Read The Desert Spear Online

Authors: Peter V. Brett

The Desert Spear (99 page)

BOOK: The Desert Spear
11.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

But only for a moment, because then, as the human broke the mimic's will, the coreling prince touched his mind. Wards had no power in the between-state. Any hatchling prince knew that. The one had foolishly made himself vulnerable.

The mind demon lashed out before the human could recover from his surprise, and then, at last, it Knew its foe, diving into the river of his memories. The human was horrified at the invasion, but helpless to stop it. His impotent rage was intoxicating.

Then the one surprised him again. A lesser being would have faltered, but the human left his memories behind, unguarded, and threw his will at the mind demon's own river, the essence of its being. He burst through the mind demon's defenses, unprepared for such ferocity, and they Linked for just a moment before the coreling prince managed to gather its will and sever the connection.

The moment his mind was free, the one solidified, forcing the mimic to do the same.

'Renna!' the human called, and the coreling prince looked in shock to see the air ripple and the human female appear as if from nothing, stabbing the mimic with her warded knife.

The mind demon ignored the mimic's howls, studying the distortion in the air about the female, a garment trailing behind her as she struck. Powerful warding, to have hidden her from even a prince's eyes.

The moment the one solidified, his mental wards returned, but he also lost his control over the mimic. The mind demon had its servant shove him back, then throw itself upon the female, rending the warded garment from her and knocking her to the ground in a tumble.

By the time the one came to his feet, two females squared off before him, identical in appearance and action. The mind demon Linked their thoughts so that the mimic could mirror her utterly, then let go the claws that held it to the trunk of the tree. It stepped out into the open air and drifted to the ground as gently as a falling leaf.

The Painted Man blinked, seeing two Renna Tanners before him, identical down to the blackstem stains on her skin in varying degrees of fading. They looked at him with the same eyes, wore the same ragged clothes, carried the same knife. Even the magic they radiated seemed the same.

He ran to Twilight Dancer's side, forcing himself to ignore the horse's labored breaths as he snatched up his great bow and fitted an arrow. He wavered, unsure who to point it at.

'Arlen, she's the demon!' both Rennas shouted in unison, pointing to the other.

They looked at each other in shock, and then turned back to him. 'Arlen Bales,' they said, both planting their hips in the exact way Renna did when she was angry, 'don't you tell me you can't pick me from a coreling!'

The Painted Man looked at both of them and shrugged apologetically. Two sets of identical brown eyes glared at him.

He frowned. 'Why'd I have to play kissy, that night''

Both Rennas seemed to brighten at the question. 'You lost at succor,' they said in unison, and then again turned to look at each other in horror.

The Painted Man concentrated, watching them both at once. 'How'd I lose''

The Rennas hesitated, then looked at him. 'Beni cheated,' they admitted. A murderous gleam came into both their eyes, and they turned to each other once more, raising their knives.

'Don't!' the Painted Man said, raising his bow. 'Give me a moment.'

They both spared him an irritated glance. 'Corespawn it, Arlen, just let me kill the ripping thing and have done!'

'You ent a match for it, Ren,' the Painted Man said, and both women glared at him again. 'Real Renna would mind me,' he added.

The women threw back their heads and laughed at that, but they made no move to attack each other. The Painted Man nodded.

'Might as well come out!' he called loudly into the night. 'I know you're there! That changing demon ent smart enough for this!'

There was a rustle off to the side, and a demon appeared. It was small and slender, with an oversized head and a high, knobbed cranium. Its eyes were huge black pools, and it bared only a single row of sharp teeth at him. The talons at the end of its delicate fingers were like an Angierian lady's painted nails.

'Been wondering when I'd run into one of you bastards,' the Painted Man said. He tapped the large ward tattooed in the center of his forehead. 'Painted myself up special for it.'

The demon tilted its head, studying him. Beside him, the two Rennas stiffened slightly.

'Your mind may be shielded, but this female's is not,' the Rennas said in unison, as the demon continued to regard him. 'We can kill her at will.'

The Painted Man drew and fired in an instant, but the demon traced a quick ward in the air, and there was a flash of magic that reduced the arrow to ashes before it struck home. He drew another arrow to his ear, but it seemed a useless gesture against this new demon. He lowered his bow, easing the tension in the string.

'What do you want'' he demanded.

'What does your steed want from the insects its tail swats'' the Rennas asked. 'You are an annoyance to be crushed, nothing more.'

The Painted Man sneered. 'Come try.'

But the Rennas shook their heads. 'In time. You have no drones to defend you, while I have many. Soon I will lay open your skull and consume your mind, but it amuses me to let you bargain for the female first.'

'You said I had nothing you want,' the Painted Man said.

'You don't,' the Rennas agreed. 'But giving up something you wish to keep hidden will cause you pain, and that will sweeten the meal we make of your mind.'

The Painted Man's eyes narrowed.

'Where did you learn of us'' the Rennas asked.

The Painted Man glanced at them, and then looked back at the mind demon. 'Why should I tell you' You can't pull it from my head, and she doesn't know.'

The Rennas smiled. 'You humans are weak about your females. It is a failing bred carefully into your ancestors. Tell us, or she dies.' As they spoke, both women lifted identical warded knives and stepped close, holding them to each other's throats.

The Painted Man raised his bow, wavering it between them. 'I could shoot one. Got a half chance of killing your changeling.'

The women shrugged. 'It is only a drone. The female, however, holds great meaning to you. You will suffer much if she dies.'

'Great meaning'' the Rennas asked, and the Painted Man turned to look at them fully. There was fear in their eyes, and despair.

'I'm sorry, Ren,' the Painted Man said. 'Din't mean for this. Warned you.'

Both Rennas nodded. 'I know. Ent your fault.'

The Painted Man raised his bow at them. 'Ent gonna be able to save you this time, Ren,' he said, swallowing the lump in his throat. 'Not even if I knew which one was you.' Renna bit back a sob, and he could almost feel the mind demon's pleasure.

'So you're gonna have to be strong and save yourself,' he said. ' 'Cause that monster's the face of evil, and I ent gonna let it get away.'

The mind demon stiffened as it realized what he meant, but it was a second too late, as the Painted Man dropped his bow and leapt at it, covering the distance between them in an instant. Before it could command Renna and the mimic to kill each other, his warded fist struck the coreling prince's bulbous head with an explosion of magic.

The slender demon was thrown several feet by the force of the blow and landed on its back, hissing in rage. Its cranium throbbed, and the Painted Man could feel the thrum of power it sent out, though it did him no harm.

Behind him, the mimic shrieked, but the Painted Man ignored it, leaping at the mind demon again, pinning it and delivering heavy blows. Each wound healed instantly, but he did not let up, keeping it stunned until he could find a way to kill it. If it dematerialized, he was prepared now to match wills against it.

But the mind demon stayed solid, perhaps fearing just such a thing. With each blow, it grew more dazed, taking a split second longer to recover. The Painted Man slipped around the demon into a
sharusahk
choke hold, the pressure wards on his forearms growing warm as they flared against its throat, building power. It would be over in seconds.

But then a wind demon crashed into him, breaking the hold and knocking them apart. The Painted Man rolled atop the wind demon and struck it hard in the throat, stunning it, but a wood demon swung down at him from the trees before he could finish it off. It was followed quickly by several more.

The mind demon felt its connection to the mimic sever when the shock from one's blow blasted through its skull. It had never known such pain. In the ten thousand years since it was hatched, no creature had ever dared to strike the coreling prince. It was unthinkable.

The demon struck the ground hard, and immediately sent its distress out in a general call. Drones would come from all around to answer it. The mimic answered with a cry, but failed to come. The human leapt atop the mind demon, hammering it about the head with his wards.

Used to fighting through its mimic, the mind demon was unprepared for the pain and confusion of physical combat. The human gave it no time to recover, and it was helpless to prevent the one establishing a primitive dominance hold. His wards activated, sucking the coreling prince's own magic and turning it into pain.

That might have been the end, but at last a wind drone answered its call, knocking into the one and breaking his hold. Other drones followed, flocking to defend the coreling prince. The moment it was knocked away, the mind demon healed its wounds, hissing in outrage at the affront. It sent another call, meaning to bury the one in drones. It could sense dozens of them in the area, running hard to join the melee, but the mimic was strangely absent.

The human flung the wood drones from its path, charging the coreling prince again, but this time it was ready, drawing a ward that sent a blast of air to strike the one like a physical blow, hurling him across the clearing. By the time he rose, he was surrounded again by wood drones. At the mind demon's command, they broke branches from the trees to use as weapons, circumventing even the muddied wards of forbiddance on the human's skin.

The mimicking of her words and actions was horrifying enough, but Renna was truly revulsed when the mind demon rose up to take control of her voice and she realized it had been hiding within her all along, like a stowaway suddenly taking control of the cart.

It was an unspeakable violation, worse than anything Harl had ever done to her. Worse than the outhouse, worse than being staked at night. She could feel the demon burrowing through her thoughts like a field vole, taking her most cherished and private memories to use as weapons against Arlen.

The thought filled her with rage, and she sensed the mind demon's pleasure at the response.
I've taken you before,
it whispered in her thoughts.
Many times.

Renna looked at Arlen, and despaired at the resignation in his eyes. She had thought she was strong enough to walk his path. That she could do anything he could. But now that lie was proven. All she could do was get him killed.

She choked on a sob and tried to raise her knife to bury it in her own throat, but the mind demon controlled her body like a Jongleur's puppet, and she could not act against its will. Even if Arlen guessed right and somehow managed to kill the mimic, the mind demon could make
her
stab him in the heart just as easily. She wanted to warn him, but the words would not come.

But then the look in Arlen's eyes changed, as if he had come to some decision, and he gazed at her with a trust no one had ever shown her before.

'You're gonna have to be strong and save yourself,' he said. ' 'Cause that monster's the face of evil, and I ent gonna let it get away.'

Her fear fell away at that look, and her eyes hardened. She nodded, and felt the mind demon's sudden start, taking Arlen's meaning the same moment she did. It tried to react, but it was not quick enough as Arlen struck a blow to its head that lit the darkness with magic.

The demon's presence in her mind vanished, leaving Renna stunned and disoriented. She glanced at the mimic, still in her form, and saw it stagger similarly, cut off from its mind.

Tightening her grip on her father's knife, Renna growled and leapt at the creature, putting the blade into its bare midriff. She put her free arm around the demon, pulling it in close as the blackstem wards on her skin activated. Magic shocked through her muscles, filling her with strength as she heaved the knife upward, opening up the creature from navel to collar.

The mimic's body may have looked like her on the outside, but the black, stinking ichor that burst from the wound was nothing from the surface world.

She looked at its face, the same face she had seen a thousand times in the surface of water. Renna was almost brought to tears by the pain and confusion in her own eyes, but then the face snarled like a dog, and its teeth began to elongate as it hissed at her.

Renna twisted as the mimic lunged, turning its own energy against it as Arlen had taught her. She grabbed its thick braid in her free hand as it passed, pulling it up short from its fall and baring its nape. The move gave such power to her pivot and slash that her knife passed through its neck effortlessly.

Just like that, the fight was over. The demon's body fell to the ground lifelessly, and she was left holding her own head by the hair, eyes rolled back and black ichor dripping from the neck. She inhaled, taking what seemed like her first breath in hours.

BOOK: The Desert Spear
11.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Academy: Book 1 by Leito, Chad
Forgotten Husband by Helen Bianchin
Love at Any Cost by Julie Lessman
Caper by Parnell Hall
Run To You by Stein, Charlotte
The Windsingers by Megan Lindholm
11 by Kylie Brant