The Fighters: Ghostwalker

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by Erik Scott Debie


  She swore. This perverted peace, even if Greyt brought it about, would inevitably fail. The Lord Singer was no friend of Alustriel or the Silver Marches. The rebellion of Quaervarr would bring war—innocents would suffer and die for nothing, all so his mad heroism could hold true, a version of heroism he himself admitted to be false!

  Burning with resolve, Arya strained at her bonds, her mind racing to formulate an escape plan. She tried to call for Bars and Derst, but the two slept soundly across the way, and her gag allowed only muffled grunts. Arya knew she was alone. Perhaps, if the guards were to come close, she could trip one and get her manacles around a throat…

  But then she heard startled gasps from down the hall and the light vanished. Straining her eyes, Arya looked out but could see only darkness. Everything was silent and absolutely still. She could not be sure why, but she felt that a battle was going on, albeit a short one, though she could not hear the screams of either men or steel.

  "Illynthas, shara'tem," came a whisper, and a light the size of a torch flame gleamed into existence inside her cell, a man's length from her.

  It was an eerie, blue-green light that shone from a crystal high overhead. Arya looked up at it, then allowed her eyes to slide down, along a long staff of black wood, down to a thin hand that held it aloft. That hand extended from black robes that swathed a gaunt figure, a figure with glowing green eyes that seemed to bore into Arya's very soul.

  The dark figure made a little gesture, but it was not an attack. Her bonds crumbled and fell away, passing into nothingness before they touched the floor. Arya blinked in disbelief.

  "I offer freedom, Nightingale," said the mage. "And a warning: you are his only hope."

  Arya's brow furrowed. "What? What do you mean? Who are you?" she asked.

  "Someone who is doing what he should have done long ago," the mage replied. He extended his hand as though to help her up.

  Still wary, Arya took that hand and, with the mage's help, got to her feet.

  "What—" she started, but he was gone. Where her hand had held his, there was only a sword: her sword.

  The knight looked around in wonder, but the mage had vanished as quickly as he had come, and there was no sign of his passing, except for the open cell door.

  And that terrible omen: "You are his only hope." Heart pounding, sword in hand, Arya rushed out to release her companions.

  * * * *

  In another corridor, not so far away, Meris's eyes slid from the dagger stabbing into his belly to the hands holding it. Then they traveled up the slim arms to his attacker's face to see furious sapphire eyes glaring at him with all the fury and hatred of the Nine Hells.

  But they were not the eyes of Walker.

  Angry tears streaming down her cheeks, Lyetha pushed with all her strength, driving the dagger through Meris's white leather armor and into the tough flesh beneath. She had stabbed near the spot Greyt's knife had found, but her blade followed an angle that cut deep into his bowels.

  Their gazes locked for a moment, and the two shared a terrible understanding. Meris saw in Lyetha's beautiful eyes the final cruelty, the last crime that could be commit­ted against her.

  He saw the death of her love.

  Never had Meris seen something that stunned him—or frightened him—as much as the fury in those eyes.

  "For my husband," she said, steel on her tongue. "And for my son."

  Meris blinked in reply.

  Only when the darkness down the hall swirled and Walker materialized did Meris awaken and realize where he was and what had happened. With a flourish, he dropped his hand to the shatterspike's hilt.

  "No!" shouted Walker, leaping forward.

  It was too late, though, for Meris drew the blade out and across Lyetha's chest, sending blood sailing. Slowly, as though time itself stood still, the beautiful half-elf fell back into Walker's arms. The ghostwalker, panic and wrenching pain on his face, gazed into her eyes.

  Meris, who had never seen Walker express emotion, blinked in stunned silence at the depth of the ghostwalker's mourn­ing, and it sent a pang through his heart. He did not even think of attacking, though Walker was defenseless.

  Lyetha looked up at Walker as though she did not rec­ognize him, for a long, agonizing breath. Then her brows rose and a soft smile creased her face where only a pained grimace had been before. She gripped his hand with renewed strength, as though finally understanding a secret only the two of them knew. Held in Walker's arms, Lyetha drifted into death as Meris watched. At last, her eyes shifted past Walker's shoulder, and her lips moved.

  "Well met again, Tarm," she said.

  Then Lyetha died, a peaceful smile on her face.

  Though Meris knew he should have attacked, should have sent his blade screaming for Walker's head in the man's moment of vulnerability, he could not. Some part of him caught the sight of something greater than himself—for the first time in his life—and it stayed his hand. Or perhaps it was his fear of the unknown. He did not understand—indeed, he could not begin to fathom—the emotional depth of the scene before him, and confusion ran through him and with it, terror.

  Meris knew then, for the first time, the full measure of his foe, and he was terrified.

  * * * *

  Even as he watched her spirit fade away, embracing that of Tarm Thardeyn, Walker gently laid his dead mother on the soft carpet and rose to face Meris, who still stood, apparently dumbfounded. Reaching down to his belt, Walker slowly drew out the guardsman's sword and pointed it across the short distance that separated him from Meris. The wild scout responded by raising his own weapon—Walker's shatterspike—and pointing it at the ghostwalker. The points of the blades almost touched.

  Meris calmly pulled the knife out of his belly, grimacing as blood leaked out. Not taking his eyes from the ghostwalker, Meris dropped a hand to his belt, drew out a steel-encased potion, and quaffed it.

  Walker watched as the blood flowing down the white leather slowed to a trickle, then stopped entirely. His eyes darted into the study, and he saw Greyt's corpse. Somehow, even knowing that his vengeance was done did not calm the rage that boiled within his heart.

  "This will be our final duel," Walker assured him. "You will pay for all you have done."

  "I'm sure I will," Meris replied. "We've looked forward to this duel—you and I both." He rolled the sword over in the air, and its mithral surface glinted almost gold in the torchlight. "But I have the advantage, my friend."

  In response, Walker held up his bandaged left hand, upon the fourth finger of which gleamed his silver wolf ring. Its single sapphire eye sparkled.

  Meris shrugged, conceding the point.

  "I'll just have to make sure I cut your hand off before I kill you this time," he mocked.

  Now it was Walker's turn to shrug, but he did not move a muscle. His focus remained upon Meris, this man who had taken all Walker valued in life—things he had never known, and things he had thought lost before but had only truly gone now.

  Such was his focus upon Meris that Walker was com­pletely surprised when the door behind him shook under a mighty blow and muffled shouts penetrated the wood. He lunged, startled, but Meris batted his sword out of the way and leaped to the side.

  The scout slashed out with a counter—a blow Walker dodged—and his wince of pain told Walker that the heal­ing potion had not taken full effect yet. Walker took full advantage, slamming his sword into the shatterspike with a ringing blow. The long sword snapped against the shat­terspike's edge, sheering off with a scream, but the damage had been done. With a curse, Meris let the mithral blade fall from his shaking fingers. The scout dived for it, but Walker flung the broken blade at him, and it sank into the carpet a pace from Meris's hand. Scrambling away from the weapons, Meris fled down the hallway, shouting for the guards as he went.

  Walker slipped a dagger out into his hand and pulled back, but another blow on the door jarred his focus and the blade ended up in a wall a foot from Meris's fleeing head. Before the
ghostwalker could draw another knife, the scout vanished around a corner toward the door to Greyt's manor.

  Stifling a curse, Walker turned back to the vibrat­ing door. The sounds of fierce fighting came from behind the locked portal, deep within the manor. A blunt object pounded upon the locked portal, and a long crack had appeared through the door. Taking up the shatterspike, Walker readied his lunge.

  The door splintered, cracked, and flew off its hinges. Walker leaped out...

  And stopped. His mouth dropped open and his sword point fell with it.

  "I told you I could have picked the...." Derst was saying. Then he saw the ghostwalker. "Oh."

  "Walker!" shouted Arya as she threw herself into his arms.

  The ghostwalker was dumbfounded and his mind blanked for the next few moments. All he knew was that he was holding Arya and kissing her and, somehow, that was all that mattered.

  Bars and Derst tried to fill the silence with chat.

  "You know, Bars," said Derst, who hovered at the paladin's side, picking at his light tunic. "I'll be we could have found and donned our armor in the time it takes the two of them to say 'well met.'"

  "Speak for yourself, Sir Goldtook," Bars replied. "You're the one who wears hunting leathers. I'm the one with the metal plates. Perhaps if you were my acting squire—"

  "Forget it!" spat Derst. "You remember the first and last time I helped you put on your armor. Never again!"

  " 'Never again?' Why so?"

  "You almost crushed me when you needed a chair!" argued Derst.

  "Squires often do much in the line of duty," shrugged Bars.

  "I suppose sponge bathes, for example?"

  "Only if you're a lass in mail—er, sorry Arya," Bars mumbled, his face turning bright red.

  But the lady knight had not even noticed. Instead, she was holding Walker as though he might slip away at any moment.

  "Ahem," Derst said, clearing his throat. "We're still here."

  Walker and Arya, remembering themselves at last, pulled apart and turned. Though she had moved to the side, Arya still held his hand tightly, a warm touch that threat­ened to swallow Walker's focus.

  The sounds of battle were still coming from beneath the manor. Bars and Derst had freed the other prisoners, who even now fought Greyt family rangers underground.

  The three knights were covered with sweat and grime, clad in simple tunics and leggings rather than armor, and speckled here and there with blood—none of it apparently theirs. Their borrowed and improvised weapons (Derst's being a dagger, leather thong, and flask) were in sorry need of repair. All three seemed tired, weak, and totally unprepared for a fight except for the grim expressions they wore—looks that would cause the most hardened warrior to wince.

  In perfect shape to wade into battle.

  Walker nodded. "Well met," he said.

  "Well met indeed," said Bars, extending his hand. "Arya's told us much about you. Well, not really that much... Well, aye, nothing. Um ... Well met." He trailed off and left his arm out for Walker to take.

  Walker looked down at the extended arm and took it, to his great surprise.

  Derst shook Walker hand. "I thought you'd be taller," he mumbled.

  "I'm glad you got to meet," said Arya. "Especially since we're probably all going to meet Kelemvor in his under­world soon."

  Walker needed no words to explain what they were about to do. He merely pointed.

  "Bah!" exclaimed Derst. "You're always the pessimist, Arya."

  "Aye, how many rangers can Meris have?" rumbled Bars. "A dozen? Two? Babe's play!"

  "Easier than poking a chest full of goblins with a rapier," agreed Derst. "And besides—are they the legendary Knights in Silver? No. We are." He paused. "The legendary."

  "Right," agreed Bars. "The Knights in Silver have never been defeated on the field of battle, and for good reason. Each of us is worth twenty of them!"

  Arya, none-too-confident, looked at Walker for support, but the ghostwalker only smiled. She rolled her eyes.

  "Men," she said.

  "Aye," agreed Derst. Then, after a pause, he looked at Walker. "So—what's our plan?"

  Walker turned and looked down the darkened hallway. He bent and slowly retrieved the discarded shatterspike sword.

  "The front entrance?" Bars said, bemused. "Smells like an ambush."

  "Bah! Meris would never expect us to be so stupid as to go out the front!" put in Derst with a laugh.

  Then, when no one laughed along with him, his face grew serious once more.

  "We're not, are we?" he asked, looking to each one for a reply.

  None were forthcoming.

  The ghostwalker peered at each of the knights. Then, with­out a word, he began walking resolutely down the hallway.

  A smile lit on Bars's face.

  "I like that plan!" he said. He hurried behind Walker.

  Derst and Arya looked at each other, both equally stumped.

  "Well, I suppose there's always my foolproof backup plan," said Derst. Arya arched an eyebrow.

  "Proof against you, you mean?" Arya asked.

  "You know me," Derst said with a shrug. He indicated the hallway with an open hand, and followed Arya when she ran after Walker.

  When they arrived at the closed double doors, Walker held up a hand to stop them. He turned to address the three knights, who shared his determination. They drew steel.

  "We do not know how many rangers await," said Walker. "I will go first."

  "Suit yourself," Derst whistled. He hid behind a small table. "I'm comfortable, being alive and everything."

  Bars nodded, pressing himself into the corner between the door and the wall.

  Arya was not as yielding. She stood next to Walker, stub­bornly clinging to his arm. When he looked over at her, her eyes were firm. "I'm coming with you," she said.

  "This is the only way," Walker replied calmly but firmly.

  "But, Walker, I have to tell you—"

  His steely gaze cut her off and told her Walker would brook no argument.

  Biting her lip, Arya took Walker's hand and squeezed it.

  "Be wary," she said.

  Walker nodded, squeezing her hand back to show he under­stood. Then Arya took up her place opposite Bars.

  The ghostwalker closed his eyes, breathing in deeply. His focus returned, dampening the hot rage to a cool fury, shuffling it behind icy walls of control. Deep in his dark resolve once more, Walker opened his eyes, prepared.

  Sheathing the shatterspike, Walker stepped to the doors, pulled them open, and walked out, arms wide open...

  Into a hail of arrows.

  Chapter 22

  30 Tarsakh

  Arrows from two dozen bows shot for him, arrows seeking to turn Walker into a human forest. The ambushing rangers were fully confident the battle was over before it had begun, for there was no way Walker could dodge or deflect so many arrows. The arrows shot right through him and slammed into the open doors, carpeted floor, and walls inside Greyt's manor, and more than a few bristled from the end table behind which Derst hid. Arya stifled a scream, covering her mouth. Bars and Derst looked at one another, shocked.

  Walker just shook his head. It was all just as he had expected.

  As the rangers, standing in a rough line in the middle of the plaza, looked down at their bows as though the weapons had betrayed them somehow, Walker raised his head and continued to stride forward. As he came, they realized they could see through his body; he was translucent, like a ghost.

  More than a few of the twenty-four rangers gasped in terror, seeing the vengeful spirit of folk legend, and their limbs shook. The others, old and hardened veterans all, gazed at Walker in doubt and disbelief.

  The two dozen men stood in front of the Whistling Stag, which rested across the way from Greyt's manor. Walker nodded. That must have been where Meris had fled.

  "I am the Spirit of Vengeance," said Walker. His matter-of-fact words were soft, but they projected throughout the square loudly
enough to reach all their ears. "I am the son of the Ghostly Lady of the Dark Woods, who brought the fires of heaven upon Quaervarr a century past. I was born and live in darkness, I breathe retribution, and I sleep to the screams of the damned. I fear no living thing, man or woman."

  He paused, waiting while all that sank into his foes, but he need not have bothered. The rangers were trembling.

  "I have slain your champions, and one alone awaits me," he continued. "My fight is with Meris Wayfarer, not with you. I offer you this one chance to throw down your weapons and to quit Quaervarr and the Moonwood forever."

  Many of the guardsmen looked hesitant and afraid, but the reminder of Meris, their new lord, seemed to snap them out of it. Not that they knew loyalty, but as much as they feared the black specter before them, they feared the cruelty of Meris Wayfarer more. After all, one man could not defeat two dozen men, no matter his power. No ranger threw down his arms—indeed, many fitted more arrows to the string or drew swords.

  "Then it seems I have no choice," said Walker, slowly draw­ing the shatterspike and continuing to walk toward them, "but to kill you all."

  Half the rangers replied by aiming for Walker once more, and half tightened their grip on their weapons.

  The ghostwalker made no sign of changing his calm walk until the first ranger, two short swords in his hands, lunged at him, screaming the name of the late Lord Singer.

  Walker whirled, his blade out and dancing in the breeze. It cleaved one sword in two then snapped against the man's arm, sending him away screaming. A second ranger thrust a long sword at Walker from the other side, a blow that was deflected with perfect timing. The ghostwalker brought the sword up high, then threw the ranger off and continued walking, as though the man had never attacked. This ranger looked at his sword, saw that it was still whole, and swung at Walker's back. At the same moment, the dozen rangers with bows drawn fired upon the ghostwalker.

  Unfortunately for the rangers flanking Walker, the arrows passed through the ghostwalker's head and chest as through mist and found resting spots in their bodies.

 

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