Read City of Light (The Traveler's Gate Trilogy) Online
Authors: Will Wight
Besides Simon and Andra, Lycus only knew of three other Valinhall Travelers. Overlord Indirial only showed up when he was on business for his realm or for Queen Leah, and he never stayed long. Besides, he was an
Overlord.
Lycus wouldn’t have called to an Overlord for help if he were drowning; he would have been afraid of distracting them from something more important.
Lycus didn’t know Denner, who entered the House every once in a while, stayed for a day or two, and left without warning. He seemed the most normal of the Travelers, and he even told Lycus stories during his stays in the House. But Lycus had no idea where to find him now.
The other Traveler, Kai, was...odd. Lycus' mother had warned him never to talk to Master Kai without another adult present. He spent all his time talking to those little dolls, and Lycus got the impression that he would happily murder anyone who so much as mussed a single hair on a doll's head. Lycus was too scared to look in Kai's general direction most of the time. He had heard that Kai was staying deep in the House, deeper than Lycus had ever seen, but he didn't know why.
So all the Travelers were out. He supposed he could warn Chaka, but Chaka was stuck in the garden. What could he do about a threat in the entry hall?
“What about Erastes?” Andra suggested, keeping her gaze stuck on the growing red Gate. The blade slashed up, tearing a chunk out of the air, revealing a black-and-white tiled floor on the other side. And what looked like the body of an impossibly huge man in shining silver armor.
The sword worked slowly but steadily, as though sawing through the world was a demanding physical chore.
“Where is he?” Lycus asked.
The torn Gate was growing at an alarming rate. Soon the armored giant would be able to step through.
“Find him!” Andra snapped.
Lycus stayed where he was.
“Go!” His sister yelled. The Gate grew another two inches.
“I need to help you!” He couldn't leave his sister here, alone, to fight whatever was about to come through this Gate. What kind of brother would he be if he did that?
She gave him the look, the lopsided half-smile with a twinkle in her eye that she always used when she saw a joke that nobody else realized was funny. “You're a hero, Lycus, you really are. But what are you gonna do that I can't?”
A second dark link slid into being on her wrist, and a third was beginning to materialize. The chains of Valinhall were growing on Andra's arms, which meant she had called steel.
Lycus wondered what they would do if Overlord Indirial stepped through and demanded to know why they were pointing swords at him. They would get in a lot of trouble. The Overlord might even arrest them; he’d heard that some Overlords did that to people who got in their way.
That’s probably all it is,
he reasoned.
Overlord Indirial’s going to come through that door, and he’s going to yell at us for pointing swords at him.
He had never actually heard Indirial shout at anyone, but he could imagine it easily enough.
Then, with a screech like tearing metal, the Gate finished. It was two feet taller than a normal Gate, stretching from the entry hall's wooden ceiling all the way to its carpeted floor.
The armored giant stepped through, and Lycus saw that it wasn't a man at all. It looked like a man—two arms, two legs, a torso, a sword in its right hand—and it was covered in intricate gleaming steel armor, but it had no face. Its helmet was open, revealing thousands and thousands of metal gears inside where a human would have eyes, a nose, a mouth. It was like looking inside a man-sized clock. As it stepped through the Gate, it whirred and clicked and clanked. There was no flesh inside that armor.
Lycus felt like an idiot. Chaka reminded them every day of the first rule of Valinhall: it's
always
a threat.
He swore he would never forget that again.
“Stop where you are!” Andra called, and she sounded like she had the authority to make that demand. “Who are you?”
The helmeted head creaked as it swiveled on an armored neck. Twisting bronze gears surveyed Andra instead of eyes.
The metal giant spoke with a voice that sounded like grinding rocks. “I am Tartarus. I will not be stopped.”
It marched forward, sounding with each step like a cupboard full of pots and pans crashing to the ground. The sword in its right fist had a blade as long as Lycus was tall, but it wasn't made of the same shining silver metal as its armor or Andra's Dragon's fang. The sword was solid, shining red, with twisting black lettering crawling up its flat surface. In the few moments of silence between the giant's footsteps, Lycus thought he heard the sword screaming.
Andra must have heard the same thing, because she gave the sword a wary glance. “Lycus, run. You need to find Simon.”
With a shout, she jumped forward and thrust the point of her lightly curved blade up and into the shoulder, between the breastplate and the upper arm.
Sparks flew, and Andra stumbled back. Tartarus didn't slow down, walking implacably forward toward the hallway. Toward Lycus.
He stood frozen for perhaps a second, stunned. The Dragon's Fangs could cut through anything. He had seen those Valinhall-forged swords slice through trees, cut chains, and stab through stone walls. What was this giant's armor made of?
Then he realized that, if he didn't move from where he was, he was going to get an up-close look at the bottom of Tartarus' steel boot.
Hating himself, Lycus turned and took off running down the hallway. He would warn Chaka, and hopefully find Erastes. They could help Andra, even if he couldn't.
And maybe they would know where to find Simon.
***
Simon slammed into the street on his hands and knees, Azura skittering away. His skeleton rang like a bell, his knees and wrists felt like they had exploded, and his vision had whited out from pain.
But he clutched a single thought: he wasn’t dead.
Rebekkah was laughing harder than he had ever heard her, or any of his dolls for that matter. She practically sobbed with laughter, and he was sure that if he could pull her out of his cloak, she would have a huge grin on her painted face.
That was, by far, the greatest thing I have ever seen anyone do,
she managed.
Caela is going to be
so
mad she didn’t get to see it.
Simon crawled a few feet away, nudging his aching body across the rough cobblestones. His stone and steel had held out—in fact, thanks to the mask, they were still going strong—but he couldn’t help but wonder what kind of damage he’d taken on the inside.
You know you wouldn’t have made it without those shields slowing you down,
Rebekkah sent. She had the tone of someone telling a joke.
I think he might have saved your life!
I should thank him,
he sent. Then he remembered that he’d landed a blow in the last instant before he hit the street. Alin was an Incarnation, true, but he’d seen Incarnations die from lesser wounds.
If his eyes would hurry up and clear, instead of showing him a blurry world full of phantom doubles, he could check for himself.
Hey Simon,
Rebekkah said, still in her cheery tone.
Put your hand out to the right.
Simon didn’t question it; he reached blindly out and felt around on the street until something met his hands. It was a rough, round ball, about the same size as a coin, and it felt warm and slightly sticky.
His hand jerked back. Was she trying to get him to put his hand on a bloody piece of someone’s body? What kind of gory prank was that?
Don’t be a child. Pick it up.
Reluctantly, Simon did as she asked. As his vision cleared, he saw that he was holding something like a dried fig, only dark red. It didn’t
look
sticky, or blood-covered, or anything else to account for the sensation, but it felt like it was trying to cling to his hands. It was too warm, and it seemed to almost pulse, as if it contained an impossibly small heart.
What is it?
Rebekkah gave the mental equivalent of a shrug.
How would I know? But it feels important. I bet you two hours that it’s an artifact from another Territory. Probably Elysia. The Eldest will love that.
Simon slipped the red fig into his pocket before he realized what she’d said.
Wait. Hours? You bet hours?
Yeah,
she said casually.
Hours out of the House. The only reason I came with you today is because I bet Otoku twelve hours that you’d earn the ghost armor. She thought you wouldn’t be able to do it for
at least
another two weeks.
But…you don’t choose which doll I take,
Simon sent.
I do.
Rebekkah’s mental voice took on a pitying tone.
Awwww, that’s cute. You can believe that, if it makes you feel better.
That idea became more disturbing the more he thought about it, so he put it out of his mind.
Speaking of time, you’re almost out of it.
Almost,
he sent.
Not quite.
He could feel the chains wrapping around him; they twisted down his legs and under his feet, until he felt like he was bruising his heels on steel links with every step. They bound his ribs and snuck up his shoulders, and he could feel them sliding up his neck. Once they wrapped around his neck, like a Nye’s noose, he would be fully bound to Valinhall.
Here, now, that almost certainly meant Incarnation.
But it looked like he wouldn’t have to risk it.
Alin lay less than five paces away, face-up in a pool of strangely glowing blood. His gold armor was split down the middle by a blow Simon didn’t remember delivering, and pieces of metal had flown all the way to Simon’s feet. Alin’s eyes were still rainbows, but they were frozen; they didn’t shift and change in the disturbing way they had when he was alive. His pale hair was matted and still, and he wore an almost comic look of surprise.
Simon’s eyes burned, and he tried to wipe moisture away before realizing that he still had the mask on. Why should he care if Alin died? Simon had never liked him.
But he shouldn’t have had to die. Alin had turned to Incarnation for no reason other than to save his sisters. He had taken over Enosh, and planned to take over Damasca, to prevent tragedies like it from happening again.
And he was from Myria. He wasn’t the kindest, or the easiest to talk to, but Simon had grown up with him. He remembered Alin getting caught stealing at eight years old, and talking his way out of it.
Simon shouldn’t have been the one to kill him. If the world was right, Alin shouldn’t have to die at all.
In your fantasy world, sure,
Rebekkah said.
In that magical Territory where nothing bad happens to anyone who doesn’t deserve it. That’s not reality, though, so take off your mask before you make this situation worse.
Simon looked up at the waystation. None of the Elysian creatures had returned after Alin’s death; in fact, they seemed to be backing up farther. Indirial was still sprawled on the steps, twitching and shifting underneath his cloak. Overlord Feiora marched out the doors, an armed bird-man in front of her holding a pair of swords, and a raven circling her head. Finally, Leah stepped out, the Lightning Spear in one hand.
“Did you get him?” she called.
Simon winced. “I got him,” he yelled back. It sounded callous; they should have been mourning the death of a man they knew, not celebrating it.
Despite the steel, essence, and stone running through him, begging to be used, he forced himself to sit down. When he took off the mask, he’d collapse, so it would be much better if he didn’t have quite so far to fall.
When he was seated on the street, he reached up to peel off the mask.
Eugan the raven let out a single, shrieking caw.
Behind you!
Rebekkah shouted.
Get him!
Simon jumped up, banishing and re-summoning Azura into his hand with a simple effort of will.
Alin's body rose like a puppet pulled up by invisible strings. The wound across his chest sealed itself with a shimmering pink light, but his body still hung as stiff as a slab of meat on a hook. His arms dangled at his sides, his knees on the point of collapsing. He still stared as blankly as before, his rainbow eyes frozen mid-swirl.
Kill him now!
Rebekkah sent.
Simon stood frozen. His every instinct in Valinhall was screaming at him to either finish Alin off or run, not to stand there like an idiot, but he had lost himself in regret for Alin's death. Now, he wasn't sure what to do.
He hesitated too long. Alin's eyes snapped to one color: blazing gold. His head jerked forward as though someone else was moving his body like a doll, his hand rising up, filled with gold light.
Simon may have hesitated, but Leah didn't.
The Lightning Spear flashed toward Alin so fast that Simon almost didn't catch it, even through the Nye essence. Alin should never have been able to react in time, but he managed to get one palm between his side and the spearpoint.
A gold flash, bright enough to all but blind Simon through the mask, met the Spear and blasted it aside. It flipped through the air toward the waystation, but Simon didn't stand watching it. He moved at last, drawing on essence and steel as deeply as he could. The world slowed, and he dashed toward Alin.
You have half a minute, at best, until the chains reach all the way around,
Rebekkah warned him.
So finish him quick.
Simon held Azura low in both hands, running for Alin. His golden armor wouldn't stop a Dragon's Fang, and he didn't have the reaction time to combat Simon with the Nye essence; this should be easy.
Alin's head snapped to the side, his eyes blazing gold, and he filled the street with a river of white-hot light.
Simon called ghost armor. It should have taken longer to regenerate, but under the effects of the mask he could call on his powers almost with impunity.
The destructive light filled his vision, blinding him, and crashed into the transparent green plates of the ghost armor. He braced himself against the onslaught, holding one arm in front of his face in an instinctive attempt to ward off the heat and pressure directed at his eyes. It still felt like getting pounded by a tide of molten steel, but he held on.