Sunday, November 22, 2009

Chapter 7 - section 2

About a half a mile south of the castle I found it: a circle of toadstools. What do you know; an honest-to-goodness fairy circle. It appealed to my sardonic sense of humor and I couldn’t suppress my smirk as I inspected it. I circled the ring once before grounding myself and closing my eyes. As I exhaled slowly, I pushed my will through the invisible barrier that clung like sticky and twanging elastic before stepping through into the next world.

And with one foot, I stepped straight into a noisy, clashing maelstrom of clanging swords, squealing horses, shrieking men and flying arrows. Shit. Suddenly, I understood how that piece of dropped bacon felt about the fire and frying pan. Leaping from a war in planning right into a very bloody war at its height was only a matter of analogy, but just as dangerous.

Muttering, I started to weave through the chaos. Both sides apparently took umbrage at this and more than one swing came in my direction. The pain in my shoulder was forgotten as adrenaline kicked in. Right, right, left, duck; I blocked enemy with enemy, leaping from one skirmish towards another. The man, who looked like a normal human save for the grayish skin which might have been passed off as battlefield grime and the colossal build of a heavy duty weightlifter, let out a shriek as the sword intended for me flashed down. The spurts of blood looked very human as I took the unexpected route of changed direction to leap over the downed man and fly past the understandably startled swordsman. I guess he didn’t expect an unarmed, unarmored woman to jump towards him, screaming like a banshee.

Real battle is nothing like the study of strategy. Dad used to line up objects to imitate formations and demonstrate maneuvers. He would show us how to take advantage of the gaps in a line and when to order this defensive block or that calculated retreat. It all seemed so logical and rational with those straight lines set up for our edification. The nightmare I had glimmered into bore the same resemblance to Dad’s models as a snarling jaguar does to an eight-week old puppy. Clinically, the structures might be similar: four legs, two ears, two eyes, tails, carnivorous teeth; but when you find yourself in front of one or the other, it’s a considerable distinction. They’re fundamentally two different creatures.

Breathing heavily, I dropped behind the corpse of a horse porcupined with a garnish of arrows. Jackpot! Staring beyond me into nothing was a very grey, very dead man. He had been shot through the throat and looked to have died painfully and recently. More importantly, his armor was more or less intact. His sword had been discarded nearby. I could put both to better use than they’d see lying there with his cooling flesh.

I’m not inherently unethical and I wasn’t free from a sense of guilt as I stripped the gear from the stiff and heavy limbs of a man who had died in the name of some cause or other. Looting his corpse might not be kind, but my clothing would disappear at any minute and I wanted to survive this mess. I considered trying to move a blanket from the horse to cover the dead man’s soon-to-be nudity, but I wasn’t about to take the time to search until I was safely ensconced in protection.

I settled the breastplate over my shoulders with a grunt just as an arrow narrowly missed my ear. Shit. I stumbled, a vicious pain spreading across my shoulder. Damn damn damn! The breastplate was iron and I hadn’t taken the time to remove all of the dead man’s padding. And I had apparently reopened the gift my would-be assassin had left me. Cursing only partially under my breath, I tore the padding from the soldier, ripping it from him in a massive ragged strip. Wadding up the dirty, sweat-stained cloth, I shoved it under the breastplate to cushion the armor and prevent it from adding to my weakened state.

I ducked down to reach for the corpse’s helmet, just as another arrow whistled over my head. I wondered how the hell I was going to track down a Michael the anything in this mess, not to mention survive. Muttering imprecations and expletives, I clapped the iron cap over my now thoroughly matted and tangled curls. Staying down, I reached out and grabbed up the sword.

And not a moment too soon; one of the wild-eyed, grey-skinned warriors came flying over the dead horse. He landed with a thump, but rolled right back up to his feet and came at me. A dagger whipped from his waist so quickly that it was almost as if it had appeared by magic. I couldn’t help but admire the almost preternatural ability and speed of this race. They really seemed excellent fighters. The man looked me over and his mouth split into a ghastly grin of crooked, yellow and brown teeth. Apparently excellence in fighting had no correlation to good oral hygiene.

In a French dialect which made his accent thick and difficult to understand, the brute chortled as he lunged at me; “Je serai gentil, putain. Vous ȇtes un morceau trop doux pour endommager votre bouche ou vos mains. Je voidrai que vous les employiez dans mon lit.”

Although his choice of insult gave me momentary mental pause and his threat of using my body in such a manner was sufficient to make me grimace, my instincts were sharp enough with the adrenaline fueling me that I parried his lunge with my newfound sword and tried to knock the dagger out of his hand, or at least chop off a few fingers. My angle was all wrong, however, and he was sufficiently skilled to evade that tack. No matter how disgusting the man was, I’d yet to find the man I couldn’t insult with false bravado and sufficient strength. In my Parisian accent, honed from more of Dad’s training, I replied as degradingly as I could, “Qu’est-ce que c’est? Vous plus ne winez et dinez une fille? Combien bas votre honneur doit ȇtre.” The only thing that irritates a man more than debasing his pride is diminishing the size of his manhood after sleeping with him.

The massive titan’s heavy black brows shot up towards his scalp, hiding underneath the metal helm encasing his massive skull. His dark eyes glittered from the deep hollows of his eyesockets. He seemed pleased at the challenge of having to fight me. “Et gaspillez un bon repas?” he countered, snarling, the odd French dialect barely comprehensible. He spat out the words as if the very taste of them was a potent and pungent form of waste. But I wasted no more time on his face or those foul teeth and instead watched his torso, awaiting his attack. Sure enough, he came at me again in a quick and curving motion, designed to protect his wielding hand.

Instead of swinging the sword, I let it drop and simultaneously stepped in towards the giant man’s onslaught. Turning my body into his thrust, I grabbed his wrist and spun him around and down. My shoulder flashed white hot, but my center of gravity was far lower than his oversized form and with a loud thud and a completely startled expression, I got the thug down on the ground mostly through his own momentum. I didn’t waste an instant before leaping onto him, placing an arm across his neck with a threat of choking him and locking my knees to the ground so his legs were pinned.

The man’s surprise morphed seamlessly into rage as he struggled underneath me. I had the leverage, though and greater practice, so he wasn’t going anywhere. Fast as I could, I liberated his dagger and muttered, “Thanks, but I really don’t think you’re my type, anyhow.” I pulled back just enough for him to start to fling himself at me, but I was ready and pounded the back of his neck with the pommel of his own weapon.

He grunted on impact and then fell still. I leapt up, making sure the big grey giant hadn’t brought a buddy along, but for the moment, my refuge seemed secure. I tucked the dagger into my looted belt and glanced back down. Delicate though the brain may be, it’s a lot harder to kill someone by hitting them on the back of the head than you might think. To that end, the great lummox was still breathing. I had no real desire to kill, in spite of the ogre’s desire to make me a trophy and have me adorn his bed. His incapacitation suited me just fine.

Free from immediate threat, I finished suiting up. My movements were rendered far slower than normal. Now that the surge of adrenaline was winding down, the ache in my shoulder was strong enough to distract from the gnawing hunger tying my stomach into knots. Ignoring the hot flaring from my wound, I grabbed the sword, heaved a shield up over me and made a crouching run in the direction that seemed furthest from the continuing melee beyond the horse.

Arrows dropped like vicious birds of prey to land in the soft flesh of throats, faces, and even one belly as I charged through. More than once, the missiles thunked against my shield and an ambitious one hit my breastplate, but fortunately they did no more damage than some possible bruising. I was only approached by one big grey fellow on a charger, but evading him was a simple matter of sending a mental wash of pain and fear at his steed; emotions I had a heavy stash to draw upon at that point.

To give the goon his due, he was an excellent horseman. Although the massive bay screamed and rolled its eyes, rearing up, he managed to keep to the saddle. I rushed to find a pair in foot combat to try to lose the horseman. I ducked quickly around them, but paused as I caught sight of an odd gleam shining from the helm of one of the soldiers. The conical metal helm didn’t entirely hide his golden hair from view. Cold and calculating dark eyes locked onto me, sending a shiver down my spine.

With a growl, Goldilocks renewed his attack on the poor big grey guy he was matched up against. It didn’t take long. I had enough time to see the mighty swing that severed the unfortunate soldier’s head before my feet got the best of me and sped me away. Discretion is the better part of not getting decapitated.

My mind raced nearly as fast as my feet. What the hell was he doing here? The possibility that he was some sort of thrall of Eva’s and this had been some elaborate fabrication to execute me wormed through the more important considerations, such as running, escaping, and remaining intact. My body might be far from perfect, but I had grown rather attached to it.

I clanked and clanged my way off of the field and through a sparsely wooded area. I imagined hulking footsteps behind me, camouflaged by my own noisy retreat and although I was gasping for air and a stitch was forming in my side, I pushed on. Running has never been my strength, although I certainly seemed to be getting some practice at it these days. I resolved to set up an exercise regime once all of this was said and done. I tried not to think about the possibility of not surviving for want of that regime.

My feet thudded rhythmically into the twigs and leaves underfoot; the cracks and creaks harmonizing with the constant cacophony of my oversized armor crashing together with every jolt of my feet. My labored breath was a quiet wheeze in comparison and I was starting to get really hot under all this padding and metal.

That was when the dagger hit my back. The force nearly knocked me off my balance with the echoing PANG of metal against metal. I wondered if the backpiece had split. The dagger hit the ground, but a new dull pain blossomed across my back and I caught a second wind inspired by sheer terror. If I couldn’t get away, this psychopath really would kill me.

Drawing upon my fear, I spurred myself on, leaping over twigs and positive that Goldilocks was going to take me down at any second. My lungs strained and the agonized thump of my heart beat painfully against my back, so strongly that I could barely hear anything over the rushing sound of my own blood. My focus on forward momentum was so complete that I barely noticed the bolt that whizzed past my ear to land with a thump behind me.

With a gurgle, Goldilocks leapt upon me and his full weight came to bear on one of my legs, forcing it to buckle under me. I fell forward, limbs sprawling as I futilely tried to halt the inevitable faceplant into mud and leaves. I carefully spat out my mouthful of earth and without pausing, tried to flip over, my shoulder searing in agony at the motion. I tried to kick Goldilocks off of me at the same time that I tried to scramble back and away from him. I got in three really good heels to his nose before I was far enough back to realize that he was lying still on the ground and making no effort to escape my foot.

Struggling to suck air into my poor deprived lungs, I took quick inventory of my ailments: shoulder – excruciating, back – sore but intact, legs – functional. I rose quickly, giving the assassin a cursory once over. His last ditch effort to bring me down left me muddy but uninjured; however, it may have been one of the reasons for his lack of fight. Blood dribbled from a gash on his forehead where he had fallen upon a rock. Perhaps the primary reason for his lack of movement, though, was the bolt that had pierced his leather armor, run through his chest and was now sticking out of his back.

As I finally noticed the telltale tingling under my pain, I turned to flash a glance over my shoulder and called out, “Nice shot.”

From between the trees, a tall youth stepped out, nodding at me. He was lanky and gangly, but dressed in well-fitting leather that made him look more comfortable when I had seen him last – on the street outside my home in the Other Realm. I narrowed my eyes with the recognition of him, but I owed him my life right now. If he was going to try to kill me, a little gratitude wouldn’t make matters worse. “Thank you,” I offered, inspecting the crystalline blue of his bright eyes, puzzled.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Chapter 7 - section 1

I passed through the castle as innocuously as I could. It takes a lot of people to keep a castle of this size running smoothly and no matter where you go, you’re bound to run into someone. But I kept my head down and moved quickly. My shoulder still ached, but it had grown into the dull and painful ache that belongs to a lingering pain. What I felt was a reminder that I wasn’t hale and whole but not enough to be truly debilitating.

Far more overwhelming was the uncertainty and fear that was clawing at my innards and had gripped both mind and spirit. Vicky’s absence before had been worthy of worry, but her blood-stained sheets was confirmation that all my fears had been justified. I felt as if my family was getting picked off one at a time and I still had no idea who this unseen assailant was. It didn’t make sense to blame Garrett. He would have had the opportunity to finish the assassin’s work on me while I was unconscious, but he hadn’t. And if Cullen really was planning to wage war upon Garrett, he wouldn’t have sneaked into the castle to injure Vicky. And there was no way that either of them could be blamed for what happened to Dad.


Mulling over the possibilities, I found some of Cullen’s cast off clothing: a tunic, leggings and sash. They were a bit large, but I eased myself into them anyhow. They were a sight better than my bedraggled, corseted and blood-stained outfit. Besides which, it didn’t matter how poorly they fit so long as they protected me until I found the glimmer site that Eva had specified.

Once changed, I took the dagger with me out into the gardens. Through the mist, down the path and into the heart of the tamed and pristine beds I went, not a soul in sight. The air was cool, chill and damp like spring. A copse of riparian trees hung over an artfully laid out stream. I padded over the moss covered roots, ducking between the long branches drooping to trail their tips into the moving water.

The hollow was where I remembered it; just below eye level on the left face of the third tree over. Glancing into the grey and swirling mists for any signs of movement, I dug the page out from between my leggings and smallclothes. Frowning and looking down, I started trying to commit the page to memory. This was no small feat, because it read like some archaic, magical VCR instructions. It was filled with phrases like “in order to augment metallic egress, hammer-weld whilst the fourth house holds the moon and quench in heart’s blood.”

Even so, I read through it all five times. It was clearly meant as a lesson in how to create a bloodsword. Being no smith, most of the technical information made very little sense and the language of the mystical part evaded my comprehension as well. Still, I committed the words to memory by rote. Once I was satisfied that I had gleaned as much as I was capable from the scrap of parchment, I bundled it around the dagger and then wrapped them both in a scrap of oiled cloth also salvaged from between leggings and smallclothes. The cloth would help protect them from dampness and damage for at least a short period of time. Stealing another quick glance around, I shoved the bundle securely into the hollow of the tree, trying not to think about what creepy-crawlies might use it for a home.

Just in case anyone was watching, I circled away before heading back towards the castle. Ignoring the chill wind that sprung up from nowhere, I wondered at the implication of the instructions on the page stashed away. I wondered at the implication of those instructions. Dad’s edicts referenced the bloodsword as if it was something unique. But with that page, was it possible there existed more than one? And if so, what effect could that have on the throne?

I frowned and watched a stray pebble skitter away from the force of my purposeful steps. That we were to scour the Mistlands in search of one of these swords was bad enough. The idea that more than one could be out there seemed downright dangerous. I wondered what power this sword actually possessed. Dad’s edict seemed to indicate it would strengthen our natural abilities to a point where one of us could hold his own against all the rest. Unfortunately, the page Eva had given me was more of a how-to on how to create the sword, not an explanation of what it actually was or how to utilize it.

Although my steps continued, the leather shuffling softly against the stone path, I suddenly caught sight of a shadow moving quickly in my peripheral vision. I turned my head swiftly, mid-stride. The mist was thick, abundant, and concealed any immediate motion from my scrutiny.

“Hello?” I called out tentatively as I slowed to a halt. “Who’s there?”

The condensation in the air muted my voice and made it sound soft and strange. I squinted, peering in the direction I thought the shadow had moved towards. As I watched, the electric tingle of awareness vibrated lightly under my skin like an itch between skin and bone. Everything was still and at the same time, was in constant motion. The mist swirled and writhed, but it was chaotic and constant and definitely not what I was looking for.

Again out of the corner of my eye, I saw something dark flash past. More defined – it looked humanoid and tall, but not bulky. I stepped off of the path onto the moist grass in pursuit. The figure was still no more than a shadow in the filmy smoke-like covering. “Wait! Stop!” I called as I sped blindly into the mist. In the distance, the motion stilled. Hazarding a guess, I queried, “Tristam?”

Only silence met me in response. Even the birds had stopped singing. I mentally kicked myself. Tristam had never set off my fey senses before, even though I was fairly certain he wasn’t a human either. It didn’t make sense that he would set my muscles jumping now. I called out a second guess as I moved slowly through the damp, concealing tendrils that clung to my skin and clothing, “Eva?”

The mist seemed so opaque and solid for the purpose of obscuring my vision that it was disconcerting how truly ephemeral it was when I passed through the walls it formed in front of me. Ahead, the form remained still and slowly solidified as I approached. The fey sensation faded even as I approached the shadow. It seemed so eerie after the fast movement before that it was so completely and utterly still. Almost like the person wasn’t breathing.

And that was because the person wasn’t breathing. As I squinted at the form in front of me, I realized that I had unwittingly been stalking one of the various marble statues that litter the gardens so aesthetically. The fast-moving person I felt must have given me the slip after ducking behind the statue, knowing the mist would hide his escape.

Releasing a healthy curse worthy of a sailor, I turned away, scouring the mist for any living being. There was none, but the slow twittering of birds resumed, loud on my straining ears. I grimaced, shifting my sore shoulder. At least whoever was spying on me hadn’t tried to kill me this time. I could only hope that they hadn’t seen where I hid the dagger.


Fed up with unseen stalkers and the mysteries of the mist, I caught up with the path again and followed it around the castle. Once it joined with the main road, I swung a right and stalked away from the buildings. The sooner I could get out of here, the better. I had had my fill of bullying half-brothers, cryptic artifacts taking a starring role in familicide and strange people popping in and out of existence to kill or save me. Coming here had only made the matters worse. I had more questions than when I had started and to stay here was unlikely to aid me in divining solutions. Was it any wonder I avoided this place? Determination pushed me on as I strode down the south road, looking for the glimmer point Eva had written about.