The Ascension

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The Ascension Page 14

by Kailin Gow


  “Between them!” Gem ordered the Dragon, knowing that its hide would be impervious to anything either of the men could throw at it. “Get between them!”

  The Dragon tried, Gem had to give it that. It came to earth with a bump that nearly shook Gem from its back, and that sent several surrounding men on both sides stumbling from their feet. It should have resulted in Devon bouncing off one side of the Dragon, while Goolrick bounced off the other. The trouble was, the two men were no longer there.

  There were two faint shimmers in the air, but beyond that, Gem couldn’t see any sign of them. As far as she could tel , wizardly magic had met fairy magic, and the result had been total disappearance.

  For a moment, Gem didn’t know what to do.

  With Devon gone, what chance was there of stopping this battle peaceful y. She had hoped that seeing her alive and free would have had a pacific effect on the fairy knight, leading him to cal off his army’s assault. Of course, Gem reasoned, that didn’t mean that some sort of accord wasn’t stil the way forward. It just meant that she needed more leverage.

  Impetuously, she dove from the Dragon’s back, ducking between the waiting knights before they could ful y recover from the sight of the creature landing among them. Gem dodged a half-hearted swing from one fairy soldier, stepping around another in the search for Devon’s second in command. Would she even recognize someone she had only seen from the air?

  It was a ful minute before Gem spotted him, and in that minute, Gem found herself experiencing a harrowing mixture of violence and near misses.

  Men died around her, while others attacked, only to fal back as Gem used a mixture of ruler words, physical attacks, and simple evasion to keep herself alive. Maybe abandoning the Dragon hadn’t been such a good idea.

  Final y though, Gem spotted him, a slender fairy young man with long flowing white hair, who was attempting to shout orders from a clear space on a smal rise. Gem ran towards him, but skirted round the rise at the last moment so that she could come up behind him. Scanning the battlefield for a suitable implement, she snatched up a dagger from a fal en soldier before stepping forward to place it to the second in command’s throat.

  “Do you know who I am?” Gem demanded.

  “Why yes, Your Majesty. Both our war leader and our queen have spoken of you.”

  “Your war leader is gone. Devon disappeared only minutes ago.”

  “I am aware of that.”

  “Devon was integral to your chances of success,” Gem argued. “Without him as a linchpin, you can’t win. It’s better for al of us if you and I can come to a peaceful solution. Just tel your men to pul back, and we can find a way.”

  If Gem expected the fairy soldier to say yes, she was sorely disappointed. He twisted, grabbing Gem’s wrist in the process, and at the end of the movement the knife was in his hand, not hers.

  “I’m afraid it doesn’t work like that. Devon might lead us in war, but he is not our ruler. The Winter Queen has given her commands, and we must fol ow them to the death. Unfortunately, her commands concerning you are clear.”

  He raised the dagger, but in his rush to hurt her, he forgot the simple precaution of stopping Gem from speaking.

  “Deleterious.”

  The fairy man fel back, dead. If he had been alone, that would have been an end to it, but now Gem found herself stranded in the middle of the Winter Court’s forces, and an increasing number of eyes were turning her way. A rough circle of fairy knights started to form around her, and Gem could see the threat in their eyes. It seemed that they were as determined as their superior to carry out their queen’s mandate.

  Fire blasted the earth where they stood, and the men scattered. The Dragon stomped through, pausing only briefly to swat aside a fairy who came too close. Gem ran for it, knowing that it was probably her best chance of getting out of there alive. The trouble was, being as accustomed to the strange as to the mundane, a few of the Winter Court knights were already recovering from their shock at being attacked by a Dragon, and were starting to run for Gem. There was no way she would be faster than them.

  The middle of the Dragon’s three heads swept down, snatching up Gem by her armor and depositing her gently on the creature’s back. The other two swept gouts of flame in front of the pursuing knights. Gem clung on as the Dragon reared, making the men fal back again, looks of awe directed, not just at the great beast, but also apparently at her. It was nice to know that there was something she could do to get their respect, even if that something turned out to be riding a creature that could flame gril them with ease.

  A sweeping beat of the Dragon’s wings had them airborne again, and apparently headed for the castle. Gem tried tel ing the creature to set her down near the battle lines, but for once it ignored her, landing lightly on the roof of one of the castle’s towers.

  “Do you real y think having to take a walk through my own castle is going to stop me getting back to the battle?” Gem demanded, but the Dragon just hopped lightly down into the castle courtyard by way of an answer, abandoning her there. Annoyed now, but deciding that railing at the creature wouldn’t achieve anything, Gem hunted around until she found a trapdoor leading down into the castle.

  She sped along the corridors at first, knowing that she had to get back to the gate to take charge.

  Gradual y though, Gem slowed, looking around.

  There was something wrong, something subtly different about the castle, but she couldn’t quite put her finger on it at first.

  It only became clear when Gem started to see signs of technology. Someone had left their phone on a side table by accident, while there were occasional glimpses of cables, and a couple of the doors had electronic locks. That could mean only one thing as far as Gem was concerned. She wasn’t in her own castle at al . She had a pretty good idea of where she was though.

  Searching until she found a familiar landmark, Gem made her way to the central hal way. Dr. Percy Brown was there waiting for her.

  “Where is my father?” Gem demanded, and presumably she pitched the tone of voice correctly, because the physician didn’t waste her time.

  “He… he’s in his study.”

  “Of course he is. Where else would he be?” Gem set off at something close to a run, racing her way along the familiar route to Henry Word’s study. She paused before opening the door, revealing her father at his desk, on a chair he had obviously stolen from somewhere else, while watching something on a monitor. He looked busy.

  Gem didn’t care.

  “That’s the second war you’ve pul ed me away from today. What do you think you’re doing, Father?”

  Epilogue

  Henry Word considered his daughter. She was so beautiful, and so brave, and so vivacious in some ways that it was almost painful, because it reminded him so much of her mother. Particularly when she looked angry enough to vituperate him at any moment.

  “So why did you do it?” she demanded. “Why did you pul me out of there when I could have won the battle?”

  “Won?” Henry shook his head. “Gem, the battles are only just beginning. Even if you win one, you won’t win the war.” He gestured to the monitor in front of him. “Come and look.”

  Briefly, it looked like his daughter might repudiate even that request, but she nodded, stepping around the table to watch.

  The monitor played scenes from the battle taking place on Myriad. There was Sparks, being swept back from his fight with Jack by a surge in the troops around him, clutching his leg as he did so.

  There was Kat, dodging a swing from Rio and stabbing back at him to open a cut along his side.

  The angle was good enough to see the slight change in her eyes as she did it, the confusion that fil ed her features.

  Henry adjusted the sound. It shouldn’t have been possible to hear one conversation in the middle of a battle, but they had ways around that.

  “Rio?

  I

  don’t

  understand.

  What


  is

  happening?”

  The girl didn’t get an answer, because at that point, half a dozen werewolves rushed forward to rescue Rio, forcing Kat to retreat into the Winter ranks.

  More scenes fol owed. There were stands by individual groups of fairy knights, clashes between polar bears and satyrs that looked like great col isions of fur and flesh, even brawls between timber wolves and shape changed werewolves, so that no one looking from the outside could possibly know who was winning.

  The two queens clashed more than once, but each time found the duel going past its pinnacle with no victor. They were simply too evenly matched.

  Around them, their armies flung themselves at one another with the fury of waves crashing over rocks by day, while hardly resting at night as smal groups of skirmishers went out.

  Even some of the scenes from the camps they made at night were heartbreaking to Henry. In the camp of the Summer forces, Sparks stalked angrily through the place, ignoring offers of debauched distractions from the Summer Queen’s maids, keeping his eyes firmly fixed on the spot where the silent figure of Rio sat among the werewolves, never looking over at him.

  In the camp of the Winter forces, Kat wandered fitful y at night, never seeming to settle in one place. When she got too near the edge of the camp, she would be turned back by a living, black and white wal of stoic penguins, but otherwise she just spiraled aimlessly around the tents. Her brother would occasional y fetch her back, but there seemed to be something harder now about Jack, more focus.

  He ignored the privations of camp living, and even volunteered for night time raids, coming back several times with blood upon his swords.

  With neither side having a preponderance of force, there seemed to be no end to it. The battle went on and on, played out in violence that Henry found sickening, but that he forced himself to watch anyway. He could never revel in it, the way the Winter Queen seemed to, the way they al seemed to when the madness of the violence swept them up, but he would not look away. He was glad to see that Gem didn’t either.

  “But this… this can’t be right,” she insisted. “I have only been gone a few hours. This is too much to have happened.”

  “Time is different in Myriad,” Henry reminded her. “Just as it was for me. For them, it has been days. Long, deadly days. There has been only one piece of good news…” the scene on the monitor changed again, showing both sides limping back from the battlefield.

  “Who won?”

  “No one. Even this wil be a temporary peace.

  Either the Summer Court wil demand restitution, or the Winter Court wil strike again. The battle in Anachronia continues too. In fact, it has yet to reach its zenith.”

  “And you’ve snatched me away,” Gem pointed out. “I need to be there.”

  Henry shook his head.

  “You need to be here. There are things that you need to know, things that might eventual y provide a way to help.”

  “Such as?”

  Henry paused, biting his lip. This wasn’t an easy thing to say, but he said it anyway.

  “Gem, I’m dying.”

  “What? You can’t be. Since when?”

  Henry shook his head sadly.

  “I have known for a few years now. In part, that is why I created Wordwick. I wanted to leave a meaningful legacy for al the worlds. Of course, as my daughter, you are heir to al of it.” Gem shook her head, and Henry could see the tears that trailed their way down his daughter’s face.

  “No. You can’t. It isn’t…”

  “Fair? I know.” Henry did something he hadn’t been able to do in years, and stood, enfolding his daughter in a tight hug. “I didn’t want to tel you like this, but events are getting out of control.” He looked around his study, at the chaos of paperwork that went with it. “Believe me, running Wordwick isn’t easy at the best of times. You’l certainly need al the help you can get.”

  Gem pul ed back from him.

  “I don’t care about any of that,” she insisted.

  “My father’s dying. My friends are trying to kil each other. My kingdom is under attack. How could I care about a game?”

  “Because the fates of al the worlds are bound up with it,” Henry said simply, “and you aren’t someone to run away from that, Gem.”

  Gem shook her head.

  “I ran before.”

  “You ran to save yourself. To save others, I think you’l stay.” Henry felt a touch of wetness on his own cheek. “I wish I had been able to spend more time getting to know you. I only hope that there wil be time now, though I fear we wil both be occupied.”

  “With what?” Gem asked, and Henry found himself proud of the note of readiness he heard there. Al this, and his daughter was stil ready to do what had to be done for the sake of everyone. He what had to be done for the sake of everyone. He wished that he had been so strong, sometimes.

  “With finding someone who can truly deal with the more pernicious effects Wordwick throws up, though I find myself almost wishing that it could be you, Gem.”

  “I thought I was your heir?”

  Henry smiled gently, reaching out to take his daughter’s hand in his.

  “Oh, you are. Don’t worry about that.

  Unfortunately, running Wordwick wil require a special combination of talents that not even you possess alone. I have spent so much time scouring the worlds to find the perfect person. In fact, going to Myriad proved very useful in that respect.” Henry waited while realization dawned in his daughter’s expression.

  “You mean,” she asked, “that you went to Myriad just to find someone?”

  “Oh no,” Henry replied. “I told you the truth before. There are problems in the program that need to be fixed. Entanglements between the worlds that need to be disentangled. If that put me in a position to find the perfect… candidate, then that was an added bonus. And of course, the Winter Queen thought I was doing it al just for these,” he tapped his new legs, “so she never suspected the truth.” Gem stood there, open-mouthed.

  “So who is it?” she demanded, before pausing. “Hang on, there’s only one person you would have to go to Myriad to col ect, and that’s…

  Devon?”

  Henry nodded.

  “Exactly. Who else could it be? He is so many things, bundled together, as I hope you wil have time to find out.”

  “But Devon is gone,” Gem insisted. “He fought Goolrick and disappeared.”

  “I know,” Henry replied, “and I stil cannot make up my mind if that is the best thing that young wizard of yours has done, or the worst. It kept Devon safely out of the fight, but it has also lost him for now.

  He must be found again before something happens to him.”

  Gem gave him a long look.

  “You make it sound like there is something terrible in store.”

  Henry could only nod.

  “I’m not prescient, but I’m not stupid either. I have seen the signs for a while. There are dangerous times ahead, Gem. Times that wil require Devon to steer the worlds through. Finding him has to be our top priority.”

  “I know he’s important…” Gem began. Henry raised a hand to cut her off.

  “I’m serious, Gem. Devon’s safety has to come before anything else. We have to find him, and then you have to devote your time to making sure he comes through this war alive. Even if it means choosing his life over mine.”

  Gem shook her head.

  “It won’t come to that.”

  Henry sighed, looking straight at his daughter.

  “That’s the trouble, Gem. I’m almost certain that it wil .”

  ********

  Dangerous quests, unfathomable destinies, unquestionable friendships, and forbidden love…

  the Wordwick Gamers story continues in the next book of the Wordwick Games Series book of the Wordwick Games Series The Return

  June 2011

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  The Return

  Featured over 550 SAT Words


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