Most of Karak’s soldiers had died, overwhelmed by their sheer numbers. Their bodies lay strewn across the road, still in haphazard lines. Kayne, however, remained. The lion tore through their ranks, their chainmail nothing to his massive teeth and claws. The soldiers struck at his side and thrust for his underbelly, but to no avail. Kayne was too quick, too strong. A few pieces of rock had chipped off his side, and strangely enough, it appeared he bled liquid fire.
“To me, beast!” Darius cried as he came running, trying to sound braver than he felt. “Do not waste your time with pups when you could fight a wolf!”
Kayne heard his voice and turned. A deep snarl emitted from his throat.
“Traitor,” he rumbled.
To this, Darius laughed.
“I was loyal to Karak,” he said. “Karak turned on me, sent his followers to kill me, and now would have a priest sacrifice hundreds in his name. I dare say Karak’s the one who betrayed us.”
Kayne tensed, and his claws dug into the hard earth.
“You speak blasphemy and false truths,” he said. “I’ll tear your lying tongue from your head!”
The lion leapt, reaching his full speed in the blink of an eye. Darius fought his instincts to dodge aside, for Ashhur’s voice did not cry retreat in his ear, nor danger. It told him to stand. Trusting it, he thrust his greatsword to meet Kayne’s charge, putting every ounce of his strength into the attack. The lion filled Darius’s vision, throat full of fire, roar rolling against him like a physical force. But a light shone from his blade, and it grew, and grew. Kayne tried to bat the sword aside as he descended, to clear the way for his kill.
His paws sliced clean off instead. The sword remained unmoved. Mouth open, charge in full, Kayne fell upon Darius. The paladin’s blade went up to the hilt inside his jaws, the tip piercing out his back. Fire burned, and Darius felt its heat, but the light enveloped him, protected him. Rock cracked, turned molten and rolled in all directions as the creature howled and broke. In the center of the corpse, Darius stood, sword held in hand as the fire slowly dwindled away. He took a deep breath, then smiled. At his feet, the grass was burned black but for beneath the soles of his feet.
“Thank you,” he whispered, then lifted his sword high so all there might see its immaculate shine. Cyric had fled, the lion was dead; Ashhur had not abandoned them just yet.
24
Valessa did not know what to expect as she exited the shadow portal. She could barely think through the pain that filled her. Stumbling out, she fell to knees that became her arms, then her hands, then back again to her knees. Her form kept fighting, twisting, and she could barely remember who she once was. Her eyes opened, and she looked about. They were in rolling hills, the grass a pale yellow. Glancing behind her, she saw a river.
“The Wedge?” she asked. Was that where he’d taken her?
“It seems appropriate,” Cyric said. His voice was behind her, and with great effort, she turned to face him. Blood dripped from his hand, and more stained his robe from where the arrow remained embedded in his shoulder. His head dipped low, as if he were humbled for the first time in his life. Most frightening were his eyes: the wild, angry loathing that grew with every word he spoke.
“Is this not where we trap the monsters and other frightening creatures no longer of use to us?”
“Cyric?” Valessa asked, struggling to stand. She felt herself coming together, and pale skin started to form across the shadow that was her. “What are you doing?”
“Ashhur has stolen away my victory, but the blame is mine. Karak does not bestow mercy on those who deserve punishment.”
He lifted his hand, and from the center of his bleeding palm she saw stars swirling together amid a black void. And then the pain hit. It was different than when the light of Darius’s sword or Jerico’s shield touched her. That burned from the outside, dissolving away at her being. This was so, so much worse. She felt the very center of her soul cracking from within, her limbs shaking, her mind breaking into pieces as the very substance holding her together was taken away.
“I should have struck you down the moment I saw you,” he said as the pain increased. “The unfinished are all failures in Karak’s eyes, unworthy of a place of honor at his side. I gave you a chance, yet now we suffer. I suffer! Your burden was to kill Darius, and you did not, you worthless, faithless bitch! What you feel, that is Karak’s anger.”
His words were becoming a jumble in her mind. Her skin burst, and gray shadows bubbled to the ground. To her knees she went, clawing wildly at the earth. This was how he would repay her? She suffered in agony, denied an eternity with her god, and yet he would blame her for his own failures? Darius had defeated him as well. Where was Karak’s fury for him?
“Karak,” she whispered. “Please...Karak...save me.”
She prayed for strength, for escape from the torment, for the mad priest to suffer...but heard only laughter. Her limbs were gone, as were her legs; she was nothing but a writhing puddle of shadow struggling to retain form. Still she could see Cyric looming over her, nothing but hatred and faith. Yes, she saw it, his faith burning bright, his skin alive with ethereal fire. Karak loved him still, but why?
Then there was no love for her. Closing her eyes, she cursed her god, and fell through the world.
The rock and stone passed over her as she fell. Caverns and empty spaces flew past, but still she fell. She thought to fall forever, to see if at the very bottom she might find the Abyss her god ruled over. But instead she felt water, a great river rolling beneath the surface. This time she did not fight it, despite the horrible pain and discomfort it caused. She didn’t care for her form, didn’t care for her survival. It carried her for a moment, and then at last, she slipped from its current and into stone.
Something stopped her from falling further. The pain was ebbing, however little. Within the rock, her heart hardened, and with a tentative hand reaching upward, barely more than a tendril of smoke, she yearned for the surface. It was strange, the way it felt as she climbed, melding parts of her body with the stone to lunge higher. But she endured. Crawling, crawling, time meaningless in that darkness, the hours passed. Higher and higher. Many times she thought herself confused, and feared she crawled downward, but she fought through the disorientation.
At last, her hand burst through the grass, and like a woman emerging from a deep river, she crawled upon the surface. She didn’t know where she was, saw nothing but trees and thorn bushes in all directions, but it didn’t matter. The red star still burned in the sky, and she followed it. Hours passed as she ran, her form steadily regaining strength. Her surroundings grew familiar, and she realized she was on the correct side of the Gihon, thankfully.
On and on, to Darius.
The night was young when she found Daniel’s men camped at the outset of Willshire. Darius was among them, she knew, but they would not let her pass, not if they recognized her. Adopting the look and dress of a plain village woman, she wandered through them, smiling meekly at any who looked her way. In the center she found Darius’s tent, him sitting within it. His sword was at his side, but so far, it lacked its damnable glow.
“Darius,” she said, stepping within. He looked up from his bed, confused, but then she dropped the façade, and stood naked before him, her own body, her own face, with nothing to hide. He reached for his sword, but she did not move.
“Have you not had enough?” he asked, his hand closing about the hilt.
“I have,” she said, even as her skin flaked away under the growing light of his sword. “I promise you nothing, for blood remains between us. But that is not why I am here.”
She hated doing so, but she must. Valessa fell to one knee, bowed her head, and then looked up into Darius’s eyes so he might see the searing hatred in them.
“Help me,” she asked. “Help me kill Cyric.”
Epilogue
Cyric wandered further into the wild lands trapped between the rivers. There were many creatures there, he knew. He�
�d read the books, seen the maps. When the gods’ war had sundered the land, Ashhur and Karak had given strength and form to the beasts so they might fight as soldiers. But now the creatures had abandoned their gods, or was it their gods who had abandoned them? He didn’t know. He didn’t care.
The camp of wolf-men was small, but it would grow larger with time. He trusted his strength, the strength of Karak. Darius was only a dying vessel, one of the last paladins of Ashhur that his enemy might throw at him. Desperate, and wild in faith. Such a man would fall in time.
At the edge of their camp the weaker wolf-men slept. Cyric stopped just before them, for he knew his scent would alert them soon. Growls confirmed this. The first to see him snarled, leapt from his sleep, and attacked. Cyric waved his hand, crushing his throat with a heavy stone made of shadow. Two more leapt at him, and with a word he burst the blood from their eyes and nostrils.
“I have not come to fight,” he told them as more and more gathered. “Where is your leader?”
“I am pack leader,” said a large wolf-man, pushing through the rest. His claws were sharp, his whole body lean with muscle. Cyric smiled at him.
“My name is Cyric, priest of your god, Karak, the god you worshipped before you turned to the moon and in falseness gave her your faith.”
“You speak lies,” said their leader. “I will enjoy the taste of your blood on my tongue.”
“Try, if you wish. The strongest leads the tribe, after all.”
The wolf-man feinted a direct rush, then circled to the side before leaping. It was a clever move, but Cyric did not fall for it. Clapping his hands together, he summoned manacles born of dark magic. They broke through the dirt and wrapped about the wolf-man’s wrists and ankles, slamming him to the ground. All around him, the rest of the tribe yipped with fear. A small tribe, maybe thirty at most; Cyric knew they would be the first of many. And he also knew that, as a human, he could never inspire their complete loyalty. He looked down at the captured wolf-man, then knelt mere inches from his snapping teeth.
“I will give you great power,” Cyric said. “All you must do is accept the love of Karak, and swear your life to me. Can you do that? If you do, I will increase your tribe to a thousand strong. At my side, you will fight as we retake the north in Karak’s name. Heathen men will die before you, and your feasting will be great. What do you say?”
The wolf-man looked up at him with startling intelligence in his eyes. The tribe fell silent as they waited for an answer from their pack leader.
“I will serve Karak, if Karak will lead us to blood and battle,” he said.
“Excellent.” Cyric banished the chains. “Rise, wolf, and tell me your name.”
The creature rose to his full height, towering over him. His voice deepened as he spoke, a heavy growl eager for conflict.
“Redclaw,” said the wolf.
Luther knelt before his bed, hands clasped in prayer. They were not far from Lord Sebastian’s castle, and he expected an envoy from him at any time. Not that it would matter. His host marched beside him, and Sebastian’s army had been left tattered and in ribbons. If Sebastian wanted to retain power, he would have to turn to them, regardless of his own feelings.
“All for you,” Luther prayed. “All I have done, I do for you. The lawless shall be broken upon the immovable law. In time, the North will be yours, not just in heart but in deed and law. May I remain strong, and break the will of Sebastian. We have left him nothing, as you desired. Let him know his strength is in his loyalty to Karak, not his own might and men.”
Movement at the entrance of his large tent alerted him to a man’s arrival. Luther turned, saw one of his paladins holding a scroll.
“My priest, forgive me,” said the paladin.
“Yes, Grevus?”
The paladin crossed his arms, and he looked uneasy.
“We’ve received disturbing reports from the towers. It’s about Cyric.”
Luther sighed, and with a groan, rose from his knees.
“What has my pupil done now? Don’t bother reading the message, just tell me.”
Grevus’s cheek twitched.
“We hear he’s overthrown Sir Robert at the Blood Tower, and also assaulted the village of Willshire. Worse...I do not know what to make of this, my priest. Perhaps the messenger lies, or has heard wrong.”
“Out with it,” Luther said, feeling anger growing in his breast.
“Luther, among many other things, it says Cyric preaches that he is Karak made flesh, now free to walk the land and remake it in his image.”
Luther swallowed, his throat suddenly dry. He nodded to the lengthy message the paladin held in his hand.
“Tell me everything.”
A note from the author:
I love writing these. Besides the obvious reason (yay another book finished and ready for readers!), these little notes are my chance to sit down, and for maybe a page or two, chat about the work, and try to decide how I really feel about the story. Of course, nearly every author can talk forever about their characters, just like most parents can talk forever about their children. I’ll try not to bore you too much, nor will I pull out the wallet photos.
So what have I really learned from Old Ways? Two things. One, no matter if it is the Paladins or the Half-Orcs, Jerico’s life often sucks. He’s such a fun punching bag, I can’t help it. Two, Darius is the man. Parents may have to love their children equally, but I don’t have to when it comes to my characters. Some don’t live up to expectations. Some cause problems, and keep demanding attention. And then there’s Darius. This was supposed to be a series devoted to Jerico and his back-story, but more and more it feels like he’ll be stuck in Darius’s shadow. The highlight, though, is their interaction, and I’ll make sure they meet up once more in what I believe will be the fourth and final book of the paladins.
I wrote earlier about how difficult Clash of Faiths was to write. Looking back, the dark tone was probably much of the reason, an overall grim feeling that, until the last few chapters, I was uncertain whether or not would be denied. But I’m happy to say this one was so, so much easier. Darius might have his struggles, and life isn’t a cakewalk for Jerico either, but they’re friends now, and united once more against a common enemy. I don’t know if this affected the story in any way, but I’m damn proud of it. Every book I release I feel confident it’s the best one I’ve ever done, but with this one, I’m doubly confident.
Which means it might suck all the harder, but hey, if you made it this far, you at least finished the story, so that’s still a partial win.
Some of you might have noticed how much longer Old Ways was compared to the previous two. That wasn’t intentional. The Paladins series was my attempt to write some shorter, more laid back stories, more fun and less carnage than say, Shadowdance. Well, the story is getting longer, and the emotional stakes have grown far, far beyond what I ever expected. Hopefully you’re all happy about that, because it caught me off guard. As Old Ways progressed, I started realizing just how much the scope was widening, and how much more story there was lurking beneath my original ideas. So when I say the next novel should be the last, don’t take that as a guarantee. It might not be. I won’t know until I write it. Darius and Jerico might end up with other plans...
Some quick shout outs. Thank you, Ramsey, for the awesome maps. I know a few fans should be rather happy about that. Thanks Peter and Terry for the cover, Derek and Ashley for the editing, and Rob for the early critiques to see if I was keeping the story on track. And last, but certainly not least, thank you, dear reader. It’s not always fun and games, but I do it for you. I’m a man dancing on the stage, and I’ll keep doing it long after the spotlight is off, so long as there’s a few of you out there still entertained.
David Dalglish
December 31, 2011
The Broken Pieces
1
In the Castle of the Yellow Rose, Lord Sebastian Hemman stood staring at his throne. Upon the wood of the chair he’d ha
ndsomely paid an artist to stencil in various lions, all roaring and clawing with sharpened teeth and claws. The cushions were red, and sewn in golden colors were two symbols. One was of the rose, his banner, the other another lion. His entire seat of power, the representation of his divine right to rule, was nothing but a declaration of his faith in Karak.
Except he felt no faith, only fury. His thin hand dug into the cloth as he entertained thoughts of tearing off the stitching with his bare fingers.
“Milord?” said a guard, stepping through the doors into the grand hall.
“Have they finally arrived?” Sebastian asked, not bothering to turn around.
“The priest has, if that is who you mean.”
“Who else would I mean? Leave me, and send the bastard in. Just him, and no others.”
Sebastian sighed and settled into the throne. It felt like the carved lions bit at his hands, and the stitching growled at his back. The guard hurried away, as if afraid of his master’s ire. Not that Sebastian blamed him. He’d hanged two men the day before, peasants stupid enough to be overheard speaking ill of him. It’d done nothing to improve his mood. Nothing would. Karak had betrayed him. Despite his loyalty, his devotion, and most importantly, his exorbitant tithes, the god of Order had sealed his doom in his war against his rebellious brother, Arthur.
The doors opened again, and in stepped the elderly priest, Luther. They’d met several times before, though never for long. Something about his manner made Sebastian feel like a child waiting to be exposed for the lies he’d told. Luther slowly approached, walking between the many empty tables. There’d be no feasting, not for several years. Most of the men who’d raised cups to Sebastian’s name were now dead, crushed by Luther’s army of mercenaries and paladins.
The Paladins Page 62