Book Read Free

Blinded by Power: 5 (The Death Wizard Chronicles)

Page 21

by Jim Melvin


  Torg started toward Invictus again. The sorcerer had torn away Rajinii’s breastplate as easily as parchment, and now he was strangling her with his bare hands. The queen grasped both his wrists and fought with what strength remained to her, but to no avail. Invictus was a giant among children.

  Torg’s entire body glowed blue-green. Energy ran up and down Obhasa’s white shaft, crackling on the rounded head like an oil-soaked torch set aflame. But when Torg approached within five paces of the sorcerer, he smashed directly into the yellow shield and again was cast aside. By the time he was able to stand, he saw with horror that Rajinii’s eyes were bulging from their sockets, and her arms were flopping about in obscene spasms.

  Torg cried out, stepped forward, and pounded Obhasa against Invictus’s magical buffer. The shield bent inward, but did not break. Invictus didn’t even seem to notice. Instead, he pressed the queen’s lips against his and kissed her as she died.

  “I will see you dead, I swear it,” Torg screamed, pounding Obhasa against the shield. “You disgusting, perverted freak.”

  The sorcerer dropped the queen’s corpse with a thud. Only then did he look at Torg, as if he had forgotten for a time that he was near. Then, a series of white explosions distracted him, and he jerked his head to the right and stared westward toward Jivita. The piles of dead bodies obscured what caused the flashes, but Invictus seemed to know anyway—and he smiled.

  “You see? Laylah loves me, after all. She attacks her kidnappers.”

  Invictus started westward. The bodies that littered his path—even the largest and heaviest—were blown aside when they came in contact with the shield. Torg shuffled after him, cursing, screaming, and striking with Obhasa from all angles, but the sorcerer gave him less heed than a Tyger might have paid a pesky sparrow.

  Torg gave up the attack and sprinted past Invictus, leaping over gruesome mounds of corpses and swerving in front of the sorcerer. Finally, he saw what he had feared most: an enraged, defiant Laylah doing battle with Kusala and the Asēkhas. But Torg knew this had nothing to do with Invictus. Instead, she was fighting to remain near Torg.

  “Laylah . . . no!” Torg screamed. “You must flee . . . now!”

  Then he realized that calling her name had been a mistake. Laylah ran toward him. Kusala dove into her and knocked her down. Then the chieftain tried to lift her onto his shoulder and run, but Laylah’s body lit up like a bonfire, knocking Kusala off his feet.

  Laylah scrambled up and ran again, shouting, “Torg! Torg!”

  “No!” Torg screamed again, but then a blast of energy more powerful than any he had ever experienced struck him from behind. As if a gigantic wave had swept him up, Torg was hurled forward and would have been carried far beyond where Laylah stood. But Podhana leapt from the side and caught his ankle, jerking him down. The billowing energy swept over Torg and the Asēkha and then continued on its way, passing out of sight and sound south of Jivita.

  Churikā snarled and charged at Invictus, heaving a pair of Tugarian daggers with terrific force at the sorcerer’s chest. Both weapons incinerated when they struck the magical buffer.

  Invictus said, “Hmmph!” and held up his right hand, palm facing outward. A thin but concentrated beam of yellow light struck the young Asēkha between her breasts, severing her spine as it exited her back, her corpse collapsing face-first on the turf.

  When Laylah saw this, she became filled with such rage that her long blond hair cast off sparks. “I hate you,” she screamed at her brother. “No matter what, I will always hate you.” Then she raised both her hands and unleashed a pair of white beams at her brother’s face. The beams struck the pale shield and penetrated several cubits, but not far enough to reach her brother’s flesh.

  “Laylah, I do this for your own good,” Invictus said condescendingly. “The last thing I want is for you to get hurt.”

  Another bubble of yellow energy broke away from the magical buffer and floated toward Laylah. Dalhapa saw it coming and leapt between it and the sorceress, but this sent the Asēkha tumbling. Kusala also attempted to stop it and suffered the same fate. The bubble fell upon Laylah and encased her, freezing her in place. The chieftain struck at it with his uttara, but in doing so, his blade was destroyed.

  “Lord, I have failed you,” the chieftain cried to Torg. “She is beyond my reach.”

  Invictus snarled. “Beyond your reach? What does that mean?” Then he turned to Torg. “What does that mean, Death-Knower?”

  Torg sighed. “Rather than become your slave again, she preferred to die.”

  “And you would have permitted this? Interesting. Of course, you know that I cannot allow this to go unpunished. As far as I’m concerned, killing my sister would have been an unforgivable offense. When traitors are caught in the act, they must suffer the consequences.”

  Torg understood all too well what the sorcerer meant. In a voice loud enough to shatter glass, Torg shouted, “Vikkhipati ca evati! (Scatter and flee!)” Then again, “Evati!”

  Torg did not believe the Asēkhas would obey, but to his amazement they ran—all except Kusala. Always prone to belligerence, the chieftain could not bear to abandon his king, no matter how clear his command. Then, Kusala did run, but when the chieftain stopped and plucked the Silver Sword from the ground, Torg realized that his longtime friend had no intention of departing.

  Invictus saw this too.

  “As my prisoner, you will be made to suffer,” the Sun God said to the chieftain. “The sword you hold will become your chain.” Then Invictus unleashed swirling beams of yellow light from his fingertips that crackled through the air, round and round, before enveloping the sword.

  Kusala cried out and dropped the blade, then stared in amazement at the palm of his hand, which was so charred he could see bones. In four centuries, Torg believed that the chieftain had never been injured so severely. But also for the first time, the sorcerer was meeting resistance he could not overcome. Invictus had intended to melt the Silver Sword so that he could mold it around Kusala’s body, but though the hilt-wrapping and crossguard quickly disintegrated, the blade and tang remained suspended in the air, unharmed.

  Beads of sweat erupted on the sorcerer’s forehead, and his cheeks were flushed from the intensity of his effort. Even the energy that held Laylah in place seemed to wobble. Torg took advantage and attacked again, punching Invictus’s pale shield with the glowing head of Obhasa. Blue-green fire dueled with yellow, sending out tendrils of power that squirmed around the magical buffer like probing snakes trying to find entry points in an invisible wall.

  Invictus seemed not to notice Torg’s presence, so intense was he on destroying the supernal blade. Then, without warning, he ceased the assault, causing the blade to fall and stick point-first in the soft ground.

  When Invictus turned on Torg, the whites of the sorcerer’s eyes were blood-red, and yellow mucus gushed from each nostril. Clearly, there were limits to his power, but would those limits make him vulnerable? Using every shred of his remaining strength, Torg poured his essence into Obhasa and blasted it at the sorcerer. The power that emanated from the Death-Knower was capable of leveling stone buildings. Slowly the sorcerer’s shield began to succumb.

  “Hmmph!” Invictus said, and he swept his arms upward as if tossing a ball underhanded. Another bubble of energy blew outward, knocking Torg off his feet again.

  Torg stood and prepared to continue his attack, but then Laylah was beside him, freed from the paralysis of her temporary prison. Now her entire body was aglow with her own white power, and from her fingers burst white beams that flared angrily when they contacted the sorcerer’s magical buffer. Torg joined the assault, bombarding Invictus with blue-green fire. Again the Sun God took a step back, then several. But to Torg’s dismay, the sorcerer managed to smile even while bearing the brunt of their power.

  “You have forced upon me an unexpected concession,” he said, his voice quivering only slightly. Then he raised his hands skyward and cried, “UЇhakālā, vi
ramāhi! (Heat, desist!)”

  An instant later, a cool breeze swept over the land, as sweet and glorious as spring. Invictus had released the spell that had turned Triken into a furnace, but the strength he had been using to maintain it flooded back into his body.

  “Now . . . where was I?” Invictus said.

  The pale-yellow shield encasing the sorcerer expanded, shoving Torg back. As Torg struggled to resist its growth, he saw within his peripheral vision a flash of silver streaking toward the Sun God. The supernal blade of the Silver Sword struck the magical buffer point-first—and punctured it.

  Invictus cried out and tried to dodge the weapon, but the ultra-sharp point punched through the sorcerer’s thigh and protruded at least a span out of the back of his leg. Crimson blood spilled out.

  Until then, Invictus’s defense had been nearly impenetrable, but now he fell to the ground and screamed in an almost childish manner, grasping the sword’s exposed tang in an attempt to draw the blade from the dense muscle. The pain distracted the sorcerer, and he lost focus. His pale-yellow shield wobbled, then vanished. For the briefest of moments, the Sun God was vulnerable.

  Torg and Laylah sprang forward to finish him.

  45

  DESPITE ALL THAT was occurring around him, Kusala took momentary pleasure in the cool breeze. But it was obvious even to the chieftain that Invictus’s release of the pervasive spell would make the sorcerer even stronger. If the Sun God were to be defeated, it was now or never.

  When Invictus’s fire had destroyed the Silver Sword’s handle, it had exposed the tang. Kusala grasped the tang, tore the point of the blade from the ground, and flung it at the sorcerer with the prowess only an Asēkha possessed. The point punctured Invictus’s shield and stabbed him in the leg, and when the sorcerer fell, his magical buffer vanished. Immediately, Torg and Laylah leapt toward Invictus, and for the first time since the Sun God had appeared on the battlefield, the chieftain felt like they had a chance.

  But then out of nowhere, the demon appeared. He had never seen Vedana with his own eyes, but he had been told enough about the most ancient and powerful of demons to recognize her. A black hole opened in midair, and she simply stepped out, incarnated as a slump-shouldered woman, her tattered robes and mottled flesh bizarrely translucent. Though she was old and gray, she appeared anything but helpless. Instead, her eyes blazed with crimson fire, and poison-tipped talons sprang from her gnarled fingertips. The demon leapt upon Torg like a rabid dog, and the pair rolled on the grass in a snarling tangle.

  Rather than attack Invictus while he remained vulnerable, Laylah chose to chase after Torg and Vedana. This amazed Kusala. How could Laylah waste such an opportunity just to aid Torg, who was fully capable of taking care of himself? Kusala screamed at Laylah to kill Invictus, but he realized his protests were in vain. It was obvious that madness had taken her. It was up to him to slay the sorcerer before the window slammed shut.

  The Sun God seemed not to notice any of this. His full attention was focused on removing the Silver Sword from his leg. His flesh glowed eerily, but the yellow flames seemed unable to encase the supernal blade.

  Kusala ran so hard he grew dizzy, attempting with all his will to close the distance between him and Invictus before the sorcerer could withdraw the blade. Just as the point was exiting the sorcerer’s flesh, Kusala leapt feet-forward to crush Invictus’s throat and chest. Few beings could have survived such an assault, but Kusala arrived a moment too late.

  The magical buffer reappeared.

  Kusala smashed against the glowing magic, shattering the bones of his ankles and lower legs. Then he dropped straight down and landed roughly on his side next to the Silver Sword, which Invictus had dropped disdainfully to the ground.

  Golden energy swirled around the sorcerer’s thigh, magically healing what had been a dreadful wound.

  Kusala sought to stand, but his legs were ruined. In a final act of desperation, he grasped the tang of the blade with the intent of driving the point into the sorcerer’s heart. The sword had pierced his magic once; perhaps it could do it again. This time, however, Invictus was better prepared. Before the chieftain could complete his strike, bolts of light as hot and dense as molten stone sprang from Invictus’s eyes, striking Kusala in the face.

  The Asēkha’s skull shattered.

  The journey toward his next life began.

  So ended the long reign of Chieftain Kusala.

  46

  LAYLAH HAD forgotten how much she despised Vedana, but when the demon incarnated almost directly in front of her, rage overcame her with such enormity that she lost her wits. Rather than attack Invictus and finish him, Laylah chased after Vedana, intent on destroying her.

  Laylah caught up to the unlikely pair and prepared to strike, but as quickly as Vedana had appeared, the demon vanished in a cloud of black smoke. When it cleared enough for Laylah to see, she discovered Torg lying on his back on the grass.

  “Our one chance,” he was saying. “She ruined our one chance. She stopped not just me, but you as well.”

  “I’m sorry,” Laylah said, kneeling and then cradling Torg’s head. “I could not bear to see you harmed by her. It . . . it . . .” Laylah could think of no more to say. The demon had once again used magic to defeat her.

  Torg’s eyes were blood-red. “It is over, my love. Kusala is dead—and we are lost.” Then his eyes closed, and he appeared to lose consciousness. Had Vedana poisoned him? Laylah could see no scratches.

  Then she heard Invictus approaching. The sorcerer was mumbling.

  “Grandmother, why did you come to my aid? If you had not intervened, they might have prevailed. Do you not wish to see me destroyed? Once again, your motives are beyond my comprehension. What are you up to?”

  Laylah stood and turned toward her brother, fully prepared to continue the fight. But when she saw him, her arms sagged to her sides. Invictus was healed and returned to full strength, his puissance as magnificent as a star.

  Then she saw Kusala’s headless corpse. She gasped. The sound tore Invictus from his reverie, and he focused his gaze upon her face.

  “Dear sister, you have led me on a merry chase. But now it is over. You and I will return to Uccheda. I’ve kept your room just how you like it. However, first I must deal with the Death-Knower.”

  “Stay back!” Laylah screamed. “If you take another step, I will slay my beloved and then myself.”

  Invictus halted. “‘My beloved’? I’m not certain I like the sound of that.” Then he smacked his fists together hard enough to create sparks. “I am your beloved. You and he spent a few miserable weeks together, but you and I shall be entwined for eons. Eventually, you will forget that he even existed.”

  Terrified and sickened, Laylah fought the urge to collapse into hysteria. “I shall never forget him. No matter what you say. No matter what you do.”

  “Aaaaaah, but you shall forget. Still, I won’t have you going around telling people that I’m incapable of mercy. So I will present you with a gift. Remember the tree that was so special to you when you were a girl?”

  “The one you twisted and deformed?”

  “I did no such thing. Your sycamore is the grandest tree east of Mahaggata. And just to prove to you how fond I am of trees, I shall create another for you. But first I must incapacitate you again. When you’re in this kind of mood, you are so difficult.”

  Laylah had no idea what he was talking about, but she didn’t like the sound of it. Meanwhile, Torg was attempting to sit up. “Wait,” she said to her brother. “Don’t hurt him . . . please! If you’ll leave him alone, I’ll do whatever you say.”

  “Leave him alone? After all he’s done? Lovely Laylah, I’m afraid I can’t do that. Besides, you’ll do whatever I say, regardless. Everyone does. I am Akanittha.”

  With a wave of his hand, a yellow bubble of energy again encased Laylah and froze her in place. She tried to scream, but her lips wouldn’t open. It was as if she were encased in a block of ice, only the ic
e was warm. The only things she could move were her eyeballs, though she still could breathe.

  To her horror, Invictus sauntered over to Torg. Now the wizard was on his knees, leaning against Obhasa for support. Before Torg could stand, her brother tore the ivory staff from his grasp and tossed it aside. But not before Obhasa flared, burning the sorcerer’s hand. Invictus snarled and then slapped the wizard hard in the face with his other hand.

  Torg’s head snapped to the side, but instead of injuring him, the slap seemed to shake him from his stupor. Torg leapt to his feet and launched a roundhouse kick at the sorcerer’s temple, leading with the toe of his boot. Any other human-sized creature would have suffered a cracked skull. But Torg’s blow never made contact. Lights flashed, flames flared, and the wizard’s bones seemed to crack. Torg fell to the ground and grasped his ankle. Laylah tried to scream, but only silence came from her mouth.

  “Hmmph!” Invictus said, as if amazed that Torg could have come even that close to harming him.

  As Torg writhed on the ground, her brother raised his right hand, spread his fingers wide, and began to whistle, the sound eerie and ominous. Tendrils of blackness oozed from Invictus’s ears, nostrils, and mouth. Then globules of golden fire encased his fingertips and coalesced into streams that sprang through the air toward Torg, incinerating his clothing and boots and enveloping his now naked body, causing him to squeal. Never before had Laylah heard Torg sound so helpless.

  In her paralytic state, Laylah shouted, “No . . . no!” But whatever sound she made did not carry.

  Torg’s deeply tanned skin bubbled grotesquely and then began to split, first down the center of his chest and the front of his thighs, then the sides of his arms and lower legs. Eventually his cheeks ripped apart, exposing white teeth. The wizard howled, as if pain more severe than any living being had ever experienced was blistering through his body. Magically, Torg was lifted and forced to stand upright.

 

‹ Prev