Possessing the Grimstone (11 page)

BOOK: Possessing the Grimstone
10.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

It was this threat, this evil that sickened the world. It sickened her, and had nearly destroyed her kingdom. It was time to crush it and drive its seed into the dirt.

“M’lady.” Nachin entered the room. “Your tea.” He walked onto the balcony and handed her a steaming cup with a saucer.

“Ah, my dear, constant, Nachin. What would I do without you?” Olani sipped slowly and smiled.

Nachin bowed his head. “The teahouses in Cardoon have the most amazing brews, exotic and robust. I hope you find this mixing favorable.” He left the balcony.

She watched him leave the room then took to her seat at the desk. She set the tea down and picked up a quill pen. “I must send word to my father that I am safe in Cardoon. Even as a prisoner in the Western Isles, he must know what is happening in the world.”

Chapter Eight

“Watch the enemy, watch them close,” Tolan yelled to Pim, who could barely hear him above the roar of the horse hooves. “Duck their attacks. They have many different types. There are magic-users, death machines, clubs, and axes. There may be other things that we are not aware of. They will attack from all sides. Watch the skies, and use your fleet to escape.”

Pim half-listened as the wind lashed at his face and flaxen curls. His cheeks grew cold; his heartbeat climbed; his spine stiffened. The skies around them darkened, and even though they’d only been riding a few hours, it was as if day turned to night, although dusk had yet to come.

Concern for the first time slithered through Pim. The blackness rolled in around them, nipping at them from beyond Pim’s peripheral vision. The air was unnaturally cold. Something stank in it, something decayed and cloying.

Pim’s throat went dry and he swallowed, putrid air slipping through his nostrils. He heard what he thought might be thunder growing in the distance.

Something whistled through the air, and Pim heard a crash. It boomed through the land and he mistook it for a quake, at first. A quake would have been preferable.

A huge, spiked boulder slammed into the ground, and Pim screamed. Mud sprayed the air. Horses vanished from sight, men were lost, screaming. The ground buckled, and Pim gasped as Tolan’s steed wavered, but held its balance.

Pim threw his arms around Tolan, and felt the warrior’s muscles tense. He watched sweat seep from beneath his helmet.

“This is only the beginning!” Tolan cried, drawing his father’s sword and letting out a battle cry.

Pim’s heart was in his throat, tears welled in his eyes, and he heaved… but the heaves were nothing but dry. He felt his hand slip onto the handle of his sword, but found he could not lift it. Mud slid down the side of his face. He wiped it from his left eye, and saw a four-legged reptilian beast appear with a horrifying rider on top of it, the first of hundreds.

A whistle shot through the air again. Another boulder screamed across the sky like a comet. It came down and crushed a wagon full of Wivering. Pim’s heart shattered; he realized suddenly that Jun had been in that wagon, the Wivering warrior who had given him his first sword.

Cold terror filled Pim. He trembled violently. Despair tore his bowels into pieces. He couldn’t accept the loss of his people, his friends. What had they done? Tears streamed down his cheeks, slipping into the whipping wind. He searched for survivors—he prayed for them—but he saw nothing in the sea of advancing soldiers.

He turned to face the huge army of nightmares and their ghosts ahead of him, and screamed. His terror turned to rage, and finally, he drew his sword.

A flash lit up the sky. Yellow-green bolts of magic snatched Cardoon soldiers off horses one by one. War machines launched more boulders into the skies. Roars and screeches pierced Pim’s ears.

The largest armies in all of Athora clashed.

Cardoon cavalry raged into waves of creatures wielding clubs, axes, and pole arms, riding atop scaly beasts with forked tongues, and teeth the size of sabers.

Tolan galloped a straight line into their thick numbers. He lobbed the head off the first thing that came into his line of sight. The head spun through the air and its familiar screeched and vanished into the mist-shrouded ether.

Enemy mages hurled green fire and energy bolts, incinerating men and beast where they stood. Tolan slung his dagger and nailed the one highest on the catapult before him. The blade caught the creature in the throat, toppling him to the ground.

Drith led his war wagons to the right of the Cardoon cavalry, and joined the fray. His Southern warriors launched a hail of spears into the air, plunging them through the feral creatures, spilling ebony blood, and dissipating their familiar spirits.

Northern foot soldiers took up the rear, and, circling around them, the ministers of Gwythroth teleported into battle.

The enemy creatures and their reptilian steeds raged, pushing onward against the collected forces, fighting to stay on their path. Axes and clubs swung hard, bashing soldiers from their horses, smashing faces, breaking necks, shattering jaws.

Spirits clawed at horses and dragged men to the ground, lashing with spindly, pale fingers.

Reptilian mounts overturned Southern wagons, ripped into painted flesh, and swung their tails, cracking ribs, busting shields, and stomping the fallen.

Tolan swung his bastard sword across throats, splitting armor from gullet to gut. His blade was smeared with black, oily blood.

Pim had yet to swing his sword. He sat, frozen, on the back of Tolan’s horse, heart pounding in his chest, sweat rolling down the back of his neck. A rider stormed them, and Tolan reared back on his horse. A stone axe swung, and missed Pim’s face by inches. Tolan took up his shield as the axe swung again, and blocked it. Ghostly arms slithered through the shield, and slashed at Tolan’s face, brushing his cheeks.

The warrior leaned back, just out of the spirit’s reach. The thing howled, and its master grunted, pulling back its axe. Its broken teeth were covered in spittle; hairy-knuckled claws curled around the axe handle.

Suddenly Pim lunged, seizing his opportunity. He plunged his blade deep into the monster’s belly. The thing hissed and spat before going limp. It toppled from its steed. The spirit vanished with a scream.

“Well done!” Tolan cried.

Pim trembled all over, staring at his blood-slicked blade. Suddenly, the rider’s reptilian beast bit into Tolan’s horse, ripping into its throat, and sending them all crashing to the ground.

Pim and Tolan rolled in the dirt. A horde of enemy creatures descended on them, familiars cackling with glee.

The reptile climbed over Tolan, snapping its jaws at his face. The warrior scrambled for his sword, and whipped it across the big lizard.

The beast’s throat tore open, and it fell over with a thunderous crash.

Clubs and claws came down on Pim, but the young Wivering flipped to his feet and launched into his fleet. In the blink of an eye, he spun around the three creatures advancing on him, and cut the back of their knees open.

All three went down, and turned to look behind them, searching for the illusive Wivering. Pim was now in front, cutting each of their chests open. Flailing spirits grew confused, slashing at the air until their masters died, and they vanished in puffs of mist.

Another creature raced toward Pim, a spear in its grip. Pim dashed out of the way, dodging the attack, and watching as the thing impaled one its brethren.

Tolan jumped to his feet as Pim came to a stop. The warrior focused and finally set eyes on the Wivering. “Do not get too full of yourself! Behind you!”

Pim turned too late as a creature plowed into him, sending him down. Pim’s sword flew from his grip. An axe came down just beside his ear. He scrambled for the shield of a fallen comrade, grabbing it just in time for the axe to come down on the shield hard, cracking it up the center.

The creature pulled the axe out of the shield, reducing it to two pieces. Pim opened his mouth to scream as the creature and its familiar reached for him.

Tolan jumped into its path, blocking its attack with his sword. He and the creature traded blows, and the familiar slashed him across the face, yanking the helmet from his head. Tolan kicked his foe in the gut, but the creature recovered, back-handing the warrior.

Tolan went down, spitting blood. He reached for the dagger in his boot as the foe pressed its clawed foot to his back. Tolan stabbed the dagger behind him blindly, sinking it into the creature’s kneecap.

The creature wailed, and Tolan rolled onto his back, kicking with both of his feet. The creature fell backwards, landing on a spear, and impaling itself.

Tolan crawled to Pim, and pulled him to his feet. “Are you alright?”

Pim managed to nod. His lips trembled. He was unable to speak. His eyes scanned the battlefield, and soaked in the horrendous carnage around him.

Northern archers fired wave after wave of arrows, but the creatures kept on coming. Southern warriors leaped from their wagons and climbed to the top of the enemy’s war machines and catapults, cutting apart the ropes and mechanisms until they were reduced to ashes by the mages and their fiery dark magic.

Drith’s wagon was overturned by a group of creatures, but the fierce king battled on. He took up swords in both hands, and flipped onto his downed wagon. He kicked rushing creatures in the jaws, buried his blades in bald heads, and let out a hellish battle cry, despite the wounds and scratches the familiar spirits inflicted upon him.

The Wivering jumped from wagons and horses, and used their fleet to race into battle. Pim caught their blur as they rushed to the rear of the creatures, dragging swords with them, opening guts, cutting through bristly hides, cracking bone-plated armor. But the enemy was catching on.

The next flanks were ready as the Wivering raced to their rears. The familiars tethered to the foul creatures turned at a speed almost matching the Wivering, and pulled half of them to the ground. Clubs and axes fell on screaming faces, ghostly claws ripped into throats and chests.

The remaining Wivering rushed to the protection of the Cardoon soldiers and the Gywthroth teleports. But even the mystical teleports found their abilities matched by the familiar spirit companions.

Spirits tore hooded robes from the Gwythroth ministers, revealing thin membranes covering frail bodies, inverted ears, and large blue eyes that radiated with ethereal light. Spiked clubs and studded lances adorned with bones tore at their fragile, fairy-like flesh.

The teleports were no slackers: from beneath their hoods, they slung barbed chains, and vanished only to reappear in a new position, wrapping the chains around enemy necks, twisting and severing their heads with a pop.

All of this offense was still not enough. More and more creatures stormed the allied forces. Mages appeared to take the place of fallen ones. New war machines hurled flaming boulders from the distance.

The grounds filled with the broken, burning bodies of men, teleports, and Wivering. Green flames scorched the horizon.

“Come!” Tolan shook Pim. “We must move! Do not make yourself a target.”

Hopelessness filled Pim as he watched all manner of people fall. Gnarled teeth nipped at him, scaly tails swung at him, bone-clad, hairy, barrel-shaped creatures with ghostly-white spirits hovering above them leered at him from every corner.

Pim ran with Tolan, and suddenly spotted Ono battling one of the creatures. Another lumbered behind him.

“Ono!” Pim called before launching into his fleet of foot.

“Pim!” Tolan called, but the Wivering was gone.

Pim ran and ran, his feet burning, his eyes tingling, He hit the carcass of a horse and launched himself off it, soaring into the air. He lifted his sword in both hands.

The Wivering came down hard on the creature, driving his sword into its neck. Its familiar spirit took a swing at Pim, but vanished before connecting.

Pim climbed from under the lifeless body and looked up at Ono.

“Pim!” Ono smiled. “I owe you my…”

He watched Ono stammer, blood seeping from between his lips. A lance had impaled him, bursting through his chest.

Pim rushed to Ono, catching him in his arms. His friend tried to speak, but couldn’t. In seconds, he sighed his last breath.

Agony ripped through Pim; his heart shattered, and he felt his very soul split in two. He wailed as Ono’s killer loomed over him.

Tolan ran as fast as his legs would carry him. “Pim!” He leaped over bodies, burning banners, and crushed wagons, spotting the monster as it raised its club.

“Pim! Pim!” Tolan stopped, took aim with his sword, and launched it.

The blade sailed across the battleground, and plunged through the beast’s neck. It crashed to the ground, coughing up blood.

Tolan bent over and panted, recouping his strength.

“Tolan! Hark!”

The warrior looked up to see Geyess ride up and toss him another sword. “Behind you!”

The spiked club caught Tolan in the left arm, and sent him down. His gauntlet shattered, and blood dripped down his hand. The creature swung the club again, and missed, smashing the ground, and tossing up rubble.

Tolan swung his sword with both hands, and chopped the club in half. He yanked the blade up, and caught the creature in the chin, gouging his face. Blood spattered. The enemy’s spirit screeched and reached for Tolan, but the warrior ducked out of its reach and plunged his sword into the creature’s ribs. It fell to its knees, where Tolan then beheaded it.

Geyess cheered as Tolan turned, wiping sweat from his brow. Tolan started toward him when the axe tore into Geyess, ripping him from the horse.

“By Thet’s hammer!” Tolan cried, running again.

Geyess tumbled onto the ground, two other creatures chopping at him until a fireball hit them all, bursting into flames, and turning them to ash in mere moments.

Tolan fell to his knees mid-run. His head dropped as he watched the ashes blow past him in the winds of war.

The enemy pressed their attacks with more fireballs and catapults. The grounds trembled, and soot choked the air. Blood streamed like rain. The kingdoms lost ground, with Southerners falling, Northerners, too, and Wivering retreating. Tolan realized they had the right idea.

Other books

If You Wrong Us by Dawn Klehr
Making Trouble by Emme Rollins
Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear
Stolen Dreams by Terri Reid
The Wagered Wife by Wilma Counts
Last Grave (9781101593172) by Viguie, Debbie
Affairs of State by Dominique Manotti