Chapter Twenty-Four
Celieria ~ Orest
On the ramparts and streets of Lower Orest, Celierians and Fey fought side by side. Axes, swords, and war hammers swung, cracking
bone, severing limbs. Magic exploded from shining hands. Fey’cha flew with blurring speed and lethal precision until the pearlescent
gray stone ran red with blood.
But still the Eld kept coming.
Devron Teleos swung his ancestor Shanis Teleos’s meicha hard, blocking the downward slice of a sel’dor blade. The blow rattled his teeth, but he merely snarled and slashed out with a red Fey’cha, angling the blade upwards, beneath
the black scales of the Eld soldier’s armor. His opponent screamed and dropped to the ground, dead in an instant from the
lethal tairen venom forged into the lute’cha steel.
“Where the flaming hells are they coming from?” Dev shouted, whirling to battle another foe. Rain had warned him the Eld had
learned how to use the Well of Souls to travel, but there’d been no whiff of Azrahn—nor warning of any kind—before the portals
had appeared and poured twenty thousand Eld into their midst. The entire lower city was overrun.
Tajik vel Sibboreh swung his seyani longsword in his left hand and fired red Fey’cha with his right.
“Scorched if I know, but so long as the maggots keep coming, I’ll keep killing them.
” His red plaits swung about him like tails of fire, and his weapons moved at blurring speed.
He fought like a demon. Nothing stood against him.
His face was drenched in blood, his searing blue eyes an eerie sight in the mask of gore.
A tairen length away, a massive Eld soldier with biceps like tree trunks was sweeping a war ax like a scythe, sending gutted
Celierian bodies flying.
Tajik bared his teeth in a savage grin, ran up a pile of rubble, and leapt across the melee towards the giant’s back. Screaming,
“Miora felah ti’Feyreisa!” he brought his sword down in a killing blow, severing the Eld’s head with a single strike. The headless body remained standing
for a moment, fountains of blood spurting up from its neck. Tajik turned his face into the shower and laughed.
All around him, Fey fought with lethal skill and eyes lit like savage stars. The sight filled Tajik with pride. Not one of
the Fey had abandoned Orest, despite the nonsensical “retreat to the Fading Lands” krekk Tenn v’En Eilan had spewed across the Warriors’ Path earlier in the day. Every blade under Tajik’s command knew what his
steel was made for, and it scorching well wasn’t for retreating before the enemy even showed up on the field of battle!
A sel’dor arrow glanced off Tajik’s shoulder plate. His eyes narrowed as he sighted a knot of Elden archers who’d made their way to
the top of the city’s inner wall. Magic blasted from his fingertips. Half a dozen archers burst into flame and tumbled off
the wall.
Another wave of Eld came rushing around a rubble-strewn corner. Tajik greeted them with a clap of magic that brought a building
tumbling down upon them. “You want death, Eld maggots? I’ll give you death. This is for all the honorable and worthy friends
you slaughtered! This is for my sister!” Ablaze with magic, he leapt into the billowing dust cloud and swung his sword in
savage arcs, his Fey’cha flashing between each strike like bolts of lightning. “Come dance with the tairen, if you dare!”
Leaving Tajik to his slaughter, Dev ducked an explosion of Mage Fire that took out half a dozen less lucky fellows behind him and scrambled up a flight of stone stairs to the battlements of the outer wall to get a better view of the city.
Lower Orest was in flames. Entire blocks of the city were burning with billowing clouds of thick, black smoke, and the screams and howls of battle rose from the conflagration.
From his vantage point, he could see Earth master Rijonn vel Ahrimor, the tallest Fey Dev had ever met, shaking a mile-wide
swath of land like a carpet. He struck the ground with weave after pounding weave, sending huge shuddering ripples of earth
racing out like waves on the sea, ripping buildings from their foundations, tossing enemy troops and massive siege weapons
like flotsam. Nothing in his path could get through. Eld archers had turned the Fey’s back into a damned pincushion trying
to bring him down, yet the giant merely set his rock jaw and kept spinning his earthshaking weaves.
?Fey! Ti’vel Ahrimor!? Dev sent the order spinning across the Warriors’ Path, then shouted to his commander in both voice and Spirit. “Take out
those archers, men! Protect that Fey!”
?Lord Teleos! Get down!? A fist of Air slammed into his chest, knocking him to the bloody gray stone walk just as a massive sphere of Mage Fire shot
past where his head had been.
Dev gave a grim wave to the white-haired, black-eyed Gillandaris vel Jendahr, Tajik’s good friend, who was quite possibly
even more savage and lethal than the red-haired Fey general. Magic blazed in Gil’s hands, and with a heave, he flung his weaves
over the crenellated stone. Dev scrambled to his feet and peered over the wall. Half a dozen Eld war barges floated in the
middle of the mile-wide river, each carrying a full dozen blue-robed Primages who flung great balls of Mage Fire at the outer
wall. Behind them, on the northern banks of the Heras, enormous trebuchets—where the Dark Lord had they come from?—launched explosive mortars against the outer wall.
Gil’s weave hit one of the war barges, and his magic exploded with a concussive blast, sending shattered wood flying.
?Fey!? Gil cried on the Warriors’ Path. ?To the wall!
Five-fold weaves to the river! Sink those barges and send those Mages swimming!
? He flung another weave of his own over the walls, hitting the same barge a second time, in the same spot. The hull cracked,
and the Mages shrieked as the water of the Heras poured in.
Dev watched the screaming Mages in grim triumph. The Source-fed waters of the Heras burned Mages the way sel’dor burned Fey, which meant the rotting blue-robed rultsharts were bathing in acid. He couldn’t think of a better fate for them. “Trebuchets!” he cried. “Aim for the river! Take out those
barges!”
Gil grinned and gave a white-blond braid a deferential tug.
?I’ll leave the boats to you, Lord Teleos.
We’ll take care of the Mages in the city.
? He leapt from the outer wall on an arc of Air, landing like a cat upon an abandoned wizard’s tower on the inner wall.
?Water masters! Divide the falls! Let’s make it rain!
? His laughter danced eerily through the smoke and sounds of war.
Dense clouds of blue magic swirled over the city, and half
the torrential falls of Maiden’s Gate suddenly swept into the air and flooded Lower Orest.
A bell later, most of the Mage war barges had sunk, and Lower Orest was shin-deep in water. But the Eld kept coming. The trebuchets
on the north banks of the Heras and the remaining Mages had made Orest’s outer wall and its armaments their target. The wall
went down, taking hundreds of men and Fey with it.
Dev abandoned the ruins of the outer wall and made an Air-powered leap to the crumbling walk of the inner wall. Reports were
flying in from all over the city of new portals opening, delivering fresh enemy troops, demons, and darrokken, those foul, pestilential monstrosities created by the Eld.
The city’s defenders were outnumbered, and even with the wild, murderous skills and magic of Fey sword masters like vel Sibboreh
and his friends, the enemy was decimating them. The entire perimeter of Lower Orest was in flames, and the enemy was on the
march west, towards the mountains. If the allies didn’t retreat now, they risked being cut off and slaughtered.
The fight for Lower Orest was over. Aloud and in Spirit, Dev shouted, “Retreat to the mountains! Retreat to Maiden’s Gate!
” The series of stair-stepped walls that climbed the slopes of the Rhakis would be much harder for the Eld to conquer.
The walls were thick, the armaments many, and the high ground gave the defenders the advantage. ?Retreat to Maiden’s Gate! Retreat!?
Wrapped in Gaelen’s invisibility weave, Tajik raced after the retreating allies, slaughtering unsuspecting Eld as he went.
But as he drew nearer Maiden’s Gate, he began to realize the call for retreat might have come a little too late for him. The
enemy was closing in, new, fresh, well-rested waves of them. Tajik began doing more running and less slaughtering.
Less than a mile from the fortified terraces of Maiden’s Gate, a pack of slavering, filth-ridden darrokken burst out of an alleyway into the road in front of him. Though Tajik was still cloaked in Gaelen’s undetectable weave, the
beasts immediately turned and began racing towards him, red eyes gleaming, foul mouths dripping a froth of loathsome poison.
Tajik muttered a foul curse. Darrokken didn’t sight their prey. They smelled them.
Though how the jaffing things could smell anything beyond the foul reek they exuded, Tajik could not begin to guess.
Red Fey’cha flew from his fingers. He spun north and took off running, his legs pumping as if his life depended on it. Which,
he realized as the pounding footfalls of the beasts grew closer, it did. He dropped his invisibility weave and poured all
his magic into speed and maneuverability, running faster than he ever had.
Behind him, the darrokken ran faster.
Just as the fetid breath of the foul beasts warmed the back of his neck and he felt the cold kiss of death draw near, a familiar
Spirit voice cried, ?Vel Sibboreh! Duck! Five-fold weave!?
He glanced up to see swooping darkness and a gaping, fang-filled maw filled with boiling flame. He dove for cover, shielding himself with magic as tairen fire enveloped the darrokken, incinerating them on contact.
The shout rose up from Maiden’s Gate: “Feyreisen!”