Read Angelslayer: The Winnowing War Online
Authors: K. Michael Wright
As Falcon drove his sweating horses, he felt no chill. From beyond, at what must have been the mighty gate, there came a furious roar, a roar of thousands, and though echoed by distance, there was no mistaking the sound. Hericlon had fallen. There was a brief moment when Quietus wondered how it could have been, that if they had taken the gate, it could never have been the village Unchurians of the south, hardly capable of even threatening the Galaglean settlements. It was possible this was actually a full-blown war he was riding into. The thought surged through his veins, leaving him adrenaline-charged.
Suddenly the wind of his advance through the canyon was split by the echoing roar of an unhuman beast. It reared upon hind legs in the pass before them, more than ten feet high. Its head was the face of a man, but there were fifteen, maybe twenty huge, muscled arms groping with clawed fingers.
Falcon's lead horses were thrown into panic. The chariot's harness bar snapped, and the center shaft staved into the earth. The car was thrown forward, slamming into the beast, knocking the animal back. All arms wrapped about both the chariot and Falcon, but the blow had been so solid, the beast fell forward, its gut and chest caved in. Quietus, the king of Galaglea, vanished beneath him.
Insane with fury, the Champions circled and dismounted. They leapt upon the creature and with sword and axe began hacking through bone and blood, tearing a hole through its back. They hacked through flesh and bone until finally they were able to pull Quietus out as if he were being given birth. The Falcon gasped for air, bloodied, covered in visceral guts and flesh. He struggled to his feet, steadied himself a moment, then looked up.
“A horse!” Falcon screamed.
A Champion dismounted, and Falcon took the reins, vaulted into the saddle. He spurred the horse into a gallop, drawing his sword and pointing forward. The Champions fell in at his flanks.
As he rode, Quietus wiped the blood from his eyes. When he turned the final bend of the canyon and the clearing of the garrison court as well as the great gate of Hericlon fell into view, he brought the horse up so sharply, it reared, and the Falcon stared, scarcely believing his eyes.
Men swarmed over Hericlon as though they were ants, as though the gate were no more than an overturned log being consumed by warms of voracious termites. The numbers of them took Falcon's breath. Amazingly, the gate was still closed, though he could see even more of them behind it. In fact, an army waited beyond the gate, trapped behind its thick, oraculum bars. The creatures pouring over the walls were of all shapes and size; they were like rivers of bare white flesh. Falcon twisted the reins and held his sword high.
“Champions!” he cried, then bolted forward, lifting his bloodied sword high. His Champions fanned out beside him in a phalanx. Dull, black iron tips of their lances lowered. They came like a wall of missiles. As they closed, those filling the passageway did not turn in defense, they had no shields to raise, no swords or spears, they were all of the last generation Failures of an angel, and seeing the Falcon charging, they were thrown into panic. Those that found the room to do so fled.
The Champions had passed and Satrina was running. She ran past the carnage of blood and body parts and dead horses. But then she spotted something. It was in the stomach of a huge, horrid creature with seemingly an endless supply of arms. It hung from a shred of skin in the back, near the area of its heart. The hilt was black ivory and about it were intertwined silver serpents. It was Rhywder's short sword. “No!” she screamed.
She leapt atop the bloodied flesh and wrenched the sword free just as Marcian and the Second Century came about the corner. Marcian halted a moment, for it seemed this girl had brought down this huge creature, pulling a sword out of the heart from behind. She did not look a warrior, and though the creature had been hacked to pieces, the killing blow was obviously hers. It seemed impossible. When she spotted him, the girl did not ask permission; she leapt from the creature's flesh onto the back of Marcian's horse.
“Go!” she shouted. “Go, run!”
Marcian motioned and they thundered onward.
As the garrison fell into view, just as Falcon had done, Marcian paused, turning his horse sideways, dancing a moment, as he stared at the impossible. The Falcon had driven a massive wedge into a virtual wall of flesh and now in close quarters, they were slaying with axe and sword.
Marcian's second, an able warrior named Riuel, pulled up at his side.
“Goddess bless us,” Riuel muttered, “I have never seen such a sight.”
“It appears we are about to engage heaven's miscarriage!” Marcian cried. “Those are not warriors; they are mostly the last generation of an angel, Failures.”
“So it appears, my lord,” Riuel said. He turned in his saddle and lifted his sword as a mark. “Second Century! Prepare to engage!”
Marcian locked his cheek guards in place. He slipped his hand through a buckler.
“Hold tight, woman,” he said, having no idea who she could be. He leaned forward, drawing his sword, and whispered his horse speed, kicking his heels into its sides. The cavalry of the Second Century Galagleans spread out to either side. They lifted their lances, anchoring them into the saddle sheaths at their horse's flanks, and lowered the heavy iron tips as they closed for the kill. One hundred mounted Galagleans were about to slam into the madness swirling at the bottom of the gate.
The mass of flesh, the seventh generation of the angel, finally began to group at the commands of their officers and rushed the left flank of the Champions, only to find they were being closed on by hundreds of horsemen and even more lances. Screaming, they ran in all directions, and most were slain with lances through their backs.
Marcian's horse drove into the thick of them, and once his lance lodged through a huge creature whose head had no neck, he drew his sword and began to slay from side to side. He cleaved flesh like the gathering of a harvest. None of them fought back. It seemed madness; it was madness. He severed a spine with a clean sweep. The flesh seemed soft, too easily cutâthey had no armor, no shields. Behind him, the girl had come to her knees in the saddle, gripping his back plate with one hand as she stabbed at the creatures using a fine, Daathan short sword. She screamed, as fevered as any warrior, but she was no Daath. When his mount reared as it slammed into a wall of massed flesh, Marcian turned in the saddle, barely catching her before she went over the flanks.
Marcian found he had broken off from the others and waded in deep. With twenty horses and the girl, he found himself pressed against the miscreants and turned to see they closed off his rear. They had grown more capable as he neared the gate. Some were armored, and were turning to attack, armed with axe and spear. They were being closed on from all sides.
“Dismount!” Marcian cried.
The horsemen dropped from their mounts and angled swords, using their horses as protection. They drew inward, forming a tight circle, shields out, swords to the side. Marcian threw the girl behind him where she crouched in their center, her short sword, which had slain beasts, angled and bloody.
These were giants, fourth, fifth generation, fairly capable fighters. The game had suddenly shifted. As the giants pressed past the horses, stepping over corpses beneath them, Marcian and his Galagleans fought them back. Though they were seven and ten feet tall, they were not trained warriors. They fought poorly; their only strength was their numbers. For every one killed, two more would appear. To his left, Riuel fought in stance, efficiently slaying anything that drew near, as were Marcian's other men. Amazing, enough had swarmed the passage that the horsemen behind Marcian were now wading through flesh like cutting through jungle to reach him. One of his men grunted, taking a pike through his side. Its tip was barbed and caught in him in the gut, but there were so many he was then jerked back into them and beheaded. They roared as if scoring a victory. One giant wearing a misshapen bronze chest plate as if he had been given a poor man's armor, tore off the Galaglean's blue cloak and waved it for the others to see that the Galagleans could be killed, even by these, the lessers.
Marcian heard the main body of the cavalry comingâthe screams of dying as his men were piercing through to reach him. They were the Galaglean captains of the old guard, and they had fought in hard and bitter campaigns. Such memories were not forgotten in a lifetime. They efficiently closed in with thrusting pikes and long swords, cutting a wide path through human flesh. As they reached Marcian, bodies were trampled so thick, the rock of Hericlon's floor could barely been seen, and getting over and past slain debris was a nagging offense. The angel's spawn were braver now, thicker, though no match for the Galaglean warriors who had reached them. The angel had taught them well, however, for they fed themselves to axe and sword, caring nothing that they were being slaughtered, making their slaughter in itself the impediment. Marcian began to feel his skin crawl from it. He had fought valiant battles, but this was madness and it seemed somehow an odd, cruel mockery of war. Even if they were misshapen, even if they were demon spawn, their faces were human, their cries were lanced with pain, and their blood was red.
The he noticedâfor the first timeâthe base of Hericlon's gate. There was a hive of activity. It reminded him of a thick fur of bees swarming over their hives at work. There were hundreds all laboring at once, working on every part of the gate's machinery, rebuilding the winch assembly of the portcullis at an unbelievable pace. Freshly cut pylons were been thrown up and a series of pulleys and cogs were cut on the spot and quickly fitted to bearings. Scraps of cut wood, chunks of discarded beams, were scattered as the assembly rose almost as if it were spellbound magick, as if it were assembling itself. Somehow they had gotten the heaving, thick chains out of the gate's pathways that tunneled deep into the black rock and were threading them into the spokes and cogs and gears, hammering and winching them down into place. The workers were frenzied; they moved as if they were driven mad, as if invisible lashings were driving them at their tasks. They were the size of humans, but their skin was reddish in hue, their hair long and night-black. These were Unchurians, spawn of the angel, but they had not been trained as warriors. They were workersâmechanics, machinists, engineersâand they were moving at a fantastic pace, franticâit was a frenzy of commotion and movement. Some were crawling on hands and knees over the top supporting beams, tightening the lashing.
His men were fighting about him, continually slaying, but Marcian was searching, trying to tease out the puzzle. Where were the warriors? Where was the core of the legendary Unchurian firstborn of the vast southern desert cities, the uncounted of Du'ldu?
He realized that someone must have utterly destroyed the winch assembly; he even saw trampled ash. It had been burnt to the ground. Someone had tried to ensure the gate would not be raisedâsomeone who had the sense to realize what could come through it. So Marcian looked past the frenzied assembly to the gate of Hericlon, the thick bars of oraculum that was the portcullis, and there he found the prime, the Unchurian firstborn. They were waiting behind the bars, pressed against them, and deep into the passage south were endless numbers of them, enough to tear into the armies of Galaglea, enough to possibly take the legions that were now pressing up at full run from the vale.