Beyond the Edge of Dawn (31 page)

Read Beyond the Edge of Dawn Online

Authors: Christian Warren Freed

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Epic, #Teen & Young Adult

FIFTY-FOUR

Corso Attacks

Mabane screamed at the top of his lungs. Old nightmares rushed back, driving the fractured man to the edge of sanity. The careful walls he’d erected around his subconscious were shredded in an instant by the braying werebeasts. Mabane cried. His life had finally come to its conclusion. Lord Death stalked the land this night.

The gods, it seemed, had turned their backs on the people of Malweir, condemning all to murderous villainy. Werebeasts poured from the bowels of the ruins. Scores of sleeping hunters died in the first few moments as Corso unleashed his weapons. Inspired by evil, the priest of the dark gods laughed into the winds. Aradain was about to crumble.

“We’re all going to die!” Mabane wailed.

Men and women rushed by. All were armed, yet none knew what they were facing. Kavan glared down at the prostrate man, detesting Mabane’s inherent weakness. Friend or not, Kavan recognized him for what he was. A coward. He prayed his own fate would not be so harsh.

“On your feet or die where you lay!” Kavan roared.

“By Hell, Kavan, what’s all this about?” Dag bellowed from a few meters away. Blood stained his tunic, thick rivers dripping from his sword.

Kavan snarled. “Hell, indeed. Corso has unleashed his monsters. We’ll not like the night like this.”

“Let’s give the bastards a war. Kill enough, and the rest will break and run.”

Kavan had always admired Dag’s singular mind. Only right now, he believed the man was addled. “There’s no way. He’ll have hundreds of them, and we’re just a handful.”

Aphere’s crossbow thrummed.

“We’ve an army, lad!” Dag argued.

Kavan reluctantly conceded. “Organize the defense. Hopefully, we last the night.”

“That’s the spirit, lad!” Dag bellowed a deep laugh and turned to his men. “Start gathering as many survivors and weapons as you can. We can win this.”

Whether it was truth or not, Kavan approved. Guttural roars temporarily drowned out the screaming. The iron rich smell of blood tainted the night air. What had been an orderly camp devolved into a charnel house. Limbs and organs littered the ground. An occasional werebeast corpse lay among the dead. The battle, what remained of it, was one suited for the Gaimosians: mean and dirty.

Kavan spotted a handful of beasts loping over the edge of Corso’s stage and got an idea. “Dag! Send as many people as you can up to the stone platform. Give us the high ground, and we might hold them back.”

“Aye!”

Dag raised his sword high, creating a rallying point for men. Tym and his Fist counterpart were among the first to arrive. They were eager for the chance to clear the Fist name. Dag let loose an old battle cry and charged. Close to forty hunters followed in his wake. They cut a fearsome path through the carnage. Men and monsters fell under the fury of steel and ripping claws and teeth. A scaled beast landed in front of Dag, knocking them both down. Dag clenched his sword and rolled into a battle stance.

“Go!” he cried to Tym. “Get up to that stone. This beastie is mine.”

The werebeast bellowed. Strips of flesh hung from between jagged teeth. Coal black eyes glared sharply at the man before him. Jealous rage seethed from its very being. It saw Dag and remembered what it had been just that morning before the dark gods had perverted it. Dag and the beast charged simultaneously, meeting in a crash of flesh.

Dag reeled back as claws raked through his leather plate armor, tearing flesh from his chest. He grunt in pain. His sword slashed wildly in hopes of fending the beast off before it struck again. Dag could have sworn he heard the werebeast laugh. The beast attacked again. A lifetime of battle came alive, and Dag moved. He dropped to a knee and cut up. The impact jarred him to the bone. Ropes of dark blood dropped around him. He quickly spun from the knee, lashing out to take the beast at the calf.

Grimacing in pain, Dag realized his wounds were deeper than he’d thought. “Come on, you ugly mother….”

Missing a hand and a foot, the werebeast crawled towards him. Coiling to leap, the werebeast became frantic. Dag sidestepped and slashed ferociously as the beast dove at him. His sword ripped downward and severed the beast’s head in one clean stroke.

“Are you done playing?”

Dag looked up as Kavan jerked his sword from the dead heart of another beast.

“You and I can have a go when this is finished, lad,” Dag roared through his pain.

He limped to his friend. The whirlwind around them had temporarily subsided.

“Bastards fight hard,” he grunted.

Kavan nodded. A stiff breeze whipped his sweat-soaked hair around his head and shoulders. He knew all too well how hard they fought. His dark eyes caught trickles of blood running down Dag’s chest.

“You’re injured.”

Dag snorted. “Just a scratch. I’ve lived through worse.”

Aphere darted past. Her legs from the thigh down were drenched in blood. “Are you two going to stand around gabbing like old maids, or are we going to get back in the fight?”

Dag grinned, concealing his wince. “I really like her.”

“Come on,” Kavan said.

The trio headed towards the rendezvous point.

 

 

 

“One hundred and sixty,” Lars reported.

Kavan grimaced. The numbers weren’t good. He estimated there had been close to a thousand hunters and their retinues in camp. Now, they’d been reduced to a paltry two hundred. Hundreds of the werebeasts lay strewn amongst the corpses. Kavan didn’t doubt that Corso had many more.

Dag asked, “Can we hold out?”

The sun was breaking. Kavan had never been so glad to see the sun. The atmosphere among the survivors rose sharply as the first rays of light kissed away the darkness and drove the enemy back into their lairs.

“We still have two more days before the eclipse,” Aphere answered.

“Not good odds,” Kavan said.

He stared over Dag’s shoulder to Mabane. Against everything, the one-armed drunk had managed to survive the initial assault. Kavan felt the stirrings of hope. Gods were fickle that way.

“I’ve never known you to back down from a fight,” Dag said wryly.

Kavan flashed a smile. “Set half the men to sleep. Keep a quarter on watch and have the rest gather weapons, food, and water.”

“Now we’re talking, lad.”

Kavan faced Aphere. “Take a detail and clear the dead away from the base of the platform. We’ll set watch fires every twenty-five meters to give us a clear field of fire when they return.”

“That still leaves us with the problem of getting into the ruins,” she said.

He agreed. Before Corso had played his hand, they’d had a chance at sneaking in unnoticed. “It certainly makes our task more difficult. Mabane is the key. As long as he lives, we have a way down to the nexus.”

“A small chance,” Tym said.

Kavan eyed the youth, reminded of his own days wandering the world aimlessly in search of fame and glory.

“Dag, I’m going to need you to take command of this rabble.”

Dag’s eyes narrowed. “Just where do you think you’re going?”

“We’re here for specific purpose,” Kavan told him. “We need to get underground.”

Aphere perked up. “You have a plan?”

“Tomorrow, we sneak into the cavern and kill Corso.”

It sounded simple in his mind. Break into a fortress, for all intents, and slay a being in possession of dark powers far beyond their understanding. Throw in a few hundred bloodthirsty monsters, and there was virtually no way for Kavan to win. Dag’s blank stare confirmed that. Not even the aged veteran believed what he’d just heard.

“You’ve cooked up some wild schemes in your time, but this is crazy,” Dag finally managed.

“I’m not left with much choice.”

“You’ll die down there.”

“Down there or up here, it doesn’t matter. We have to try or the whole world will suffer,” Kavan said.

“So be it. We’ll hold these bastards off long enough for you to do what you need doing. When are you going to make a run for it?”

The knights exchanged a dubious look. Neither wanted to answer the question. They’d risked their lives for a hundred causes, none their own. Now this. The risk of failure was overpowering. Kill Corso and close the nexus. It all sounded so simple.

Aphere finally answered. “If we go during the day, the caverns will be filled with werebeasts.”

“Forcing us to fight through them to reach the nexus,” Kavan finished. “There is no clear favorable choice. We must time it so that we enter the moment the werebeasts emerge. Pre-position by the cavern mouth and wait until dusk.”

“Leaving the rest of us to slaughter,” Dag murmured thoughtfully. “Sounds like your best option, lad. How many you taking in?”

“Myself, Aphere, the two Fist, and Mabane.”

“Is that enough?”

Kavan could only guess. “We’ll find out soon enough. Dag, listen to me. If we don’t make it back, take as many survivors as you can and flee this kingdom.”

“If what you say is true, there’s no point in running. I’d rather die here then hiding in a hole. Damned, but this is a tight spot,” he snarled.

Pride wouldn’t allow him to retreat. Kavan couldn’t think of anyone better to watch his back.

“Think you can keep them busy enough?” he asked with a grin.

“We’ll soon find out. Those beasties fight hard but die good. It’ll be a fight to remember.”

“A good fight,” Tym echoed.

The youth had a pall of defeat over him. The Fist seldom stayed to fight in such dire circumstances. That they’d chosen to remain spoke volumes of their tenacity. Kavan hoped Tym had enough left in him to survive the night. There’d be need of men like him in the future world.

“It’s settled.” Dag rose slowly. Pain racked his chest. His wounds threatened to put him down. Sheer bravado kept him going. Dag didn’t think he was going to live past this battle anyway. “You get some sleep. Lars and I will see to this.”

Kavan watched his friend limp away. He tried his best to hide the pain, but Kavan saw through the charade. Dag was hurting. They knew each other well enough to avoid the subject, but it hurt Kavan to see one of his closest friends so. The knight left his friend to go about readying for battle.

 

 

 

Dag ran a hand through his hair. He was tired, filthy. Blood stained his clothes. He was in a fight, no doubt about that. The burly veteran surveyed his chosen battlefield dispassionately. Most of the bodies had been cleared away from the platform. Lars and a few others had even gone so far as to begin burning them before disease set in. Water and rations lay piled in the center of the perimeter. Dag figured it was more than enough, especially considering the casualties he expected tonight.

Half of the men and women left were archers, but with only a few hundred shafts between them.
Not much at all. I reckon enough to hold off the first charge. After that, it don’t matter none
. Great flocks of vultures were forming in the distance, hungrily awaiting the end.

“Not yet, you bastards,” he whispered.

He caught Lars watching him and shook his head. “What is it, lad?”

“We’re about as ready as can be,” Lars said.

“But?”

Dag was no fool. He read doubt on the boy’s face.

“Are you sure we’re doing the right thing?”

“You’re a good man, Lars,” Dag told him. His stern gaze softened. “I hope one day you’ll lead men of your own. This is a task far greater than me. I believe Kavan when he tells me this. Even if I wanted to leave, I think this fight would eventually catch up. Right or wrong, the gods have already decided for us.”

Greater than ourselves
. Lars felt deepening pride. “The men will do their part.”

Dag placed a fatherly hand on his shoulder. “You’ve the makings of a fine leader. How about you me go try to inspire the troops? We can all use a little encouragement.”

 

 

 

Kill Pirneon. Raw emotions awoke in Kavan. A friend and mentor no longer, he was forced to view the Knight Marshal as the enemy. Doubts surfaced. He didn’t know if he was capable of killing a friend. Kavan was good in a fight, but only because of Pirneon’s teachings. His former mentor was a harsh man, not easily bested in combat.

The notion of fighting Pirneon twisted his stomach. He’d barely slept since he and Aphere had argued. Kavan looked around. Mabane snored softly. He envied the man. To have gone through so much and still live suggested much to the Gaimosian. He had no doubts Mabane was a vital player in this game, but to what end?

Both Fist were asleep as well. So, too, was Aphere. Only he found no rest from the demons lurking in the corners of his mind. Why? He’d been in comparable situations before. What made today so different? Kavan lay his head down on his pack and closed his eyes. Pirneon and monsters eased their way into shadows, wisps of imagination. Kavan soon found the beaming face of Phirial.

He smiled. There was a fact he’d been able to come to terms with. Love was still alien, never sticking around long enough to be ensnared. It was different with Phirial. She gave him balance, a reminder of what it meant to be Human. Kavan unexpectedly turned his thoughts to putting down his sword. Phirial’s flowing red locks were the last thing he thought of when restless sleep finally came.

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