Williams, D M - Renegade Chronicles [Collection 1-3]
Page 86
Although outmatched, Othello knew he could take at least one more of the monsters with him to the grave. So…who will it be? he silently prodded.
The goblins seemed to be considering that very thing. They eyed his blade, slick with dark blood. Adrenaline or exhaustion caused the creatures to undulate before him. The shadows dancing in the distance were making him dizzy.
It was only when a second shaft planted itself just below his clavicle that he remembered goblins were wont to poison their arrows.
The impact sent him staggering backward, but he somehow managed to stay on his feet. The goblins kept their distance. With their toxins in his blood, he was as good as dead. They wouldn’t risk getting gutted by his knife.
He thought he heard a goblin laugh as he pushed himself, unsteadily, toward where the archer stood, reaching for another arrow. He dove at the creature’s chest with all of his might, planting his knife hilt-deep into the goblin’s body.
But his aim had been off, and the wound wasn’t fatal.
The goblin rained down a series of blows about Othello’s head and shoulders, splintering its bow for its trouble. The creature’s gangly arms possessed great strength. The howling, flailing monster raked its claw-like nails across his face before he could pull away.
Othello kicked out with his uninjured leg, connecting with the handle of the knife still lodged in the archer’s chest. The creature let out a pathetic yowl and pitched forward. Slumped but still standing, he turned to the remaining goblins.
None of them had made a move to help their companion. They were, at that moment, exchanging words in their strange tongue while glaring mercilessly at him. Then, as one, the four stepped apart and waited for him to come forward so that they could surround and slay him—or for the poison to finish the job for them.
Othello wiped the sweat and blood from his eyes with a filthy sleeve. The toxin burned in his veins, and he shivered in spite of himself. The ground beneath him pitched back and forth like the deck of a ship in a squall.
The goblins smiled in cruel delight. Confident he was no longer a threat, the four of them came forward, giving him a wide berth as they spaced themselves evenly on all sides.
Weaponless, nauseated, Othello fingered the wooden object he had unconsciously removed from a small pouch at his belt. With one finger, he traced the symbols that were carved into the reddish surface of the coin-like token. He didn’t know what the glyphs meant, but his father had insisted it was elfish writing.
He hadn’t asked his father why he had given him the token when he had left home. And he didn’t question his sudden need to caress the heirloom’s smooth surface. If it was a good luck charm, as he had long suspected, he needed its magic now more than ever.
Something sharp tore into the back of his shoulder. With a wild cry, he lunged at his adversary, groping for the goblin’s sword arm. It was all he could do to hold the blade down and away from him. As they struggled, he used his opponent for support.
Somewhere in the back of his mind, he wondered if he would have been able to defeat the hunters if they hadn’t drugged him. That thought evaporated when the other three goblins made their presence known, their jagged blades biting into his flesh.
Othello roared, but the sound came from someone—or something—else. He forgot all about his missing friends and the burning war camp as he grappled with the predators. There was only pain and the need to survive.
The primal game of kill-or-be-killed lasted mere seconds.
PART 1
Passage I
Alone in his private pavilion, Drekk’t wanted nothing more than to lie down on the worn-out cot, close his eyes, and pretend that day’s events hadn’t happened.
The stench of fire hung heavy in the air, though the last of the flames had been snuffed out more than an hour ago. Subduing the hungry flames had been no easy task. They hadn’t had a great quantity of water at their disposal. The general had refused to sacrifice the army’s drinking water, and thus, the fire had been left to burn itself out, consuming a good many tents—and soldiers—before finally fading dying.
Drekk’t’s army had reduced the island’s capital city and one of its fortresses to rubble. Neither battle had been easy. Those victories had come at the cost of many goblin lives, even though the humans had been caught by surprise both times. Yet tonight’s fire had caused more damage than an organized counterattack would have.
Of course, the blaze hadn’t started itself…
Though his scouts had yet to return, Drekk’t had little hope of capturing those responsible for the unexpected offensive. He was too exhausted to be angry. The humans’ audacity would not go unpunished—of that he was certain—yet for now, there was nothing to do but sleep and dream of revenge.
He was limping over to his cot when a freezing wind filled the tent, causing the rawhide walls to flap madly. Drekk’t reached for the broadsword at his hip, thinking the humans had returned. Then he realized what the unearthly breeze portended. His hand stopped halfway to his weapon.
His enemies had not returned, but he trembled nonetheless.
It was impossible to tell whether the tent flaps opened or not because an impossibly dark shadow suddenly occupied the space between him and the only way out. Drekk’t gawked, dumbfounded, as the coalescing blackness took shape.
The shrouded figure standing before him was roughly the same size as the general, though Drekk’t felt much, much smaller. Wrapped in a robe as dark as crow feathers, the newcomer exuded a tangible aura of power. So strong was the sensation it might have knocked him off his feet had he not already fallen to his knees.
“Arise, General.”
“Yes, n’Kirnost. Of course, n’Kirnost,” Drekk’t groveled, keeping his eyes downcast.
It wasn’t the first time he had cowered before the great personage before him. Before his providential promotion to campaign general, Drekk’t had taken his orders from another, one of T’Ruel’s many arrogant princes. Drekk’t had advanced in rank thanks to that prince’s costly mistakes.
These days, he took his orders directly from the top.
Drekk’t had many reasons to feel apprehensive before the Emperor of T’Ruel. Not the least of which was the Emperor’s intolerance for failure of any degree. Even if the general had great news to impart this night—which he certainly did not!—Drekk’t would have found it difficult to keep a tremor out of his voice.
The Emperor’s absolute authority in T’Ruellian society was matched only by his godlike magic. Drekk’t had no idea whether the Emperor had used vuudu to cross the ocean and visit him in person or whether he had created an illusion of himself to manifest on the island. Not that it mattered.
Drekk’t knew very little about how vuudu worked, and that was just fine with him. He bore no love for spells or the shamans who wielded them. He was a warrior. He won his victories through cunning tactics, relying on the sword and the strength of the arm wielding it.
As a rule, shamans did not impress Drekk’t. The Emperor, however, was the one exception.
“Tell me what has transpired here.”
Still looking down at the ground, the general took a deep breath and took a couple of seconds to search for words to describe the tragic events that had transformed his war camp into a scene of disorder and destruction.
His mouth refused to cooperate. He would have rather stabbed himself in his good leg than confess his failure to the Emperor, but outright lying wasn’t an option. Drekk’t had to practically spit out each sour-tasting sentence as he related how a handful of humans had sneaked past the perimeter guards, rescued a valuable prisoner, and covered their retreat by igniting the army’s stockpile of explosives.
He decided against mentioning the part where two of the humans had bested him in close combat, wounding him badly before making their escape…
The Emperor said nothing as the general imparted his ill tidings. When Drekk’t reached the end of his report, he was forced to wait several uncomfortable minu
tes before the Emperor spoke.
“And they all escaped.”
Unsure of whether his sovereign lord was asking him a question or stating a fact, Drekk’t muttered, “They did, n’Kirnost.”
The Emperor then made a noise that sounded like a growl. Drekk’t glanced up in spite of himself. His gaze was drawn to the only color within so much black. Deep within the Emperor’s cowl, two small orbs of fiery scarlet flickered like candles in a gale. Even though he knew the Emperor was a goblin underneath it all, Drekk’t felt as though he were standing face to face with Death.
Under the scrutiny of the Emperor’s unnatural eyes, Drekk’t was assailed by the sudden need to fill the terrible silence. “I sent my best trackers to hunt the humans down,” he added, “But all except one of the ghost-skins fled on horseback, n’Kirnost. They couldn’t hope to catch them.”
There was another long pause, during which the general could do nothing but squirm inwardly and remember how his predecessor, Prince T’slect, had been punished. If the Emperor could treat his own son so mercilessly, what chance did the general have of walking away unscathed?
Finally, the Emperor spoke. His voice was deep—deeper than any voice Drekk’t had ever heard. There was an echo-like quality to the tone as well, as though the Emperor were standing inside a cave rather than a tent.
“I am most displeased, General Drekk’t. T’slect’s incompetence forced our hand against the humans. You and your army have enjoyed two major victories, but your counterpart in the west has not fared so well. I have sent reinforcements to aid that army, but that is the last ship I send to this island until it has been conquered and annexed to T’Ruel.”
“Yes, n’Kirnost.”
“Is there anything else you wish to report before I leave you to clean up your mess?”
Drekk’t hesitated. He had glossed over another aspect of the humans’ raid on the camp. Now he wondered if the Emperor had read between the lines—had read his mind, for that matter—or if that question had been mere routine.
General Drekk’t summoned every ounce of courage he possessed and uttered the words that could well prove to be his last.
“Peerma’rek…it was taken by the humans.”
The temperature inside the tent dropped so drastically Drekk’t saw his breath pouring from his nostrils in frantic puffs. A veteran soldier of countless campaigns, Drekk’t counted himself among goblinkind’s bravest deadliest specimens. Yet given a choice between facing a regiment of berserker dwarves or the wrath of his sovereign lord, he would pick the bearded bastards every time.
Rumor had it that the Emperor was the son of Upsinous, the goblins’ patron god. Others said that he was Upsinous in disguise. At that moment, Drekk’t would have believed either was true.
“I promoted you to campaign general despite the fact that you were not granted Upsinous’s greatest gift,” the Emperor said at last. “Though you are not Chosen of the Chosen, I put my faith in your abilities as a leader and as a warrior. I lent you Peerma’rek, the greatest of the Goblinfather’s talismans, to make up for your shortcomings.
“It was a mistake to give you the staff. I should not have bestowed upon you the gift of vuudu when Upsinous himself deigned not to do so at birth.
“I do not enjoy being proven wrong, General.”
To Drekk’t’s astonishment, the Emperor did not follow his statement with a fatal blow.
“You lost Peerma’rek, and you will recover it,” the Emperor said. “If you do not, you won’t live long enough to regret it. I don’t care what it takes. Being the fine tactician that you are, I am confident you will find a way to accomplish both of your objectives…regaining the staff and conquering the island.”
Drekk’t could barely move his lips to reply. “Yes, n’Kirnost.”
The Emperor’s silhouette started to fade. The effect resembled nothing so much as a desert mirage vanishing upon closer inspection. The deep voice was as strong as ever, however, as it spoke some final words:
“You made the same mistake as T’slect. You underestimated the humans. Do not do so again.”
The red, unblinking spheres were the last to disappear, leaving Drekk’t alone in darkness.
* * *
A path cleared before Ay’sek as he strode through the rows of tents. The soldiers’ conversations ceased one by one, resuming only when they assumed he was out of earshot. He paid them no heed. They were unlearned louts, the lot of them. He was above them all, and they knew it.
On another night, Ay’sek might have strained to hear the resurging dialogues on the off chance a soldier dared speak ill of him. He couldn’t begrudge those born without Upsinous’s gift their jealousy, but insubordination would not be tolerated.
He knew he had a reputation for being short-tempered and rigid—even for a shaman. The goblins now bowing and averting their eyes as he passed by did so out of fear as well as respect.
But tonight he had better things to ponder than useless underlings. The quenching of the fire had been in no small part his doing, and the measures had taken their toll, leaving him weary and eager for rest. He had only just fallen asleep when the messenger—an obsequious imp, to be sure—roused him back from the realm of dreams.
Here and there, tendrils of smoke spiraled up to the heavens, which was an indecisive gray. Whatever late night or early morning, it was hardly an appropriate time for a Chosen of the Chosen to be disturbed. True, he was living in an army camp, but was nothing sacred?
The closer he got to his destination, the more irritated he grew. Gritting his teeth, he craned his neck in search of a tent unlike its neighbors. He had never had any use for Drekk’t, but after tonight, his estimation of the general had sunk to new lows.
When he finally reached Drekk’t’s pavilion, he did not hesitate. Sweeping past the sentries, he stormed inside the tent and leveled a look at the general that, he hoped, expressed the full measure of his displeasure.
Drekk’t leaned over a small, wooden desk, scratching at some parchment with a quill. The furniture—all of the pavilion’s accoutrements, in fact—were spoils of war, but whether they had been acquired from the wreckage of Rydah or taken from some other land, Ay’sek couldn’t guess. Drekk’t’s residence wasn’t lavish per se, but it was spacious.
Space, however, was a luxury in itself. Even Drekk’t’s highest-ranking officers shared their tents with others, and after tonight’s fire, quarters were bound grow even more cramped. The general lived better than anyone else in the camp—aside from a certain shaman.
“Ay’sek,” Drekk’t grunted, not deigning to look up from his writing. “Thank you for coming so promptly.”
Ay’sek narrowed his eyes. No, he had never liked Drekk’t. Smug, insolent Drekk’t, who held no regard for proper etiquette. Disrespectful Drekk’t, with his blatant disregard for Upsinous’s gift and the gifted. It was a wonder that some shaman hadn’t killed the arrogant brute long ago. Though murder was an unforgivable crime in T’Ruellian society, it was also dangerous for anyone to accuse another of murder—especially if the murderer were a shaman.
“Your lack of respect wears on my patience, General,” Ay’sek snapped. “You will address me as n’feranost or Master Ay’sek.”
Drekk’t looked up from his work, blinking stupidly, then dropped the quill and rose to his feet. He wore the expression of a sleepwalker woken in the midst of a late-night stroll, leaving Ay’sek to deduce that the general hadn’t meant any offense. Drekk’t was simply distracted.
But that only annoyed Ay’sek more. Most goblins possessed a healthy dose of fear for their betters. Drekk’t, however, was so accustomed to ignoring his place within the hierarchy that he lacked the instinct to kowtow.
“My apologies, Master Ay’sek.” Drekk’t gave a slight nod of his head, a sad excuse for a bow.
Ay’sek didn’t reply. He was curious about the document that had so captivated the general’s attention, but he wouldn’t give Drekk’t the satisfaction of asking about it. Inst
ead, he studied the warrior.
Dark circles surrounded Drekk’t’s dull orange eyes, though the rest of his complexion looked waxen. His grayish yellow skin had lightened to a color resembling the ash blowing around the camp, and while most all goblins hunched a bit, Drekk’t’s above-average build appeared to be too much for the general to support just then.
Forget spells, Ay’sek thought, I need only blow on him, and he’ll topple over!
Drekk’t’s wretched condition was almost enough to bring a smile to the shaman’s face. The general’s present state could well have been the result of the humiliation that the humans had dealt him, but something told Ay’sek that there was more to it than that. Come on and spit it out, he silently demanded. I don’t have all night.
Drekk’t tore his tired gaze away from Ay’sek’s and spoke. “As you know, the Emperor saw fit to bestow upon me the talisman Peerma’rek. You also know that the humans stole it from me this night.”
Ay’sek nodded, and now he did smile, albeit slightly. He had never liked the idea of Drekk’t—or any mere solider for that matter—possessing vuudu. Upsinous’s gift was reserved for the Chosen of the Chosen alone. He had often wondered why Upsinous suffered such a blasphemous tool to even exist.
Seeing Drekk’t with Peerma’rek had been like watching a rabbit test out a pair of wings. And it irked him even more to think of humans handling one of Upsinous’s greatest relics.
“I want you to recover Peerma’rek.”
Ay’sek scoffed. “And whom do you mistake me for…one of your witless lackeys? You were the one who lost it, Drekk’t. You retrieve it.”
Had anyone else in the camp spoke to Drekk’t that way, he would have been justified in skewering him on the spot. Drekk’t was the campaign general, after all. He commanded the thousands of soldiers that made up this battalion, and he would govern the combined forces of the eastern and western armies once the two regiments rendezvoused at the center of the island.