Three (The Godslayer Cycle Book 3)

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Three (The Godslayer Cycle Book 3) Page 19

by Ron Glick


  Corus only lingered long enough to look meaningfully upon his Lesser brethren. “I never thought I would ever be offering my thanks to you, Prankster,” he said, “but this day, I do just that.”

  Then, without providing Ankor an opportunity to respond, the God of Knowledge also vanished, leaving the Prankster alone in his ethereal state. He waited a moment to assure himself that his fellows were indeed gone, then willed himself to merge back into his Hamil facade.

  It probably would have killed him outright to actually say the words, he mused. But then, that would have deprived me of the fun of watching him wiped from existence like the others...

  Chapter 12

  The fire popped, startling Bracken from his own self-reflection. He blinked, looking around to see if anyone else had noticed his mind wandering, wondering if perhaps he might even have fallen asleep. But if any had noticed, none made any obvious signs.

  Brea and Avery were engaged in what the dwarf would call “tolerated discussion”. Though Avery had no reservations about speaking with the priestess, she on the other hand clearly only conversed with the man out of necessity. The would-be God had become an unwanted ally, and so Brea needed to endure. But she made no effort to disguise her lack of interest, either.

  Bracken had lost interest in the conversation shortly after it had begun days ago. How many times could one talk about “what if”s or “most likely”s, after all? The dwarf had learned that humans had an annoying habit for speculation and over-thinking possible outcomes. To a dwarf, one simply did what was needed when it was needed doing. If something different happened, one dealt with it when and if the need came up. Thinking about it - or worse still, talking about it incessantly - would not change what was to come. So why dwell on it?

  “When will Nalen return from his watch?” asked Brea, interrupting something that Avery was saying. Her question was aimed toward Lartien, an obvious slight to whatever it was that the God-man had been saying.

  “I will send Loris out to replace him in another hour, if we have not heard anything by then.” Ever hopeful that their vigil would end sooner rather than later, the commander of Avery's guard always proposed his scheduling of his men upon the possibility that the watch would soon be done.

  “Perhaps I should go in his stead,” suggested the priestess. “I tire of all this waiting.”

  “The sword will come back,” Avery insisted. “All we have to do is wait for it.”

  Brea stiffened at the rebuke. “Nathan is dead. And all you care about is the damnable sword.”

  “Need I remind you,” responded the faux God, “that it is the girl we are both after? She's the one who slew the Godslayer.”

  “And the only reason we are tolerating your presence,” added Brea. “Our causes are joined. For the moment. But I do not have to tolerate your obsession with the swords while we wait.”

  “The Nine are all that matter,” said Avery in a considerably softer tone. “Your Nathan knew that much. If you can not see past my presence and view, at least consider that getting this sword under our control will at the very least be honoring the man.”

  “Our contr'l?” spat Bracken. “More'n like yers. Don' take us fer fools, young'un. None of us'r so blinds as t' no' see tha' ya want the sword fer yerself.”

  Avery was quiet for a moment. Then with firm resignation, he met the dwarf's eye. “I will not deny that. But not for the reasons you believe. There is more here than you know, something I have not said.”

  “Oh?” asked the dwarf, his back straightening. “Do tell.”

  The would-be God paused again before answering. “I told you Martin had visited me. What I did not tell you was that he told me I needed to be sure Nathaniel Goodsmith did not gain Three. He said it was critical because he could not have come into the past to warn me if the Godslayer acquired the sword.”

  “No' much chance o' tha' now, is t'ere?” snapped the dwarf.

  Avery's eyes fell. “I'll admit, the warning about keeping it from the Godslayer now seems to be a pointless caution. But I cannot argue that Martin seemed to know what had not yet come, and so I intend to keep the sword safe. At least until whatever future where I meet this Martin comes to pass and can send him back to warn myself. After that?” He shrugged. “Who can say?”

  “So you seek to keep your own path through time intact?” asked Brea. “That is your only concern?”

  “Not entirely, but it is my primary one.”

  “Well, yer confessin' a'ready, so's migh''s well tell the rest.” Bracken screwed up one eye, willing his other to pin the man across the fire in place.

  “Something else Martin said,” said Avery. “He said it was my destiny to bring together the Nine, to unite all the swords. I cannot say I know what that means exactly, or what purpose would be served by it, but it is clear that I am supposed to do it. And I have... spoken - if that is even the right word - with Two. There is a plan that the swords have, and it does involve bringing them all together at some point. Then if Martin is to be believed, it will be my place to do so.”

  “But Two has been destroyed,” supplied Brea. “You cannot reunite something that no longer exists.”

  Avery raised his hands helplessly. “Again, I have no way of answering that. Like keeping Three from the Godslayer, I cannot decipher all of what Martin told me. But if we are to work together, you have a right to know my motivations.”

  Bracken ground his teeth. It infuriated him that this man was being so forthcoming. He had come to think of Avery as a conniving rat, abusing power he lucked upon to make simpletons worship him. But more and more, this man was disproving all aspects of the dwarf's belief in him. Either there was more to the former heretic than the dwarf had ever considered, or he was simply growing into a better person through his experiences. Either answer however put the dwarf's loathing of the man to shame. He might not have been convinced that there was any sincerity behind the man's surface behavior, but Avery left little to criticize in what he actually did.

  “So what will you do when this girl returns?” asked Brea pointedly. “We have talked for days now on how to fight her, but not once have we discussed what we will do should we prevail. Who walks away with the sword once the dust settles?”

  Tension-filled silence took over the small group, the fire crackles the only sound to be heard. Bracken noticed Lartien's hand sliding toward the hilt of his sword, prompting the dwarf to reach to his side where Hal'bracken rested against the side of his seat.

  “I believe it goes without saying,” said Avery cautiously, “that the sword must leave with me.”

  “But that is not to say we could not leave together with it,” added Viola quickly. Ever the peacemaker, Avery's lady spoke rarely, but when she did, it was with an effort to prevent conflict.

  “So you would have us follow you now?” asked Brea.

  “Not follow,” said Avery, taking up the former barmaid's offered compromise. “Join us. We are all after the same thing, I would say. None of us want these swords misused, do we? Why not make a pact to seek them out together?”

  Bracken gave a sidelong look to the priestess, but she made no move to look away from Avery. After several moments of silence, Avery continued.

  “Look, Nathaniel Goodsmith is gone. There is no changing that. And the swords will not all come to you as this one has. What do you intend to do? Give up the quest?”

  The dwarf bowed his head and grimaced. “He's no' wrong, Brea,” he said grudgingly. “Wha' woul' we do if we di' no' join 'im? Give up on Nate's plan? Stop followin' the swor's an' give up any chance we migh' 'ave ta fin' Nate's boy?”

  The would-be God perked up at this. “Boy?”

  “Nathan's son was taken,” offered Brea in a lifeless voice. “He was deceived into believing Imery had taken him, which is what led to his taking her life.”

  “So Goodsmith did slay a God before Levitz?” Avery chuckled. “I was beginning to think I was wrong about his being a Godslayer up until he killed one there.
But he killed one before. Interesting.”

  “Actually, he was defending me,” said Brea, dropping her shoulders in a sigh. “For a long time, I held a grudge against what he did that night. But with his passing, I have come to accept that what he did was necessary. Imery may have killed me if Nathan had not interceded. And none of us knew that the result would be her death.”

  Avery reached around and pulled One free of its sheath, then proceeded to swing the sword aimlessly through the air in front of him. “It would seem I have some catching up to do. Funny, I'm still in competition with the Godslayer even after he's already dead.”

  The would-be God suddenly stopped his sword in mid-swing, his face going rigid. “First,” he said ominously. He turned to Brea sharply. “You have First here?”

  The priestess pulled back. “What? First?”

  “Nate's ot'er sword's not yers ta take, boy,” growled Bracken. The dwarf did his best to avoid Brea's glare of rebuke.

  Avery stood, looking about the darkness beyond the light cast by the fire's flames. “No, you don't understand. One can sense the other swords. And it's telling me First is nearby.”

  “So?” asked Brea.

  Avery raised his sword defensively. “It means someone is using the other sword. Someone has drawn First!”

  At this, Bracken picked up Hal'bracken and stood up, prepared for battle. Brea stood beside him, and he could hear the two sellswords drawing their own blades, as well. In moments, the small company had become an armed encampment.

  Who could have known that Nate even had another sword? He made a point of never having both in the open at once, and to any casual observer, the swords looked identical. First was, after all, the sword from which the mold for all the others had been made...

  “I had hoped to slip away quietly,” came a voice from the dark. “But I suspect this will be more fun.”

  As the last syllable was uttered, a young man's sturdy frame began to take shape from around the edge of the shack. The newcomer walked casually, completely at ease in spite of the numerous weapons raised against him. In one hand, he held an empty scabbard while in his right he held the unmistakable outline of one of the Old Gods' swords, carried with an ease that suggested either extreme confidence or utter foolhardiness. Bracken would have guessed the latter.

  “Put down the sword, sir,” called Avery. “You have no idea who you face here this night, and we will not let you take what you have stolen.”

  The young man laughed. As he continued to step forward, his features began to coalesce into a face full of unforgettable familiarity. The dwarf heard Brea's sharp intake of breath at the unmistakable resemblance. There were subtle differences, certainly enough to distinguish this newcomer from the man they all knew, and yet...

  Bracken had watched Nathaniel Goodsmith grow from a small lad into a powerful young man, but even he had to consider whether this was a younger version of his friend standing before them now. Yet he knew that was at best wishful thinking - this newcomer was not his Nate, but he looked so much like the man who had so recently fallen that there could be no doubt that there was a familial connection at play on the young man's features as he approached.

  The stranger laughed wickedly. “Oh, your faces are hilarious! You actually thought I was him for a moment, didn't you?” When no one responded, the man stopped his forward progress and continued. “Well, I'm not Nathaniel Goodsmith.” The young man's inflection of Nate's name held pure venom. “I'm his better. In every way. He was a traitor to the Pantheon! I'm the real Avatar. ”

  Bracken felt his rage rising, his feet moving forward of their own volition. “Look 'ere, lad,” he managed through the effort not to grunt, “Nate was our frien', an' yer no' ta speak ill o' him. No' now, no' ever.”

  “If not me, then who else?” guffawed the newcomer. “He's the failure, and he died because he was a failure. He was blessed by the Gods - by the Gods! And he turned his back on them! What else did you think was going to happen?”

  Bracken felt a heavy hand fall on his shoulder, one of the men laying his strength upon him to hold the dwarf in place. The reminder checked his charge, but only just. Brea may have helped him understand where his rage came from, but it had not cured him of it. And this young man tempted a great deal with his disrespect.

  “Nate was th' bes' man I ever knew,” said Bracken instead, his words barely distinguishable from the growl in his throat.

  Another hand - lighter than the first - fell on Bracken's other shoulder and he immediately felt the presence of the priestess at his side. “Who are you?” asked Brea. “You're related to Nathan. That's unmistakable. But none of us know you.”

  The young man laughed again, swinging the sword at his side in a swishing motion as he did so. “The dwarf knows me. Don't you, old man?”

  Bracken's rage was tinted by an ember of confusion. He knew this newcomer? How?

  “Used to bounce me on his knee,” said the man, a grimace twisting his face. “Told me stories of great dwarven battles of old, stories so ridiculous no one could really believe in them.”

  “Tha's no' poss'ble,” responded Bracken. “I was ne'er 'round human children 'til I came to Oaken Wood, an' tha' was barely a half o' yer life time 'go, by my guess. Yew'd o' been wha', ten?”

  “You really don't know, do you?” The man took another step forward and leaned in towards the dwarf. The man's features took on an exaggerated innocence and his voice emulated that of a child. “It's me, unca' Brack!”

  Bracken felt his soul drop from his chest. It was not possible. How could it be possible? There was just no way it could be...

  “Geoffrey?!” gasped the dwarf. “Bu'... Geoffrey's a chil', barely three win'ers!”

  The man stood up again and threw his head back. “Yeah, I grew up.”

  Bracken turned to Brea, but the priestess only continued to stare at the newcomer. He knew without seeing it that his own face was aghast with shock. “Tha's Nat's boy? I don' know how, bu'... tha's who 'e is sayin' 'e is...”

  Brea narrowed her eyes. “You are Geoffrey Goodsmith?”

  The man gripped the sword at his side tighter, raising it slightly in front of him. “I am. I am also the true Avatar. Nathaniel was never intended to be - I just was not old enough when the time came. Well...” The young man spread his arms wide, displaying his body for all to see. “That mistake has been corrected.”

  Brea blinked, then turned to look back at the dwarf. “He believes what he says. He really believes he is Geoffrey Goodsmith.”

  “Put the swor' down, lad,” urged Bracken, lowering his own weapon and stepping forward plaintively. “I'll no' figh' my frien's boy.”

  Geoffrey raised his own sword, now unmistakably the sword known as First. “I have no such reservations,” snarled the young man. “This is my birthright, and I will be taking it. Try to stop me if you like, but I'll cut you down if you try.”

  “No,” said Avery, stepping forward suddenly. “You have no claim to that sword. It's very existence is an affront upon the Nine, but that aside, you are taking the weapon of a man who gave his life in service to the Old Gods. You will not rob his grave under some claim of birthright. It will not be done.”

  “Don't you dare say that!” barked the young man, stabbing First forward menacingly. “Don't you ever say that piece of trash ever did anything in service of his Gods! He was an infidel, mocking the Pantheon and their faith! I saw him die! There was no Godly design in what he did - he tried to strike down a little girl, and the Gods struck him down for his hubris!”

  Bracken felt the rage building again, but he fought it down, reminding himself who it was his instincts wished to dissect the spleen of. “Yew know no' wha' yew say, lad,” the dwarf attempted to reason. “Nate was no' tryin' ta hurt th' girl. 'E wan'ed the swor', tha's all.”

  “And he did it because your Pantheon Gods told him to,” inserted Brea. “He was told he had to collect all the swords or he would never see you again. He did it all - worked for the O
ld Gods over his own wishes to just be left alone - because they promised him... you!”

  “Blasphemy!” yelled the young man. “Nathaniel abandoned me, left me to fend for myself. He knew I was kidnapped, but went after you instead. He defiled the memory of my mother to go after you, his slut!”

  “Whoever told you all of this has lied to you,” urged Brea. “I know you think this is all true, but it's not. If you'll just put down the sword...”

  As the priestess spoke, she made slow gestures towards the young man, seeking to draw into his confidence. Now she took a step toward him, perhaps hoping she could lay hands upon him, to use some magic or another to compel him to see. But it was all for naught, as the young man saw her approach and backed away defensively.

  “Don't come any closer!” he fairly screamed. “You are my father's whore, and I will not listen to anything you say!”

  Without warning, a sword came out of the darkness behind Geoffrey, but the young man sensed the strike and dodged. With a great swing of his blade, the air around him erupted with water, a veritable wave of force throwing the newly arrived Nalen back upon the ground. Geoffrey stood over the guard, his sword raised to deliver a killing blow. Yet Bracken was faster.

  As First came down in its deathblow, Hal'bracken intercepted the sword's arc. Sparks flew where the two weapons collided. Bracken had been prepared, having experienced this effect before - but Geoffrey was unprepared. The sudden backlash from the repelled strike sent him stumbling, and before he could recover, the young man sprawled upon the ground several feet away.

  Somehow, Geoffrey managed to keep his grip upon the blade, but as he looked up at the advancing people around him, his eyes suddenly filled with panic. And without another word, the young Goodsmith vanished from sight.

  “How--” demanded Lartien bitterly.

 

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