The Death of Promises (18 page)

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Authors: David Dalglish

BOOK: The Death of Promises
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The dark paladins drew their swords and held them high. The room darkened as the black flame flared from blade and axe. “For Karak!” they shouted. “For Karak! For Karak!”

Krieger beamed, the shouts causing the hairs on his neck to stand and a tight shiver to crawl up his spine.

“Arm yourselves,” he shouted. “And prepare your provisions. Time is our foe.”

“And every foe must be beaten,” Carden said, joining him on stage. He strutted out with familiarity and an aura that made all in his presence bow.

“Krieger is the new High Enforcer of the Stronghold,” the old man said, his deep voice losing no strength from age. “You will follow his commands, for they are the words of Karak himself. Now rise! Make ready! The time for war is now.”

The dark paladins cheered his name and clanged together their weapons. As they left to prepare, the old man turned to Krieger and smiled.

“A sufficient speech,” he told him. “Though your energy and conviction made up for your lack of grace.”

“It is how I fight,” Krieger said as he sheathed his sword. “And it is how I speak. Will you come with us?”

“My bones are old but my faith is still strong,” he said. As if to prove his point he drew his own sword and plunged it two inches into the stage.

“Veldaren will crumble like a house of straw,” Krieger said.

Carden tore his sword free and held it high.

“And we will be the fire that consumes it as it falls.”

M
ira had no horse of her own, but she was light and Lathaar’s horse bore her weight with ease. She sat in front, his arm around her waist to hold her steady. Jerico rode several paces ahead, scanning the horizon for any sign of Qurrah and his book. They had been riding for several days, and after the fifth Lathaar finally told her everything Keziel knew about the daughters of balance. She said little, mostly listening. During their ride the next morning she finally spoke.

“Are you sure what he says is true,” she asked. “About what I am?”

“I find no reason to doubt him,” Lathaar said.

Mira leaned against his chest, closed her eyes, and then tilted her head so it rest sideways against his armor.

“Killing Darakken was my purpose, wasn’t it?” she asked.

“We don’t know that.”

“And if I do have another purpose, what if…”

She said no more. Lathaar stroked her hair with his free hand. After twenty minutes of silence, she spoke again.

“I’ve had dreams,” she said. “Good dreams. Peaceful dreams. And in each one I am dying.” She felt Lathaar tense up at her words.

“That isn’t your purpose,” he said. “You aren’t supposed to die. I won’t let you be a martyr.”

“Evermoon taught me to pray to Celestia,” she said. “I know the sound of her voice. The dreams come from her, Lathaar. That girl, the one like me...”

“Tessanna.”

“Yes. I think she is to kill me.”

The path led them into a large forest, where the tree trunks were thick and the space between was large enough that they could stay mounted. They still had to be careful of footing, lest they injure their horses. Lathaar guided his mount side to side as he thought over his words.

“Celestia wants you to keep everything the same,” he said, gently pulling on the reins to slow his horse. “She may want you to die to prevent more good. I won’t allow it, Mira. I won’t let you die just so she…just so…”

The girl smiled up at him and pressed a finger against his lips.

“I can read your mind, remember?” she said.

He nodded, trying to look calm as his face flushed a deep red.

“Careful back there,” Jerico shouted, “I think I upset a gopher’s home.”

Lathaar checked the ground and sure enough found a deep collection of holes prepared like a deadly trap. He guided his horse around, glad that Jerico’s horse hadn’t injured its leg when the dirt collapsed underneath it.

“I missed you,” Mira said.

“Missed you, too,” Lathaar said.

The girl turned around and kissed his neck just above the top of his breastplate. Just as quick she turned back, nestled comfortably in his arms, and remained quiet for the rest of the day. Jerico looked to make sure they had avoided the pitfall, and as he did he noticed how red Lathaar face had grown.

“What the abyss is wrong with you?” he asked.

“Nothing,” Lathaar said. “Nothing at all.”

“Well hurry, still have a good week to reach the Bridges. This little shortcut through the forest will save us time, but not much. Oh, and Lathaar, may I remind you that while Ashhur doesn’t require us to take an oath of celibacy, he does frown upon needless necking while my back is turned.” Lathaar’s face turned even redder as Jerico rode on, muttering something about youngsters.

M
ira stopped them when the western bridge was finally in view. She had grown increasingly quiet as their journey progressed, to the point she said almost nothing to Jerico, and only the occasional comment to Lathaar. She cuddled him on his horse, slept at his side near the fire, and did little else. So when she held out her hands and ordered them to halt, it was their surprise, not her words, that made them stop short.

“What is it, Mira?” Lathaar asked. “What’s wrong?”

“Can’t you feel them?” the girl asked. “Waiting like snakes?”

Jerico closed his eyes and let his mind listen for the soft voice of Ashhur. “Dark paladins, seven of them. Someone isn’t happy about our return to Neldar.”

“This is worse than you think,” Lathaar said, frowning atop his horse. “Qurrah was never in league with Karak’s knights. If they’re here, then more is at stake than we know. Neldar must be in danger.”

“What do we do?” Jerico asked. They could see the magnificent arches of the bridge in the distance from their perch atop a hill. A small patch of trees filled the distance between them and the bridge. His eyes were good, and he could see waiting beside the arches were seven men in distinctive black armor.

“We can’t go around,” Lathaar said. “Our horses cannot swim across water that fast, and our armor isn’t exactly light.”

“I can get us across,” Mira said, staring at the bridge.

“Yeah, I guess you might know a floating spell or two,” Jerico said as his face perked up.

“No,” Mira said, her face darkening. “You misunderstand. We will cross.”

“Wait…you want to meet them head on?” Lathaar asked.

“There’s only seven of them,” Jerico said, scratching at his chin.

“They’re dark paladins, not virgin squires. Seven is more than enough to be dangerous.”

“I will get us across,” Mira repeated. “Now move, or I go without you.”

The two paladins glanced at one another, apprehensive about the idea, but Lathaar had seen Mira fight Darakken. He would trust her. Down the hill they trotted, through the woods toward Karak’s bridge.

They were spotted the moment they left the forest. The dark paladins formed a line across the front of the bridge, eager for a fight.

“Arrogant,” Lathaar muttered. “No hiding their numbers and no attempt at ambush. It’s as if they want us to fight them or turn away.”

“They’re young,” Mira said, her eyes rolling back in her skull. “Their faith is maniacal, blind.” She flitted from one mind to the next. “None are afraid. They think our deaths will give them favor with the dark god.”

“I haven’t met a paladin for Karak I can’t beat up, down, and sideways,” Jerico said. “And no young pups will change that, either.”

“You stay back,” Mira said, her black eyes staring at him. “They don’t know who I am. I will show them.”

“Show them what?”

She smiled at Jerico.

“The goddess.”

Mira leapt off Lathaar’s horse. Before he could spur his mount faster, her bare feet were already hovering an inch above the grass. An unseen wind pushed her forward, as if she weighed nothing. Her arms trailed at angles behind her, like masts holding an unseen sail.

“Hey, wait!” Jerico shouted, spurring his own horse on as the other two left him behind. “Don’t have fun without me!”

Mira saw that Lathaar was closing so she flew faster, her hair flailing wildly as the wind at her back soared stronger. The bridge approached at frightening speeds, but she knew that she appeared far more frightening to the dark paladins that waited. She slipped in and out of their minds, whispering echoing words as she did.

The goddess is coming. You are to die, mortals. Die to the goddess. Fear my eyes, my hair, my fire. The goddess is here.

She felt their fear growing, and to that she smiled. She had tried a similar ploy to Lathaar, and he had only grabbed her presence in his mind and demanded to know her name. Silly dark paladins, she thought. All faith but no courage.

Fire swirled around her hands as she came to a halt before the line of platemail, axes, and swords.

“I am a daughter of the goddess,” she told them as they stared, frozen in place by fear and indecision. “And I demand passage. Will you grant it?”

“It is the will of Krieger, and of Karak, that none shall pass,” the one in the center answered. While the others had long hair cut past the shoulder or tied in ponytails, he was completely shaven. “We are the embodiment of his will. And the goddess shall not break the will of Karak.”

Mira laughed as the edges of white in her eyes vanished.

“Very well. Let’s test Karak’s will.”

A ring of fire rose from the ground around her, blazing hot. The seven raised their shields, testing the heat. A razor blade of whirling air shot from Mira’s fingers, slicing one in half at the waist. His body fell, blood and intestines spilling everywhere. She turned to another, who braced his shield. Again she laughed.

“Shut up, bitch,” the man said, the lion skull on his shield gleaming in the sun. Mira clapped her hands together above her head. Lightning struck from the clear sky, swirling its power around her. The other dark paladins dodged, but the one who had cursed her kept his place. Arrogance, Mira thought. She pointed at his chest and winked. Lightning shot from her finger, crashing through his chest and out the other side. The blast lifted him into the air before flinging him off the bridge.

“We will not fall!” the bald one shouted, holding an axe in both hands. He prayed for aid from his dark god, and his request was granted. The black fire that surrounded his blade spread to all his flesh, protecting him from Mira’s fire. The girl turned toward him, smiling as if it were a game. She remembered the times she had trained against Flowers, and later on the rest of the Doru’al. Even ten at a time she had won, and those demons were far quicker and stronger.

A wave of her hand and a wall of ice surrounded her. When the bald man shattered it with the hilt of his sword, a great flash of light blinded his eyes. Mira clapped again, and the horribly bright light struck them once more. The others charged, her fire wall dissipated. She twirled, blasting one with a solid ball of water and hitting a second with a chunk of earth she tore from the ground. A third swung his sword at her waist, desperately praying to Karak that it would tear flesh. Instead it passed through empty air, for Mira was no longer there.

She reappeared on the far side of the bridge, waving as if all was friendly between her and men she had just injured. As the dark paladins glared death, they heard the heavy sound of hoof beats. They turned and saw Lathaar and Jerico riding at full speed toward them, and with opponents on both sides, they knew their error.

“Kill the paladins while we can,” the bald one ordered. “Close combat at all times. The girl will not risk hurting her companions.”

The five charged, their weapons high and their shields ready.

“None of you are Krieger,” Mira said, her bright smile fading just a bit. “But I feel better just the same.”

She twirled her hands, opening a portal. She stepped through and appeared in front of the dark paladins. Before they could react, she knelt and punched the bridge. Another wall of ice rose up, blocking Jerico and Lathaar from reaching them.

“Mira!” she heard Lathaar shout from the other side.

I’m fine,
she told his mind.
Please trust me.

She stood, elegant and powerful. Ice swirled around her hands. She grabbed a man’s throat, and then the ice found a new home. Frost shards exploded outward, piercing his windpipe. As the dark paladin dropped, the bald one stepped in and slammed his shield across her forehead. Mira fell, her vision swimming. She used her arms to roll to one side as an axe struck where she had been.

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