Demonsouled Omnibus One

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Demonsouled Omnibus One Page 120

by Jonathan Moeller


  Zuvembies.

  Lion shuddered in his grasp, its azure flame burning brighter.

  “Release!” bellowed one of the archers.

  “No!” shouted Mazael, “no, lower your bows, take your...”

  But it was too late. His men knew how to fight Malrags, but most of them had never seen a zuvembie before. A storm of arrows slammed into the charging mob of zuvembies. The impact knocked the front row down, sent them sprawling into the others. But the arrowheads did not harm the undead flesh.

  Normal steel could not wound a thing raised by necromancy.

  And then the mob of zuvembies crashed into the shield wall, claws raking against the iron and wood. The knights and armsmen struck back, yet their blades rebounded from the zuvembies as if they had struck steel. In an instant Mazael saw one man go down, and then another, the zuvembies clawing at throats and faces.

  He sprang into motion.

  Lion blurred in his fist, and Mazael struck the head from the nearest zuvembie. His sword sheared through the undead flesh with ease, and blue fire extinguished the green glow in the zuvembie's empty sockets. The creature collapsed to the earth in a pile of yellowed bones and dusty flesh. Mazael wheeled, striking the arm from another zuvembie, Lion's blade splitting the skull of another.

  Then he spun, and slapped Lion against the flat of Gerald's blade.

  The blue flame spread to Gerald's sword, wreathing it in a halo of ghostly light. Gerald had fought zuvembies before, and knew what to do. He hastened into the fray, smashing a zuvembie attacking a pair of knights, chips of yellow bone flying from his blade. Romaria cast aside her bow and drew her bastard sword with a steely hiss, and Mazael slapped Lion against her sword. Again Lion's flames spread, and Romaria attacked, bastard sword gripped in both hands.

  Mazael raced through the fray, slapping Lion against the swords and spears of his men. The ancient sword's fire spread, and soon the battlefield shone with blue light. The zuvembies were quick and strong, but wore no armor, and the burning swords and spears cut them down with ease. Mazael smashed down another zuvembie, the stench of decayed bone and long-desiccated flesh filling his nostrils, and risked a quick glance around the battlefield. They were winning. He had lost a half-dozen men to the charge of the zuvembies, but they were winning.

  But who had created the zuvembies? It took a necromancer, and a powerful one, to raise zuvembies from the corpses of the slain. A Malrag shaman? That would explain the green lighting. But he had never seen a Malrag shaman powerful enough to raise the zuvembies...

  A bloodcurdling roar rang out, and Malrags raced from the trees, armored in black steel, black axes and spears in their hands.

  “Shield wall!” roared Mazael, cutting down another zuvembie. “Reform the shield wall! Now! Now!”

  These Malrags looked...different.

  They stood perhaps a foot taller than most Malrags, their arms and chests heavy with muscle beneath their black armor. Strange crimson veins crawled over their arms and six-fingered hands and faces, stark against their gray hides, and misshapen crimson tumors covered their faces.

  An arrow shot past Mazael's shoulder, and then another, both burying themselves in the chests of the charging Malrags. He saw Romaria with her bow in hand, loosing arrow after arrow. More arrows whistled out, though the Malrags' armor deflected most.

  Then the shield wall came together again, and the Malrags attacked.

  Mazael swung at a Malrag, and the creature pivoted, catching the blow on its axe, and shoved against him. He stumbled, scrambling for balance, and deflected a blow from the axe on his shield. Gods, but the thing was strong! The Malrag roared and swung again, its colorless eyes wide with rage, and Mazael twisted, avoiding the blow. Lion lashed out and bit into the creature's leg, and the Malrag stumbled to one knee. Mazael brought Lion around in a backhand and beheaded the Malrag. Black blood spurted from the stump of the creature's neck, while a strange crimson slime leaked from the bulging veins.

  But Mazael had no time to contemplate it. Another Malrag came at him with a roar, spear thrusting. He blocked the spear thrust on his shield, Lion carving a wound in the creature's thigh. The Malrag staggered, and then Romaria was behind it, her sword ripping open the side of its neck. Again black blood sprayed from the wound, along with that vile crimson slime.

  The shield line bucked before the Malrag onslaught, but it held. These Malrags were stronger and faster, but they were still Malrags, and Mazael's men knew how to fight them. Mazael slew Malrag after Malrag. Gerald bashed one across the face with his shield, yellow fangs flying from the impact, and drove his gleaming longsword into the creature's heart. Romaria moved through the creatures in a blur, movements almost dancelike, her grip shifting from one-handed to two-handed and back again as she killed.

  And it was over. The remaining Malrags fled into the trees, scattering in all directions. The zuvembies lay in broken heaps of shattered bone and leathery flesh, the green light in their skulls extinguished. Mazael's men started to break, moving in pursuit of the scattering Malrags.

  “Hold!” shouted Mazael. “Hold, damn you! There might be more of them!”

  “There weren't that many,” said Gerald, black blood dripping from his blade. Mazael saw him look through the lines to Rachel on her horse, heard him sigh in relief. “No more than two score, I think.”

  “And no more than eighty zuvembies,” said Romaria.

  “Did you ever see a Malrag shaman raise zuvembies?” said Mazael. She had fought against Malrags, years ago, before she had ever come to the Grim Marches. She knew more about them than anyone Mazael had met, save for Lucan Mandragon.

  Who was in no condition to answer questions.

  “No,” said Romaria. “And I never saw a Malrag shaman before Ultorin attacked the Grim Marches.”

  Mazael nodded, hand tightening around Lion's hilt. The blade's flames dimmed as the surviving Malrags retreated. Someone was commanding the Malrags, that was plain. A skilled wizard could take control of a Malrag band. Or a powerful Demonsouled, with a soul tainted by demon magic, could command Malrags with ease.

  Mazael himself could have commanded the Malrags, if he gave in to the dark power in his soul, let that seductive black strength consume him...

  No.

  But if a Demonsouled commanded the Malrags...that meant a Demonsouled with the ability to raise zuvembies. A Demonsouled wizard, then, able to use the dark power of his soul to fuel his spells. That gave Mazael pause. His father was the Old Demon, the eldest of the Demonsouled, a creature of terrible cunning and a wizard of crushing magical might. Mazael had defeated him once, but he knew his father had not forgotten him.

  Had the Old Demon come for him at last?

  “Circan,” said Mazael. The young wizard nodded, pale hair damp with sweat. He had taken no part in the battle, saving his spells in case the Malrag shamans attacked again. Lucan would have had the strength to unleash his spells in the battle, even as he deflected the shamans' lighting bolts.

  Mazael missed Lucan, both his aid and his counsel.

  “Aye, my lord?” said Circan.

  “Any more of them out there?” said Mazael.

  Circan rolled the wire-wrapped crystal through his fingers, eyelids fluttering. “There...yes. Perhaps a score of those deformed Malrags. And...” His eyes opened wide.

  “What is it?” said Mazael.

  “Four hundred of them,” said Circan. “Perhaps six miles away. Coming this way, quickly. My lord, they will be upon us within the hour.”

  Mazael cursed. Mounted men could take on a large number of Malrags. Yet here, among the tangled roots and uneven ground of the Great Southern Forest, riding horses into battle was suicide. Four hundred Malrags would overwhelm Mazael's men, especially if the shamans unleashed their green lightning. Could Mazael break free, escape before the Malrags caught them? No, Malrags moved faster then men on foot.

  “We'll need to fortify,” said Gerald. “Find a strong place where the terrain works to our advantage,
and fight the Malrags from a position of strength.”

  “We need more time than we have to fortify,” said Mazael, his mind racing. “We'll...”

  “Mazael,” said Romaria. “There is a ruined castle near here, from the kingdom of Old Dracaryl. It's been abandoned for years, but the walls still stand. We can fortify the gate, and hold out until we can kill whatever balekhan or Demonsouled commands the Malrags.”

  “Can we make it in time?” said Mazael.

  “It's three miles southeast,” said Romaria. “Overlooking the stream we forded this morning. If we hasten, we can get there before the Malrags.”

  Mazael stared into the trees. They had encountered a few Malrag warbands since leaving Deepforest Keep, but ragged groups of a few dozen, some still bearing wounds from Ultorin's crushing defeat. Four hundred Malrags aided by zuvembies and shamans was a far more dangerous foe. Mazael needed an edge.

  “Go,” said Mazael, ramming Lion into its scabbard and turning towards Hauberk.

  They rode to the southeast, taking the wounded with them, and leaving the dead behind.

  Follow this link to continue reading Soul of Dragons.

  About the Author

  Standing over six feet tall, Jonathan Moeller has the piercing blue eyes of a Conan of Cimmeria, the bronze-colored hair a Visigothic warrior-king, and the stern visage of a captain of men, none of which are useful in his career as a computer repairman, alas.

  He has written the DEMONSOULED series of sword-and-sorcery novels, and continues to write THE GHOSTS sequence about assassin and spy Caina Amalas, the COMPUTER BEGINNER'S GUIDE series of computer books, and numerous other works.

  Visit his website at:

  http://www.jonathanmoeller.com

  Visit his technology blog at:

  http://www.jonathanmoeller.com/screed

  Contact him at:

  [email protected]

  You can sign up for his email newsletter here, or watch for news on his Facebook page.

  Table of Contents

  Description

  Other books by the author

  Epigraph

  Chapter 1 - Warband

  Chapter 2 - Balekhan

  Chapter 3 - The Wolves Gather

  Chapter 4 - The Lady and the Knight

  Chapter 5 - Calibah

  Chapter 6 - Pursuit

  Chapter 7 - The Dragons

  Chapter 8 - The Grand Master

  Chapter 9 - The Cleric of Sepharivaim

  Chapter 10 - Reunion

  Chapter 11 - The Black Wolf

  Chapter 12 - Cenotaph

  Chapter 13 - The Lord of Deepforest Keep

  Chapter 14 - The Duel

  Chapter 15 - Rebirth

  Chapter 16 - The March

  Chapter 17 - The Battle of Castle Cravenlock

  Chapter 18 - The Pursuit

  Chapter 19 - The Great Southern Forest

  Chapter 20 - Falling Leaves

  Chapter 21 - Deepforest Keep

  Chapter 22 - The High Druid

  Chapter 23 - The Seer

  Chapter 24 - The Siege

  Chapter 25 - Ritual of Rulership

  Chapter 26 - The Rally

  Chapter 27 - The Sortie

  Chapter 28 - Retreat

  Chapter 29 - Call of the Wolf

  Chapter 30 - Bloodsword

  Chapter 31 - The Betrayal

  Chapter 32 - The Opening

  Chapter 33 - The Door of Souls

  Chapter 34 - The Lady of Castle Cravenlock

  Soul of Dragons Bonus Chapter

  About the Author

  Table of Contents

  Demonsouled

  Other books by the author

  Epigraph

  Chapter I

  Chapter II

  Chapter III

  Chapter IV

  Chapter V

  Chapter VI

  Chapter VII

  Chapter VIII

  Chapter IX

  Chapter X

  Chapter XI

  Chapter XII

  SOUL OF TYRANTS Bonus Chapter

  About the Author

  Soul of Tyrants

  Book Description

  Epigraph

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Soul of Serpents Bonus Chapter

  Other books by the author

  About the Author

  Soul of Serpents

  Description

  Other books by the author

  Epigraph

  Chapter 1 - Warband

  Chapter 2 - Balekhan

  Chapter 3 - The Wolves Gather

  Chapter 4 - The Lady and the Knight

  Chapter 5 - Calibah

  Chapter 6 - Pursuit

  Chapter 7 - The Dragons

  Chapter 8 - The Grand Master

  Chapter 9 - The Cleric of Sepharivaim

  Chapter 10 - Reunion

  Chapter 11 - The Black Wolf

  Chapter 12 - Cenotaph

  Chapter 13 - The Lord of Deepforest Keep

  Chapter 14 - The Duel

  Chapter 15 - Rebirth

  Chapter 16 - The March

  Chapter 17 - The Battle of Castle Cravenlock

  Chapter 18 - The Pursuit

  Chapter 19 - The Great Southern Forest

  Chapter 20 - Falling Leaves

  Chapter 21 - Deepforest Keep

  Chapter 22 - The High Druid

  Chapter 23 - The Seer

  Chapter 24 - The Siege

  Chapter 25 - Ritual of Rulership

  Chapter 26 - The Rally

  Chapter 27 - The Sortie

  Chapter 28 - Retreat

  Chapter 29 - Call of the Wolf

  Chapter 30 - Bloodsword

  Chapter 31 - The Betrayal

  Chapter 32 - The Opening

  Chapter 33 - The Door of Souls

  Chapter 34 - The Lady of Castle Cravenlock

  Soul of Dragons Bonus Chapter

  About the Author

 

 

 


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