Time resumed its slow crawl. Nük T’nyr saw every movement around him from the sweep of a blade to the raising of an arm in exacting detail. He moved within the sweep of blades yet outside their grasp. He swept right, rending flesh from bone through armor. He crushed back and down with his banded elbow, knocking a warrior from his mount. He took more blows straight on, stepped back, used the edge of his shield to decapitate the onrushers.
He heard shouts behind him, too full of rage for any but his Slaedwa. A hundred Empyrjurin clanged their way forward.
He cried his outrage into the dark sky. His great battle sword ran with blood and his scorn-filled laughter gave his armies renewed hope. The Jurin peoples would rise again.
2
By the eve of the battle’s twelfth day, the black walls were but a half league distant. Nük T’nyr, surrounded by his Slaedwa, led the charge toward the gates. Praefect L’kohn and his Scarabaeid followed. To the east and south, Kha’el D’erth’s forces held back enemy reinforcements who emerged from waygates that disappeared as suddenly as they appeared. Their force of a hundred and fifty thousand proud Jurins was halved, but they were no less determined.
Once they were within the shadows of the walls, Fhurjurin began tunneling as Styrjurin kissed the heavens with lightning and storm. Monsjurin and Hylljurin kept their places to the rear and continued to batter the city’s great structures with their machines of war.
Nük T’nyr spoke a blessing to the sacred eum and to G’rkyr the Merciless, namesake of his heir. Those who defended the space between his forces and the gates were Drakón. While the flyers were his greatest concern, those who walked, crawled, and slithered were no less treacherous.
To his right, Stutk, the Slaedwa Commander of Crims, took a blow that would have sundered any lesser. Nük T’nyr retaliated on the other’s behalf with a deep thrust past thick scales to the heart, felling the Drakón even as its great wings beat upon the air seeking escape. Stutk in a blood rage cleft the Drakón’s head from its body then raised the severed head with both hands and hurled it over the wall. The dragon’s blood was still hissing in the flames of Stutk’s flesh when he set upon the next in the line.
Shouting out in glee and praise, Nük T’nyr did likewise. He had only taken a few steps in his charge when an unnatural shift between the heavens and the earth caused him to break off. He looked upward expectantly, and when he did, Praefect L’kohn set upon him. So certain was he of betrayal that his blade was buried in flesh before he could stop himself. An instant later, the heavens shattered as curtains of fire rained down and the earth quaked as it was rent and torn.
It seemed as if Tenhol itself would break. Nük T’nyr steadied himself by digging his blade into the earth and holding on with both hands. Rifts in the earth opened and widened, even as they were filled by burning curtains of slitrain. Blackwind of a thickness and type he had never seen followed, choking and strangling as it went.
“More damned Drakón trickery,” Stutk said as he hunkered down beside his king.
Nük T’nyr cursed in rage and frustration, and the blackwinds and slitrains came even harder. “Da’m te nurrin,” he said to honor those who died by the hundreds, for even the mightiest of the Scarabaeid could not push these magics aside completely.
He wondered that he and those close to him were untouched only for the quick moment it took him to find Praefect L’kohn and stare into the other’s dying eyes. There was a certain satisfaction in those eyes, a smugness that Nük T’nyr understood. “Hurren var de’trod. Kurhri, kurhri, kurhri,” Nük T’nyr chanted. Words of the ode to the last free king.
Stutk, matched by Rwenwik, Slaedwa Commander of Kals, stood and took up his king’s words. Others followed. Soon the fields were alive with the sounds of the ode lifting over the sounds of death. The Drakón waiting to charge in after the storm ended were met by Jurin with blood and fire racing in their veins.
The fighting continued through the long tolls of the night. Morning found Nük T’nyr with the taste of blood in his mouth. He spat fire as he sought to rally his people. “My father’s father lived and died enslaved to the Drakón,” he shouted. “Soon we will know freedom and the Drakón will atone for all they have done.”
Rwenwik to his left replied before Stutk, even as both matched slitherers fang for fang with their swords, “And we will win. And I will be honored to stand at your side.”
“G’rkyr willing,” Stutk grunted.
Rwenwik lashed out as he spoke, “I am my own master and the Merciless will have nothing to do with it, though perhaps D’rk’r the Dark will.”
“Indeed,” Nük T’nyr shouted as he moved between the two, his blade dancing in his skilled hands.
Kurl’k, L’kohn’s former second, was close behind. He paved a path over the rifts and kept stray magics away as the group made their way toward the gates. “L’kohn saved the last,” he said quietly to his king. “Your steel, our magic, together as it should be.”
“I am more a believer now than ever before,” Nük T’nyr said, to settle an old matter between them.
“I am doubly blessed then, and I pledge to you as L’kohn pledged to you.”
Nük T’nyr dug in to a particularly large slitherer. Blood and flesh flew as it was hewn. “I accept your pledge, though I still wonder at the need for it.”
“Scarabaeid do not go to war with our kings. We choose freely.”
Nük T’nyr threw his head back and laughed. “And yet you do. And yet you have for millennia.”
“By choice, not by burden of duty.”
Stutk shook his head. “All are here by choice, not by burden of duty.”
Rwenwik blinked at him, at his boldness. Nük T’nyr voiced approval before the other could speak. “I see how it could seem otherwise given L’kohn’s ways and his service with my father. But really—” He stopped, for a sudden exclamation had gone up among the Jurin, a mass cry of rejoicing that moved oddly from the rear.
Nük T’nyr could not see over the black walls, but he could guess at the turn of events that brought such cheers. The tunnelers had broken through—or so he hoped. Hardly feeling his fatigue, his belly light and his thoughts clear, he led another push toward the gates. The press of bodies closed as the Drakón surged forward, and Nük T’nyr’s own Slaedwa, eager for more killing, slammed into him as they made their way forward.
Seeing smallfolk now among the Drakón, Nük T’nyr took Grækor in his right hand. With his left hand he drew a short blade from his belt. He worked his way forward with the smaller blade thrust back and angled down to keep the smallfolk from stringing the tendons in his legs, occasionally sweeping it forward to clear a path before his kneecaps.
Suddenly something hit his head so hard his ears rang. Thick claws knotted his hair and his feet were no longer on the ground. He kicked the air as the Drakón drew him up by the scalp. Thinking quickly, he hurled his short blade heavenward, then with Grækor in both hands he thrust up with all his might.
Bellowing, the Drakón dropped him. Nük T’nyr hit the ground, rolled to his feet, and came up with his blade. He killed the beast and went on.
The moment stretched out. He saw every detail, felt every shifting of the air around him. The Drakón slithering before him had teeth as long as his forearm. They glistened white.
He shouted at the repulsive beast, blocked a blow, gave back with his blade. The creature was dark gray, almost black. Its hide was as thick as the best Jurin armor. Its eyes were as big as his fists.
He wrenched his sword from the hide, drove the blade in again and again, trying to work it between the overlapping plates. He grunted satisfaction as hide and scales and flesh parted.
The beast toppled. He ripped his sword free, prepared to move on, but realized there were no more foes between him and the gate. All he could hear were his own heavy breaths.
Everything seemed to stand still. There was a sound like the dry wind that blew through his mountainous homeland. A new tide swept up from behind him,
a wall of shouting Jurin, thousands racing forward, and as he looked on, the gates swung open.
He realized he could no longer hold his arms up for more killing, and as his legs gave way, Stutk and Rwenwik caught him.
“You’ve done it,” Stutk said. “The city will be ours by day’s end.”
“The great ones flee,” Rwenwik said, pointing out the mass exodus borne on wings and air ships.
“Not him,” Nük T’nyr said. “He will not flee. You’ll find him in the lower keep. Go now, take the glory.”
3
Stutk and Rwenwik found the Drakón lord just as Nük T’nyr said they would. Nük T’nyr prepared for their return by cleansing himself of blood and sweat and donning his ceremonial armor. They came for him in the middle tolls of the night.
“He waits for you,” Stutk said. “You should have been the one to take him. The honor and glory should have been yours.”
“Such was not mine to take,” Nük T’nyr managed as he stood. “Not just for the one, for the many, for all Jurin.”
Nük T’nyr raised his glass to Kha’el D’erth. Kha’el D’erth stood and raised his glass in return. “Strength and resolve.”
“Indeed,” Nük T’nyr said, emptying his glass. He took his sword from the smith who had cleansed and oiled it, then dismissed those attending him. “Her ladyship?”
“Dead, by his hand I’d expect.”
“I’d expect so too.”
He left his pavilion with his Slaedwa commanders on either side and Praefect Kurl’k a step behind. He crossed the distance to the inner keep quickly, almost methodically. It was a path he had not forgotten in a thousand cycles. He walked it with his head held high, a sword in his belt and a crown on his head. It was a stark contrast to how he had walked it before at his father’s side.
He climbed the bloody steps, entered the keep. Inside his people were making way for him. Having cleaned up the worst of it, they pulled away carcasses to be hacked and hewn. He felt the power in the halls, so much so it was as if they were bathed in magic and not in blood.
Nük T’nyr felt victory in his heart, and knew it was not just a whispered thought when they came to the great hall and saw the great one lying prone on the floor. He was free now no matter what happened from this day forward.
Though he had not spoken, the dragon lord must have sensed his presence. In the hall was writhing and screaming like to wake all the gods. But the sounds did not come from the great one—they came from his sequestered servants.
Nük T’nyr could have brought silence with steel, but instead used words. “Your power is broken, your army is scattered, and your great city is in ruins. I offer exile in place of death.”
The Drakón lord fought to a sitting position despite his captors’ efforts to keep him prone. He spoke words like a viper swooping in on its prey. The sound that catches you unaware just before deadly jaws snap and venom pumps. “I offer you the chance to be raised anew,” he said, “A choice for life instead of death.”
Nük T’nyr threw back his head and laughed. His laughter echoed throughout the whole of the great hall and beyond. “I am amused at your impudence. At my gesture, you are dead. I will think of you no more than you’ve ever thought of me or mine.”
“Oh, you’ll think of me. You’ll think of me and you’ll curse this day to the end of yours. What you’ve set in motion cannot be undone. You were born slaves. You will die slaves. You have merely to embrace your new masters.”
“I am my own master from this day forward,” Nük T’nyr said, and then with his sword he took the thing he had long sought.
The Drakón lord convulsed in response. He did not speak again, though his was a slow death.
Near the end, Nük T’nyr carved out the other’s table-sized heart and watched it beat its last beat. He turned to regard his commanders and the praefect with the heart gripped in both hands.
Stutk and Rwenwik fell to their knees. The dozens behind them followed. The hall fell to silence. Only Kurl’k dared to meet Nük T’nyr’s gaze.
“They would not give us freedom, so we took freedom for ourselves,” Nük T’nyr said. “Today is our Day of Atonement. From this moment forward, we shall know only freedom or death. And death in support of freedom is glory.”
The voices raised in reply filled the hall and were almost deafening. A chant of praise issued forth, honoring Nük T’nyr. Nük T’nyr chanted back the name of the most honored fallen. “Ghul Rwern, Ghul Rwern, Ghul Rwern,” he began, and he continued through the long list of those who had died bathed in glory.
Daybreak found him in his pavilion, readying the next attack before the enemy could regroup and counting the steps he must take before rising against the next seat of the empire. Kha’el D’erth was there with him through the small hours as were Stutk, Rwenwik, and Kurl’k.
Chapter 15
1
Yarr spun around, fearing treachery in the sound of steel behind him, but the Trykathian cavalier and his followers were not threatening him. Instead, he realized they had noticed what he had not—a group of Monsjurin off to the left, walking their way.
They were dressed all alike, in chainmail shirts over crimson robes. They had great widowmaker swords slung across their backs though none had donned their plumed helms.
Xerc resheathed his sword and his followers did likewise. “Guardians of the Wanderer,” he said. “The Order of Noble Yrenil.”
Yarr nodded and said nothing, but he kept his hand near his sword. While he trusted the flag of respite that flew in the training grounds, he had learned the hard way that nothing was ever as it seemed and nowhere was truly safe.
They stood and waited for the Monsjurin to arrive.
The leader was enormous, with a bushy black beard nearly as long as Yarr was tall. He held up a hand in greeting and spoke in clear Trykathian. Cavalier Xerc answered, and they seemed to have an argument. Then the guardian turned to regard Yarr.
“I am Guardian Jdost,” he said, in Cikathian now, “come to battle for honor and glory and freedom. Cavalier Xerc tells me you are a Supremator. I disbelieve.”
Yarr held back a grin. None of the Jurin peoples ever came to Cyvair of their own free will. Still, he guessed the alternatives were worse for a warrior people. “I am,” he answered.
“It is not possible. I step on you and you are dead.”
“That may be so,” Yarr said, turning to walk away.
Jdost unsheathed his sword, slammed it into the ground to block Yarr’s retreat. The flat edge of the sword was as wide as Yarr himself. The hilt beyond stood several spans above Yarr’s head.
Yarr turned back to the Monsjurin, pointed to the drab gray flag flying over the field. “The flag of respite,” he said. “No training. No sparring.”
“I am promised nine killing days, and on the tenth freedom.”
Xerc and his followers moved to stand between Jdost and Yarr. The Trykathians were thick limbed and thick bodied, standing nearly as tall as the gargant’s sword hilt, but only half as tall as the gargants. Xerc said, “Rules are as they are.”
Jdost and his lot clearly thought otherwise. Jdost took up his sword, shouted, “Coward, coward,” and ranted with obscenities.
All conversation in the training ground stopped. Yarr felt a sort of trembling in his soul. “I have told you that the flag of respite flies. I will fight you another day. Our conversation is done.”
“You don’t walk away from me!”
Yarr, ignoring the gargant’s screams and the curses that followed, walked toward one of the few he counted truly a friend.
“Well done,” Dhon told him, offering him a place on the bench beside him. “It would shame us all if you were to fight under respite.”
Yarr sat next to the hulking Fhurtroll. “I care not of these duties, but I would never purposefully bring shame.” He paused, turned to ensure the cavalier and his men were behind him. “Let me introduce you. Cavalier Xerc, this is Dhon of Fetinwol.”
Dhon and
Xerc clasped forearms. The Fhurtroll and the Trykathian were of a height but the troll’s girth was easily twice that of the Trykathian. “I took you for a Trykath slayer. Are you not?”
“I cannot claim that honor. I am but a cavalier.”
“It is good to meet you,” Dhon said, still gripping Xerc’s forearm. “Are you allied with the Dwelmish? They are Goeks, are they not?”
“They are, but we are not allied.”
Silence followed. Both Yarr and Dhon had thought all Goeks were allied. It crushed hope.
“Well, I see,” Dhon said, breaking the silence. “You are a welcome addition all the same. You join us, do you not?”
“Auy,” the cavalier said, and his followers nodded agreement.
The Trojk Master of Keys brought them drink. He was a Trykathian and had won a part of his freedom. The games of the colosseum were his trade. They brought him respect and wealth, much of which was purchased by Yarr’s blood and sweat. He honored Yarr when he could, but it was poor substitute for the thing Yarr yearned for. Freedom.
As they drank, Yarr listened to the talk but only participated sporadically. His thoughts were elsewhere, lost to another time and place.
The key master mistook his bliss for something else and whispered, “The new woman, she was good. Yes?”
It took Yarr a moment to return to the here and now. “She was,” he said. It was a lie but a small one. The girl was a victory gift, but Yarr did not fight for women or glory. He fought to stay alive. He fought until he need not fight any more. “Send back Rigga. It is her I miss.”
“I thought as much,” the Master of Keys said. “Rigga it is. She will await your pleasure in the rooms below.”
Yarr feigned a smile, which the key master took as genuine. “Thank you, I’ll go shortly.” He clasped the key master’s arm.
He listened to Dhon and Xerc talk. He stayed quiet. The cavalier’s followers drank heavily. He did not. Drink clouded thought, slowed response.
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