Betrayal at Falador (runescape)

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Betrayal at Falador (runescape) Page 26

by T. S. Church


  “He’ll do,” Doric said, gesturing to the man with his axe.

  “I beg for mercy!” the wounded man pleaded when Theodore dismounted. “Please! I am unarmed!” His voice shook with fear.

  Theodore looked at him in contempt.

  “You Kinshra deserve only the same mercy you offer to others. But I shall spare your life today, for you are coming with us to Falador. If you cause me or my companions any problems, we will kill you.”

  “We should search him thoroughly,” Doric said, carefully looking over the man.

  “He will not need his armour-it will weigh down our horses.” Theodore forced the man to his knees and carefully cut the straps with Kara’s blade, mindful not to injure him. With a loud clatter the man’s heavy breastplate fell to the ground, followed by the rest of his cumbersome plating.

  They bound the man’s hands and sat him on one of the Kinshra horses that had survived the attack, tying him to the saddle and ensuring that the reins were secured to Theodore’s steed.

  “Where is Arisha leading us?” Doric called as they rode to catch up.

  “To the east, to Edgeville, I think. It is a full day’s journey, and the monks have little food with them.” Theodore spoke as if he disagreed with her decision.

  “Then where are we headed?” Doric asked, knowing that only one destination could be important for the squire.

  “We will catch up with them and make our farewells. Then we will ride on to Falador. The Kinshra will not be far behind.”

  It was fully daylight by the time they galloped away, leaving the cold light of the cloudy winter morning to illuminate the colder faces of their dead enemies.

  FIFTY

  “Dig him out!” Sulla shouted across the courtyard. His temper mirrored the weather, for it had started to rain heavily and he was in ill spirits.

  He looked toward the east wing of the monastery, which was smouldering now that the fires had been dampened. It seems the chaos dwarfs’ weapons have worked, he mused with a hint of satisfaction. He relished the idea of turning them against the crowded city of Falador. He imagined the streets running with the blood of innocents. Of women shielding their young, of the sheer helplessness of the knights in trying to protect their city from the falling shells.

  His reverie was interrupted by the yell of a soldier who stood over the collapsed wall. Sulla stalked quickly over as they shifted enough of the debris to locate their demonic ally.

  “Get him some water!” he spat. The nearest of his men ran to a fountain and filled one of the buckets abandoned by the monks. With a nod from his superior he emptied it over the werewolf’s dust-covered face.

  Instantly an agonized howl caused all but Sulla to back away.

  “It burns me!” the werewolf bellowed. “The water had been blessed by the priests of Saradomin.”

  Sulla glared at Jerrod furiously. He contemplated leaving the creature there, or perhaps emptying several more buckets of water onto him and putting the bricks back, abandoning him to starve to death.

  The werewolf struggled to free himself, pushing upward with a sudden strain. The bricks on top of him shuddered slightly in response.

  “Free him!” Sulla ordered, before leaving to commandeer a room for himself in the western wing of the monastery, all of which was untouched by fire and undamaged from his bombardment.

  “Wake up, Kara!”

  The voice sounded far away. She opened her eyes slowly, unsure of what she saw. The last thing she remembered was the stinging smoke in her lungs and the searing heat on her face.

  “Am I dreaming?” she asked, her voice weak. Somewhere nearby a man laughed, finding amusement in her confusion.

  “You should actually be dead. Both you and Gar’rth.”

  At the mention of his name Kara looked wildly about, but she was alone on the side of a red mountain under an eerily dark sky which obscured the stars.

  “Where is Gar’rth? Where am I?” Panic filled her voice.

  “Gar’rth is not required, not yet anyway,” the voice answered calmly. “It is you with whom I wish to speak. And do not be afraid-you will not be kept here very long.”

  “Who are you?” She found herself staring at a diminutive figure swathed in red robes. His eyes gleamed cunningly and his bent frame caused him to look up at her, a smouldering orange glint in his pupils. The man’s face was misshapen, his forehead swollen, and red sores were prevalent over his pale skin. He drooled somewhat, as if he were a fool.

  Yet Kara feared him.

  “Just an old friend,” the hunchback replied. “You do not know me, but I have watched over you for a long time. Since the day you were born, in fact.”

  “Are you saying that you knew my parents?” she asked, hope in her voice.

  “Alas, I did not,” came the answer. “But I do not wish to speak to you about the past. It is the future I am interested in. Look, there, to the east.”

  The man pointed, and she followed the direction of his hand. Then she gasped.

  The entire horizon was swarming with an army encamped. Never had she imagined such a mass of men and weaponry with their thousands of campfires, more numerous to her than the stars in the night.

  “Who are they?” she asked, awestruck.

  “They are your followers, Kara-Meir. If you wish them to be.”

  “Mine?” Suddenly she was afraid.

  “Yes, my dear. Yours. Think, Kara, about the past.” The voice was seductive, compelling. “The world cannot go on as it is. You feel hatred against the Kinshra for what they did to your family, and rightly so. But where should the true blame lie?”

  “With Sulla?” Her voice was faint, unsure.

  The small figure in the red robes shook his head patiently.

  “No, not with Sulla-for he is just a man. A victim like yourself. No, who has waged war on the followers of Zamorak for generations? Who strives for domination in the world at this time? Think, Kara-who has betrayed you?”

  Realization dawned as she understood what was being said.

  “The Knights of Falador used me” she said slowly. “It is they who…” For some reason she could not bring herself to finish the sentence.

  “They have hounded the followers of Zamorak for decades, Kara-and yet still they permit the Kinshra to live. The deaths of your family occurred not because of Sulla, but because of the Knights of Falador. Do you not see? They need the Kinshra to remain a threat to the people of Asgarnia-they need an enemy to justify their own existence. They could have destroyed the Kinshra years ago, if they wanted.

  “But they didn’t, and because of that your family are dead and you are alone. You know their lies and their hypocrisy-they endangered you to achieve their own ends. They are attempting to take over Asgarnia, making the people believe them indispensable by letting the Kinshra continue with their savagery. This is their plan.”

  Kara lowered her head in thought.

  “Let me show you something, Kara,” the man said, his mouth twisting into a macabre smile.

  And suddenly she was amongst the huge army of black-clad men, standing next to a column of horsemen who rode under a black banner. As they drew parallel with Kara their leader raised a hand and the column halted.

  “What are they going to do?” Kara whispered.

  “Just watch, Kara-Meir. They cannot see or hear you.”

  The leader spoke and Kara recognised the voice. For it was her own, although different somehow, harsh and impatient.

  “Where is he?” her voice said, as the figure removed her helm, shaking the blonde hair that fell loosely about her shoulders, her dark eyes flashing in the light. Kara gasped in amazement, for it was her-at least ten years older-who commanded the many thousands of men.

  “Here he is, my lady,” a guard shouted, dragging a man who wore a torn white tunic and whose long unkempt hair hid his identity. He was thrown before her horse.

  “Have you considered my proposal?” her older self asked, and to Kara’s ears there was a defini
te malice in her words.

  “I will not take up the sword again,” said the man whose voice was alarmingly familiar. “I vowed to Saradomin never to do so.”

  “Do not speak his name!” She spat the words, her face contorted in sudden rage. Her expression softened after a moment however, and even appeared gentle. “Tell me you will reconsider,” she ordered.

  “I will not, Kara,” came the reply. “You have kept me prisoner for years, ever since my order fell at your hands. My mind is fixed.”

  The prisoner suddenly wept and Kara, looking on, realised with a cold shock who it was.

  “It is a shame, for I had hoped you would join me in forging a better world. But I see it is not to be. I can no longer waste time on you.” She tugged on her horse’s reins. “Goodbye, Theodore, last of the Knights of Falador.”

  With a dark look she rode past him, nodding briefly to the guard who stood behind the kneeling man. She did not bother to turn her head as the guard brought his axe down, and she did not bother to look as Theodore breathed his last, his eyes looking to her as his life left him.

  “I would never do that! I will never become that!” Kara shouted in outrage. “This is a nightmare. No one can see the future.” She stared at Theodore’s corpse and began to sob.

  But the robed figure seemed not to care.

  “It is only one of many possibilities, Kara,” the hunchback said. “Think about the power you could wield-the power to change the world, to stop all this war and needless death. The world needs a saviour, Kara-Meir, and I am offering you the chance to accept.”

  Kara bent over to hide her tears.

  “Think about it, Kara-Meir. That is all I am asking. I shall come to you twice more before you need to give me an answer.

  “Farewell, Kara-Meir, for now.”

  And with a sudden gasp, she awoke.

  FIFTY-ONE

  The werewolf stood above the collapsed wall, covered in the dust that the stonework had left on him. Sulla’s men stood back, suspicious that he might require an infusion of human blood after the battle.

  “Lord Sulla wishes to see you,” one of the captains called, a hint of fear in his voice.

  The werewolf sniffed the dawn air. The scent of blood stirred his appetite.

  “There are some captives, or corpses, if you need to eat,” the captain continued, gesturing to three injured monks who had been unable to escape, and near them several lifeless bodies.

  “It must be fresh” the werewolf said, looking at the monks in contempt. They were small and bony men, and would not make for a satisfying kill. He said nothing more as he went to answer Sulla’s summons.

  “I have to say, my inhuman friend, that I expected more from you.” The words were said calmly, for Sulla had no doubt there were limits to the monster’s patience.

  “It is this place, Sulla. The power of Saradomin enervates me.”

  “Then why do you not eat, and build your strength back up? We have some captives.”

  As if on cue, a low moan sounded from the adjoining room, drawing the werewolf’s attention. He ducked under the low doorway and found himself in Sulla’s makeshift hospital, where two of his footsoldiers lay badly injured. The two men were young and strong, and the werewolf stared.

  Sulla noticed his greedy look.

  “I doubt very much either will live long. Take your pick but keep it quiet, for the men would not like it. And know this-the boy Gar’rth and the girl were last seen running into the inferno. I doubt very much they could have survived. It seems your mission is finished, so we will have to work out a new purpose for you.” He paused to allow what he had said to sink in.

  “If you wish, you can join the Kinshra, for your strength and abilities would be an asset.” Sulla stared at the two men who lay in contorted pain. “Think about it, while you eat.”

  The lord of the Kinshra walked silently away, pulling the tattered curtain across before returning to his planning. He tried to block out the sound of the powerful maw crunching a man’s bones into powder.

  Moments later the captain came bursting into the room in obvious excitement.

  “We have located more survivors, Lord Sulla!” he said. “It is the girl and the boy, Gar’rth. They are alive-trapped in a cellar under the archives.”

  “Take me to them,” Sulla said gleefully. At long last he would force the mysterious girl to tell him who she was, and why she had plagued his dreams.

  Gar’rth could not lift the beam that had shielded them from the falling debris. Now it prevented them from escaping. Kara had seen the black-armoured men look down into the pit and she knew they would return in greater numbers.

  “Kara! Help me!” Gar’rth said, straining at the beam once more.

  “I cannot reach it, Gar’rth,” she moaned, still weak from the smoke that she had inhaled. She looked upward to the grey daylight behind the charred black rafters that hung precariously from the burnt ruins. Her mind was numb and she was overcome by sudden terror. If the Kinshra were still there, then what had become of her friends?

  And what would become of Gar’rth and her?

  Suddenly she wept. She wept because the Kinshra had won yet again. They had destroyed her life years ago, they had defeated her in her first quest for vengeance, and they had sacked a monastery and murdered innocents-and still they went unpunished!

  “Is this what you want, Saradomin?” she asked, a futile whimper in her voice. “Is this all you can promise those who follow you?” She ignored Gar’rth’s stare and pulled her legs up under her chin and cried, overcome by the injustice that seemed so prevalent in the world.

  Suddenly a harsh voice intruded upon her sorrow from above.

  “It should teach you the value of worshipping false and weak gods.” Kara knew to whom it belonged even before she raised her tear-stricken face. Whether heard across fire or ice, the voice remained the same.

  It belonged to Sulla.

  “I will enjoy finding out about you, for there are many questions that I need to have answered,” he continued, sneering at them from above. “But it will not be easy for you.”

  He turned away.

  “Get them out. But mind the boy,” he added, impatiently.

  “The boy will not be a problem,” a voice said from out of sight. “Not while I am here.” This voice, too, was familiar.

  From behind Sulla the shadow of a large man emerged, his cloak and features stained in fresh blood, his red eyes staring triumphantly at Gar’rth.

  Theodore stopped again, attracting the frustrated attention of his companions.

  “Is there something wrong with your horse, squire?” Doric called uneasily.

  Theodore glanced grimly at Kara’s sword, and then back over his shoulder in the direction of the monastery.

  “You cannot go back, Theodore” Castimir warned him, strength returning to his voice in his eagerness to prevent his friend from acting foolishly. “If you go, you will die.”

  “Castimir is right,” Ebenezer added. “Kara and Gar’rth were trapped in that inferno. They could not have got out.”

  Theodore looked hard at the old man whose determination and science had saved them. Gone was the fool of an alchemist who experimented with chemicals and challenged wisdom passed down through the ages, replaced by a quick-thinking old man who had known instinctively what to do. He knew it was wisdom that training alone could not provide.

  Still…

  “How do you know, Ebenezer?” he asked. “Is it not possible that Gar’rth could have carried Kara to safety?”

  “I have thought long on that possibility but it is unlikely, Theodore” he said ruefully. “The Kinshra had guards on all sides. If they had escaped the fires, they would have been caught.”

  It was an answer that Theodore could not accept.

  The old man continued. “There is another reason we must return to Falador, Theodore. The knights must be warned of Sulla’s new weapons. The walls of Falador were built to withstand marauders and cavalry
-but not this new technology. If Sulla can make his way south in the next few weeks, then the city will be in danger.”

  Theodore nodded.

  “The knights must be warned” he agreed. “Take this to Sir Amik.” The young squire handed the alchemist Kara’s sword. “It shall convince him. Tell him everything. Mention Doric and me by name, and Kara. Tell him about the werewolf, also, for he shall be happy to know that the monster walks no more.”

  Without waiting for anyone to speak, the squire turned his horse around.

  “Theodore, this is madness,” Castimir despaired. “We only just escaped from that place!” He seized Theodore’s reins to prevent him from going any farther, but the squire took them back.

  “Goodbye, old friend.”

  Theodore turned away from Castimir to look at Doric.

  “You know my answer, squire,” the dwarf said. “I promised Kara to fulfil my vow after she saved me in Falador.” He nodded in the direction they had come. “Let us not waste any time.”

  And without another word, the two companions goaded their horses back along the path.

  Castimir gave Ebenezer an awkward look.

  “I should go too,” he said, knowing with a grim certainty that he could be of very limited use now that his runes were near exhausted.

  “I understand” Ebenezer nodded, smiling grimly. “But let me give you something first.” He reached into his saddlebags and handed over a pouch. Castimir groaned inwardly, wondering what chemical he would pull out this time.

  “Here, you will find them of more use than I ever did” the old man remarked with a subtle expression as Castimir opened the pouch. The wizard gave a yell of happy surprise, for inside were several dozen runes.

  “Where did you get these?” he asked, feeling the tears come into his eyes.

  “I am an old man, Castimir, and I have spent years travelling the world, attempting to unlock nature’s secrets. But I was not always a scientist, you know. When I was your age I tried my hand at wizardry-I just wasn’t terribly good at it.”

 

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