The Raven Collection

Home > Other > The Raven Collection > Page 158
The Raven Collection Page 158

by James Barclay


  For a Julatsan mage, it was the only decision that could be made. What had The Unknown said of him? That he wouldn’t get in the way of someone killing her. Implying that for him the saving of his College was bigger than one life.

  Was it, hell.

  Ilkar didn’t know what possessed him. It was something he’d never even dreamt of attempting before but his subconscious instructed his body without bothering to check with the rational part of his mind. He drew his sword, his only weapon, from its sheath and flung it down the corridor and time stopped standing still.

  The sword flicked end over end. It wasn’t a great throw but it was enough. Bouncing from the orchard wall it struck the mage flat on, sending him staggering backwards, concentration and wings gone. In that moment, Erienne dived towards Lyanna and pulled her free. The Dordovan mage came again but this time Ilkar grappled him around the middle and both man and elf tumbled back into the ballroom.

  Hirad lashed his sword through the first Dordovan throat, chopping through his windpipe and jugular and sending him crashing back into the corridor where he had come from. Beside him, a Protector overheaded with his axe, splitting the skull of the next through his helmet. Without pausing to extract the weapon, he snapped the sword from his back and drove it through, waist-high, into a third.

  The barbarian roared, the blood rushing through his veins, feeling empowered and very, very angry. He batted away a strike to his midriff and laid a straight left hand punch on the enemy’s nose. Letting his momentum carry him on, he spun, taking the man in the face with his left elbow, then the right and finishing with the back of his right fist. The Dordovan went down with blood spraying from his shattered face and Hirad was in the middle of them. They never knew what hit them.

  ‘Come on, you bastards!’

  Facing them again and with his sword coming through, he thumped it into the forehead of the next victim, slicing through bone and seeing brain explode from the top of his skull as it compressed and shattered. He kicked out waist-high, his foot sweeping the body aside and leaving his path clear.

  ‘Ilkar, I’m coming!’

  There were more Dordovans ahead. Two Protectors ran past him, bludgeoning two of those who ran after Erienne and Ilkar before Hirad caught them up, his eyes seeing only red, and picked his next target.

  ‘Move, move!’ called Denser, desperately holding his concentration on the HardShield as arrows and crossbow bolts bounced off it. ‘Stay behind me, attack only if they get inside a couple of paces.’

  The Unknown was limping hard down the corridor, Aeb to his left and Darrick to his right. Ahead, Hirad had gone berserk and was causing confusion in the Dordovans spilling from the corridor entrances. They didn’t know who to attack. Aeb made up their mind for them, charging in and beheading one with a clean sweep of his axe.

  Ignoring his pain, The Unknown ran after him, each footfall sending his head swimming.

  ‘Get to the kitchen. Third perimeter. Third perimeter!’

  Aeb blocked with his sword and hammered low with his axe, taking the standing foot from a Dordovan mage who sank to the ground, clutching at the bloody stump. The Protector was battering a path, blocking the wing entrance and buying time, but he would soon be outnumbered. The Unknown surged on.

  ‘Denser, stay with me,’ he managed, every step with his damaged leg firing new agony up into his back.

  ‘Right behind you, Unknown. I’ll tell you when to run.’

  The Unknown reached the mêlée and deflected the attention of two soldiers. The first came at him, sword raised to strike downwards. The big man might have been slow but he wasn’t yet a complete cripple. He swayed right and swung his sword from the left, slashing the man across the stomach as he prepared to deliver his death blow. It was a mistake he’d never recover to learn from. The second was more cautious but was distracted by Aeb heaving his axe just past his nose to bury it in the face of another Dordovan. Seeing the chance, The Unknown threw his dagger which the soldier blocked well but then left himself hopelessly open. The Raven warrior carved open his stomach. The Unknown felt sick with the pain now. It carried through his back and into his head in waves, threatening to overwhelm him.

  ‘Run!’ yelled Denser.

  The Unknown looked behind and swallowed hard. The Dordovans were charging now, abandoning range weapons for overwhelming numbers. Darrick came past him, shouting something he didn’t catch.

  ‘Aeb, we’re going,’ said The Unknown.

  ‘Yes.’ Aeb thumped the pommel of his sword into the face of a soldier and pushed him into the pack following.

  He turned, grabbed The Unknown’s arm and ran with him up the corridor.

  ‘Get those doors ready!’ called The Unknown, fighting the urge to vomit. He wasn’t sure exactly how long he could stand up, let alone move.

  Behind them, the Dordovans were gaining fast. It was going to be very close.

  Ilkar rolled over, finishing on top of the Dordovan. He smashed both fists into the mage, hearing the back of his skull connect with the tiles and his grip go slack. Behind him, Erienne stumbled into the ballroom. He looked around. It was full of Dordovans.

  ‘Oh Gods,’ he said. He got up and ran low at the nearest mage, praying he wouldn’t prepare in time.

  Lyanna clung to her mother as she got up and ran back into the ballroom and towards the kitchen. The man with the sword came from nowhere and struck Erienne across the side of the face. She went down hard, Lyanna screaming as she tumbled from her mother’s arms and slithered across the ballroom floor. She refused to cry and got up to run back to Erienne but the man stopped her, pushing her away.

  ‘You’re going back home to die, little one, but not before you see me kill your bitch of a mother.’

  His voice wasn’t right but she understood him.

  ‘You don’t hurt my Mummy,’ she said, then raised her voice and shrieked. ‘You don’t hurt my Mummy!’

  Ilkar staggered under an enormous pressure in the mana as he tried to attune to the spectrum, aiming to prepare as he ran. In front of him, six mages rocked as one, their hands clamping on their ears. Whatever they had been creating was gone. Ilkar would have killed the lot of them but the power assailing the mana pushed him to his knees. He groped around, looking for help. Hirad surged through the door, Protectors at his heels and, in the middle of it all, the mana light was pouring into Lyanna.

  Hirad saw Selik standing over the prone form of Erienne as he burst into the ballroom. Lyanna was standing alone screaming but he couldn’t worry about that now.

  ‘Selik!’ he said, advancing. ‘I said there’d be another time.’

  The Black Wing, sword in hand, swung to face him, his smeared features curling into a travesty of a smile.

  ‘I knew I’d never get out of here alive but at least I’ll have torn the heart from The Raven. First you, and then the bitch.’ He kicked out, catching her in the stomach. She groaned where she lay. Lyanna screamed louder.

  ‘Dream on, Black Wing,’ snarled Hirad. He ran forward.

  Every surviving pane of glass in the house exploded into a thousand fragments. Every piece of plaster cracked and fell. Beams ruptured, roof slates showered down and the floor rocked beneath them.

  A great howling wind thrummed through the house. The orchard walls exploded outwards, the corridor pitched, its roof buckled and caved in. Hirad, like Selik, was flung from his feet. He rolled over, saw Lyanna stock still in the madness and then Ilkar, screaming in pain, blood running from his nose and ears.

  The noise of the wind snatched the sound but he could see the agony.

  ‘Ilkar!’ The elf couldn’t hear him. He had to get him to safety.

  He dragged himself to his feet and fought the blistering gale for the few yards to where his friend lay hunched in foetal position, his face contorted. He tried to shout again but it was no use. He looked around, saw the Dordovan mages suffering the same fate, and fixed his gaze on Lyanna. If she wasn’t stopped, every mage in the house would be killed.r />
  Denser dropped to the ground as the floor heaved and split. The Unknown turned to help him, seeing the roof blast upwards above him and collapse all along its length, showering timber and slate everywhere. The Dordovan charge had faltered and broken, men covering their heads and running right and backwards, desperate to escape the destruction.

  Wood struck The Unknown on the shoulder as he leant to pick the prone mage from the floor, the pain from his hip sending his head spinning. Wind, the like of which he’d never heard or felt before, pushed him flat, his face close to the Xeteskian’s.

  ‘Denser, what is this!’ he shouted.

  ‘Lyanna,’ he managed through gritted teeth, a line of blood oozing from a nostril. ‘Erienne has got to shield her. She’s dragging it all in and she won’t be able to . . . to hold it. Get them to the kitchen. The Al-Drechar.’

  The Unknown thought he understood.

  ‘Darrick, help me!’

  ‘No,’ said Darrick, yelling into his ear. ‘I’ve got to find Ren. I can’t leave her out there.’ And he ran right towards the doors to the orchard.

  The Unknown picked Denser up and turned to see Aeb fighting his way to the ballroom door. The big man staggered after him, turning his face against the hurricane and raising an arm to knock aside the hunks of plaster that flew at him.

  Inside, the sound was even greater.

  Aeb, if you can hear me. Bring the girl and Erienne. We have to get to the Al-Drechar.

  Aeb looked over to The Unknown and nodded. Instantly, brother Protectors turned and started crawling across the floor. One encircled Lyanna with a huge arm, two others picked up Erienne. Behind The Unknown, the Dordovans were coming on again, leaning into the wind, picking their way across the rubble and their fallen comrades. Lyanna was buying them some time but, from the pain on her face, it was destroying her mind.

  Chapter 40

  The kitchen was an oasis of calm but keeping it that way was killing the Al-Drechar very quickly. All three sat up in their beds, hands clasped together, their shield pushing outwards, barely making it beyond the table in the centre of the room. Outside it, the mana was in havoc. Anything that hadn’t been secured had been picked up and flattened against wall or shield. Mugs were shattered, chairs so much match wood and the table itself had been sliding across the floor to crush them when they had stopped it.

  Ephemere fought to reach out with her mind, to bring Lyanna into the boundary, to calm her. But she was too far away and too far gone. For Erienne, the time was now or it would be never.

  The door from the ballroom burst open. The defending Protector made to strike but instead bent to drag in Hirad and Ilkar. He slammed shut the door after them and stood ready again, impassive, unmoving, the gale picking at his clothing as he stood just within the boundaries of the shield.

  ‘Where is she, Ephy?’ moaned Myriell. ‘We can’t hold this.’

  ‘Outside,’ gasped Hirad. ‘They’re still outside.’ He looked down on Ilkar who was mercifully still breathing and ran for the door into the dining room.

  ‘Hurry, Hirad,’ said Ephemere. ‘Hurry.’

  But he had no need to. Falling almost into his arms, a Protector stumbled in with Lyanna. He sprawled into the compass of the shield and the howling, splintering and tearing stopped as if someone had cut a rope and dropped a curtain. The Al-Drechar’s shield had stopped the mana pouring into Lyanna, her mind not schooled enough to evade the lattice they had made.

  Footsteps could be heard, gathering in volume and, as the shout to arms rang around the wreckage of the house and the Dordovans gathered themselves for one last surge, The Unknown hobbled in with Denser and supported by Aeb. They were followed closely by a pair of Protectors carrying Erienne.

  On the ground in the kitchen, the tortured Protector was dead, killed by a brother. For him and his soul, it was blessed release.

  ‘Get these doors blocked,’ said The Unknown. ‘We’re out of time.’

  ‘It has to be now, Erienne,’ muttered Denser. ‘Goodbye my love.’

  The Unknown put him down and started to haul the table to block the ballroom entrance. Denser crawled over to Erienne who pushed herself groggily up on her hands. The pair of them looked at Lyanna, who lay stiff as a board in the arms of the Protector who’d saved her.

  ‘Leave her, defend us,’ said Denser.

  ‘Yes, my Master,’ said the Protector, laying her on the floor.

  ‘Erienne?’ said Ephemere gently. ‘You know what it is you must do.’

  Erienne nodded, pulled her child into her arms, lay back against Denser and prepared to enter the mind of the One, knowing she would never return.

  Darrick ran right towards the north doors to the orchard, keeping below window level and in the deep shadows cast by the flames that still ripped through the trees. All around him, the quiet after the mana gale heightened every sound and he heard Dordovans shouting from behind but nothing from ahead. He reached the doors, which had splintered from their hinges, and crept into the blazing quadrangle, running to the right-hand wall which had been blown apart by Lyanna’s brief but devastating mana gale.

  Darrick’s crouching run took him swiftly from shadow to shadow, his eyes fighting to focus in what was an alien landscape. Most of the trees were down, many turned to ashes by the Flame Orbs, and the fires still ate into the wet bark all over the orchard. The blue-tinged orange and yellow light leapt and danced in the natural wind that blew across the big open space. Already, he had seen the charred and twisted bodies of four mages and a male elf.

  To his right, Dordovans ran up the ruined corridor towards the ballroom. Too many of them. Even given the Protectors in the kitchen and The Raven going to join them, there were too many enemies. It was only a matter of time before they were overwhelmed.

  Darrick cursed himself for a fool. He had seriously underestimated the weight of mage attack that the Dordovans had thrown into the orchard and now it was up to him to change things. Until the orchard was taken, they’d been holding the first perimeter comfortably, wearing the Dordovans slowly down. He had really felt they could win and leave Erienne clear to do what she had to do. But now, it was desperate. And if the Dordovans broke through into the kitchen, everything would be in vain.

  The Lysternan General carried on to the south doors. Five more Dordovan mages lay dead. Arrows had brought them down and their throats had been cut before the fires took their bodies. Darrick knelt by the last one, looking around. At least one elf had survived to wield the knife.

  He waited, watching for movement, and felt the edge of an arrow against his neck.

  ‘I should teach you some tracking skills,’ said Ren, removing the arrow. ‘What are you doing here?’

  Darrick looked round. Ren was right behind him with another elf just behind her. She had an ugly burn across her right cheek and blood ran from a deep cut by her left ear. She was shivering.

  ‘Looking for you,’ said Darrick. ‘The Dordovans are at the third perimeter. The Raven can’t keep them away for long. We have to do something. Any ideas?’

  Ren nodded. ‘Just one.’

  The surviving six Protectors went three to a door. The Unknown had dragged the table over to block one, its broad top covering it completely. Two of them leant against it, leaving the entrance from the dining room the only option for attack. The Dordovans took it.

  Blow after blow splintered the timbers and the Protectors stood waiting, Hirad behind them. His lungs felt fit to explode, a piece of plaster had smashed over his head and his skull ached. But behind him, Erienne was sacrificing her life for her child and he was prepared to do the same to allow her to complete the job. Next to him, he heard the tap of a blade on the cracked stone flags. He looked across and met The Unknown’s determined gaze.

  ‘Ready for this?’ asked Hirad.

  ‘What do you think?’ said The Unknown.

  ‘What happened to Darrick?’

  ‘He shouted something about going to find Ren. So he should. He put her out
there, after all.’

  ‘Oh,’ said Hirad. ‘He’ll make a fine member of The Raven.’

  ‘If he lives,’ said The Unknown. ‘Which I doubt.’

  The Unknown’s blade ceased tapping. Aeb was at his left, Hirad his right and Protectors made up the rest of death’s welcome. The kitchen door splintered and in they came.

  Darrick, Ren, and the other surviving Guild elf, Aronaar, ran across the eerily empty hallway and up to the main entrance. Bodies lay where they had fallen, puddles of blood left the way underfoot treacherous and the sounds of fighting echoed from the direction of the kitchen.

  Ren put a hand out and stopped them just inside.

  ‘There, under the trees opposite, like the coward I thought he was.’

  Darrick strained his eyes and could see Vuldaroq, flanked by three mages and two soldiers. He was seated, apparently unconcerned by the death he had set in motion, just waiting for the outcome.

  ‘You need to take the mages,’ said Darrick. ‘Make sure Vuldaroq is incapacitated as far as casting is concerned. They look like they escaped the gale out here. I’ll take the swordsmen.’

  ‘Both of them?’ asked Ren.

  ‘No problem,’ said Darrick.

  ‘Be ready,’ said Ren.

  She signalled Aronaar and the two elves slipped soundlessly out of the entrance, disappearing immediately into the shrubs to either side of the door. Darrick scoured the area for more Dordovans. He couldn’t see any but the cover behind Vuldaroq about thirty yards away was deep. He’d have to trust the elven eyes.

 

‹ Prev