‘You know what we face should we stay here. Making a run for it might seem attractive and indeed we will be in the open air, we will have access to fresh water and vegetables, perhaps even wild animals.’
He paused while the smiles spread through the gathering.
‘But we will also be vulnerable. There will be no walls to guard us, only the ColdRoom shell. And to maintain casting on the move will be difficult. We are going to have to steal our own wagons and horses before we start.
‘Now, again, before you decide for yourselves, think on this. If we strike out, we strike out into the unknown and we might be overwhelmed quickly. Here, we know how long we can hold out, health willing. And there will be those of us who will be unable to travel.’ He held up his hands. ‘Please. Hear me out. Those of you know who you are. You could not survive the trip and you would be a burden on the rest. It is harsh but we must face the full reality.
‘Among those who would not travel is Kayvel.’ Heryst had to pause, fearing his voice would crack. The sick mage gripped his hand tight. ‘It breaks my heart but he knows his condition and he still believes the fit should leave. He will be with those who have to remain behind. He knows what it means and he will not let any be taken by the demons.
‘Think on it, and we will talk at nightfall. Thank you. Thank you all for everything you have done so far and everything that you still have to do. We will prevail. We will survive. Balaia will rise from the ashes of this invasion.’
The babble of conversation that broke out was doused quickly by a screech from below. The demons were attacking again.
Chapter 27
Lord Tessaya was in the forward positions overlooking Xetesk when the demon master approached. Not for the first time, the creature came to speak to the Wesmen. Always feeding them their forthcoming doom unless they joined the fight to bring the colleges down.
Tessaya recalled the offer that had been made the day before. Something to do with the sanctity of the western lands should the Wesmen complete the job the demons had begun in Julatsa. The Wesmen Lord had spies in the field near each college and was not as blind as the demons liked to think he was.
He had his chair brought up for him. It was horse hide, padded and stretched across a hardwood frame. High-backed, it was stitched with the Paleon crest. He settled into it and accepted a mug of herb infusion. He cupped his hands around it gratefully, the warmth combating a little of the freezing midday air. His furs were gathered about his shoulders and he had let his beard and hair grow thick, covering much of his battle-scarred face.
Settling into his chair, his lieutenants around him and every warrior tasked to show nothing but strength and belief, he waited for the demon to issue across the ground. He watched its tentacles rippling beneath its torso and was pleased to see its colour brighten to a mid-blue, its temper already frayed by Tessaya’s lack of respect for its authority.
Closer to, he could see its brow was pinched in hard on its hairless head. Its nostril slits were flared and its long-fingered hands were clasped together in front of its writhing chest. It came to a halt about ten feet from him. It towered better than twenty feet above him, a fetid smell drifting on the light breeze. An imposing figure but impotent to do him harm.
‘You push my patience to its limit, Wesman,’ it said.
‘Let us at least use the names we know we have,’ said Tessaya, taking a sip of his drink. ‘Unless, Drenoul, you wish me to call you “demon”. Can I offer you a beverage?’
‘I would rather chew my own body than accept the filth you drink,’ replied Drenoul. ‘Enough, I have a great deal to do. I will hear your answer to my proposal.’
‘A moment,’ said Tessaya, raising a finger. He beckoned one of his lieutenants close. ‘Speak softly and make as if you are responding to my questions. I think this demon needs to understand its place in the eyes of Wesmen.’
‘Indeed, my Lord,’ said the warrior. ‘One thing that might interest you is that we have received a scout from the college of Lystern recently.’
‘Really?’
‘He reports the college is on the verge of breaking.’
‘Ah, something of a shame. I would hate to see the enemy forces able to divert north to join the Xetesk battleground. Is there any indication as to their ability to hang on for any length of time?’
The warrior shrugged. ‘They like all mages have proved themselves tenacious. It is inconceivable that they will simply roll over.’
‘We will talk more later,’ said Tessaya. He turned back to Drenoul. ‘My apologies, I was reminding myself of the detail of your offer.’
Drenoul breathed out in a snarl. Its fingers unclasped and grasped at the air in front of it. Its colour lightened a shade further.
‘As I understand it,’ said Tessaya, ‘you felt that we would best serve you by attacking Julatsa and its attendant elven defence under your local commander’s direction. The reward for this was a promise that you would not seek to enslave my peoples.’
‘That is an accurate summation.’
‘What I nor my ruling cadre can understand is why you would make this offer. You have consistently told me over the last two years that we could not hope to stand against you once the colleges had fallen and magic destroyed. Yet here you are plainly unable to complete your task and apparently needing my assistance. You’ll understand my scepticism and my reluctance to trust a race for whom utter dominion has long appeared to be the only conceivable goal.’
Drenoul was quiet for some time, forcing its colour back to a more palatable deep blue.
‘We would concede some surprise at the length of college resistance, ’ it said eventually. ‘And we want a swift resolution to allow us to take rightful control over the mage lands and the entirety of eastern Balaia. Those who aid us will be treated as allies in the years to come. Those who stand by or oppose us will be enslaved. There is your choice.’
Tessaya smiled, knowing it a patronising gesture. ‘Or perhaps the reality is that without us you do not have the strength to beat the colleges and never will have. Perhaps you have lost more of your minions than you expected and your forces, finite as they must be, are actually being stretched.’
Drenoul flashed bright sky-blue. ‘And perhaps you need a personal demonstration of our strength, Tessaya. The loss of Wesmen Spirits might serve to remind you of your tenuous hold on your own life.’
Tessaya fought the urge to stand, and instead leaned back further into his chair. ‘But you cannot afford to, can you, Drenoul? Is it not true that should you send a force capable of taking some of my warriors, you would compromise your siege of Xetesk, or of Lystern or Julatsa, and allow them to strike out?
‘You do not frighten me, Drenoul. Nor do you frighten any of those I command. I am aware we cannot kill you or any of your race but neither can you break us with a touch or a cut. My warriors are strong and they are numerous. We can keep you back at will. We have Understone Pass at our backs. We are a problem you wish you didn’t have to face. As are the elves. Easterners are weak, their spirits are vulnerable. And in two years you have failed to break them. What makes you think you will ever be able to break us?’
Drenoul made a move forwards and immediately eight warriors drew their weapons and responded. Drenoul stopped, his colour now a thin, pale blue verging on white.
‘Your words will not save you when we march on your helpless lands, Tessaya. They will ring hollow in your ears. The offer is withdrawn.’
Drenoul floated high into the sky, turned and flew quickly back towards Julatsa.
Tessaya pushed himself from his chair. ‘Withdrawn? Rejected, I would suggest.’ He looked for the lieutenant again. ‘They don’t need us to help them fight in Julatsa, I am certain of it. But they want us out of the way. Every scout that returns from the north, I want reporting immediately to me.’
‘Yes, my Lord.’
Tessaya began to walk back towards the fires at the centre of the camp.
‘Something is about to ha
ppen. Something critical. I can feel it.’
Dystran and Vuldaroq were studying one of the more arcane and complex texts stolen from the library when the change in atmosphere happened. It was quite sudden, like the sun burning through thin cloud to warm the earth. They were in Dystran’s chambers, surrounded by guards and with their few script-scholars nearby. These latter four were working on language which had defeated both the senior mages.
It took Dystran a while to work out what it was that had alerted his subconscious and caused him to look up and through his closed balcony windows.
‘What has just happened?’ he asked, pushing his chair back.
‘You were struggling to decipher this word and wondered where it was they went, whoever they were, and if there are any of them left,’ said Vuldaroq, a half-smile on his thin face.
Dystran glanced sideways at Vuldaroq as he got up. How strange the fortunes of Balaia had revealed themselves to be. Vuldaroq was a man that Dystran would gladly have seen swinging from a tree in the college courtyard before the demons had invaded. But without losing any of his trademark bite, the head of the Dordovan college had revealed himself to be a man of depth and strength as well as possessing a sharp analytical mind. It had taken him some time to throw off the memories of his flight from Dordover but he and his few mages had proved a tonic in the college of their erstwhile enemies.
If only they could break down the terminology contained in the texts Sharyr had brought back. Something important was eluding him and it was based around an allusion to a people called the Charanacks. They held knowledge, so the text maintained, that had been the basis of the first deal struck between demon and Xeteskian mage well over a millennium ago. Dystran was frustrated. He’d have loved to know who they were. They would almost certainly be worth talking to.
‘I don’t mean that,’ said Dystran. He walked to the balcony doors and opened them, standing inside while his guards gathered about him. ‘Just listen.’
Everyone in the chamber did so. Dystran saw a frown cross Vuldaroq’s face.
‘Quiet,’ he said.
‘Silence more like,’ said Dystran.
He indicated his guards accompany him and he walked out into the fresh air of his balcony. Every day since the gliders had finished their search of the mana trails that identified the positions of their ColdRoom casters, demon activity had been incessant.
They had suffered a number of quick attacks from the reavers that they had been lucky to repel without losing any of their mages and only three swordsmen. And when the attacks weren’t coming in, the creatures swarmed the shell, probing and teasing. They kept up a barrage of sound, hoping to distract their targets, and further away, any who cared to look would see enslaved Xeteskians being herded from one area of the city to another. There seemed no discernible purpose to this barring the sapping of morale.
But now the shell was deserted. Dystran couldn’t see a single demon flying above the college or walking the outer walls. Further afield, he could see no slaves in the streets, no clusters of demons hovering over them as they worked. He could hear no cries of the exhausted, terrified and dying. There was no smoke from cook fires. Nothing.
Far in the distance, he could see the shapes of demons clustered in the air to the north. Confident, he walked the circle of his balcony. Away to the south, the fires of the Wesmen signified their confusing and continuing presence. Dystran wished they’d join one side or the other. Or indeed return to the Heartlands. Occasionally he had seen demons hovering near to the Wesmen. Attacking, talking or simply watching, he couldn’t tell. There were none there now. In the distant east there were more demons. West towards the Blackthornes too. Dark patches in the sky at the edges of the city and beyond.
Dystran completed his circuit and looked up into the sky above the college. In the blue, the vibrating white slash hung. If he tuned in to the mana spectrum he knew he’d be able to see the pure mana flooding into Balaia, strengthening the demons with every passing heartbeat. And occasionally, more demons would travel from wherever it was their homeland lay across inter-dimensional space, swarming into the sky before dispersing about whatever tasks they had been summoned to perform.
There was a crowd at the balcony doors.
‘A trap, do you think?’ asked Vuldaroq.
Dystran shook his head. ‘It isn’t their style, is it? I just don’t understand it.’
‘We should take advantage,’ said Chandyr, who never left Dystran’s side. ‘Bring some of our people into the college.’
‘No,’ said Dystran.
‘My Lord—’
‘No,’ he repeated. ‘Think, Chandyr.’
‘I am,’ said the commander, bristling. ‘We have a chance to save some of our own.’
Dystran ushered them all back inside. He shared the urge to do exactly what Chandyr desired but he knew it was folly. ‘Whether it is a trap or not is immaterial. For one thing, I don’t think you will find any Xeteskians within a mile of the college. Wherever those demons are hovering, that is where our people are, believe me. But even should you bring them in, it is impractical. We can barely feed and water ourselves, let alone any more mouths.’
Chandyr relaxed a little and inclined his head. ‘I know you’re right, it’s just . . .’ He gestured out towards the city.
‘I understand,’ said Dystran. ‘There is no one in this room, in this college, who does not want to save every man, woman and child in our city. But we have to liberate them when we can truly help them. That isn’t now but we will do it.
‘But you’re right, we must take advantage. So don’t stand there. Take the fastest runners you have and let’s get something more from the library, assuming it didn’t all burn. And Chandyr, we don’t trust these bastards, right? So make sure some of your sprinters can cast, won’t you?’
The Raven had enjoyed a peculiar rest. They, plus Kas, Ark and Eilaan, had camped on the idyllic shores of Triverne Lake for three days and four nights. They had seen no sign of demons. They had seen no sign of anything barring forest creatures, in truth. Curious. They’d sparred and trained, talked and rested but it all had a surreal quality. None of them could ever ignore the fact of what was to come.
If they’d been in a storm before then surely this was its eye.
Understanding Rebraal and Auum’s likely timescale for evacuating Julatsa, they ate a quiet breakfast on yet another cold and clear morning before heading back for the longboat to row themselves to the main shore of the lake. No one spoke the whole way across the placid water either. Hirad had wanted to break the ice but had seen the look in The Unknown’s eyes and kept himself quiet.
He shook his head. He found it absurd that in this one longboat the future of Balaia and at least three dimensions rested. To him, it felt like a funeral procession. Prophetic perhaps. Hirad left them all to it for the row but couldn’t keep himself quiet when they’d reached the eastern shore, hidden the boat and moved to shelter.
‘Brooding doesn’t suit you, Unknown. Thinking about the family? ’
‘Not this time, Hirad.’ The Unknown shook his head.
‘So? I’m not going to guess just to amuse you. Tell me.’
The Unknown smiled briefly and looked across at Hirad to gauge his expression. Hirad mugged at him, stretching his eyes.
‘This is serious. Think about what we’re about to attempt. Think about the weight we carry, the lives of those reliant on us. Like never before, this is no game. We need to watch ourselves, Hirad,’ he said. Hirad didn’t reply. ‘We need to watch what we do, how much we take on ourselves and how much we rely on those around us. Not overstretch.’
‘Right.’
‘Hirad, we are not sharp. How can we be? It’ll take time even to get close and that means we cannot rely on each other the way we could.’
‘I’m not with you.’
‘I can’t say it much plainer, Coldheart. What we were five years ago is a memory. What we were two years ago is probably unattainable. If we fight on those
memories, we won’t survive.’
Hirad frowned. ‘We knew we weren’t enough on our own. That’s why we’ve brought a crowd with us.’
‘You aren’t listening to me.’ The Unknown took a quick glance behind him and hushed his voice. ‘I’m just asking you to wise up and understand that The Raven we all remember isn’t the one walking here. It’s got nothing to do with belief in ourselves. But we’ve sat around for two years. You know what that does and Darrick has seen its effects in our stamina, in our speed and team-work. It’s a matter of degrees but it’s critical.’
‘Unknown, in case it escaped your attention, I spent my time running with the TaiGethen and Thraun with the ClawBound. I am faster than I have ever been.’
‘Fine!’ The Unknown slapped his hands against his thighs. ‘But I am not and nor is Darrick, Denser or Erienne. Nor are Ark and Kas come to that. Remember your little spin move outside Blackthorne? It almost got you killed. I was only just in time.’
‘But you were there.’ Hirad felt confused and a familiar anger grabbed at him. ‘So what’s the problem?’
‘The problem, Hirad, is that you cannot rely on us as you did. And that means that for now at least, you have to slow down. Stay in line and in touch.’
‘If you think I’m going to ignore an opening to kill because you think you’re too old and slow you’re wrong. I fight my way. Like I always have. And you yours. And we look out for each other. Like always.’
The Unknown stopped and faced Hirad, his eyes hard, face reddening slightly. ‘Why do you always have to be such a stubborn bastard? I’m trying to help you stay alive here.’
Hirad could sense The Raven bunching around them. He thought to walk away but stayed. ‘No you aren’t. You’re trying to clip my wings. Undermine my belief in you all and I can’t understand why you’d do that. Where we’re going, we’ll need every advantage we’ve got and what I’ve learned from Auum is a big one.’
The Raven Collection Page 291