Heirs of Destiny Box Set

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Heirs of Destiny Box Set Page 173

by Andy Peloquin


  “I know.” Hailen smiled. “I’ve done this with the Hunter and Kiara.”

  Kodyn cocked an eyebrow. It seems his life isn’t quite as sheltered as we first thought.

  Hailen took the belt from him, hesitating only a heartbeat before he flung himself off the roof’s edge. A loud humming filled the air as the young boy zipped along the line toward the Temple of Prosperity. He dropped before he slammed into the roof, rolled a few times, and stumbled to his feet. A broad smile split his face and he waved his arms for them to follow.

  Ennolar was already signing orders to Lunus. The Secret Keeper turned and raced down the stairway. Kodyn had no idea where the priest was going but there was no time to worry. He had to get everyone to the other side before the Stumblers reached them.

  He turned to Briana. “You next.”

  She seemed far more hesitant to follow Hailen. “Are you sure?” she asked. Fear and worry mingled in her dark eyes.

  “It’s the only way,” Kodyn told her as he took the sack that contained Suroth’s journal and the Serenii artifacts. “But it’s a lot more fun than you’d expect.” He removed his belt and formed it into two loops for her to slip her wrists into. “Just hang on tight and enjoy the ride.”

  It took her half a minute to finally drum up the courage to make the leap. She zipped across to the roof and fell hard, right into Hailen’s outstretched arms. The two of them went down in a tangled heap of limbs and clothing. Relief flooded Kodyn as they climbed to their feet, apparently unharmed. The look on Briana’s face told him she’d enjoyed it far more than she’d expected.

  When he turned back, he found a company of Secret Keepers had joined Ennolar. Aside from the eight Guardians and the Arch-Guardian himself, there were four more, including Lunus, all carrying heavy-looking sacks and leather satchels.

  Kodyn frowned. “No offense, Ennolar, but I’m not sure the rope can handle so much weight.”

  Ennolar’s face soured. “The rope will hold. It is alchemically treated, and far stronger than hemp.”

  Kodyn nodded. “Fair enough.” House Hawk used something similar, a lightweight cord of alchemically-strengthened fabric, a secret known only to specific Journeymen of House Scorpion. “So who’s going first?”

  The Secret Keepers exchanged glances. Finally, Uryan stepped up first. She had little trouble with the crossing, landing lightly and rolling to her feet without a stumble.

  As Thevoris crossed, Kodyn risked a glance down at the Stumblers. His gut clenched as he caught sight of the rising pile of Stumblers. He had a minute, maybe two, before the creatures reached them.

  “Go, go!” he urged. “We’re out of time.”

  But he could only hurry them so much. They had to go one at a time, and the crossing took a full ten seconds. His stomach twisted into tighter and tighter knots with each beat of his heart.

  Finally, only Lunus and Ennolar remained. Lunus went first, pausing only long enough to scoop up the crate of Thunderstrikers, tucking them under his arm, and hurtled himself across the zip line.

  “Here.” Ennolar tossed a spare leather belt to Kodyn. “You’ll need this.”

  Kodyn took it with a nod. “Careful, Ennolar, or people might think you’re actually starting to like me.”

  With a scowl, the portly Arch-Guardian wrapped his own loop of leather around the rope and slid across.

  Relief surged within Kodyn as the Arch-Guardian dropped onto the far roof. He’d insisted on going last, but the rising pile of Stumblers filled him with a driving urgency. Even as he swung his belt over the rope, the first of the creatures hauled themselves onto the roof and lurched to their feet just ten paces from where he stood.

  “Kodyn!” Briana’s scream echoed across the Artificer’s Courseway. “The sack!”

  Horror froze the blood in Kodyn’s veins. He whirled, his eyes dropping to where he’d left the cloth sack containing Suroth’s journal and the artifacts beside the doorway into the Temple of Whispers.

  Time slowed to a crawl. Kodyn couldn’t leave the sack—they’d need them to get into the Vault of Ancients—but if he delayed, the nearest Stumbler would reach him.

  Yet he had no choice.

  Releasing his grip on one end of the belt, Kodyn drew his sword and raced toward the sack. A Stumbler lurched into his way, arms outstretched. Kodyn barreled into the creature, shoulder driving into its chest. The impact knocked it backward into another Stumbler just clambering onto the rooftop. Together, the two toppled from the roof with a gurgling, rasping cry.

  Kodyn threw himself toward the sack, scooped it up in his free hand, and slid his arm through the looped drawstring until it rested on his shoulder. Spinning, he raced back toward the rope line, his heart pounding in his lungs. Two more Stumblers shambled into his path. He cut one down and dodged the other, barely avoiding its swiping claws. Desperation flooded him as five more monstrosities climbed onto the wall between him and the rope.

  He had a second to decide. In desperation, he turned sharply to the side, sprinted toward the edge of the roof, and threw himself into the air with all the force in his legs. Even as he hurtled into empty sky, he snapped his left hand up and out, looping the belt around the rope. His right hand barely snagged the buckled end of the belt, his fingers closing around the cold metal.

  His arms snapped tight, his shoulder twinging as his desperate leap carried his body swinging wildly to the left. The rope bounced once, twice, sagged. Kodyn’s heart sank and he braced himself for a plunge to the street below.

  But the anchor held. His grip on the leather belt tightened, and he clung on for dear life. Slowly, gravity took hold of him and he picked up speed, zipping down the line toward the Temple of Prosperity.

  A triumphant laugh burst from his throat. Against all odds, they had escaped the Temple of Whispers!

  Chapter Fifteen

  Evren leapt back to avoid a wild swing of Issa’s huge sword. What in the fiery hell? The Keeper’s Blade, usually so precise and determined, seemed to have lost her mind.

  Red-faced, teeth bared in a snarl, Issa hacked at the oncoming Stumblers, her flammard a blur of black steel that severed limbs, tore flesh, and sheared through bone. But instead of controlled finesse, she was a hurricane of fury and death.

  Hykos, too, retreated after a savage blow clipped the spiked pauldron protecting his left shoulder. Worry darkened his expression as he watched Issa hew her way through the slow-moving, ragged creatures flooding the hall.

  What happened to her? One minute, she’d been triumphant at seeing the Keeper’s Council under arrest. Now, after a private conversation with Lady Callista, she was this seething, roiling mass of rage. What did the Lady of Blades say to her?

  Issa fought with reckless abandon, throwing skill and training to the wind in favor of brute force. A low growl rumbled in her throat as she hacked down Stumblers in twos and threes. Evren had seen men fight in a battle rage, their vision clouded and mind dimmed by bloodlust. Rage drove Issa now, but Evren couldn’t tell where it was directed.

  He couldn’t fault her effectiveness. Of the original twenty Stumblers that had flooded the palace, only one remained alive. Issa buried her sword in the thing’s chest and tore it upward, snapping bones and spraying blood across the gold-and-silver tile. She charged the next pack of Stumblers with the same ferocity. The monstrosities fell faster than they could lurch from the secret passage.

  Then Issa was fighting to push the creatures back into the tunnel, thrusting, chopping, punching with her gauntleted fists, driving her crossguard into ghastly faces. The rasping, gurgling cries of the Stumblers were drowned out beneath the bestial snarl rumbling from Issa’s throat.

  But beyond the Stumblers, down the hall, Evren caught sight of four figures locked in battle. These were no Stumblers; they wielded steel swords as Issa’s and wore splinted leather armor.

  Evren’s eyes flew wide as he recognized Hallar’s Warriors trading savage blows with a familiar figure. Aisha!

  The Ghandian was hol
ding her own, her movements flowing and graceful. Her assegai darted in and out, striking flesh and drawing blood time and again, yet she faced three enemies alone. Even the most skillful warrior could be brought down.

  “Hykos!” he shouted, turning to the Blade. “We need to help her!”

  “Issa’s got this under control,” Hykos called back.

  “No, her!” He raced past Issa toward the militants and Aisha.

  He fell upon Hallar’s Warriors from the rear, his jambiyas flashing in the light of the palace lamps. He hamstrung the closest, drove the tip of his left-handed dagger into another’s spine, and brought his right-handed blade whipping across the back of the first man’s neck. The blow did little real damage, but the pain distracted the militant long enough for Aisha to bury her assegai into his gut. A moment later, Hykos’ sword whistled past Evren’s shoulder and plowed devastation through the third man’s head, collarbone, and shoulder. The militant seemed to split in half, crumbling to the ground to join his dead and dying comrades.

  “You hurt?” Evren asked.

  Aisha shook her head. “She might be, though.” She thrust her chin toward Issa.

  Evren turned and found the Keeper’s Blade locked in a grapple with four Stumblers. Blood and guts stained her armor, face, helmet, and sword, but she appeared lost in the madness of battle. With a growl, Issa hurled the creatures back into the tunnel and made to pursue.

  “Issa!” Hykos’ shout had no effect on the enraged Blade. The Archateros spun toward Evren. “I’ll get her, you get that passage closed!”

  “Good luck with that!” Evren retorted.

  Gritting his teeth, Hykos hobbled toward Issa, ducked beneath a wild swing of her sword, and seized her by the gorget. He moved so quickly Evren barely saw the quick pivot and twist of his hips. Issa flew backward and crashed to the ground, her sword clattering from her hand. Evren leapt past the struggling Blades and triggered the gemstone that sealed the opening. The guttural gurgling sounds in the tunnel faded as the stone wall slid closed.

  “Issa!” Injured knee or no, Hykos wrestled the furious, snarling Blade into submission. “Issa, it’s over. The battle’s over. They’re gone.”

  Issa struggled for a long moment, her teeth bared in a snarl. Yet slowly, Hykos’ voice and his grip on her arms seemed to push back the battle rage and she regained some of her sense. The wild light in her eyes faded and died. Her jaw unclenched, her thrashing stilled, and sense flickered in her eyes. “H-Hykos?” She seemed to suddenly collapse, going limp, like a flower wilted in a desert heat wave.

  “It’s me, Issa.” Hykos spoke in a firm yet soothing voice. “The battle is over. You drove them back.”

  “Back...” Issa seemed lost in a stupor, her brain struggling to return to consciousness. Her arms fell to her sides and she lay still, gasping for breath. But this was more than physical exhaustion; something had taken a toll on her mind, drained her completely.

  “What happened to her?” a voice whispered in Evren’s ear.

  Evren turned to find Aisha standing beside him. Worry darkened Aisha’s choclat-brown eyes as she stared at the now-still Issa.

  Before Evren could speak, a new voice echoed through the halls.

  “A-Aleema?”

  Lady Callista stood frozen at the end of the corridor, hand gripping the hilt of the sword on her back. Her eyes had locked on the white-haired woman beside Killian. And the cloth-wrapped bundle draped over the blacksmith’s shoulder.

  “Callista, dear.” A smile brightened the white-haired woman’s face. “I wish better circumstances had brought about this reunion. I know Nytano would have wanted to see you one last time before…” Her voice trailed off and she bowed her head.

  Suddenly, Evren realized what lay in the bundle. A body, wrapped in a funeral shroud.

  Guilt settled like a burden on his shoulders, but he fought against its numbing weight. He clung to Hykos’ words. “Dealing with the guilt and moving on is the only way we can honor them,” the Archateros had said.

  He hadn’t been the reason for Nytano’s death. It took effort to admit it, even to himself, yet he forced himself to repeat it a second time, a third. He and Issa had arrived in time to save Nytano, to turn the tide of battle in their favor. Issa’s grandfather had died at the hands of the Ybrazhe. Blaming himself wouldn’t help Issa or her family.

  All these thoughts flashed through his mind in the space between heartbeats. In that time, Lady Callista still hadn’t managed to speak. She seemed unable to form words, her expression a mask of shocked surprise.

  Aleema glanced over her shoulder at Issa. “We had to tell her, Callista. Nytano couldn’t go to the Long Keeper without her knowing the truth.”

  Lady Callista’s face paled. “She’s angry, and rightly so. What I did—”

  “You did for her.” Aleema stepped closer to the Lady of Blades and placed a motherly hand on her arm. “She’ll understand, walida. Give her time.”

  “Not to be melodramatic,” Killian put in, “but if the Stumblers could get in here, with Hallar’s Warriors opening the way for them, it’s likely they’ll be flooding the palace from all of the other entrances. They need to be secured, now.”

  Evren’s brow furrowed. For the first time, he registered the fact that Killian the blacksmith stood in the palace, with a strange familiarity.

  “Yes, of course,” Lady Callista mumbled. She seemed in a trance, half-dazed and fully worried for Issa. Yet as her eyes traveled past Killian, the sight of the Stumblers’ bodies strewn across the blood-soaked floor seemed to snap her out of it.

  She turned to Killian. “Elmessam, get Nytano’s body to safety.”

  “Of course, my lady.” The blacksmith inclined his head.

  Elmessam? Evren cocked an eyebrow. He’d long known Killian wasn’t a blacksmith—or not only a blacksmith—yet it seemed his name was just another of the myriad layers of deception.

  Lady Callista turned to the white-haired woman. “Aleema—”

  “I will fight with you, walida.” The Blade drew her sword. “The years haven’t been so unkind that I can’t still swing a blade.”

  “Thank you, Yamma.” Lady Callista bowed, her face still a mask of surprise, wonder, and something more…sorrow, a deep-rooted longing.

  She raised her voice. “Archateros Hykos!”

  Hykos looked up from where he crouched beside Issa.

  “Go with Invictus Aleema and secure the Pharus’ quarters. No one gets in without my authorization.” She narrowed her eyes. “No one.”

  Hykos hesitated, shooting a glance at Issa, who lay slumped against the wall, her eyes glazed over. The battle rage had passed fully, leaving her bewildered and numb.

  “You have your orders, Archateros,” Lady Callista barked.

  A torrent of emotions flashed across Hykos’ face as duty to his commander warred with his desire to remain beside Issa. Long seconds passed before he spoke. “Yes, Proxenos.”

  Aisha crouched next to the seated Blade and smiled at Hykos. “We’ll keep an eye on her.”

  With a nod, Hykos rose to his feet, gritting his teeth to hide a wince of pain. Evren noticed only a slight limp as he marched down the hall to join Aleema and, together, the two of them disappeared around a corner.

  “I could use a bit of help here,” Killian put in as he stumped up the corridor. “Evren, lend me a hand.”

  At the mention of Evren’s name, Lady Callista’s eyes narrowed.

  “Of course.” Evren hurried to follow before the Lady of Blades could speak.

  Killian moved at a steady pace, though they could only move as fast as his braced, injured knee permitted. Evren had seen the blacksmith fight, but the thrill of battle had a way of masking even severe pain. Now, with the rush past, Killian would be feeling the discomfort in his old battle wound.

  His eyes were drawn toward Killian’s armor—the same armor that Lady Callista wore, complete with the snarling lion helmet, the golden headband with its sigil, and the huge two-han
ded sword.

  “Elmessam?” Evren hissed. “The name Killian’s just one more façade, eh?”

  Killian grunted. “New line of work needs a new name. I couldn’t very well go about calling myself Elmessam, else the wrong people might remember that I was once a Keeper’s Blade.”

  “So you’re working with the Lady of Blades. ’Some of us have to find other ways to serve our city’, if I recall.” Evren threw up his hands. “You couldn’t have told me that a week ago? Could have made things a whole lot easier if I’d known we had allies in the palace.”

  “Some secrets are too important to share with anyone,” Killian replied.

  The blacksmith led the way into a small, richly decorated chamber. Moving past the plush couches and pillow-strewn Al Hani carpet, Killian strode to the center of the room and gently deposited his burden onto an ornately carved red oak table. He rested a hand on the bundle, bowing his head. “He was a good man, Nytano.” He spoke without looking up. “One of the best Blades I ever knew. Not only a great warrior, but a man of courage and honor. He will be missed.”

  “You came all the way up here just to bring his body?” Evren cocked an eyebrow. That sounded nothing like the Killian he’d known.

  Killian turned to him. His face had gone dark, a shadow in his eyes. “The smithy’s defenses would never have held out the Stumblers. We had to run. Aleema wouldn’t leave Nytano’s body for those creatures. And, we figured that the palace could use two more Blades to help hold the walls.” He gave a wry smile and tapped the bands of steel reinforcing the right leg of his armor. “Even old, broken Blades.”

  Evren narrowed his eyes. “Why does it seem like you’re not even a little surprised that these supposedly mythical creatures are attacking?”

  Over the last few years, Evren had encountered the offspring of demons, stone-skinned monstrosities, and ancient Serenii magic. But for a man like Killian, such legends coming to life should be far more shocking.

  “Surprised the shite out of me, they did.” Killian chuckled. “Lurching into the smithy like that, impossible creatures right out of Shalandran lore. But I’d been hearing rumors of Stumblers spotted in the Keeper’s Crypts for weeks now. Never had a credible eyewitness account to back up those whispers, so I dismissed them as nothing more. Yet the more I heard scattered reports from my Mumblers, the tales of drunks and Deadeners, the more convinced I was they were real.” He shook his head. “One of those times when it’s terrible to be right.”

 

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