The Raven Collection

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The Raven Collection Page 257

by James Barclay


  ‘Well, there is no surprise element now,’ said Darrick. ‘The cavalry will be watched for like the TaiGethen. Getting close to here to distract them will be a challenge. Chandyr is not a stupid man.’

  ‘But can we hold out?’

  Darrick considered a moment. ‘Without help from the south? No. But we’ll take as many of them with us as we can.’

  ‘Come on, Raven,’ said Hirad. ‘Let’s eat.’

  Chapter 41

  Erienne awoke in the middle of the night and sat up, biting back a scream. Her dreams had been full of tortured magic and the cries of mages shivered from the mana forever. They had been full of a crawling blackness that consumed everything it touched, that dulled the brightest tones and choked the songs of the young. She had seen herself at the gates of the college, presiding over the demise of all magic, laughing down at the upturned faces.

  And around her feet had been her children, brought back to her from death. Returned to where they would be forever safe. At her side, being as she was. One.

  ‘Shh, love, it’s all right.’ Denser’s voice from next to her in the bed did nothing to calm her heart.

  ‘It cannot promise that,’ she said. ‘Nothing can promise that.’

  ‘Promise what?’

  ‘You wouldn’t understand,’ she said, tasting the bitterness in her own voice. ‘Leave me. I can beat it.’

  ‘Don’t shut yourself away from me,’ urged Denser. ‘Let me share the burden, please.’

  ‘What can you share?’ she snapped. ‘It’s all inside me. I cannot give it away, I cannot let others carry it. It is in me. It is trying to beat me.’ She forced herself to stop, to lower her voice. She had turned to face him, still lying there, hurt in his eyes and concern in his face. ‘It taunts me, Denser. But how can it? It is not sentient. How can I beat something that is not there at all?’

  ‘Whatever your mind sees as the fight is what must be beaten. It is a fight for control of your own body too. I know I cannot really help you but don’t shut me out. Please don’t do that.’

  She stroked his face. ‘I’ll try,’ she said. ‘But it’s so hard. I feel like I am the only thing stopping a flood from drowning us all. It’s so hard to find room for anything else.’

  ‘Then do not.’ Denser smiled but his eyes retained their pain. ‘I will understand.’

  ‘Tell me that in a year,’ she said. ‘Or in a season.’

  ‘Assuming we live that long,’ said Denser. ‘We might not see out another day.’

  He shifted his position, sat up, his hands behind him, taking his weight.

  ‘Tell me what you saw today,’ he said. ‘What made you break the spell?’

  ‘Their casting caused the problem,’ she said immediately. ‘I’m sure of that now. The very mana they forced into focus triggered something in the stone around the Heart, like a black stain spreading upwards. It was like it was being forced to close, to shut down. It’ll happen again the next time they try.’

  ‘Darrick doesn’t want them to. Not tomorrow,’ said Denser. ‘He doesn’t think we can hold out another day without the Julatsans casting to stop Xetesk.’

  ‘Well they can’t,’ she said, frustrated at his lack of understanding. ‘It’s obvious, isn’t it?’

  ‘No,’ said Denser. She sighed impatiently, caught herself at it and stopped herself retorting.

  ‘Sorry.’ She calmed herself. ‘It’s mass use of magic that causes the problems. If they are all out there casting shields tomorrow, the focus will fail. There’s no doubt about that in my mind. Geren was only half right. The only chance is to raise the Heart, get it back into the place where it can generate the flow again, and hope the shadow can be suppressed while they raise it.’

  ‘How?’

  She shrugged. ‘Well, I’ll have to think of something, won’t I?’

  ‘Like what?’

  ‘How the hell do I know! Gods Denser, I’m not the bloody oracle.’

  ‘Yes, but you are the only one who can do something to help. No one else can even see the problem, let alone do anything to stop it.’

  She pushed away and stood up, feet chilling on the cold stone. ‘Great. Erienne, the saviour of Julatsa. Erienne, the saviour of the whole bloody world.’ She turned on him. ‘Pity is, I have no idea how to do it.’

  ‘Well, can I—’

  ‘No!’ she shouted. ‘No one can.’ She put her head in her hands. ‘Sorry, Denser. Please go back to sleep. You need rest for tomorrow.’

  ‘Come back to bed,’ he said, voice gentle, the one she had fallen in love with.

  ‘I can’t sleep any more. I need to think.’

  ‘When will the Al-Arynaar be able to cast again?’ asked Denser after a pause.

  She shrugged. ‘They were drained, you know. I couldn’t help that. Maybe in the afternoon. Maybe later.’

  ‘I see,’ he said. ‘Erienne, will you do something for me?’

  ‘If I can,’ she said.

  ‘Tell everything you’ve told me to Darrick. I don’t think he was going to sleep much tonight and he should know. He’ll be in the refectory or the gatehouse.’

  ‘It’s as good a place to walk as any.’ She searched around for her shoes and a shawl to put around her shoulders.

  ‘I love you, Erienne.’

  ‘Don’t you forget it.’

  The news for Blackthorne was as good as it could possibly be. Communion between Dordovan mages had informed him that a force of around two hundred and fifty was closing in on Julatsa. With those he had with him, they would make three hundred and they could yet strike the decisive blow.

  A Lysternan cavalry mage had brought further news in the early hours of the morning that the college still stood and that Izack was planning another assault on the Xeteskians at the earliest opportunity. Though their cavalry was stronger, the Xeteskians had lost the day and were camped just outside the city to the south. He had been advised to enter from the north or west.

  It was not quite dawn when Blackthorne roused his band of tired but willing Dordovan and Lysternan fighting men and mages. With them rode his own few men and their spirit had grown by the hour as their wounds had healed and their aches and pains eased. There would not be a better time to move and attack, and he was not going to miss the rendezvous point a mile west of the city.

  They marched quietly as they approached the silent college city. Away to their right, the sun was beginning to climb over the horizon and the enemy had to be close. But friends were closer still and would soon be in sight.

  ‘This could turn out to be a great day, Luke,’ said Blackthorne. ‘If The Raven can mastermind holding onto the college for another morning, we could be on them. The war is not yet lost.’

  ‘I have prayed that we wouldn’t be too late, my Lord,’ said Luke. He was smiling, his young face bright and alive.

  ‘Some day, everyone’s prayers are answered. Perhaps today it is your turn.’

  Blackthorne was leading his ragtag bunch up a gentle wooded incline. At the crest, they would be able to see all the way down to Julatsa. He was hoping too that they would be able to see where the allies were waiting. He was looking forward to seeing a friendly army for a change.

  The further they walked, the more Blackthorne demanded quiet. He had dismounted and was leading his horse as were all of his own men. One hand was on the bridle, the other flattening his sword against his waist to stop it from jangling. It would not do at this time to blunder into an enemy they had not foreseen. His scouts, however, few though he could spare, had reported nothing for a mile all around them ever since they had left their rest stop.

  Those scouts had returned now and were only a hundred yards or so ahead, the furthest still in sight, just cresting the rise. Blackthorne saw the scout crouch suddenly and slither off out of sight. Immediately, he stopped the march, the men already knowing better than to question the Baron. He waited and it was not long before the scout reappeared, haring down the incline and sliding to a stop.

  �
��My Lord,’ he said.

  ‘Calm yourself,’ said Blackthorne. ‘Tell me what you see.’

  ‘The allies are not far ahead, they are along the banks of the River Taalat no more than a mile distant. The city is close. But there are others closing in on them. I cannot be sure but I would say they are Xeteskian. Mages. There are few but they move with great purpose. My Lord, I would stake my life that they aim to attack.’

  ‘And do the allies outnumber them?’

  ‘Ten to one, my Lord.’

  ‘Then . . .’ Blackthorne trailed off. Everything became awfully clear. He turned to his men. ‘The allies are going to come under spell attack. For ease, split down college lines. Dordover, run to them, warn them off but don’t get too close, Luke go with them, take four of our people. Ride hard. They may not see you early, that’s why I need Dordovans behind you making a racket. Lystern, come with me. We have some mages to kill.’ He swung into his saddle. ‘Oh, and we’ll be running and we’ll be shouting too. The time for quiet is at an end. Come on!’

  The band ran up the slope, Blackthorne at a half-canter at their side. Luke and the other riders had ploughed off and were already over the slope and heading hard towards the Dordovans. Blackthorne breasted the rise and saw it all laid out before him. The allies, oblivious to the threat that approached them from the south-east, the Xeteskians, and he was certain his scout was right, riding quickly towards their goal, directed by familiars, flying above them.

  ‘Let’s go!’ shouted Blackthorne, and set off down the long slope after the Xeteskian riders.

  He was well in advance of the foot soldiers but he had three of his own about him. It didn’t matter if he was killed, so long as he disrupted for long enough the casting he was sure was coming. He closed the gap steadily but the Xeteskians were well ahead, their familiars now high in the sky, hovering over the allies who were, he could see, beginning to shift, unease rippling through them.

  Way to his left now, Luke was flying along, hair streaming out behind him, one arm waving wildly. Blackthorne fancied he could hear the boy’s shouts.

  ‘Just don’t get too close,’ he said to himself.

  Ahead, the Xeteskians dismounted and formed a tight group, swordsmen remaining mounted, cantering around in a protective ring. Behind him, the Lysternans were making a game attempt to keep up but he was already fifty yards ahead and pulling further clear.

  A pressure beat down on his ears and his horse slowed dramatically, its head rocking from side to side, its flanks shuddering. A black line appeared in the sky, quickly resolving into half a dozen such lines, crossing to make a star that dragged cloud to it in great swirls that thickened and darkened.

  ‘No, no!’ Blackthorne shouted and urged his horse on but it was reluctant to move.

  Ignoring the growing pain deep in his ears, Blackthorne dismounted and began to run on towards the waiting horsemen whose own mounts had suffered the same discomfort as his; the loose mage horses had bolted, heading away to sanctuary wherever they could find it.

  Blackthorne could still see down the slope to the allied camp, where men were now running in all directions. Unwilling horses were being mounted and people starting to scatter. A half mile from them, Luke had been forced to stop.

  Above them all, the star opened like the petals of some malevolent flower. For a heartbeat, Blackthorne thought the spell must have failed. No lightning was disgorged, no inter-dimensional power bit the ground. But this was not BlueStorm and in the next instant, he was forced to his knees by a high-pitched whine in his head that flattened his strength and threatened to blur his sight.

  He clamped his hands over his ears but it made no difference, yet looking up, he saw that he was one of the lucky ones. The allied camp had been the target and there, the spell struck with appalling force. The river rippled and bounced in its bed, flowers and bushes were pressed down, their leaves and petals driving away as if propelled by some unseen hand.

  And the men and horses. Oh dear Gods, the men and horses. Like the trees near which they stood, they sagged, helpless and writhing. Those that could, shouted and screamed. It was impossible but it seemed that they grew in size, inflated against their clothes and their skin. Men wailed and gasped, horses kicked at the air, trees ripped along their trunks, their leaves falling like autumn. And when the pressure became too much, they burst.

  Like being detonated from the inside, they exploded outwards and upwards, just lumps of flesh, bone, shivered wood and skin. The debris filled the air like a cloud tinged pink and still the spell was not done as it ripped up the ground too, catapulting rock and earth high into the sky then shutting off.

  Instantly, the pain eased and a fury gripped Blackthorne. He drove himself to his feet and called his men to him. And when they were all standing and ready, he charged. They bellowed their rage and their disbelief at what the Xeteskians had done, their swords whirling around in their hands, catching the sunlight.

  Ahead of them, the mounted soldiers forced their horses into order and rode at them. Blackthorne felt possessed of the energy of a teenager. He rolled under the blow of a horseman, came up on to his knees and savaged his sword through the legs of the next beast past him. Not waiting to see what he had done, he rose and ran on, slashing out at another rider, feeling his blade connect he knew not where. He had one target in mind and one only.

  The mages were in no condition to cast or to defend themselves but it would hardly have mattered otherwise. Blackthorne and his men fell on them like wild animals, carving through hands that tried to protect heads, splitting skulls, slicing stomachs and puncturing chests, groins and backs. And above, the familiars who had directed it all, screamed and fell as their masters died. No one was spared, no one escaped and the blood soaked into the green grass, staining it as black as the robes of the men they had slaughtered.

  But that was as nothing to what the Xeteskians had wrought. When he was done and the exertion and shock fell on him like a cloak too heavy to wear, Blackthorne walked to the scene of the spell and looked on it. He felt detached from the horror and that was surely the only way he could have stayed standing and not fall to his knees, vomiting his guts into the river.

  Scraps of flesh lay everywhere. It was impossible to distinguish man from beast. Blackthorne had visited an abattoir once. The waste buckets would have been full of pieces of meat this size. Chunks of gristle and bone that were no use for anything but grinding down for dog food. He could barely believe that this had ever been men.

  He turned to see his men gathering behind him. Many had succumbed and were sick, others had let swords drop from nerveless fingers while they stared in complete incomprehension. It only took a moment to see that none of them could go on. Not right now and perhaps not ever. So he gave them an alternative.

  ‘We must take news of this to Dordover and Lystern,’ he said, his voice thick and shaking. ‘Xetesk must be stopped. Not at Julatsa but at its very heart, in the college itself. This power can never be used again.

  ‘Look at what they have done. Hundreds of men with no chance. Remember what you have seen here, remember why you will want to fight at the gates of the Dark College again.’

  He turned and led them away.

  ‘Contact cannot be made,’ said Dystran, sitting by the bedside of his old friend Ranyl.

  The master was fading fast now and perhaps would not even see out the battle. His voice was brittle, every cough brought up fresh blood and his face was grey and terribly thin. He had not eaten in two days and even a sip of water was taken with the knowledge of certain pain. But still he clung on and those eyes reflected the pin-sharp mind inside his failing body.

  ‘But they cast the PressureBell?’ he asked, Dystran having to lean in close to hear the grinding whisper.

  ‘Yes, it was cast. We monitored it from here,’ said Dystran. ‘But we do not know its effectiveness. It is apparent that not enough survived with energy enough to link a Communion with me.’

  Ranyl nodded. ‘Best assum
e they are all dead, young pup.’

  ‘And we’d better pray the allies were destroyed. We suffered heavy losses yesterday. But the walls and gates are weak and the Julatsans cannot cast, or so it would seem. We can break through today. We must.’

  Dystran looked out through Ranyl’s balcony doors. Another fine day was dawning, the wispy clouds already burning off. A good day for triumph.

  ‘We are so close,’ said Ranyl, a tear of pain squeezing from his eye, the cough spraying blood on to the cloth he held to his mouth. ‘I may yet live to see it.’

  ‘You will, old dog, you will,’ said Dystran, starting to believe it himself if the battle could be won today.

  There was a tentative knock on the door.

  ‘This had better be important,’ muttered Dystran. He stood and strode to the door, snatching it open to reveal Suarav standing there. The guard captain looked anxious. ‘Yes?’

  ‘I am sorry my Lord but you must come to the walls of the city.’

  ‘Any particular reason?’ asked Dystran. ‘An odd cloud formation perhaps or may be a herd of deer galloping across the battlefields of yesterday.’ He dropped his voice to a clipped whisper. ‘Can’t you see I’m with a dying man?’

  Suarav dropped his voice too, and spoke so low that Dystran had difficulty in hearing. He caught one word though, or thought he did and prayed he was mistaken.

  ‘I beg your pardon?’ he said.

  The Wesmen songs had reached a new crescendo when they had reached the eastern side of Understone Pass. Their pace had increased, as had their belief in victory. Understone itself lay in ruins, the stench of death reaching them hundreds of yards distant, as did the calls of the flocks of carrion birds, fighting over putrefied flesh.

  There really had been no one left to fight them, just as his scouts had reported. So the four thousand warriors, led at a rhythmic trot by Tessaya, Lord of the Paleon Tribes and ruler of the Wesmen, picked up their voices and drove themselves north to glory.

 

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