The Sorcerer's Legacy (14 page)

Read The Sorcerer's Legacy Online

Authors: Brock Deskins

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Epic, #Sword & Sorcery, #Teen & Young Adult, #Children's eBooks

BOOK: The Sorcerer's Legacy
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Although the general lacked the helm and boots to complete the suit, the pieces he wore made him more than formidable. The armor was beyond black, seeming to pull the very light into its liquid depths and trimmed in gold that never scratched, flaked, or tarnished.

“Men, today we embark on a new journey, a new destiny for us all,” he addressed his troops in his powerful command voice. “No longer will we be under the thumb of an arrogant, cruel, and capricious lord. No longer will we sell our lives for his personal gain. From now on, when we risk our lives it will be for our own gains and our own profits instead of filling the already rich coffers of the duke!”

General Baneford allowed himself a small smile as his men cheered loudly at his proclamation.

“Our primary goal now is to enlarge our ranks and carve out our own little country where we will be the lords and masters! If we can complete the suit, so much the better. We can create and control a larger piece of land with it, but no longer will I risk your lives just for the armor with nothing else to show for it.

“Any men who feel an overwhelming sense of loyalty to Duke Ulric are free to leave now without fear of hostility. I begrudge no man for his loyalty, but keep this in mind. Does the duke return that loyalty to you? I say he does not! However, if any man wishes to leave he may do so now, but this is the only time you may do so freely. After this, any man who leaves will be considered a deserter from Baneford’s Brood.”

Although many of the men looked around, none broke ranks and departed.

“Very well, welcome to Baneford’s Brood. Our first target is a small town three days ride to the southeast. I already have scouts placed within and I will brief your platoon leaders tonight. This is a raid for food, gold, horses, and resources, not wanton slaughter. We are not a mercenary group, nor will we degenerate into savages. We will conduct ourselves as the professional soldiers that we are. Dismissed!”

 

***

 

Samone rode her destrier down the hard-packed dirt road, resplendent in her shining silver armor. Her raven hair shone brightly in the sun, swinging just over her shoulders with the cadence set by her trotting charger. As a paladin of Solarian, she was one of the three holy warriors that comprised this unit of the Solarian’s Light.

On her right, wearing half plate, was a large man named Griff. Unlike Samone, Griff was not a Chosen of Solarian and could not directly wield their god’s divine power. However, as a Sword of Solarian, he was a devout follower and dedicated his battle prowess to extinguishing Solarian’s enemies.

Griff was a big man but affable and friendly. He was an unrepentant jokester and was quick to laugh. Some people mistook his quick humor and pleasant nature as softness; big, but slow and soft, like a domesticated cow. Even when confronted with hostility, Griff would often be laughing right up to the point he brought someone down for good.

Riding to Samone’s left was Brother Charles. Charles was a quiet and contemplative man, usually immersed in his Book of Radiance despite having committed every passage and verse to memory long ago. He wore chainmail and leather under his holy vestments, and as a Chosen of Solarian, wielded the power of their god to smite down evil and heal the sick, and injured.

The fourth man was not a usual member of their group and rode a short ways behind the three holy warriors and felt as out of place as he looked. He wore only short robes, soft leather breaches, and was considerably younger than even Samone, who looked to be a woman in her best years. If he was truly a graduate of The Magus Academy, he was just barely.

Not being a regular member of their group, not being a devote of Solarian, and being not just a wizard but a young wizard, the three Light of Solarian did not go out of their way to be inclusive. Griff tried but he usually just ended up teasing the young man and hurting his feelings.

Young Kyle was on loan from The Academy and tasked with providing aid to Samone’s group as they went from town to town, rooting out undead and helping the priests tasked with sanctifying the kingdom’s burial sites.

So far, the group had yet to encounter any undead of significance. A few skeletons or zombies had clawed themselves out of the earth before or during consecration rites, but Samone and Brother Charles put them to rest easily enough. So far, it seemed the reports of an undead plague were greatly exaggerated.

It was late afternoon by the time the squad of Solarian’s Light reached the middling-sized town of Hoffsteader. The party rode straight to the burial site and found several priests already performing the consecration ritual. A man of middle years separated himself from the others as the group approached and began dismounting. He hailed them with a wave as he approached.

“Hail, Chosen, good of you to come and help, though I fear we are nearly done already.”

“Father Flavin,” Samone addressed the local priest, “I apologize for out late arrival. A damaged bridge forced us to take a longer route to get here but it looks like we were not necessary.”

“No, Solarian was with us throughout the day and our ritual has gone well. It was a great task, considering the size of the land needing cleansed.”

“I am surprised Hoffsteader possesses such a large burial ground for such a modest town,” Griff commented.

Brother Charles broke in. “Hoffsteader was the site of a virulent plague just over a century ago. Many of the outlying towns carted their sick here for quarantine, some even as far as away as Brightridge. After the sickness ran its course, the Church had the town put to torch and the one you see now raised a short distance away to be resettled.”

Father Flavin nodded along with his church brethren’s recitation. “Quite right, brother, you know your history.”

Samone looked at the long shadows cast by the rapidly waning sun with a weary sigh. “Father Flavin, I know you have all been doing the real work, but we are weary from the long ride and I fear we would likely just be in the way at this point. But if you don’t mind, I think we will head into town and get our rooms ready and our horses put up before we return to lay any final prayers.”

 The priest smiled warmly up at the pretty, young paladin. “Of course. I am certain we can finish up on our own while you see to your stay. We should be just about finished and ready for your final prayers by the time you get settled in.”

“Thank you, Father, we’ll be back shortly.”

“I’m looking forward to good glass of ale to wash down the trail dust I’ve been chewing on for the past few hours,” Griff declared boisterously as they walked their horses down the town’s wide avenue in search of a good inn.

“Amen to that,” Charles agreed. “How long have we been riding anyway?”

Griff laughed loudly. “The shadows say about eleven hours but my arse says about four days!”

The three warriors of Solarian’s Light turned in their saddles to look at the wizard as he gasped audibly.

“Oh come on,” Griff told the young mage, “lighten up. Even Chuck here thought it was funny.”

Kyle shook his head. “The shadows. Look at them.”

They all looked at the shadows stretching from the buildings and other structures.

“Okay, maybe it’s closer to ten, ten and a half. For crying out loud, do you wizards have to be so damn precise with everything?” admonished Griff.

“No, I’m talking about the shadows back at the burial site!” Kyle practically shouted, his face going pale.

“What about them, Kyle,” Samone asked as a deep feeling of dread crept through her body.

The mage swallowed deeply then replied, “They were pointing the other way!”

Samone cursed in a very unholy manner as she and the others wheeled their mounts around and raced back to where they had left the priests performing their sanctification rites.

They had barely made it halfway back before the screams of dying men reached their ears even over the loud pounding of the horses’ hoof beats. Samone drew her sword with another curse and pushed her mount even harder despite knowing in her heart that they would never be able to save the defenseless priests.

 The scene that met them was horrific. Skeletal claws sprouted from the ground like macabre plants in a garden as they clawed their way out of the earth, pulling down and interring two of the clergymen to rest alongside them. Others had exhumed themselves and were tearing two other priests to pieces.

Father Flavin and another of his clergy lay with a rictus of agony and terror spread across their faces. The men looked to have died months or years ago and set out to dry. Their skin was sallow and dry, their bodies skeletal as if all the liquid in their corpses had simply evaporated.

Shadows detached from the trees and tombstones and rose out of the ground. The shades moved with the swiftness and silence of a strong wind, attacking the living that mocked their undeath.

Samone barely had time to slip her feet from the stirrups as the shades raked incorporeal claws through her mount, rolling as the poor warhorse whinnied in terror, bucked, and fell to the ground. The shadows continued to attack the poor animal even after it ceased moving, drawing every bit of life out of it they could before seeking fresher prey.

Samone rolled to her feet, slipped her shield onto her arm, and shouted a prayer to her god. Her sword burst into a radiant white light, driving back the oppressive cold and fear the shades emanated with their presence and opposition to all things living. The paladin lashed out at the death spawn, fury powering her strokes over the loss of her faithful mount. Her holy sword, blessed with the light of Solarian, hewed down the shades as they left the dead horse and focused their attack on the humans.

The other three members of the group, who were slightly slower in their charge and response, dismounted, knowing that fighting these kinds of creatures from horseback was not to their advantage.

Brother Charles wrapped himself in the protections of his faith as he rushed to aid Samone who was seemingly oblivious to the tide of undead creatures rapidly bearing down upon her. The Chosen of Solarian raised his holy amulet made of gold surrounding a large sphere of purest amber and shouted a rebuke empowered by his faith at the advancing hoard.

The nearest zombies and skeletons, along with several of the shades attacking Samone, crumbled as the holy symbol burst into light, illuminating the graveyard in a brilliant yellow glow. Many of the undead monsters not destroyed outright fled from the power of the light, unable to stand in presence of the power of a god that considered them anathema, and put as much distance between themselves and the holy power as they could.

Kyle saw that despite the cleric’s effectiveness, there were still dozens, even scores, of the monstrosities still advancing with evil intent. Unable to use most of his spells in such close combat, he elected to deal with those further back and let the warriors deal with the ones up close.

The wizard spoke arcane words of magic and raised a towering wall of flame that stretched twenty feet high and practically bisected the huge cemetery. The wall of fire caught at least a dozen of the creatures in conflagration, incinerating them instantly. Those were the lucky ones. Those near the edge of the roaring flames combusted and flailed about, sometimes grappling with their own in their mindless panic.

 The undead not caught in the inferno backed away and sought to go around the flames to attack the living humans. Kyle was about to unleash a powerful explosive fireball into the next thickest ranks of undead when something hit him hard from behind.

The mage rolled forward and away from the source of the attack and came up with his hands spread and a spell on his lips. He saw Griff swinging his sword in a series of swift strikes through one of the shades that must have come out of the ground or snuck up from behind them. 

The big warrior’s swings seemed to pass right through the shadowy creature but the third and fifth strike of the complex attack routine bit home and the insubstantial creature burst apart like smoke caught in a fierce wind.

“You can burn up all the scary skeletons and zombies you want, but it’s the ones you don’t see that will get you,” the big warrior smiled at the wizard.

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