The Splintered Eye (The War of Memory Cycle)

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The Splintered Eye (The War of Memory Cycle) Page 76

by H. Anthe Davis


  In upstairs windows, curtains twitched. Shutters shifted. Down the street, he heard the unmistakable click of a crossbow and flinched at a ruddy flash—a section of a ward that sprang into visibility above the fissure. On his ear, the silver hook started to hiss and jitter, and he pulled it off and saw Houndmaster Vrallek do the same.

  A red wall rose suddenly from the fissure, translucent and sheer, stretching up past the angled roofs of the homes and shops. It turned horizontal at the top to spread and link with the other walls until it seemed that this whole Shadowland section had been placed in a box.

  From within the box and from the opposite side of the street, the doors started opening. Shadow Cultists stepped onto the porch of the tavern, gawking over their drawn weapons, and in the upper windows Sarovy saw small faces peeking out.

  The crawling red ceiling joined into a single flat pane, and then, with a roar of compressing air, it crushed downward.

  Shutters blew out, curtains shooting forward like flags as the red hand of the Crimson magi pressed in. Wooden roofs crunched down flat then collapsed through ceilings, brick walls buckled, mosaics exploded into scatters of tile that rebounded off the barrier in a torrent of sparks. The sound of shattering masonry assaulted Sarovy’s ears and he stepped back, covering them, but even that roaring and tearing noise could not blot out the others.

  The screams.

  The red hand thrust down, down, down, and the top floors flattened beneath it. Inside the red line, the cobbled street started to buckle. Some of the men outside the tavern stood frozen, staring up at the awful destruction, while others hurled themselves at the barrier or back into the building as if it could save them. But nothing passed through the wall: not Shadow Folk, not flying debris, not dust.

  The lower walls cracked with a sound like thunder, and suddenly the whole block tilted as the cellars and passageways below it collapsed. The buildings dropped in a jerk, several yards at once and then a few feet, a few more, the cobbles popping up wildly as the street beneath them shattered. The screech of stone and splintering wood, of metal girders hidden somewhere below, of smuggled goods and semi-honest livelihoods and people—

  With a last titanic crash, the red hand pressed down to street-level, and it was over.

  Sarovy withdrew his nerveless hands from his ears, staring across the red pane to the exposed city block opposite him. More mages stood on that side, and more White Flame soldiers as expected, and from the buildings beyond them he saw Shadow Folk gaping in abject horror. No sound came from the ruins below but for the faint creak and crash of broken buildings further crumbling. Everything within the red rim of the mages’ spell was gone.

  In the sudden silence, Sarovy heard Houndmaster Vrallek’s rough laughter all too well.

  Then came the snap of a bowstring, the sudden whistle of a crossbow bolt. The flash of a ward. And suddenly all was chaos—shouts and screams of rage, the rasp of steel being drawn, the pale rush of the White Flame soldiers entering the fray. Sarovy saw the Field Marshal turn from surveying the wreckage, his grin white as bone in the dark forest of his beard, his eyes gleaming with reflected red light.

  “Destroy all who stand against us!” he roared to the troops, and Sarovy twitched, hand falling to his sword automatically. The Field Marshal strode past him, fevered gaze feasting on the sudden riot, but Sarovy found that he could not turn.

  He could not move at all. The crushed buildings were almost obscured by the dust in the red magic box, but in those swirls of debris and blooming smoke, he saw the future.

  Something small glinted by his boot. He lowered his gaze, feeling as if he moved and thought through slow sap, and saw that it was a marble, or perhaps a bead. Smooth and shiny.

  Slowly, amid the screams and the flick of bolts and the clash of swords, he stooped to pick it up. It was nothing special: a piece of black glass wrapped in a twist of wire, too misshapen to be pretty. A cast-off. A reject, left behind.

  Without quite thinking, he curled it into his fist, then tucked it in a pouch on his uniform belt.

  Then he drew his sword and turned to lead his men.

  Coda

  Geraad hesitated in the doorway to the laboratory, not sure why he had come. Not sure why he had not fled as soon as Enkhaelen had released him from the inhibiting collar. He had left Rian still huddled under the bed in the tiny chamber they had been allotted; he almost envied the goblin the ability to be so small and so hidden.

  At a slab six in and three over, the necromancer glanced up from his work and said, “Ah, Iskaen. I see you’ve finally had the guts to come visit.

  “Guts, you get it?” he continued when Geraad just stared. “Because Iskaen is the old word for innards, entrails… A good sausage-maker’s name… Perhaps you didn’t know that.”

  “No,” said Geraad faintly.

  “Well, come in. We don’t want to refrigerate the whole volcano.”

  Geraad took one hesitant step inside and flinched as obsidian shards irised shut behind him, sealing him in. Enkhaelen had already returned his attention to his work, which seemed split between the body on the table and the small mirror propped nearby. Now and then he would glance up from his scalpel to run a finger along the mirror as if caressing something within.

  “So, what is it you need, my gutsy young friend?” he said, not bothering to look up.

  Geraad forced himself to step between the first row of slabs, fiercely not looking at the corpses to either side. “I— I need to know why I’m here. You captured me—“

  “Saved you.”

  “Yes, ah, that. And I’m grateful, please believe me. But—“

  “I told you I wanted nothing from you. Yet.”

  “Then what am I to do?” said Geraad, ashamed of the plea in his tone but unable to control it. “This place is…fantastic in its way, but—“

  “Also terrifying and full of monstrous strangers.”

  “No, no, I wouldn’t—“

  “Iskaen,” said Enkhaelen firmly, setting down his scalpel. “I made this place. I know what it is. You needn’t tiptoe around me; I haven’t lost so much perspective that I’ll snap at criticism. Which reminds me: how are your hands?”

  Geraad looked down at them, curling his fingers slowly. He had not felt a whisper of pain since their repair, yet he almost wished he had. Perfect as they were now, they seemed like a tainted gift, and in his most trapped moments he sometimes thought wildly about cutting them off. As if that could somehow cast Enkhaelen’s magic back in his face and make this all go away.

  “They work well,” he said.

  “Come here.”

  Resigned, he drifted past the rest of the slabs to join Enkhaelen at his. The body the necromancer worked on lay face-down, stripped to the waist, but though he could not see its features, Geraad felt a jolt of familiarity; the build, the coloring, the hair length and style, the remaining clothes all matched what the necromancer wore right now. Even the thick silver ring that gleamed on the corpse’s left hand mirrored the one on the necromancer’s.

  The main difference was the stump where the right arm should be, and the large hole in its back which Enkhaelen was excavating with his scalpel.

  “This— You—“

  “Yes, me,” said Enkhaelen, gesturing for Geraad to stand at his side. “If you want a purpose, you can help me right now.”

  Geraad stared into the hole, with its layers of skin and fat and muscle peeled away to show knobby vertebrae and a glint of something silvery buried within, and felt the bile creep up his throat. No matter what Enkhaelen said, right now he felt no kinship toward his butcher ancestors.

  “Not that,” said Enkhaelen, and pointed past him—then reached up to turn Geraad’s head manually when the mentalist could not stop staring. Those cold fingers sent more of a shudder up Geraad’s spine than a bucket of ice, and he shied away.

  Enkhaelen looked at him like he had three heads, then jabbed the scalpel at the mirror. “Watch that, for pike’s sake. I only have two eyes, a
nd I need to get this out before my next lecture.”

  Blinking, Geraad turned a jaundiced look to the mirror, and found in it not a reflection of the horrid laboratory but a snowy landscape. The ground was canted, broken by boulders and trees, and a crowd of shabby figures moved in the distance.

  “Touch one of the branches and my spy will move to it,” Enkhaelen said as he turned his attention back to the corpse. “Try to keep your distance, though. I don’t want him to sense me. I haven’t put much into that spy but it’s still possible.”

  Baffled, Geraad tapped a branch in the mirror, and the image leapt and bobbed and swept in on the branch then came to a stop. From this closer vantage, Geraad could see the crowd of travelers better, and his mouth went dry. A familiar antlered figure...

  “What is this?” he said.

  “Your friend Cob. I want to make sure he won’t get himself eaten. Only so much I can do, of course. That boy seems determined to feed himself to every dire force in existence.”

  For a moment Geraad considered taking control of whatever the mirror commanded and flying it straight into the crowd. Alerting Cob to this surveillance, then turning against the necromancer.

  But he would lose. And probably not even die in the process.

  The thought of being strapped down to one of these slabs while still alive—

  He exhaled and flew the spy to another branch, not too near, not too far.

  Many figures. At least twelve humanoid, though sometimes it was hard to tell from the way they scrambled up the rocky incline, and a number of wolves that milled and dashed and jostled constantly, making it impossible to count them. Up and up they went, and Geraad dutifully moved the spy to follow them, until at last he glimpsed a gap in the rock wall, half-natural and half-carved.

  As they began to slip into its dark confines, Enkhaelen said, “Ah, here we are.”

  Geraad glanced over to see a crystalline arrowhead in the necromancer’s hand, shreds of flesh still clinging to it. Enkhaelen ran his thumb along the surface and it sparked deep within, then began to glow with a faint cold light.

  Enkhaelen smiled flatly, the arrowhead’s radiance reflecting off his shallow blue eyes. “They should know better than to leave me such openings.

  “I’ll have to educate them.”

  Copyright © 2013 by H. Anthe Davis

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in review, without permission of the author.

  H. Anthe Davis can be found on the web at Facebook and Wordpress.

  Cover Art by D. D. Phillips.

  Cover background by FantasyStock.

  Table of Contents

  Relevant Cast:

  Glossary:

  Prologue

  Part 3 Concordia

  Chapter 1 – Out of the Woods

  Chapter 2 – Sword, Torch and Hammer

  Chapter 3 – Arrow’s Flight

  Chapter 4 – Allegiances

  Chapter 5 – The Grey Wraiths

  Chapter 6 – Crimson and Gold

  Chapter 7 – Complications

  Chapter 8 – Blood on the Ice, Blood on the Sand

  Chapter 9 – Erestoia By-The-Sea

  Chapter 10 – Crimson Decisions

  Chapter 11 – The Citadel at Valent

  Chapter 12 – Turo

  Chapter 13 – The Shadow Sea

  Chapter 14 – Haaraka

  Part 4 Mnema

  Chapter 15 – Crimson Adaptations

  Chapter 16 – The High Necromancer

  Chapter 17 – Gate of Water

  Chapter 18 – Akarridi

  Chapter 19 – Shelter

  Chapter 20 – In the Court of the Risen Phoenix

  Chapter 21 – Imperial Actions

  Chapter 22 – Ghost Town

  Chapter 23 – Nightmare Study

  Chapter 24 – Firebird Garden

  Chapter 25 – Force Counterforce

  Chapter 26 – The Crush

  Coda

  Copyright

 

 

 


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