Read The Last Mortal Bond Online
Authors: Brian Staveley
It was only a few dozen paces, but by the time they caught up, the legionaries were dead, blood chugging out onto the earth through ragged, ugly wounds, and Valyn was holding his axes once again.
“Let's go,” he growled. “And this time, try to keep up.”
There was a moment early on in all the blood-slick madness when Kaden caught a glimpse of a golden-winged bird. The creature screamed, careened through the sky as though it were a huge puppet yanked by vicious, invisible strings, and then it was gone, vanished behind the rooftops. He ran on, waiting for the kettral to reappear even as dozens of men wielding spears and swords flooded into the street behind them.
“Where is it?” he shouted.
“Gone,” Valyn said. “Can't make the grab.”
Even as he spoke, another knot of armored men erupted from a side alley a dozen paces ahead. Valyn, already charging, charged harder. Kaden had never seen any human being move so fast, had never seen
anything
move that fast. Valyn wielded the axes as though they were part of his own flesh, as though he'd been born holding them, and the Annurians could find no defense that availed against that brutal steel. Valyn went over their guard or under, found holes in whatever feeble attacks were thrown up, sometimes just slammed straight through a raised blade, shattering it or knocking it aside as though three feet of sharpened sword were no more than a reed.
“Come on,” he growled, gesturing through the hole he'd carved. Blood spattered his face.
The flight that followed was madness. Not since the Aedolians had come to Ashk'lan to kill him had Kaden run so hard. This time, too, the Annurian soldiers were his foes. This time, too, Triste ran at his side, her breathing ragged, but steady. This time, too, he understood the stakes, how it would only take a single misstep, a twisted ankle, and the race would be over. It was all the same, and yet it was not the same at all.
There had been a hope of escaping the Aedolians back in the Bone Mountains where the terrain favored the monks. Kaden enjoyed no such advantage on the streets of Annur. Worse, il Tornja's soldiers weren't trailing along somewhere behind, they were
everywhere,
lunging out of doorways and alleys, appearing at intersections, calling out to one another in ear-shivering blasts on their horns. Were it not for Valyn, the Annurians would have killed both Kaden and Triste a dozen times over, but Valyn, somehow, was everywhere.
When Annurians came on horseback, he killed the horses. When they came with spears, he rolled beneath the shafts and cut the arms from the attackers. Once, when Kaden rounded a corner to find two legionaries leveling flatbows at his chest, Valyn lunged in front. An ax flew end over end into the face of one of the bowmen. Kaden couldn't see what happened next. Or he saw it, but his mind couldn't work through the fact. There was an arrow. A flying arrow. Then there was not. It looked as though Valyn had snatched it from the air, but that was impossible. There was no time to dwell on it. Valyn had reached the other bowman, caved in his throat, retrieved the first thrown ax, and was waving them on again.
His look brought Kaden up short. Despite the blood bathing his arms, soaking the tattered cloth of his clothes, Valyn didn't look like a man fighting for his life. He looked ⦠glad.
No,
Kaden thought.
Not glad. Something else
.
There was no time to ponder words. Even as he paused, the Annurians were closing.
“Come on, Kaden,” Triste said, dragging him forward by the wrist. “Come
on
.”
Kaden met her eyes, saw the fear and determination there, and he ran.
The red walls of the Dawn Palace nearly proved their undoing. They'd come at the fortress from the west and south, working their way through the streets until they burst from one final crowded lane into the open space before the walls and the short bridge leading to the Water Gate.
The Water Gate was nothing compared to the towering Godsgate that opened west onto Annur's main thoroughfare. It was an entrance for minor ministers, deliveries of food and wine, workers come to repair roofs or walls. It was a small gate, but it was blocked by a steel portcullis, and for all Valyn's ability to hack his way through human flesh, his axes would do nothing to get them past that grille.
“West,” Valyn said, checking his momentum before he reached the short bridge over the moat. “We'll go in the Great Gate.”
Even as the words left his lips, however, a knot of twenty or thirty soldiers, half bearing loaded flatbows, marched out from a side street at the double to block the way west.
“East,” Kaden gasped. “The harbor.”
But there were men to the east, too, spreading out in a tight cordon across the street.
Valyn hefted his axes, as though testing their weight. “We'll go through them.”
“That's insane,” Triste hissed.
“She's right,” Kaden said. “I don't care how good you are, we're not going to survive, not through that.”
“So we don't survive,” Valyn said. “So we die.”
His voice sent a shiver up Kaden's spine.
“The canal,” Kaden said, gesturing to the filthy water swirling along the base of the wall.
One twitchy bowman loosed his bolt. It landed twenty paces distant, steel head striking sparks as it skittered across the stone.
“We didn't make it,” Triste whispered. “We didn't make it.”
Then, before Kaden could reply, madness erupted in the western rank of soldiers. Men cried out in pain and surprise, turned, tried to bring swords and bows to bear on some new, unseen foe, calling out conflicting orders even as their companions fell. The line of men, so strict and disciplined just moments earlier, flexed, then caved inward, like a river's high bank before the rising waters of a flood, calving off at first, then collapsing. Kaden could just make out, at the center of the violence, two figures, little more than shadows, really, in all the kicked-up dust, fighting back to back, hacking their way through the stunned ranks of Annurians.
“It's another armyâ¦,” Kaden began, then trailed off as a gust of wind shoveled away the dust.
There was no army. There were no rows of newly arrived soldiers to rank against those other deadly rows. There were just the two shadows, neither of them as fast as Valyn, but fast enough, twin blades naked in their hands as they forced their way forward step by bloody step, leaving a screaming, twisted human wreckage in their wake. Then, a moment later, they were free, bursting from the front rank of the legion, charging full tilt at the bridge. Both wore Kettral blacks, but their similarity ended there. The man was short, pockmarked, coal black, shaved-headed. The woman was tall, beautiful but freakishly pale, her yellow hair streaming out behind her.
“Well, Holy Hull,” Valyn said, taken aback for the first time since their desperate flight began.
“Not Hull,” the man said as they reached them. “Just a couple beat-up soldiers.” If Valyn was some preternatural hunter stalking the streets of Annur, these two looked half dead. Both were drenched in blood; a vicious blaze had singed the hair from half the woman's head. The man's blades were notched in half a dozen places. Somehow, though, they'd come across the city, cutting their own way through the Army of the North, and when the man spoke again, his voice was hard, level, focused. “What now?”
Valyn pointed. “We need in, past the gate.”
Neither of the Kettral asked why. The blond woman just threw up a hand, a casual gesture, as though she were flicking water free of her fingers. Behind Kaden there was a groan like the earth itself were breaking apart, then a deafening crash. He turned to find the steel portcullis crushed, crumbled, shoved aside.
“Go,” Valyn said, seizing him by the shoulder, hauling him onto the bridge even as the bolts and arrows started falling once more.
“Go.”
“Triste,” Kaden said, but the short man had her by the arm, was dragging her with him as he ran.
They were Kettralâthat much was clear enoughâalthough beyond that Kaden had no theories. It didn't matter. There was only one thing left that mattered.
“The Spear,” he gasped, pointing up at the impossible glass tower looming above. “We have to get to the Spear.”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Adare watched from the wall as the Kettral attacked.
Balendin stood atop a small, charred knoll, the site, until days earlier, of some temple, the ruined walls and buttresses of which still stood, protecting him from anyone approaching from behind. He'd been plying his stomach-churning violence there for half the day, unseaming men and women as though they were dolls, opening the skin, holding up the dark, pulsing organs to the light, bathing in the cries of the surrounding Urghul and, presumably, the horror of the soldiers atop the wall.
He had just torn the tongue from another helpless prisoner when the five birds came at him, one from every point of the compass and one stabbing down from above. It seemed an impossible attack to stop. Each of those birds was the size of a large canalboat, all wing, and beak, and claw. Through the long lens, Adare could see the Kettral on the talons beneath, armed to the ears with blades and bows. They started loosing arrows early, and kept shooting as the birds closed.
“They're going to do it,” Adare breathed quietly. “They're going to kill that fucking bastard.”
Nira was silent at her side a moment, studying the battle through her own long lens. Then she shook her head.
“No,” she replied grimly, lowering the lens. “They're not.”
The first kettral exploded into flames when it was still a hundred paces from the leach, the second a heartbeat after that. One moment the birds were flying, screaming their defiance, the next they were charred, already dead, tumbling from the air, the burning Kettral struggling to cut themselves free of their harnesses. Struggling and failing.
“Sweet Intarra's light,” Adare breathed.
“They could use a little a' that right now,” Nira agreed.
Whether the leach had used too much strength too quickly, or he just didn't see the full scope of the attack early enough, the other three birds got closer. Closer, but not close enough. Balendin raised his hand, dropped it down, and the nearest kettral, already coming in low for its attack, slammed into the earth, scattering horses and riders, plowing up the soft ground. The mounted Urghul surrounded it, screaming, swarming over the broken creature and the soldiers beneath like so many ants on a rotting carcass.
The fourth bird careened off some invisible wall, and though it managed to stay airborne, even Adare could tell from the stuttering wingbeat that the creature was injured, and badly. This one, however, managed to limp off toward the north, and though a group of the horsemen gave chase, it seemed at least possible that the soldiers strapped to the talons beneath would survive, escape.
That left the fifth bird, the one dropping straight down out of the clouds.
That one's Gwenna,
she realized, staring through the lens.
The largest bird, the golden one, is hers
.
Adare allowed herself the smallest spark of hope. It was possible Balendin hadn't noticed, that he'd been too busy knocking back the first four attacks to notice the fifth. He couldn't see everything at once; he had to miss something eventually. The long lens was shaking so badly in Adare's hand that she couldn't see the leach's face. She leaned it against the top of the stone wall, took a moment to find the range again, and then her stomach recoiled inside her. Balendin was staring straight up. Staring straight up, and smiling.
Adare clenched her teeth, waiting for the inevitable, for this bird, too, the last of a shattered hope, to burst into flame or be smashed into the dirt. At the last moment, however, the enormous creature sheered off, peeling away toward the east, abandoning the attack. Not that it mattered. Another blow, just as vicious as the one that crippled the other four kettral, hammered into the huge golden bird from the side. It tumbled sideways, screamed, managed to right itself, then disappeared behind the rooftops, flying toward the Broken Bay.
For a moment, it was all Adare could do to stay on her feet.
“They didn't even get close,” she breathed quietly. “Five Wings of Kettral attacking simultaneously, and they didn't even get close.”
“It's worse than that,” Nira said. “That victory just dug his well deeper, filled it higher.”
Adare turned to the older woman.
“Think of your awe,” Nira continued quietly. She gestured to the Urghul, to the Annurians manning the walls. “Now multiply that by a hundred thousand.”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Gwenna was still cursing when Quick Jak put the bird down south of the wall, in the open square that served as the Kettral command and control. Only there were no Kettral left, none but her own Wing.
“The 'Shael-spawned son of a fucking whore,” Gwenna snarled. “That bastard. That son of a
bitch
.”
The curses weren't directed at anyone, they weren't even coherent, but they kept her from sobbing.
She'd known it was a risk. They all had. She'd known, when she gave the order to attack, that people wouldn't be coming back, that Balendin would put up some kind of fight and that people would die. She'd known there was a possibility that the leach was just too strong, and she'd made the choice to go after him anyway, before he got even stronger. She'd known all of it, and yet seeing the birds burst into flame, seeing the men and women she'd so hastily trained burning, falling, dying ⦠she hadn't known how much that would hurt.
The fact that her own Wing had survived only made it worse, and when Quick Jak dropped off Allar'ra's back, Gwenna went at him with a fury, seizing him by the throat and throwing him to the ground. The fact that she could see the fear in his eyes, that she could smell the stink of panic on him, made her want to kill him right there and be done with it.