulled herself from the blackness beneath an overhang and dug her claws into the sheer wall of the trench, she did so with a hunger, wishing to see hurt befall the Frostfire Sage, and wishing to see the same or worse befall her own.
At the top, she found only disappointment. The Sages still stood on opposite sides of the yawning chasm, staring one another down, lost in their private exchange while the world broke apart beyond them.
Shadow crouched on the edge. She thought of saying something, of riling one side or the other, but she saw the way the Witch stood rooted, and the way her hair moved like a separate thing from the wind that howled above them and whistled through the gap, shrieked through the cracks and crevices. She saw the darkness gathered around the clenched fists of the Eastern Dark; saw one eye glowing molten and the other the purple of twilight, and knew that she must refrain.
The Sages would meet their ends on one another’s powers before long. For now, the battle raging just beyond them was a sight to behold.
There, Linn flew higher than the gulls that had abandoned a place with no life to speak of. She hung, her dark hair whipping behind her. She did not clutch the silver bow Shadow had seen her wield before, but rather held her arms up toward the black clouds above. Flashes lit the undersides of the gray-bellied beasts, and Shadow saw small sparks dancing from the Sage girl’s fingers.
Below her, the Ember had her amber spear spinning like a wheel of fire, like a miniature sun. It was vibrant to look upon, and the Ember was violent to behold. She leapt toward the glowing blue form that Shadow had to examine closely to mark as Myriel. The Ember’s spear missed her, but each time Myriel shot in, faster than the rest—faster even than Shadow, with all her tricks—a tongue of orange fire beat her back.
The Rockbled was not in his own element, but he was a strong and hearty threat. He was also faster than he looked, and when Myriel ducked under the Ember’s horizontal slash, which sent a crescent of flame spinning end over end toward the crystal palace, he was there to greet her, his great stone shield slamming into her side and sending her careening across the ice.
Shadow smiled as Myriel came up, her eyes blinding white, the contours of her skin and the armored plates that covered her breasts and back lost to the buzzing light that surrounded her. Myriel’s head turned toward the Sages, and looked beyond them, seeming to fix on Shadow, gauging whether or not she was a threat.
Shadow shrugged and pointed up.
Myriel followed Shadow’s pointed finger. Her white eyes went a little wider as she focused on the Sage girl, hair dancing as if she wallowed in the heart of a hurricane.
Shadow heard a sound from the east, from the direction she’d come. It sounded like screaming, like rage. The others didn’t react.
Ve’Ran’s hands were sparking blue, and when she brought them down, the black clouds turned white, and the land was bleached in daylight, clean and horrible to look upon. All of them looked like shadows in that light, like Sentinels, and Shadow knew that she might have burned away had it been the full might of the life-giving sun, and not the killing light of the death-dealing lightning.
The light arced down on the back of a crash that shook her from her feet. Even the Rockbled had to slam his shield into the frozen turf in front of him and the Ember. His strong hand snatched her by the crook of the arm and pulled her down beside him as the jagged beam struck the ice and sent up shards that turned to silver mirrors. The beam split as it struck at an angle, and tentacles of burning blue-white leapt out, racing along the ice like thrown chains.
Myriel did not run. Instead, she set herself into a crouch, fingers splayed on the flat, watching the deadly whips approach. She waited until they were very close and then she pushed hard into the ice, cracking it, and shot through the narrow gap between the rivers of blue fire. Shadow felt her eyes widen, and even the Sages turned to look as Myriel made for the narrowing gap between bolts.
As she shot between them, the beams sent out blades and flails, reaching for her with hungry intent. Shadow thought it strange for her to avoid them. After all, was her power not born of the same element?
When one spark met her, it scored a bloody black gash from her shoulder up to her cheek, and sent her down in a tumble a stone’s throw from where the Rockbled and the Ember crouched.
The bulk of the blast continued on its way, fizzling out in a series of pops and hisses as it broke upon the frozen waves.
“Then your fire is not the same,” Shadow said to herself, watching Myriel as she regained her feet.
The Shadow King blinked like a flickering lantern, the blood turning to gray smoke as it dried against her skin. Her eyes flashed from blue to red and white, alternating between them, and her form shook as she tried to shake off the effects.
She looked up as the others did to see Linn beginning to fall.
Shadow could tell the Sage girl was exhausted by the sagging of her shoulders, and by the quieting complaints of the stormy skies above.
Myriel straightened and watched her fall, heedless of the other Landkist close by. The Ember did not take kindly to that, and as Ve’Ran struck the ground a bit harder than she had likely intended, the spear-wielder charged back into the fray, Myriel choosing not to meet her until the last possible moment, her eyes tracking Ve’Ran all the while. She dodged as the burning spear split the ground on which she’d been standing, and on the next slash, she caught the Ember by each wrist, and sent her energy into her.
Shadow thought the red-haired warrior would collapse in a twitching heap. Instead, she gritted her teeth and screamed, and flared her spear bright and hot enough to send Myriel dancing back. The Ember fell to her knees, but caught herself from going over with the glowing butt of her Everwood spear. The hulking Rockbled moved in to bolster her.
“Shadow.”
The tone with which he spoke told her he hadn’t said it only once. She swung her head toward the Eastern Dark. He still held the Witch in his twin gaze, but he spoke to Shadow.
“Reyna is down,” he said. The words seemed to have no effect on the Frostfire Sage, and Shadow wondered if she had even bothered to learn her newest champions’ names. “Get him.”
Shadow nearly sighed. Either the Eastern Dark knew he couldn’t win this fight, or didn’t want to risk finding out.
“Now.”
Shadow stuck her tongue out the way a child might. She knew he hated it just as she knew he only pretended not to see. The rest of them were locked in their own bitter, wanting stares. Killing stares.
“Some audience.”
Shadow melted away, slipping back into the darkness of the gap. She tasted ash in the east, and blood. Hot, burning blood. Hero’s blood.
Linn felt the cold now as she hadn’t before. She felt the moisture in the sky, which had grown milky under the looming presence of the storm she had called in. This one had been a ways off. The skies in the north were dry. She had
to reach higher and farther than above the wet leaves and sodden bark of Center, and pulling it in had required more effort than she could recall having spent before.
She managed to call up enough wind from the surrounding atmosphere to slow her fall, but she knew that her crooked, halting path to the ground must look chaotic to those below. Uncontrolled. Vulnerable.
The glowing blue beast Baas and Misha fought stood a short distance from them, staring up from the frozen plateau. Staring at Linn, like a hunting cat watching a spiraling hawk with a broken wing.
Linn hit the ground with her heels, gritted her teeth against the shock of it and could not keep from being driven to her knees. She flattened one palm on the ground as she let her shroud of wind leave her, trailing salt and pebbles of frost across the surface of the blue glass. She watched the one known as Myriel closely.
The otherworldly warrior stood up straight. She now bore a dark scar that ran from the top of her right shoulder up to her neck before settling in the hollow beneath her flashing white eye, which now seemed tight. Her form buzzed. There was a faint blurring effect around her, as if her skin was vibrating like the wings of a hummingbird, or a wasp.
She reminded Linn of the Landkist. Of Misha, Baas and their ilk. But there was something different about her. Something apart from her strange, armored appearance. She looked more wild than the Faey and more sinuous than a human, but there was an animal fierceness to her features and a feline grace to her movements. Her power—however much it looked like it was born of the lightning—could not be, as Linn’s own bolt had nearly killed her.
Linn swallowed as the implications washed over her. She had not stopped to consider what would happen to her if she let that sparking blue energy flood her veins. She supposed there would be no wielding it. No redirecting it and guiding it on its raging, torrid path through her bones. She did not have the hot, vibrant blood of Misha nor the durability of Baas. One strike from Myriel of the World Apart, and Linn would likely die.
Which reminded her of the two figures atop the shelf none of them could afford to ignore.
Linn turned her head from south to northeast, doing her best to keep Myriel at the edges. She looked over the stiff, mangled form of the other warrior—the green one known as Martyr—and saw that the Sages still stood in much the same positions she had last seen them in, staring, considering, locked in some private reunion as their allies fought and died around them for causes only partially known.
As she watched, she saw the queen’s shoulders bobbing before she heard the wind of the gathered storm sweep the laughter back toward her. The Eastern Dark only watched from the slow-changing shell of T’Alon Rane, unmoving and unamused.
“I think that you were more potent when last I fought you,” Elanil said, though Linn saw that she took a few steps back from the edge of the chasm, one amber eye and one purple tracking her all the while. “And I less.”
She shot her right hand forward, that silver half-gauntlet lighting up blue. All sound bled from the world for a brief moment, and then the beam of frostfire shot forth, screaming across the gap toward her adversary faster than Linn’s jagged bolts could do.
The Eastern Dark moved before the beam was made, but he only stepped to the side far enough to spare his arm, but close enough to feel its effects. He watched the blue-white river of power shoot past him and tracked it as it fought with the sun’s light in the far east. Rather than pull the beam toward him, Elanil let it go, cutting it off, and the gloom of the storm once more covered the plateaus on either side of the gap. In the distance, the beam became a winking star in the daylight.
“Is there any of him left?” Elanil asked. She still held her hand out, palm smoking. She regarded the Eastern Dark, who turned back to meet her gaze, both looking as if nothing out of the ordinary had occurred.
“Ember king,” Elanil called in a mock voice. “Are you at home? Has the Sage finally taken the rest of you?”
Elanil lowered her hand and squared herself to face him head on once more. “I wonder why you did it,” she said. She sounded curious, and she sounded cunning. “Why, why? Oh, Ray Valour, dark star of the east. Why have you taken the Ember’s form?”
She turned and fixed her strange, bright golden eyes on Linn and then swept them to the south, glancing halfheartedly at the standoff between the blinking, buzzing Myriel and the Landkist as if nothing could bore her more. Linn was beginning to hate her.
“Did something happen, I wonder?”
She turned around, meeting the Eastern Dark’s glowing, mismatched eyes once more. “Did something happen to you, prince of darkness, that you did not foresee?”
Up came the other hand and out charged another beam, and no matter how many times she did it, Linn still had to blink away the effects of its glow. This one nearly hit, but Valour managed to leap above it. A piece of the beam clipped the top edge of the plateau on the other side of the gap, and where it struck, shards of ice—Nevermelt, more likely—sprouted like crystal flowers.
“Why do you run?”
Linn shook her head, not understanding what the Frostfire Sage was playing at. The Eastern Dark’s demeanor had shifted. Now, he stood on bent legs, as if he expected another attack to come at any instant. Linn wondered why he did not fight back.
“Surely you could turn it back,” Elanil continued. “My power is greater than the last time we met—”
“I have no doubt as to why that may be,” the other Sage interrupted. Linn still found it strange to listen to him. His face and lips matched Rane’s, but his voice could not have been further from the Ember king’s.
Elanil ignored him. “No,” she said. “No. I do not think it is my power you fear.”
“There is power here, Elanil,” he said, voice level and without a hint of boasting. “More than you know. You will see it, yet.”
“But it is not yours, is it, sweet brother? Could it be that you have joined in with the rest of us? Could it be that your power is now very much the same as ours?”
“Not many of you left to join.”
“You’ve done a good job of that,” Elanil admitted. “Still, the old Valour would have laughed in the face of my sorry attempts. He’d have accepted the blast and turned it back. That was your trick. That was your great and impregnable shield, and the reason why the rest of us—your hunted brethren—ever suffered you to live after you set the world on its path to ruin. Now … you run. You dip and dodge. You threaten with power, and not the unmaking of mine.”
“I am changed, Elanil,” the Eastern Dark said, voice grave. “But do not mistake things. This form holds power you cannot imagine, and I have begun to realize it, to mix it with my own.”
“I have fought the King of Ember once before.”
The queen’s voice changed. It was only for a moment, but Linn detected a simmering rage there, like a thin veneer of control resting over a brittle shell. She was in the past, now, and she did not think the Eastern Dark would follow her there.
“You fought him,” the other one nodded, “and it didn’t go well for you then. It most certainly won’t now.” He lifted one hand at his side, turning his palm up. His hand began to glow, and Linn expected a ball of flame to appear in the center. Instead, a globe of darkness bordered in red sprouted. The red turned to amber, flickering like a lantern, and while the sphere was bright, it seemed to steal the light around it, drenching the space around the Eastern Dark in his namesake. It was like an eclipse held in the palm of his hand, and as Linn watched, the ball began to lose its shape, the blackness running like ink and the fire leaking out in tiny serpents’ tongues that grew taller, licking at his palm and curling around his fingers.
Elanil did not laugh this time. Instead, she took another step back, lowering her hands to her sides, clenching and unclenching her fists. Linn could see the muscles of her cheek and jaw tensing. She felt the air change. Her clouds had begun to break apart, admitting more of the day’s light, but the space around the gap by which the Sages stood
seemed darker still.
“He took my beloved from me,” Elanil said. “Just as I took his.”
Valour opened his other palm and called up another torch of shadowfire. It was hypnotizing to look upon, and Linn both wished and feared to see what it would look like when unleashed, and what it would do to anything that stood in its path.
“Does he miss her?” Elanil asked, and Linn saw Valour wince. His purple eye lost some of its color for an instant, enough to admit a hint of the amber that the other showed. “Ask him, brother. Ask him if he misses little Resh. Brave little Resh, who fell so far.”
“He does.” Before Elanil could rise to it, he continued. “No doubt it gave him some pleasure to burn Galeveth away.”
Linn was blown backward by the force of the queen’s silent rage. A blast of freezing air hit her and sent her tumbling over the ice. She came up dazed, looking through watering eyes at the queen’s back. Her white hair whipped behind her and her voice lost all measure of calm. It sounded wrathful and ruinous.
“Over a dozen Landkist you sent against us,” Elanil screamed, “and only one with real bite. Now, here he stands. My dark and glowing prize. My embodied revenge, neatly packaged, delivered to my door. What sort of fool are you, Ray Valour, to bring him here?”
The queen’s entire form began to emit a ghostly light while the Eastern Dark’s drank in the surrounding bright.
“No games, Valour,” Elanil shouted.
“We can still stop this,” he responded, his voice a growl as he fought to maintain the frightful power gathered above the surface of his palms. Linn saw his boots beginning to sink into the splintering ice below. He was growing heavier, the shadowfire he gripped proving too strong to contain for much longer. “We can undo whatever it is you’ve done, Elanil. It isn’t too late to turn it back.”
“Power invites challenge,” she said. “It is a bright torch against the night. I didn’t believe you at the time. I didn’t listen. None of us did. But you were right. The coming of the World Apart was inevitable, and the only way to beat it is to use it. Power invites challenge, and the only thing that can stop it is greater power. I found mind, as you did.”
The Frostfire Sage (The Landkist Saga Book 4) Page 61