Hers To Choose (Verdantia Book 2)

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Hers To Choose (Verdantia Book 2) Page 20

by Patricia A. Knight


  DeKieran’s cold expression became glacial. Eric prepared to watch the man ride off, but first DeKieran turned his frigid, piercing eyes to Eric.

  “You do that.” DeKieran watched the Blue Daggers and Ostesh struggle to take his men prisoner. “I will ally my men with you for this fight.”

  Eric nodded, tight-lipped. “Thank you.”

  He wheeled his mount toward the pocket in the wall that had concealed the Verdantians. Sliding to a halt, Eric flew from his horse and leapt up the side of the uprising rock. Razor-edged shards tore at Eric’s flesh as he grabbed for handholds, jagged stones scraped and gouged at his legs while he scrabbled for footholds in the unforgiving, vertical surface. Ramsey DeKieran stayed on his heels. Upon achieving a sufficient height to see the Plains of Vergaza their band had crossed the night before, Eric stood motionless, lungs laboring. Every vulgar oath he knew flew from his mouth. The sound of DeKieran’s harsh breathing rasped in his ear. Haarb, hundreds and hundreds of Haarb, stretched in a line across the beginnings of the Narrows to the south. Krakoll’s armies had them well and truly trapped.

  DeKieran’s rough growl interrupted Eric’s steady stream of epithets. “DeStroia, are you in charge?”

  “No, Doral DeLorion commands us.”

  “Fuck!” Ramsey exploded. “Doral DeLorion? Hell’s breath. It just gets worse.”

  Eric eyed him grimly. “I need to get higher. I want to see the road from Sylvan Mintoth.”

  DeKieran opened his arm in an “after you” gesture and followed as Eric climbed higher up the rock face. Stopping, Eric pulled out his glass and peered through it. “High Lord DeTano will bring the armies of the Second Tetriarch down that road. I think I see a disturbance on the horizon but it could be wishful thinking. Here.” Eric handed Ramsey his spyglass. The renegade commander peered through the glass for long moments before shutting it with a gliding snap.

  “There is a definite boil of dust on the horizon. It could be large troop movement.” He shrugged. “Hard to say. Wouldn’t want to trust my life to it.”

  Eric studied the horizon again. “We must. Our only chance is to hold out until DeTano arrives. Let’s go spread the good news.” Sophi, my love. Eric’s heart ruptured in two. He had just found her. Sweetling, I may have to break my promise.

  Chapter Fifteen

  The torchlight in the cavern flickered as Sophi paced back and forth in front of it, arms wrapped tightly to her chest. The sound of her steps echoed through the small cave. Every time she thought she had worn herself out, anxiety spurred her to another round of frantic pacing.

  “Mother Lyre, I am going insane with this uncertainty and waiting. It has been sixteen hours. All the fighting must be over. Please, let me go to the Eye and use my glass.” Sophi clutched Mother Lyre’s hands in hers, beseeching her cooperation. “Please. I must know how they fare. I’ll take Adonia and Maeve with me. I promise to be careful. Please, Mother, please. I must know.” Sophi searched her face for any sign of weakening. Mother Lyre’s refusals had been adamant for the last few hours.

  The older woman shook her head and sighed. “I desire to know, also. Let’s both go, child. For ease of mind, we will look. But nothing more.” She faced Adonia and Maeve. “You will help me bind her and bring her back unconscious if necessary should she attempt to leave the Eye.” Her stern eyes bored into Adonia and Maeve.

  They dropped their heads and murmured, “Yes, Mistress.”

  “Thank you, Mother! May the Goddess bless you! Thank you!” Sophi hurried to the cavern the Oshtesh were using as stables with Maeve and Adonia hard upon her heels. Mother Lyre followed more slowly.

  Sophi never took her eyes off the small shelter at the heights. She barely remembered guiding her horse. Her urgency must have inhabited her mount. The creature climbed like a shaggy rock leaper, lunging and scrambling up the stony, narrow ledges with an agile willingness that barely satisfied Sophi. She breathed a heartfelt, “Thank you, great Mother,” when they gained the small stone shelter perched atop the rocky spire.

  Slipping from her horse, Sophi sprinted to the best vantage point, flattened onto her stomach and ran out her spyglass. Adonia and Maeve, slow to follow, did the same moments later. Trailing, Mother Lyre joined them and the four women scanned the flat land spread out in plain sight below them. Sophi reacted first. Dropping her spyglass from nerveless hands, her eyes stared ahead, glazed and vacant. So many Haarb. Where did they come from? How can our men possibly hold off so many Haarb? Her eyes told her a horror story of certain death for her beloved Eric, her brother Doral, the man she now called father, and all those in their company. Her brain refused the message. Fear paralyzed her. High Lord DeTano! She grabbed at her glass with trembling hands and rose to her feet. Swinging in the direction of Sylvan Mintoth, she examined the horizon intently for any sign of the armies of the Second Tetriarch. There! There! A sobbing inhale escaped her. But they are too far! She swung her glass back and forth between the cluster of those cherished by her and the advancing Haarb armies. Then swung again to judge the distance of the rapidly closing forces of the Tetriarch. Too far. Sophi slid her glass closed and watched as the three women, wind whipping their robes around them, arrived at the same conclusion. Maeve broke the silence with a whisper of despair. “They have no chance.”

  Sophi’s eyes scanned the three women with her. Mother Lyre held her gaze the longest. “Sophi, Maeve, there’s always a chance. I refuse to grieve for a living body. We will wait and we will watch and we will not despair.”

  “We will watch them die,” Adonia ground out bitterly, grief saturating her tone.

  * * *

  Eric and Primus G’hed efficiently consolidated the Oshtesh, Blue Daggers and Ramsey’s mercenaries into one unit. Not, however, without loud exchanges of mutual animosity. The Blue Daggers had been reluctant to surrender their merc prisoners until Eric barked, “Release them. We need every blade.”

  Ramsey and Doral exchanged a long, enigmatic stare.

  “DeKieran,” acknowledged Doral.

  “Visconte DeLorion.” Ramsey nodded. “DeStroia, I can hold the line to the south.” Ram gestured with his arm. “There in the narrowest part, we can be most effective against the Haarb battalions coming up from Amboy Crater.” Ram sat relaxed on his horse, as if he’d offered to accompany a lady on her shopping instead of taking on three hundred mutants, backed only by twenty fighters.

  Eric nodded slowly. “My thanks.”

  Doral raised his voice to address the ranks. “High Lord DeTano is a four-hour ride to the east. We merely need hold this ground four hours.”

  There were uneasy murmurs from Ramsey’s men of “Four hours? Against that? I’m getting out of here. This isn’t my fight.”

  Ram turned on his horse and snarled. “Flee and you will die by my hand. Stand and the Haarb might kill you. Understood?” All murmuring ceased.

  Doral turned to Eric. “My forte is death one-on-one, yours battlefield tactics. I yield to your expertise.”

  “Gentlemen!” Eric stood, capturing the attention of the combined force. “If we use the topography to our benefit, we can repel the Haarb for a short time. Our Verdantian horse will begin where the narrows limit the numbers the Haarb can send at us. Captain DeKieran’s men will hold the southern entrance. I, Segundo DeLorion and the Blue Daggers will hold the northern face. The southern forces will fall back in a systematic retreat until back-to-back with the northern forces. We will abandon the horses and take to the heights, joining the Oshtesh archers. Primus G’hed, the critical responsibility of holding the heights secure is yours. Once in the cliffs overlooking the Narrows, we will stand our ground until the armies of the Tetriarch join the battle.”

  Captain Rickard threw her head back and laughed. “Well, Daggers—can’t remember being in a tighter spot, but our Segundo has always brought us through, eh?” She snagged the unit’s pennant from the rider next to her and raised it skyward. “Blue Daggers! To the Tetriarch!”

  An answering cry went
up from the men gathered. “To the Tetriarch!”

  Ram and his mercs silently sat their horses, wearing looks of disgust.

  “Archers into the heights,” commanded Primus G’hed as he moved to the rocky upthrusts that rose hundreds of feet into the air.

  “With me, men!” cried DeKieran, moving out to face the southern exposure.

  “Blue Daggers, to me!” shouted Doral, riding into position to the north.

  Side-by-side, the Verdantian horse stretched across the mouth of the narrows and waited for the onslaught of Haarb. From behind them, the screams of men and Haarb, of horses and clashing steel filled the air as Krakoll’s battalion from Amboy Crater met Ramsey DeKieran’s force. Above it all, Ramsey’s voice could be heard exhorting his men. “Stand your ground and fight, Verdantians! Stand your ground!”

  Eric and Doral sat side-by-side and calmly watched their own death approach as hundreds of Haarb poured through the narrows toward them, war screams pouring from their lips, swords, pikes and axes held high.

  Eric readied his blade. “The Goddess guard you, you yellow-haired bastard.”

  Doral laughed grimly. “And you. I’ll never hear the end of it if you get so much as a scratch.” His commanding voice rang out. “Verdantians! CHARGE!”

  Eric sank his spurs into his mount and the line of Verdantian horse thundered forward.

  * * *

  High across the Plain, reflections of light glinted off four metal spyglasses trained on the conflict below. Sophi kept hers focused on Eric and Doral, standing back-to-back, as their blades flashed bloody arcs, blocking and slashing. She couldn’t contain her cries when a Haarb opponent managed a hit. Her arms and hands trembled fiercely from the grief and brutal agony boiling within her. She found it difficult to steady the glass to see and ultimately set it aside, only to snatch it up again. She wanted to scream to the heavens—to any god or goddess, to the hells for any demon or devil. She would promise anything, her soul, her body, her as yet unborn children, anything if only some supernatural being would answer her prayer. Help them, please, help them. The torture she endured as slave to the Haarb did not begin to approach the fear inhabiting her as she watched Eric and Doral fight for their lives.

  The Oshtesh archers had slowed the Haarb’s initial assault, arraying ‘earthworks’ of mounded dead bodies in the path of the advancing enemy. But the numbers of their adversary wiped out the initial gain and the Haarb beat the Verdantian horsemen inexorably back to the rocky uprises. With their supply of arrows exhausted, the Oshtesh joined the Verdantians, now on foot, in savage hand-to-hand combat. The heights of the narrows worked to the Verdantian advantage but dark swarms of the enemy could be seen scaling the sides of the rocky uprises, working their way to the top. It took no imagination to realize the result of that maneuver.

  With her eye still pressed to her glass, Adonia gave a cry and pointed. “Look!”

  To the east, out of a boiling cloud rising high into the heavens, a vast line of horses flattened in a dead run, stretched across the Plain. The naked eye could discern lances trailing pennants of royal purple and gold. High Lord DeTano had arrived, with the armies of the Tetriarch.

  Sophi pressed her glass back to her eye and searched for Eric and Doral, then swung it to the horses thundering down on the narrows, closing the distance in an earth-shaking race against time—a race they would not win. Closing her glass, she stood, eyes closed, tears streaming steadily down her face. Maeve, once again, gave voice to their thoughts. “They will not be in time. Our armies will not be able to fight through the masses of Haarb in time to save our men trapped there.”

  Adonia turned on Sophi. Savage words spewed bitterly from her mouth. “Where is all your magick now? Where is your magick now that we so desperately need it to save those we love? What use is it? It is false hope, false!” She gestured forcefully toward the Plain below, her accusing eyes never leaving Sophi. “My lover fights down there.” Adonia’s eyes swung to Maeve. “So does hers. So does yours. Down there is the Primus of our people, your stepfather and the Segundo of the Second Tetriarch, your brother. Where is your magick now? Now, when it has never been more needed?” she screamed.

  Sophi felt the warm diaman crystal weighing heavily in her robe’s deep inner pocket. With a terrible grief tearing at her heart, she reached in and brought out the pulsing amber crystal and with eyes closed, held it between her breasts. Where is it, indeed?

  Cradling the golden diamantorre, Sophi directed a fervent prayer to Mother Verdantia. She recalled Eric’s promise as he handed her the crystal. He had promised to come back to her. She remembered Eric telling Maeve the stored energy would be released in whatever manner she could envision, but the thought must be pure, essential, nothing clouding it. He also said that the crystals fed from feminine arousal. How can I become aroused standing here, watching everyone I love die? She gasped. Cinnagin. Sophi ran her hand urgently into the inner pocket of her robe and pulled out the small square of folded parchment. Unfolding it, she looked at the fine, rust-brown powder lying in the crease. Remembering the effects that a mere taste had, Sophi ran her tongue along the entire crease and swallowed the whole amount.

  A burning sun of erotic arousal exploded within her. All she could think for seeming endless moments—all she could feel for endless moments—was the sensation of liquid fire stroking every nerve in her body. Her skin became aware of the slightest breath of air. Her robe stroked her nipples in a carnal overload of sensation. She tore her robes from her body, unable to endure the stimulation. Her feminine places flamed. Her inner lips swelled and slicked with moisture. Her most sensitive place of all throbbed with a sparkling, pulsing burn. She threw her body on the bare ground, the diamantorre forgotten, and writhed. Her cries for mercy filling the air around her.

  Eric. Remember Eric, a small corner of her brain insisted. Eric. Eric. Staggering to her knees, Sophi grasped the now brilliantly radiant crystal in her hands and raised it to the heavens. She aimed the discipline forged through years of unrelenting training with the bow to a new purpose. With a snarling scream of supreme effort, she leashed the carnal sensations running wild through her flesh, focusing them through her hands as the light of the sun concentrates through a glass. Just as a marksman must close all else from his mind but his target, she focused her thoughts on three persons, Eric, Doral, Primus. In a trinity of thought she held them in the forefront of her mind and fed pure, unadulterated love through the amber diamantorre—the love for a brother, the love for a father, the love for a soul mate. She threw every minute speck of her essence into the thoughts she channeled through the crystal while her body raged in an inferno of arousal.

  Time had no meaning. Sophi became an emotion—love. Love for one being, Eric. For three beings, Doral, Eric, Step-father. Bodiless, she floated in an endlessly star-filled night.

  Child. Daughter. Well done.

  The ethereal voice of Verdantia permeated her being. Sophi burned as a radiantly brilliant sphere. Her awareness perceived one gloriously shining orb dotting the velvet blackness. Tethered to her with gossamer threads of glowing light, the globe throbbed in radiant pulses. It drew her unresisting until they merged in a supernova hurling vast spears of energy into the blackness surrounding them. She flamed as a luminous embodiment of immeasurable power, twinned with another soul whose essence was dearly familiar—Eric.

  * * *

  I refuse to die in this gods-forsaken desert. Doral countered another strike by the lizard man facing him, then lunged forward, gutting the creature. Shoving him off his blade with his foot, Doral fell back until he again felt Eric pressed against his back. Eric grunted in effort as he met a vicious slash by his opponent. Ari and Fleur are going to kill me—assuming I live, which is looking doubtful. Another enemy rushed him, screaming. Raising his right arm, he blocked the blow, shattering the creature’s blade. The stiletto in his left swiped across the being’s neck and blood spurted from a severed artery, momentarily blinding him. Hastily wiping his eyes, Do
ral spotted an opening in the rocks that could provide a better advantage to him—and Eric. Better take care of the man, Sophi seemed to like him. Grabbing Eric by the elbow, Doral swung his blade in a looping swipe, casually severing the hand of the Haarb facing the commander.

  “Thanks, but I had him,” Eric complained.

  “Over there, the gap in the rocks!” Doral shouted. Nodding, Eric sprang after him. Side-by-side, backs against the cliff wall, they bent in half, gasped for breath and hoped their hearts would slow before the Haarb negotiated the narrow corridor to reach them.

  “You are glowing, DeStroia.” Doral couldn’t ignore it any more. The man positively radiated light. “Whatever the fuck you are doing, tone it down. Luminescence makes you an easy target.”

  “I can’t help it.” With a lunging grunt, Eric swiped at the end of a blade that tentatively appeared around a large boulder. “I don’t control it.”

  Doral’s mouth twitched at the annoyance in the man’s voice. “You look like one of those gods-be-damned diamantorre. Hah!” Doral barked, and swung at a cautious head peering around the rocks. “Shut it down, DeStroia. Damnation, man, you’re getting brighter.”

  A low bass rumble started to shake the ground under his feet and Doral shielded his eyes. “By the seven hells, DeStroia! What the fuck!”

  The visible golden aura surrounding Eric had permeated every inch of his body. As Doral watched, a brilliantly radiant Eric rose several feet in the air, toes pointed down, arms and sword pointed upward. His back arched in a rigid crescent. A silent rictus of agony distorted his face. Golden light poured from his eyes and open mouth. Slowly he began to twirl, then faster and faster until his body appeared a rising blur. A spear of golden energy fountained into the heavens for a thousand feet, towering over the Vergaza Plain and the foothills of Nathar. At the apex of the lancing energy’s flight, roiling clouds of golden energy churned like a thunderhead above a storm. Bolts of energy zigzagged through the skies and then the cloud descended. Reaching the earth, the boiling golden fog spread out in an ever-growing circle flowing away from Eric, the epicenter.

 

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