Legends of the Dragonrealm, Vol. III (120 page)

BOOK: Legends of the Dragonrealm, Vol. III
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With a roar, Darkhorse took to the sky. But as his hooves left the ground, the latter reached up and snared them. The eternal let his limbs stretch as thin as needles, but still he could not escape the grasping earth.

Another hill rose between Cabe and Darkhorse, cutting off the latter from the wizard’s sight. The landscape, churning violently, sent him flowing farther and farther from his companions.

Concentrating as best he could, Cabe muttered. Immediately, a golden sphere surrounded him. It froze him in position despite the attempts of the earth to move him elsewhere.

He managed to catch his breath. Around him, Cabe could see only haze and ground. In the distance, he sensed Darkhorse and Shade, but which direction they were, Cabe could not say with utter certainty.

Then darkness loomed over him. He looked up, saw a wave of earth come crashing down on him. The sphere would never hold against its intensity.

Going down on one knee, the wizard thrust both hands up, his index and little fingers pointed at the oncoming avalanche.

The blue force that burst from his fingertips shattered his own shield, but Cabe cared not. The powerful, primal force continued up, striking the dropping earth with all the force that the wizard could muster.

The results were devastating. The gray sky filled with dust and bits of rock. Cabe covered his face with his own hood, then attempted to recast his sphere spell. However, the effort that he had used to shatter the attacking earth had drained him too much. Without a strong and proper source of energy from which to draw, the best he could muster was a weak travesty of the original.

Cabe folded himself into a ball, well aware that even if he survived the downpour, he would likely suffer terrible injury.

But after the first few pellets of dirt . . . the deluge ceased.

He did not stir at first, fearing some trick. Yet, when after several tense breaths he was still not struck down, Cabe finally gazed up.

Empty, gray sky greeted his dumbfounded eyes.

Slowly, cautiously, the spellcaster rose. The land beneath his feet had stilled once more. Cabe took a tentative step, but nothing happened.

The wizard dared exhale.

And that was when the voice said, “The necessary brute force, but hardly the proper dignity for my progeny . . .”

A fear that had lain dormant in Cabe for so very long burst to life. Gone were all the years of training, fighting, and learning. Suddenly he was again the young server from the inn who had been cast into a conflict that was his only because of his bloodline.

It took all his nerve to muster the strength to turn, to face the cause of his fear, the eternal fixation of his nightmares.

The black of the other’s outfit—more like a uniform than anything else—was complemented by the navy blue band around his collar and his wrists. The red emblem of a dragon impaled upon a sword decorated the chest. Boots, hip-length in front, and gloves completed his clothing.

But if the garments were not proof enough of just what evil stood before Cabe, he had only to look at that face, that damnable face, to verify his worst horror. It too much resembled his own, but was older, darker of eyes, and the mouth continually wore a contemptuous smirk. Worse, the short beard and close-cut hair bore that impossible yet familiar half-and-half look, black on one side, silver on the other.

“Do close that chasm of a mouth, my boy,” the bearded figure sneered. “Unless you’d like to say hello to your papa?”

Azran . . .

VI

“Cabe! Cabe!” Darkhorse trod without fear over the landscape. As swiftly as it had begun, the shifting of the earth had ended. The eternal immediately understood that he had been intentionally separated from the others. The Lords of the Dead no doubt feared his power and why not? He had more than once put them in their places, although he had never fought them beyond proving a point.

The huge stallion tried once more to leap into the air. He managed only a foot or so before the ground seized his limbs. So, they desired him earthbound. Darkhorse laughed loudly, certain that the necromancers would hear. If they thought him weakened by that, then they were sorely mistaken.

But what could be their intention? Likely they hoped to deal with Cabe and even Shade first, then concentrate on him. This trap was likely only to keep him busy until that time—

A malevolent giggle echoed through his mind.

Darkhorse twisted his neck at an impossible angle. “Who is that? Who is there?”

Again came the giggle, a sound that more and more reminded the eternal of the one thing he had ever truly dreaded.

But that was impossible. That one was dead, dead, dead.

He turned about, trying to make out anything in the thickening haze.

“Aah, dear, dear Darkhorse! I’ve missed you so very, very, very much! How could you stay away so long?”

A tiny, black spot formed in the mist. The shadow steed snorted, then retreated. The spot drifted toward him, growing and coalescing. It swelled to the size of a pumpkin, then began taking on a different shape. Arms and legs thrust out and the general form shrank to a doll-sized figure with no features.

No features save two ice-blue orbs that suddenly opened in the darkness that covered what should have been its face.

The giggle echoed louder in Darkhorse’s head. He reared, kicking at the ebony puppet even though it was too far to hit.

“You are no more!” he roared. “You have ceased to be! You are dead,
Yureel
!”

“What is death to us, my brother, who are immortal, who are without beginning or end?” Yureel floated closer. “But wait! You
do
have a beginning! I did create you, didn’t I?”

“And from that moment on, we ceased to have any connection to one another! I abhor everything you are, Yureel! You torture and wreak bloodshed, manipulate the minds of others simply for your own amusement!”

The puppet spun upside down, giggling. “But whatever purpose do the ephemerals serve, hmm?”

“Their lives may be fleeting compared to ours, but they earn them far more than we ever have!” Darkhorse’s eyes narrowed. “And you have already forfeited what foul existence you had!”

He reared again, clashing his front hooves together. Lightning crackled, striking out at Yureel.

But the bolts faded just before the malevolent puppet. “Shame, shame, shame, brother! It seems I must punish you . . .”

And as he spoke, Yureel swelled further in size. He grew as large as Darkhorse, then larger yet. As he grew, his form defined further, his outer shell becoming that of a monstrous knight with a horned helmet. One hand twisted, stretched, transforming into a huge spiked mace with twin heads.

“Come, embrace me, my brother!” the giant boomed. He brought the mace down hard. Thunder roared as the weapon cracked the ground, creating a chasm into which Darkhorse nearly fell.

The ebony stallion leapt over the gap, but just as before, the ground grabbed at his limbs. This time, however, Darkhorse reacted quicker. His legs shot into his body. As he landed, his torso shivered like a sack of water, softening the collision with the earth.

Immediately, eight spiderlike appendages burst free. Darkhorse raised himself up, stretching until he stood as tall as Yureel. The shadow steed’s muzzle distorted, growing wider and toothier. Little of Darkhorse now resembled the animal from which he had named himself.

“You have no soul and therefore cannot be here, Yureel! Whatever you are, you are not what you appear!”

Even as he finished his declaration, Darkhorse charged. His head sharpened to a needle point, which he plunged into the knight’s chest.

Yureel ripped in half, his upper torso flying over his adversary. The lower portion melted, turning into a huge, black puddle.

The mace came crashing down on Darkhorse, fiery sparks shooting up where it hit. Darkhorse roared in agony and lost hold of his shape. He flowed over what had been Yureel and the puddle sought to meld with him.

Another giggle escaped the monstrous warrior. Yureel’s upper half spun about, then grew a new pair of legs. “Come, come, my brother . . . let our quarrel be no more! Let us be of one mind . . . and body . . .”

As Yureel combined with him, Darkhorse felt the horrific presence of his counterpart. Despite the stallion’s denial, this
was
Yureel—or at least a part of him. There was something else, something magically created that enhanced what was actually Yureel—and surely had to be the work of the Lords of the Dead.

“You will be me and I will be me again . . .” whispered Yureel’s mocking voice. “I will step forth from this boring place of shadows and again play with your favored world! I will write an epic of blood that will encompass all!”

And he swallowed Darkhorse.

THEY HAD BEEN
separated, just as Shade had expected. He had thought that perhaps it could be avoided, but his cousins had planned better. Still, he felt secure that he could overcome whatever they had in mind for him.

It would involve the daughter. Ephraim surely had seen in her the truth long ago. Once, perhaps, twice, maybe, but never so often. Cabe Bedlam did not realize the secret his daughter held, perhaps unknowingly.

How many times have you been reborn, Sharissa? I knew you as Galani and twice others, but there likely were more. Now you are Valea Bedlam, your soul combined once again with the bloodline from which you first sprouted . . .

That was hardly the necromancers’ work. They dealt in death and undeath, not life and reincarnation. No, this was most likely the intention of that which Shade feared more than any other, which had sent him on his path of immortal madness.

But you will not have me
. . . he told that invisible foe.
Twisted though my soul has become, you will
never
have me!

Did the Lords know that they unwittingly did another’s bidding? Surely not. Not even Ephraim could foresee that. Only Shade recognized his ultimate foe, the same one he had battled since the son of Barakas Tezerenee. It was that foe, the warlock suspected, who had turned awry Shade’s spell, the one that would have made death for him but a word. It was that foe who had sought his destruction, but who had failed. Shade had lived, albeit cursedly so.

And now his ageless adversary sought his life again through the necromancers. The irony was not lost on him.

Shade had no doubt that Cabe Bedlam and Darkhorse faced evils of their own, but to turn back to help them would only serve the purpose of Ephraim and the others.

The haze closed about him, forcing the warlock to choose his steps carefully. He sensed the ever-present spirits, but they were nothing to him. The one he had feared most was not among their invisible horde.

But no sooner had he thought that, when he noticed the outline of someone walking toward him. Instinctively, thousands of years of hardening slipped away. The booming voice and arrogant tone echoed through his memories and Shade almost cringed.

Yet, when the silhouetted figure spoke, the voice was one more calm, more concerned—and not that of Barakas Tezerenee.

“I hoped I would find you here,” the ghost said.

If Shade’s blurred features could have evinced surprise, they surely would have now. “Master . . . Zeree . . .”

“Ever the formal one,” the bearded figure replied with a sad smile. He stood nearly seven feet tall and his narrow features were handsome in their way. He had a hawklike appearance that was complemented by the thin, groomed beard that matched the brown that was the color of most of his flowing hair. To one side of the ghost’s head, a streak of silver darted back, but, unlike the Bedlams’, it was an affectation, not a sign that he was a spellcaster. This one had lived before that had become the mark of the mage. “I would permit you to call me Dru, Gerrod.”

“I will not call you that out of respect, Master Zeree . . . and you will not call me who I no longer am.”

“Ever the stubborn one, too, as I recall.” The specter stepped closer. The hazy landscape could be seen through his faded gray robe.

“They have sent you,” growled the faceless warlock, unable to completely hide his anxiety. “What malignant purpose do
you
serve for them?”

The ghost of Dru Zeree smiled sadly again. “None, G—friend. Ephraim and the others know nothing of my presence here. If they did, they would be quite shocked.”

“As they are the lords, masters, and creators of this infernal pocket world, I find that hard to believe even from your ethereal lips, Master Zeree.”

“Your threat awaits you in the castle. I come as one who knew you and felt your fear—”

“I fear nothing and no one!”

Dru chuckled, an unearthly sound even to the jaded warlock. “Your father would beg to differ.” His tone darkened. “They will be here quickly. You must listen to me. The death you fear is your victory . . . that, and
her.

“Her?” Shade waved him away. “You can’t possibly mean who I think, Master Zeree . . .”

“I always knew how you felt, as did Sharissa.” The ghost shook his head. “Your cause was not so hopeless as you think. You were just . . . at the crossroads at the wrong time.”

“How eloquently put . . . and how useless to me now. If that’s all you’ve to say, then begone with you!”

Dru Zeree’s crystalline eyes narrowed. “Ever the stubborn one. Despite that, she’ll try to do what she can for you . . .” He suddenly peered into the mist. “They’re near.”

Glancing in the direction his ethereal companion had looked, the hooded warlock saw nothing. “Who are—”

But the phantom of his past had vanished.

And almost immediately, Shade sensed the approaching figures. Five of them, a good Vraad number. They were spread all along the path behind, moving unafraid of his notice. They
wanted
him to know that they were there, the better to force his hand.

The Lords of the Dead were on the hunt.

Shade started away. He was not weak in their domain, but certainly weaker than he liked. They had planned long for this moment, perhaps even centuries, and it did not behoove him to wait to confront them, not yet.

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