Read Angelslayer: The Winnowing War Online
Authors: K. Michael Wright
DEDICATION:
For Buffy who always believed.
Published 2008 by Medallion Press, Inc.
The MEDALLION PRESS LOGO is a registered trademark of Medallion Press, Inc.
Copyright © 2008 by K. Michael Wright
Cover Illustration by Jeff Easley
Cover Design by Adam Mock
Book Design by James Tampa
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission of the publisher, except where permitted by law.
There are numerous Cherokee Counties throughout the South, none of which are represented by the fictional locale in this book. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author's imagination or are used fictionally. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Printed in the United States of America
Typeset in Adobe Jenson Pro
Title font set in Sloth and Parseltongue
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Wright, K. Michael.
Angelslayer : the winnowing war / K. Michael Wright.
    p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-933836-53-9 (alk. paper)
1. AngelsâFiction. 2. Spiritual warfareâFiction. I. Title.
PS3623.R554A84 2008
813'.6âdc22
2008018228
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
First Edition
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS:
Many thanks to Carrie Wright whose help as an editor and talent as a writer helped bring Angelslayer to life.
Table of Contents
There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same became mighty men, which were of old, men of renown.
King James Version of Genesis 6:4
An isle in the Southern Sea of Etlantis Thirty years before Aeon's End, the first apocalypse of Earth
T
he sky was a slate gray when Darke's ship pulled into the island's cove. The waters of the lagoon could have been inked. Darke, the corsair, was a lean figure atop the forecastle; his black mantle flared in night's wind; his hair curled about the shoulders of his leather jerkin. His men were gathered. They were men hard of the sea.
At the forward ports, archers crouched, waiting. Amidships, the mighty crossbow, with its fifty-stone draw, was armed with an oaken bolt fitted with a heavy, rusted iron tip. At the cutwater strakes, the siphon jets of the flame throwers curled their fire breath against the prow.
In the lagoon across from them, an Etlantian galley rested. Rather, it once had been an Etlantian galley. Etlantian ships were brightly paintedâred and blue, green and white. Solid plates of oraculum, the Etlantians' silver-red metal, always wreathed the top strakes; in the sun they could reflect the color of bright blood, but this ship was a brigand, with time eating slowly at the hull and sailcloth.
Darke's own ship was black and waxen. Its sails were designed light but strong, a sacred ashen color that had allowed the night runners of Captain Darke to cut the sea like shadow. Darke's ship could appear from nowhereâalways at Darke's chosen time, always at Darke's chosen place, always with speed, and sometimes with such stealth that many an Etlantian had died in the sea never knowing he had been brought down by the Shadow Hawk, the last of the Tarshiansâthe giant killers, the raiders of Ishtar's horned moon.
However, this night Darke had not come for battle.
Storan stood beside his captain as the warship drew quietly into the deep of the lagoon. Storan was the helmsman. He had been with Darke from their youth, from the beginning when blue blood coursed through their veins, and they could as easily have sailed the stars as the sea. Storan was a bearlike figure with deep, dark eyes inset like a bull's beneath thorny brows. He had ill-kept, graying hair. His axe, a yawning blade well quenched of blood, was always at the ready, sheathed in a woven leather belt lashed against his muscled thigh.
There had been a time in memory's reach when Storan and Darke had sailed as lords of all Tarshish, the emerald cities of the Tarshians, but Etlantis had destroyed the cities of the Tarshians, laid them waste one by one, and now any Tarshians alive were raiders, hidden among the isles of the sea. They were becoming few, like carnivores that once ruled but now were being hunted for sport to extinction.
The world had changed since Darke first sailed. Most of all, the Etlantians, the sons of the angels, had changed. This last generation was like no other. Giants, some stood seven foot and more. Some were barely recognizable as human, and so they were called Nephilim, spawn of the fallen. Holy blood ran in their veins, but unholy flesh twisted them, drawing them into aeon's breath, the folding of time, the ending of all things.
The Etlantian galley in the lagoon was a large ship of the line. She had once been prime, a three-tiered craft, one-hundred oared, with four masts and a spar like a great spear, sheathed in oraculum that arched over a bull's-head ram. On her main deck were three catapults. Her sides were lashed with grappling planks, and bolt launchers ringed her bow ports like teeth. Her fire throwers were both fore and aft, but they were unlit, dripping an oily drool over the cutwater timbers.
She lay in the harbor like a fat-bellied whore, and yet, even then, her majesty still lingered in a shadow. This was not the ship of a Nephilim, of an angel's son, or even of an Etlantian princeâthose born to the angels in olden times, who were often still honorable. This ship belonged to none of those. Though no emblems adorned her and no colors flew from her top masts, Darke could trust his instincts: this was the ship, not just of any angel but of a NamedâSatariel, the lord of the Melachim, the sixth choir of the third star. This was a Watcher's ship, the ship of a high-blood angel. He was here somewhere, waiting, just as he had promised. Darke raised his hand.
“Lay back the oars!” Storan echoed the command.
The oars lifted in a single, powerful sweep and whined as they eased back against the oarlocks into their beds. Silence. Timber moaned as Darke's low, sleek warship circled slowly in idle current, keeping its distance from the Etlantian. Darke's ship looked like a black bird resting in the night.
Had he spotted Satariel's ship at sea, Darke would not have been sure whether to attack or to raise colors. It was said that Satariel had sunk more Etlantian timber than even he, and as evidence, the oraculum ram of the angel's ship was scarred like a well-used blade.
Storan, the muscled helmsman, studied the ship skeptically. “The bitch is at anchor, her oars in lock. If we struck her now, we could split her like a crab.”
“I have come in truce,” Darke said.
“You know as well as I that we are nothing but bait, Captain.” Storan spat over the side. “So where is he? Where is this unholy bastard?”
Darke studied the lagoon. Storan was right; they were unprotected here. If this were a trap, the lagoon offered no protection. If Etlantian warships were to close on the mouth of the lagoon, death would follow in short breath.
“Drop anchor,” Darke said quietly.
Storan shifted uneasily before giving the order. “Do not much like anchoring out here with our asses bared in moonlight like painted whores.”
“Storan, if he is who he claims, we would be as dead as stone if he desired. So far, he's kept his word, which means he needs us for something. We've come this far; we may as well learn his purpose. You think?”
“You would rather not know what I think of all this, Captain.” He turned. “Let out the stone!”
The anchor chain rumbled as the weighting stone splashed into the quiet waters.
There were times Darke could sense things, times he could feel a merchantman before she ever pulled onto the horizon. He could pick his way through the coral reefs of islands as if he knew their skin. And weeks ago, when a river ship had hailed alongside and its captain, an aged, withered giantâan Etlantianâhad given him the scroll, something seemed to promise that it was no trick. The scroll was aged papyrus, and its edges had been dipped in blood. Darke broke the waxen seal with its bull's-horn signet. It had been an invitation, more likely a trap, but either way, it had fired his curiosity. Because of it, Darke had sailed to this island to see the face of an angel. He wanted to gaze on a being who had been roaming Earth since the dawn of man, a being whose eyes had withstood God's fire. Darke almost didn't care the cost. “Where is it we are to meet him?” Storan asked.
Darke searched a moment and then pointed toward the dim light of a tent, beached to the lee of the Etlantian galley. Although barely visible, Darke had found it easily.
Darke's mother had laid a balm of nightshade and galbanum on his eyelids before the umbilical cord had been cut, and thus she named him Darke and promised vengeance of the night.
“There could be fifty men in those trees, Captain,” Storan grizzled. “You said he would meet in the open. I name that alone breach of word. I say we try to kill him now and mark our names in the list of the damned.”
“He is a dark angel of the holy choir; he might prove difficult to kill, Storan.”
“I do not indulge beliefs of angels of light or of dark, nor do I care for choirs. I want a song; then, I will find me a whore with a sweet voice in a tavern somewhere.”
“Not that kind of choir, I fear. This angel has slaughtered enough innocent blood to fill this lagoon.” Darke turned and spoke quietly. “Bring me Danwyar.” Calls went out for Danwyar.
Darke searched his men. He needed a shore party, a small one. Anxious, Taran stood with his hand over the hilt of the double-edged iron he had taken off a Pelegasian breached at high sea. Taran was Darke's brother, though younger by twenty-two years, something of a mistake of birth on his mother's behalf. Taran was only ten and nine. He'd be a fine warrior someday, but that day would never be reached in the light of this sun. The sun of Darke, the star of this earth, now numbered its days carefully, and though he never spoke of it to his men, Darke knew the numbers. Taran would die too soon, ever to become the slayer for whom he had been named, his great-uncle, the lord of Anguar, Taran the Red.