Part 8 (1/2)
Kai threw himself into the entry hall, just as Valin's sword came down again. He felt a line of fire against his back, but he cleared the portal.
Valin stood at the edge of the Gate, staring into the Territory he had created.
”Come on in, master,” Kai taunted. ”I'm wide open.” He brushed white hair out of his eyes, and was startled to find the hair warm and sticky with blood.
Valin smiled a little, but he pulled Mithra back. There was a sound like a distant horn, and the blade began to vibrate as though Kai were seeing the sword through a heat haze.
”Sorry, Kai,” Valin said. ”I'll come home someday. But until then, I've got work to do.”
He swept the s.h.i.+vering Dragon's Fang across the Gate, and the Gate blew away like dandelion fluff in a high wind.
Kai smiled to himself. I won, he thought. I survived.
Then he pa.s.sed out in a pool of his own blood.
When Adrienne Lamarkis Daiasus felt the silent scream shudder through the stone of her Bel Calem home, she stood from her breakfast and rushed out the doors. Black skirts swished around her ankles as she walked. She would wear no other color until she had finished mourning her husband, which would not be until she could have justice for his death.
Petrus met her outside the dining-hall doors. The pudgy, balding Naraka Traveler waved his one remaining arm in a panic. ”We need to get out of here, my Lady. Seven stones, I don't know why we're not dead already.”
Adrienne kept walking, forcing Petrus to keep up. ”Is it free?” she asked. She had to prepare for the worst.
The aging Traveler shrugged, which was not the most comforting thing he could have done. ”I certainly haven't examined the Tree myself,” Petrus said. ”But I would say no, the Naraka Incarnation is not free. If it was, I suspect we would be burning to death right now.”
She nodded, processing the information without slowing down. On the move, Adrienne signaled a nearby guard. ”Evacuate the house,” she told him. ”I want everyone who isn't a Traveler out of here five minutes ago.”
The soldier saluted and started to run off, but she grabbed him by the elbow before he could move. ”On second thought, take it a step further. Evacuate this whole quarter of the city. Tell the Captain he's authorized to use whatever force he feels is necessary. I will be there to supervise the operation as soon as I can.”
The guard let nothing show in his face, which Adrienne considered a blessing. He simply saluted and ran off to carry out his orders. Since Malachi's death, too many had felt free to tell her exactly what they thought of her commands. Evacuating an entire quarter of the city would be a logistical nightmare, and she doubted it would be possible in anything less than a full day. But, should the worst happen, some of her citizens would have a better chance to escape.
Petrus was already out of breath from keeping up with her, but he managed an approving nod. ”Good, my Lady. Very good. There's nothing more we can do here.”
Adrienne gave him her most disarming smile without slowing her pace. ”What are you talking about, Petrus? We're going down to check on the Tree. If that Incarnation breaks out, he'll have to go through us first.”
She was no Traveler, and she barely had an inkling of the kind of power that one of the Incarnations wielded, but she would slow it down with her body if necessary.
Malachi would have given his life to stop the Incarnation from reaching Bel Calem. In his memory, she could do no less.
Overlord Lysander Torannus had sent a flock of his Sarin tribe sparrows to check on the Tree the instant he felt the distortion. As an Avernus Traveler, he had a deep bond with his birds, but also utmost confidence in their abilities. If any flock could survive an encounter with the Ragnarus Tree, it would be his.
Lysander's Tree rested in the center of a forest glade, next to a creek, inside a huge marble mausoleum that had been constructed for exactly this purpose. He had only ordered the doors opened a crack, just enough to send his tiny birds inside, but in that instant he had nearly been skewered by th.o.r.n.y tendrils the color of blood. His sparrows had only made it inside thanks to the natural agility of the Sarin.
He could feel them fluttering against the doors now, and he signaled his guards to haul the doors back open. They did, though it took four men.
The flock of brown-gold sparrows swept out of the marble doors in a cloud, crimson branches snapping at their tail feathers. The guards staggered back, letting the doors slam shut. They closed on some of the Tree's tendrils, cutting them in half. Lengths of supple red wood fell to the ground, squirming like blood-colored worms.
The Sarin whirled around Lysander's head, sharing with him the squeaky, chirruping thoughts of their flock-mind.
Tree weak, they sent. Needs time. Time to heal. Needs feeding. Next year. Hungry. Weak. Broken. Needs time.
Lysander felt himself smile. The Tree would not have the time it needed to recover; he and his Highness Talos, the last remaining real Damascan Heir, would see to that. Then they would rule over the world as it was meant to be.
He had foreseen it.
Deborah was miles away when her Tree screamed, but she felt it in the rock. Through her bare feet pressed to the rocky ground, she felt the earth's pain and fury as the crimson roots of Ragnarus struggled to contain the Incarnation of Ornheim. It wasn't breaking free; at least, not yet. But it was awake. It was aware, as it had not been in the three centuries since it was sealed beneath the earth.
She rose to her feet, feeling only the faintest creaking of joints. She wasn't as young as she used to be, but she'd let Naraka take her before she gave in to age. She stood, stretching her aching back, and surveyed the cavern.
Stalact.i.tes hung many paces overhead, leaving enough room for a two-story house. The broad floor, wide enough to host a grand ball, was covered in half-finished golems. Obsidian wolves with three amethyst eyes waited, inanimate, as a young Ornheim initiate shaped its hind legs. Huge, hulking granite guardians crouched against the wall, awaiting the topaz heartstones that would bring them to life. Sleek, angular a.s.sa.s.sins of flint and shale prowled restlessly, ruby heartstones gleaming in the dim light. Each golem required weeks of delicate care and preparation, but that was the way of Ornheim: patience, preparation, and endurance yielded rewards.
Soon, their golem army would shatter the walls of Enosh. a.s.suming, of course, that the Ornheim Incarnation did not break free and kill them all.
Ornheim Travelers paced up and down the rows of golems, making last-minute checks and attending to the business of creating Damasca's golem army. Or at least, they had been attending to business just a moment ago. But they had all felt the warning in the earth at the same time, and they all looked to her*their Overlord*for orders.
Overlord Deborah kept herself from smiling, as she habitually kept most expressions off her face, but she felt it on the inside. This was why Ornheim Travelers were so much more useful than those of other Territories. They did not panic or flail around or look for further confirmation of what they already knew. They simply, patiently, diligently awaited orders. Her heart swelled with pride, but she pushed the feeling back. She had work to do.
Deborah signaled two of the Travelers nearest her. ”Urian, Dynelle, get back to Tar Canis. Put the Tree on full lockdown. If anything tries to get in or out, I want them to have to dig through two mountains and half a dozen golems.”
”Yes, Overlord,” they said in unison, and jogged off to open their Gates.
”Everyone else, back to work. Double time. We need to finish this battalion as soon as we can, then get back to Tar Canis ourselves. If the Incarnation breaks free, we should be there to face it.”
Several Travelers shouted their a.s.sent and returned to work, but Janira stepped up close, doubt plain on her face. She had advised Deborah for years, as her mother had advised Deborah's. As usual, she wore a net of diamonds in her braided hair.
”Pardon me, Overlord,” Janira said. ”But shouldn't we inform the King?”
Deborah shook her head, thinking about the Overlord of Cana. ”Trust me, Janira. The King already knows.”
Indirial sprinted through the halls of the royal palace in Cana, black cloak flowing behind him. There were two guards on the door to the King's private library, both Tartarus Travelers, and normally they would have challenged him about his purpose if they saw him trying to enter. That was a good policy, and one he encouraged; no one, not even him, should be able to reach the King without royal permission. But today he didn't have time for policy.
He flew down the hallway with the clear intention to run through anything his way. The two Tartarus Travelers noticed. They got out of his way.
Indirial slammed through the library doors to find King Zakareth seated at a desk, his sleeves rolled up, elbow deep in books, maps, and old scrolls. He looked up, surprise evident on his face.
”Indirial. What's wrong?”
Indirial didn't bother bowing. He didn't have time. ”The tenth tree is broken,” he said. ”Valin is free.”
Zakareth stared for a moment, and then his face tightened in an expression of cold anger. He slammed his hand flat against the desk. ”Why now, of all times?” he demanded.
”The Maker's reward for our clean living,” Indirial responded dryly.
Zakareth shook his head, tearing a Gate to the Crimson Vault open behind him.