“They have rigged every tree to collapse,” Velixar said as the foal slowed. “The ivy on the walls hides a thousand razors, deadly sharp. I once had a troop of orcs attempt to climb them. They bled out before reaching the top.”
“Sad for them,” she said, her voice an emotionless droll.
They rode into the demons’ camp, then dismounted. After Tessanna leapt off its back, the foal collapsed. A wave of Velixar’s hand and his magic left it nothing more than a long-decaying corpse.
“Come,” he said, taking Tessanna’s hand. “Let us find Thulos.”
She fantasized plunging her hand into a fire to burn away his touch as she followed him.
Thulos sat on his throne, the fog swirling about him, hiding the feet of the chair and making it seem like he was floating. His armor shone even in the dim light, immaculately polished. He nodded to Velixar as he approached.
“I was hoping I would not have to wait for your arrival,” he said. He tilted his head back, as if suddenly revolted. “Your relationship with that woman is baffling, prophet.”
Tessanna felt her cheeks flush at being spoken of as if she were not there. It made her feel insignificant, invisible.
“One that should be of no interest to you,” Velixar said, letting go of her hand.
“The girl is a daughter of the whore,” Thulos said, looking to the castle. “She is powerless now. We would all be safer with her dead.”
“Since when did you care for safety? Does conquest not have its risks?”
Thulos chuckled.
“So be it. I need your undead to circle the castle just outside the range of their arrows. Do not have them attack. Their presence is all I need.”
“Fear is a powerful weapon,” Velixar said.
Thulos looked over at him, then shook his head as if disappointed in a child.
“Fear? I will not cow them with fear. I will show them reason. Death, or honor. Serve me in life, or serve me in death. Temptations work better than threats, and it is all the better when they can see what happens should they resist that temptation.”
“I bow to your wisdom,” Velixar said.
“Just do your part, and quickly. I wish to start before the sunrise.”
With a wave of his hand he dismissed them.
Velixar grabbed Tessanna’s wrist and led them toward his undead, which were already marching into position circling the front of the castle. Fires burst to life along the walls, giant cauldrons of oil and pitch. Torches ran to and fro, held by frightened hands. Velixar could smell the fear even from his distance.
“Thulos is a fool,” Tessanna said as she watched. “What could he possibly tempt these people with?”
“You dare call a god a fool?” Velixar asked, surprised.
“I do,” she said. “And I call yours an abomination.”
His punch split the inside of her lip. On her hands and knees, she spat blood and did her best not to cry.
“One more remark,” he said. “One more blasphemy against Karak and I will make you an abomination so horrid men will pale at the very sight of your mutilated corpse.”
She looked up at him, blood dribbling down her chin, and smiled.
“Yes, master,” she said, but there was a wickedness in her tone. Velixar clearly didn’t like it one bit.
They stopped before the front row of the undead, the castle gates looming ahead. It seemed the entire wall bristled with spears and torches. Tessanna was stunned by the amount. When they’d assaulted Mordeina, she’d thought the numbers impressive. It turned out that was nothing. Before her was a true army, one recruited with time and coin. At least a thousand men guarded the walls, and who knew how many more filled the interior courtyard.
“They will kill many before dying,” she said.
“They won’t kill a single demon,” Velixar told her. “Show some faith.”
She snickered again. A communal roar washed over her, the result of thousands of war demons shouting the name of their god.
“THULOS!” they cried as they took flight. In perfect formations they spread across the skies, carrying banners of the bloody fist. Thulos rode atop his throne, which the demons set down just beyond reach of the defenders’ bows. The god stood. He’d timed it perfectly. The sun poured over the hills and shone upon his armor. He raised his sword high, and before the castle he seemed mighty, unbeatable. When he spoke, his voice thundered across the valley. It was as if storm clouds had settled above the castle and given their thunder to the giant before the gates.
“Warriors of Felwood,” he said, so deep that Tessanna felt her heart quiver in her chest. “I come here bringing not destruction but instead the greatest treasure of any true warrior.”
He pointed his sword south, and it was no accident he held the enormous blade with only one hand. It looked as if it weighed more than a man, yet he handled it with ease.
“By now you know of Veldaren’s fate. By now you hear whispers of the men with red wings, war demons who burn and slaughter. What you hear are the childish cries of fear. You hear ignorance and cowardice. You are men of the sword and the spear.”
He slammed a fist against his breast and then held it out to the castle.
“You prepare to fight,” he said. “You prepare to die. I honor you! But your eyes are upon the ground, when you should instead look to the skies! There are a thousand worlds beyond your own. I speak no lie, for where else have I and my soldiers come from? Every single one offers a chance for glory. In battle you mortals find meaning. In war you understand life. List your vice. I will grant it to you! Gold, women, land, food, spice, drink…these are the spoils of war, and we are the Warseekers! Come down from your walls. Throw open your gates. Do not die here in a noble but shallow gesture. Reach higher. I offer you a life worth living.
“Think on my words. This world is ending. Do not end with it, but instead embrace a fate greater than any normal man’s. In killing another, you assert your will. You declare to the heavens that you are greater. I offer you worlds to kill. A thousand men will die to each of your blades. Prove you are worthy. Show your power. Show your strength.”
He held his sword with both hands and lowered his head. Tessanna watched, enraptured by his speech. Even she, a powerless captive, felt his words stir her heart. For a moment she imagined having her magic returned to her, and marching at Thulos’s side as his queen, god and goddess. With a wave of her hand she would destroy thousands, burning them with fire and crushing them with ice…
“Most impressive,” Velixar said. “His words themselves are magic. I can feel them weaving about me, like spider webs.”
Light collected around Thulos’s sword, the blade shaking as if it would explode from the energy within. His hair blew in an unnatural wind that swirled around him. It seemed the elements bent to his will. And then he swung his sword.
The shockwave sundered the castle doors, blowing chunks of wood and metal further within, filling the air with splinters. The crack echoed in the silence, breaking the spell Thulos’s words had weaved. Now Tessanna felt fear and abandonment, and even knowing it was just the after-effects of the spell, she still struggled to dismiss it.
“The way is open to me,” Thulos said. “All who would conquer, come forth. Kneel, and accept a lifetime of blood and honor.”
“Unbelievable,” Velixar said, total admiration across his ever-changing face.
They came by the thousands, kneeling in uneven lines. They were peasants and soldiers alike, and those with swords or spears cast them at their feet. Thulos stood before them, saluting. The troops atop the walls thinned, then altogether vanished. The god neared, and he paced as if inspecting them.
“Where is your lord?” Thulos asked.
“Lord Gandrem remains behind,” said one of the soldiers. “He would rather die than serve.”
“No,” Thulos said, his voice a whisper, yet the magic in his voice ensured all heard for miles. “I am your Lord, and I stand before you.”
He lowered h
is sword. The waves of war demons descended, the walls meaning nothing to them. Velixar thought to send in his undead, but Thulos turned and shook his head.
“Let my demons drink the blood of the unwilling,” he said.
Tessanna listened to the screams of the dying who remained within the walls.
“Monsters,” she whispered.
“Such hypocrisy,” Velixar said, having heard her. “You aided me in conquering Veldaren. You watched as Kinamn fell. And here, we have granted reprieve, and life. Do you think the orcs spared any when they stormed through the streets at Veldaren? Yet now you pale and call us monsters. How is this so different?”
It wasn’t different. He was right. The realization struck Tessanna like a thunderbolt. The last remnants of her apathy crumbled. The wildness inside her thrashed in its death throes. Her and Qurrah, they’d killed…they’d killed…
So many.
So very many.
She cried as the men and women of Felwood raised their arms to the sky in tentative worship of their new god.
8
The closest person to Melorak was the priest Olrim, one of the original seven who had remained when Queen Annabelle banished their kind from the capital. The man was elderly, with pinched eyebrows, pock-marked skin, and a dull sparkle in his eyes that paled compared to Melorak’s fiery faith. Following his ascension, Melorak had appointed Olrim to minister to and train the newly recruited priests of Karak. While he was a grim and surly man, he also had an uncanny understanding of men and their thoughts. When it came to conquering a nation, that was exactly what Melorak needed.
One by one the many lords had come from their castles and bent their knee, pledging meager armies and always unspecified amounts of gold. Every time Melorak informed them of their duty, of their quota of men to give to Karak’s service and the gold to fill Karak’s coffers. Every time, the looks on their faces amused the dark priest.
“They’re like children,” Olrim said, pouring over long parchments tallying up their resources.
“How so?” Melorak asked.
“They forget their own wealth in a sulk as they ponder how much they must lose. That lord that just left, Hemman’s his name, he controls a thousand acres, much along the Gwond River. Every acre is protected by our wall of towers, yet he mutters and thinks treason at giving up a mere tenth of his wealth, and only half his fighting men.”
“Let them sulk,” Melorak said, shifting in the throne as he waited for the next lord or baron to arrive and plead their allegiance. “This land is ours, and they know it. Who else remains against us?”
“The Craghills have pledged their loyalty, along with the Knothills and their surrounding plains, plus the villages upon Deer Lake. We’ve assumed total control of the Great Fields; their harvest is too important to risk some idiot lord thinking to ransom leverage against us.”
“And Hemman’s pledged the rest of the northern rim,” Melorak said. “What about the south?”
“From here to the Corinth River, we collect taxes, and the people pray to the name of Karak,” Olrim said, rubbing his fingers together in a gesture of delight. “Only the Sanctuary remains untaken, but its priests have holed up in their mountain and repel our soldiers’ attacks.”
“Keep them harried, but do not press unnecessarily,” Melorak said. “We will deal with them in time. They are a powerful foe. If we can keep them defensive and hiding, we will spread the faith of Karak unheeded throughout the land. When they finally emerge, let them find a world changed and moved on without them.”
“That just leaves Ker,” Olrim said. “Twice their king has pledged us loyalty, but I must say, I am skeptical.”
“Are you really?” Melorak asked, surprised.
“Ker has been a nation most favorable to us, and much of the praise belongs on the shoulders of the dark paladins and their Stronghold. The people of Ker I trust, but their lord is an opportunistic man named Bram Henley. He treats faith as a weapon and nothing more. If he sees benefit in confessing allegiance to Ashhur and his angels, he will do so in a heartbeat.”
“Then perhaps we should remove him.”
“I would counsel against it,” Olrim said. “He’s popular, and worse, I hear constant rumors that he was given protection by Karak’s prophet.”
“Surely it is a lie.”
Olrim sighed and rubbed a hand through his thin gray hair.
“There is no way to know, not without asking Velixar, who is currently on the opposite side of Dezrel.”
“I can assure you that Karak will answer me if I ask,” Melorak said.
“No good,” Olrim said. “You aren’t Karak, not to the people. All we have is my intuition that he is disloyal. The war still rages in the far east, and we dare not risk having a hundred revolts to stamp out.”
“So we prevent a hundred small fires while risking one giant blaze?” Melorak asked.
“That sums it up well.”
Melorak laughed, then stood from his throne.
“Come with me, then. What of my city? Is anything disrupting their worship of Karak, and of myself?”
“Our priests minister night and day,” Olrim said, walking side by side with Melorak. “And more importantly, all traces of Ashhur have been thoroughly extinguished. We hang less and less each day for daring to speak his name.”
“You hold something from me, friend,” Melorak said, halting their walk. “What of the dark vigilante? What of the Ghost and his Blade?”
“A nuisance in the small scale,” Olrim said. “But dangerous in the wide. All those hoping for rebellion do so because of those two pests. Until they hang from the walls, we will risk an uprising.”
“Weeks have passed,” Melorak said, his voice turning cold. “Over a hundred of my men have died at their hands. They came into my castle, my room, with murder in their hearts. They must be dealt with, Olrim, in a manner most fitting.”
“And what would that be?” Olrim asked, clearly exasperated. “I have done all I can, from increasing the size and number of patrols to planting spies to watch for their passing, spies who always end up dead by morning, I might add. Other than having Karak point his finger and strike them dead, I see no way.”
“So little faith,” Melorak said, smiling. The priest-king pointed to the wall, where one of many corpses hung from hooks like macabre banners.
“Do you know who this is?” Melorak asked. When Olrim shook his head, the priest-king’s smile only widened. “He was the Watcher of Veldaren, a rogue of such skill and danger that the king paid him a handsome sum to keep tabs on the entire network of thief guilds. He died when we conquered Mordeina, an act of mercy by a cowardly elf.”
“Might he know where they hide?” Olrim asked, his hands rubbing together excitedly.
“Even better,” Melorak said. “He knows who they are, and how they fight. You say Karak’s hand must come down to smite these two interlopers? I say we channel Karak’s hand through this shell.”
Now it was Olrim’s turn to smile.
“The shock,” he said. “The surprise, the feel of betrayal, would be delicious to behold.”
Melorak put his hand on the chest of Haern the Watcher, closed his eyes, and let his dark magic pour forth. He felt his magical mind crawling through the emptiness, searching for the thin white line that was Haern’s soul. Muscles twitched, and tendons stretched and tightened as the shell was made ready for the host’s return. Teeth clenched, Melorak’s lips peeled back, grinning. Haern’s soul was his. He rammed it into the corpse, layering it with spell after spell. He denied him memory of the Golden Eternity. He denied him choice and freedom. Instead, he bound his heart, mind, and soul far greater than any chain.
“Welcome back,” Melorak said as Haern writhed on the hooks, shouting in horrendous agony. “And cease that wretched noise.”
At once Haern obeyed. He glared down with slowly awakening eyes. His hands opened and shut, as if wishing for weapons.
“Such anger,” Olrim said, clearly amused.<
br />
“Let it fuel him,” Melorak said. He slapped the undead man across the face. “Listen to me, worm. You are mine. My word is law. I am god to you, is that clear?”
Haern struggled, but it did nothing to stop him from bowing his head and nodding.
“I deny you the right to speak,” Melorak said. “For speaking has nothing to do with your task. There are two former acquaintances of yours I want taken care of. The man they call the Ghost. His eyes are mismatched, and he wears a gray cloth over his face. They even say the ashes of the dead swarm over him, masking his appearance. His robes are red, and his hair black. Do you know of whom I speak?”
Again, against all possible resistance, Haern nodded.
“Good. The other they call his Blade, a slender girl who wields daggers and sees through one eye. Do you know her?”
Another nod.
“Useful creature,” Olrim said. “Will you dispose of him once the two interlopers are dead?”
“I will consider it,” Melorak said. “It is a strain to keep him so controlled. Do well for me, Watcher, and I may free you.”
He walked over a few feet, to where another corpse hung. Embedded into his rib cage were Haern’s sabers. Melorak drew them out and handed them over. With a clap of his hands, the hooks detached from the wall, and the assassin fell free.
“Do not rest,” Melorak said. “Do not hesitate. Feel no remorse, no pity. I do not care who else you kill in your quest, so long as they are not servants of mine. Keep your body covered so none know you are undead. Keep to the shadows. You have retained all your skill; I have made certain of that. Now go and spill blood.”
Haern glared with naked anger, but his body was not his. Leaping soundlessly into the air, he sailed out a window into the courtyard and then ran, a blur of motion few could follow.
“Consider the matter of the Ghost and his Blade closed,” Melorak said. “Now, about the matter of my growing army in Corinth…”
A Sliver of Redemption (Half-Orcs Book 5) Page 9