The Evermen Saga 01 - Enchantress

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The Evermen Saga 01 - Enchantress Page 39

by James Maxwell


  "At last," one of the bladesingers said. "We can face them on open ground."

  "Quiet," said Evora Guinestor.

  She turned to Ella. "My child, your work is not yet done. There is one more thing I have to ask of you."

  Ella paled. "What is it?"

  "Be strong, Ella."

  Without another word the High Enchantress removed her shimmering green silk robe, to stand only in a light underdress. Embarrassed, the soldiers turned away. The bladesingers looked on, interested.

  "High Enchantress, that’s your…"

  "It’s my gift to you, if only for a time. I have enchanted this with the greatest runes of concealment and protection that are within my ability to construct. Now, put it on, and place the hood over your head."

  Ella did as she was told.

  "You have the Lexicon. That is what is important. Contained within its pages are the instructions for renewal. We face an unknown enemy here, but with three bladesingers and my skill we may yet prevail. One must make plans for undesirable outcomes, however, so you are to stay hidden Ella. I will activate the runes of concealment and you will stay here. Do you understand?"

  "I do, High Enchantress."

  Evora Guinestor met Ella’s eyes. Ella saw compassion there, and understanding.

  "You opened the book, didn’t you?"

  Ella nodded.

  "Good, I am glad. Remember, all schools of lore are different facets of the same jewel. The one who understands that and applies it is the one who holds the world in her hands. Now kneel. Cover your head with your arms."

  Ella sank to the sand, ignoring its blistering heat.

  "Su-nam! Al-turak-ackour!" the High Enchantress chanted activation sequences, one after the other, in short, staccato syllables.

  The shimmering robe began to grow translucent. Ella knelt on the ground, completely still, her satchel inside the folds of the robe. Her head was covered, she could see nothing.

  She heard the sound of the men grouping into a battle formation. They moved away from her, still audible through the crisp desert air.

  A great roar sounded, as close as she had ever heard it. The creature was near.

  A tiny glimmer of light shone through a tiny gap in the robe. She looked out.

  Ella could see a crest of the desert, a long line of the sand outlined against the setting sun. Figures suddenly rose from the summit, like spikes from a barricade. Men. Many men. They were all dressed in white robes, a black sun on their breasts. They drew swords.

  "Men, draw swords!" it was the voice of Captain Joram.

  The templars ran down the hill, gaining momentum as their numbers pushed forward. More than five times the number of Alturans.

  One other figure ran at the forefront of the templars, a long dagger brandished in either fist. It was a woman, dressed in a billowing white dress. Her hair was a wild mess. She ran with a disconcerting gate that reminded Ella of nothing more than a bounding wolf.

  The woman opened her lips and screamed. It was the cry of the beast, the shriek of the night creature. Ella quailed and pulled the robe closer about her body. She trembled. All she could see now was darkness.

  She could hear the High Enchantress chanting. The Alturans cried together as they ran to meet their foe. There was a horrible crunching, rending sound as sword chewed into bone. Men screamed. A liquid squelching told of a man’s disembowelment. Explosions boomed. Ella felt the searing heat of flashbombs and prismatic orbs. Above it all the sound of the bladesingers voices rose as they called forth the power in their armour, as their swords became blades of flame.

  There was a hideous grunting sound, and then she could only make out two of the bladesingers voices.

  Then, moments later, just one.

  Remembering the High Enchantress’s activation sequence for the cloaking effect, Ella chanted under her breath, frightened and alone in the darkness.

  She listened for Evora’s voice. It was gone. She listened for the last bladesinger. Gone. She stopped her chant, lest someone hear her.

  There was one final clash of swords.

  Then there was nothing.

  She heard a soft crunching sound. A sniffing came from right beside her. Tears ran down Ella’s face as she trembled. Ella smelled a terrible smell, a fetid odour of corruption.

  Suddenly there was a mighty roar, a terrible scream of incredible power, a cry of triumph. Ella nearly screamed in fright.

  "I smell something…" a sibilant voice hissed.

  "Saryah, some Alturans ran over that hill, hunt them down," a deep voice said.

  "Yes…" the voice responded.

  The presence was gone.

  Ella stayed perfectly motionless, her breath still, listening to them as they searched the dead and dispatched the wounded. A man sobbed softly for help. Ella recognised the voice of the soldier who had handed her the water bottle. His voice was quickly cut off. The tears dried on her cheeks. She simply wanted the earth to swallow her, to take her out of this terrible place.

  "The Petryans wanted the body of the High Enchantress."

  "I’ll see to it."

  "Did you save one?" the deep voice said.

  "Yes, Templar. Here, their captain."

  There was a sound as of a body being dropped. Captain Joram! Ella held her breath. Was he alive?

  "Please," his voice was almost indistinguishable. He spoke with a strange gurgling sound.

  "Listen, man. You’ve got no legs. They’ve cut your arms off too. Next we’ll take your eyes. Why not tell me, where is the Lexicon?"

  "No," Joram said in a voice of indescribable pain.

  "Take his eyes!"

  Ella was forced to listen as they tortured poor, rigorous Captain Joram. He knew exactly where she was.

  He lasted through to the very end.

  For her.

  47

  The Emperor’s menagerie held all manner of creature. The lengths that had been gone to and the expense that had been incurred, well, it astonished me. I saw birds with plumes of feathers ten times as long as their bodies. Large furred creatures with tails and pitiful expressions on their round faces. Mighty lizards with mottled hides, and translucent fish that were born, lived and died in the span of a day. What insane system meant the Emperor could possess animals from further than I had ever travelled, yet none of these places were rendered on our maps?

  — Toro Marossa, ‘Explorations’, Page 38, 423 Y.E.

  THE bulk of their forces had left a week ago. The soldiers’ faces had been grim. They knew the coming battle for Ralanast would decide the fate of Halaran once and for all. The great horde of men and constructs had departed, leaving behind perhaps a tenth of their number.

  Miro had watched them pass. Dirigibles without number. All of the bladesingers but Miro. The still-functioning ironmen, woodmen, and bonemen. Alturan heavy infantry. Mortar teams. Halrana pikemen. Three of the massive colossi stormed off. The animator cages atop their great heads looked tiny by comparison.

  It was like some great exodus.

  Miro wore a different raj hada now over his green armoursilk. It proclaimed him a captain of the Alturan army.

  They had decided to make their stand at a place called Bald Ridge. The morning sky was dark — the colour of smoke. The colour of the great plume rising from the Halrana town of Sallat as it burned. It started to rain, a cold drizzle that pooled in the freshly dug earthworks to form puddles of mud. Miro looked back and forth along the line of men.

  "Would fighting two deep be more suitable, Captain?" Lord Rorelan said.

  It still felt strange hearing his rank on the man’s lips. Rorelan was a young man, perhaps three years older than Miro. He had a beaked nose and small eyes, but he seemed much more reasonable than many of the other lords Miro had met. Rorelan had looked the battle-hardened bladesinger up and down and then deferred instantly to Miro. He thought carefully through decisions they had made about their deployment and even made some useful suggestions of his own.

  "No
, My Lord," Miro said. "We occupy a long ridge, which gives us the advantage of high ground. We want to hold the entire face, so it is better for us to have a long thin line than a short deep one. The enemy will be seeking to overrun one of our positions and then come at us from behind. Men who will face an enemy down from a hill balk at being attacked from behind. If we allow the enemy to outflank us, we are dead in moments. Moments."

  "Ahem," Lord Rorelan said. "Hence the flying brigade then?"

  "Yes, My Lord. If there is a breach we need to stop it up immediately."

  Miro and Rorelan looked down at the plain below. The Black Army scurried about like ants. Miro could see mortar teams forming up under the cover of dirigibles. That was his greatest concern. If the enemy commander was clever he would concentrate his bombardment in one area then hit the same area with his troops.

  It was what Miro would do.

  There were five imperial avengers at the forefront of the mass of enemy soldiers. They were obvious by the way the soldiers in black stood apart from them, fearful of the monster in their midst. Miro could just make out their barbed flails. There was a great danger here, he knew.

  A man ran up to Miro, "Everything is ready, Captain."

  Miro nodded, "Well done."

  He looked again along the line of men. It was a motley collection of Alturans and Halrana. He could see heavy Alturan infantry, their scaled metal armour glowing silver, drawn swords ready to be activated. They would stop all but the strongest of the enemy. He could see Halrana pikemen, their mouths set in a thin line, their eyes steely with determination. But the line was mostly made up of regulars, soldiers with ordinary swords and spears, some with armour of metal, some with armour of leather, and some with no armour at all.

  Miro stood with Lord Rorelan at the centre of the line. Behind him was his carefully assembled flying brigade, men he had worked with, men he knew. When the time came, he would fight with them. And most likely, he would die with them.

  He met eyes with Rorelan, finding a surprisingly determined gaze looking back at him. The young lord wore his raj hada on his cloak. Underneath he wore heavy enchanted armour. The sword at his side was bright — it had probably never been used. Miro hoped he would stand. Nothing took away men’s courage like seeing one of their leaders run.

  There was a man in a grey cloak working his way through the line towards him. Miro frowned. Then the man reached Miro.

  "Excuse me, Captain," the man in grey grinned, looking up. "I thought perhaps I might join you here."

  Miro laughed and reached out his hand. The man threw off his cloak, revealing bright green armoursilk below. It was Bartolo. He laughed as well, clasping Miro’s hand in a firm grip.

  "Happy to have you. Very happy indeed. Lord Rorelan, this is Bladesinger Bartolo."

  "Always a pleasure to fight beside a bladesinger."

  "My Lord," Bartolo acknowledged.

  Bartolo stood beside Miro and watched the Black Army’s preparations below. He looked along the line and whispered to Miro. "What have we got, five thousand?"

  "Something like that," Miro murmured.

  "Against, what, fifty? Lord of the Sky, help us."

  "It’s nothing our young lord can’t handle," a grizzled soldier grinned, coming up behind them and taking a sip from a flask.

  "Tuok!" Miro gripped the man’s hand, smiling broadly.

  "Listen well to Captain Miro Torresante, men," Tuok called loudly. "If anyone can beat this scum, it’s him."

  A man came out to stand in front of the forward elements of the Black Army. He threw his head back and his jaws opened. Miro didn’t need to be able to hear to tell the man was laughing.

  It was Moragon. He pointed up at the hills, directly at where Miro stood. He made a sweeping gesture across the line of his throat.

  A horn sounded — three powerful blasts.

  The first wave of attackers surged forward.

  Lights flared along the line of defenders as runes were activated. There was a hissing sound as weapons were drawn from scabbards. Bartolo and Miro both stayed silent, they would save their song for the battle itself.

  "Tulak-mahour," Lord Rorelan murmured. His scaled armour began to glow. He activated his sword.

  Miro looked down at the running attackers. It was a testing push, a thin line of men meant to draw out any surprises the defenders had in store. Many of the running soldiers carried long wooden planks. Miro waited until they reached the spiked trenches, halfway to the ridge.

  "Mortars!" he cried.

  The air crackled as the mortars released their charges. The orbs vanished into the night sky. There was a moment of silence, and then the explosions began. Gouts of flame and earth poured into the air, followed by pieces of men. Many still managed to get their planks down before the second round of orbs took its toll. Then the attackers were no more.

  Moragon ran out in front of the army again. He shouted something and pointed his arm in the air.

  The horn sounded again, a long drawn out blast, followed by a short note.

  Ten-thousand legionnaires stepped forward. At their front were two of the imperial avengers.

  "Here it comes," Miro heard Tuok mutter.

  Miro signalled the two enchanters he had managed to request. They stepped forward. "The devastators. Are you ready?"

  "Yes, Captain. The gaps in the line of trenches?"

  "The gaps are there. Just release them at the places I’ve indicated and they’ll get through."

  The enchanters nodded and withdrew.

  Moragon dropped his arm and the legionnaires surged forward. Miro watched one of the avengers. It ran like some kind of grotesque puppet, lurching first one way, then another. The tendrils of its flail made it seem like some kind of many-armed creature.

  The mass of men swamped up the hill, covering its surface.

  "Release!" Miro cried.

  He looked back along the line. It was taking too long. What was happening? There was some kind of commotion along the line. He watched as the mortars took their toll on the attackers. These were legionnaires though — their glowing armour prevented much of the orbs’ devastating effect. They added more planks as they crossed.

  Finally, evenly spaced along the ridge, five great metal balls began to roll down the hill, their runes glowing fiery red. Each was twice the circle of a man’s arms in size. They gathered momentum as they rolled, and Miro prayed they would find the correct gaps in the trenches.

  He had measured it carefully. They had left gaps between the trenches, only two or three paces, so that the spheres would be able to roll through the trenches and into the mass of men crossing.

  He held his breath as they approached. Some had worried that seeing them approaching, many of the enemy would panic, reducing the devastators’ effect. But these were imperial legionnaires. They wouldn’t panic.

  One of the spheres fell into a trench. Another found a gradient in the hill and started to drift to the side, missing the line of trenches completely. A groan went up from the defenders.

  The other three devastators went through the trenches and into the mass of legionnaires who had yet to cross.

  The devastator in the trench exploded first, just as a score of men were crossing. They saw it an instant before they heard it. The hillside simply exploded. Earth and rock went in all directions, flying into the air in a huge cloud, obscuring Miro’s view. The boom as it exploded was deafening. The sound rolled around the hills like thunder.

  Miro watched as the wayward sphere followed the line of the hill, rolling steadily towards the main army encampment below. His heart racing, he willed it to roll closer to the main body of men. First rolling away from the men, the sphere hit a bump and turned back towards the enemy. Sensing its approach, they began to scatter. It touched the edge of the enemy force, where a group of artificers operated the Black Army’s dirigibles and mortars.

  Then within moments of each other, all of the remaining glowing spheres detonated. Even Miro had to put
his hands to his ears. Nothing could be seen through the smoke and dust. He peered anxiously as it cleared.

  Miro could see now that half of the hillside had been blown away. Perhaps two thirds of the wave of legionnaires had been wiped out. It meant the loss of their trenches. He hoped it had been worth it. Looking at the main body of the enemy, he saw they had lost scores of Louan artificers along with many of their mortars and dirigibles.

  But forty-thousand of the enemy still remained, held in reserve. Forty, to their five.

  With a roar, the remaining legionnaires came pouring out of the smoke, rushing towards the defenders. One of the imperial avengers came on, at the head of their wedge formation, like the point of a spear. It was missing an arm, the thin slit of its eyes glaring with menace.

  The initial testing over, the battle began in earnest.

  ~

  THE legion smashed into the front of the line, like a wave breaking on the shore. It was instant chaos, all sense of order lost.

  Miro and Bartolo were in the middle of the fray, the flying reserve unexpectedly embroiled when the legionnaires hit the middle of the line. If anything Miro was glad they had hit him where he was strongest, but he hoped the reserve would save some of its strength.

  The song of the two bladesingers held the men together; the glaring of their armoursilk and sparking zenblades was a beacon to guide them. To Miro’s surprise Lord Rorelan was in the thick of the fighting, parrying and lunging with a formal style that gave away his training.

  "Hold for me!" Bartolo cried. Miro braced himself.

  Bartolo leapt into the air, his feet hitting Miro’s shoulders and using Miro to propel himself an incredible height above the fighting soldiers. He landed next to the avenger.

  "Altura!" Bartolo cried. He was echoed by the soldiers.

  The men began to surge forward.

  "Hold!" Miro called. "Hold the line!"

  Looking over the heads of the enemy he could see another wave coming behind.

  Most of the men pulled back, those who didn’t soon found themselves alone. They didn’t last long.

  Miro ducked the swing of a legionnaire and thrust his fiery zenblade at the man’s stomach. Blood and gore sprayed out into his face. He quickly wiped his eyes with the back of his left hand then blocked a vicious overhand cut from a half-moon axe blade. He kicked out at the man, lunging into the space he created. His song reached a crescendo. He spun on his heel, the length of the sword arcing through the air. It cut through two spears and a shield. Three men went down.

 

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