The Destroyer Book 4

Read The Destroyer Book 4 Online

Authors: Michael-Scott Earle

Tags: #General Fiction

Table of Contents

Title Page

Chapter 1-The O’Baarni

Chapter 2-Kaiyer

Chapter 3 -Iolarathe

Chapter 4-The O’Baarni

Chapter 5-Kaiyer

Chapter 6-Iolarathe

Chapter 7-The O’Baarni

Chapter 8-Kaiyer

Chapter 9-Iolarathe

Chapter 10-The O’Baarni

Chapter 11-Kaiyer

Chapter 12-Iolarathe

Chapter 13-The O’Baarni

Chapter 14-Kaiyer

Chapter 15-Iolarathe

Chapter 16-The O’Baarni

Chapter 17-Kaiyer

Chapter 18-Iolarathe

Chapter 19-The O’Baarni

Chapter 20-Kaiyer

Chapter 21-Iolarathe

Chapter 22-The O’Baarni

Chapter 23-Kaiyer

Chapter 24-Iolarathe

Chapter 25-The O’Baarni

Chapter 26-Kaiyer

Chapter 27-Iolarathe

Chapter 28-The O’Baarni

Chapter 29-Kaiyer

Chapter 30-Iolarathe

Chapter 31-The O’Baarni

Chapter 32-Kaiyer

Chapter 33-Iolarathe

Chapter 34-The O’Baarni

Chapter 35-Kaiyer

Chapter 36-Iolarathe

Chapter 37-The O’Baarni

Chapter 38-Kaiyer

Chapter 39-Iolarathe

Chapter 40-The O’Baarni

Chapter 41-Kaiyer

Chapter 42-Iolarathe

Chapter 43-The O’Baarni

Chapter 44-Kaiyer

Chapter 45-Iolarathe

Chapter 46-Kaiyer

Epilogue

End Notes

 

By Michael-Scott Earle

Chapter 1-The O’Baarni

 

“Just tell me why.” Malek’s voice echoed in my head. He had been repeating the question for hours.

Was it hours or days?

Was it days or weeks?

It may have been months.

I opened my eyes a crack and confirmed that yes, he did stand outside my cell bars and his voice wasn’t an agony induced hallucination. A cup full of light dripped through a hole in the doorway behind him, highlighting the pain and anger in his eyes. The absolute agony.

“You know why.”

“No,” he replied.

“Just execute me and end this.”

I tried and failed to negotiate Iolarathe’s release. I tried to escape. I was now in special chains crafted with spikes that drove through the flesh of my arms and into the bone beneath the muscle. The chains were attached to a ring of steel and then looped back to a chain wrapped around my neck like a noose. Any movement threatened to render me unconscious, even shitting on the tiny bucket Malek left me.

Then again, I really didn’t need to shit, or piss. They had stopped bringing me food after I stopped eating.

“Did she mean so little to you? Did we mean so little to you?”

I closed my eyes. I could not tolerate the ridiculousness of his question. They meant everything to me. But I could never explain it to him. I could never explain Iolarathe. I closed my eyes and imagined I was back in the inn with her, planning to steal the Ovule from Malek.

I should have convinced her to leave Shlara’s Rest. We could have found another Ovule. She was so committed to saving our daughter. Nothing else mattered to her. Not her own life, nor mine.

I thought back to our written communication in our room. I longed to hear her voice, but I feared we would be overheard, so we remained silent, scratching out our desperate plans on paper passed back and forth.

“How did you know we would be in your house?” The timbre of my voice disappointed me. I sounded weak and defeated.

I was defeated.

I did not know where she was. The moment we set our feet in Malek’s courtyard, scores of Thayer and Malek’s elite warriors attacked. At first I was thankful we had not been killed. Now I longed for death.

I opened my eyes. Malek was gone. The light had changed. I must have passed out from the pain. I closed my eyes again and thought of my daughter.

She is wonderful beyond anything our people have ever created.

I wanted her to tell me more, but she shook her head sadly and wrote: “Every second we waste makes it less likely you will ever meet. She is the best of you and me.”

She pointed to the rough map of Malek’s estate and asked me about the guards I had observed when I scouted the perimeter.

I wished I could have known my daughter’s name before Iolarathe and I died.

I was foolish to think Malek would ever give up his search. He was too smart and too driven to just let me wander the world unobserved. He had been waiting and watching until we walked right into his trap.

“Wake the fuck up!” A booted toe slammed into my chest with enough force to break stone. My ribs weren’t quite rock hard, so a few of them broke and instantly knitted together. I’d been so used to the Earth running through my body that I couldn’t even turn off my healing if I wanted.

Hands grabbed me and the chain around my neck slid through the loop on the wall. I opened my eyes.

There were six of them. Thayer’s. The first time they put me in the cell they had only sent three. I killed two of them before a dozen warriors came to their aid and sedated me with a sea of pummeling fists. Now I was restrained with the spiked manacles, and the guards carried long metal poles tipped with sharp hooks, so they could control me from a safe distance.

“Where are we going?” My words tasted like blood.

“Shut the fuck up!” A pole hit me in the head. Then another. I felt the coldness of the stone floor and heard the wet slapping sounds of more pole strikes against my body. I didn’t feel them.

“Get him up,” a voice commanded and the arms grabbed me again.

A cloth sack slid over my head and the beating squad half-dragged me out of my cell and into the hallway beyond my prison. I considered resisting again, but the collar and shackles were still embedded in my skin and bones. There was little I could do against this many guards unarmed.

The trip was short. They lifted me up and slammed me down into a chair. My nose was filled with dried blood but I could still detect weapon oil, leather, and chain armor. The guards secured me to the chair with more chains. I could hear the sounds of many more heartbeats.

I knew their scents before they removed the hood from my head.

“Hello, old friends.” I mustered a smile and realized that a couple of my back teeth were missing. The new ones pushed through my gums already.

“Fuck you!” Gorbanni’s voice cracked. His face was red and his blue eyes looked ready to tear.

I did not know how much time had passed since the last battle, but they had not changed. They had abandoned their armor in favor of looser garments, still in the colors of their armies.

“You may leave,” Malek said to the guards behind me. I watched them exit the thick iron door forty feet away. The metal portal clanged shut and a thick bar slid in to lock it.

“Do you have anything to say to us?” Alexia whispered. Her eyes were blue like Gorbanni’s, but a few shades lighter. She had grown out her blonde hair and now wore it braided down the left side of her neck. They sat behind a massive stone and oak table that looked well worn. Perhaps I wasn’t the first of our kind to face trial in this room.

“As I told Malek, I made a mistake.” I met her stare and she quickly glanced away.

“One hell of a mistake!” Thayer spat.

The chains and metal poles tied me to the steel frame of the chair; it in turn was secured to the rock floor with massive studs of iron. I closed my eyes and leaned my head back slightly. It didn’t matter. Even if I could escape my bonds, there would be no way I could fight through the four of them, break out of the door, and make it to Iolarathe.

“Is it too late to beg forgiveness?” I opened my eyes and knew the answer before any of them spoke.

“Why did you run?” Malek couldn’t hide his frustration, his jaw clenched and his back sat rigid in his own chair.

“You know why.”

“I want you to fucking tell me!” He slammed his fist into the wood of the table and it creaked under the sudden load. His eyes shone with tears and his nostrils flared.

“I made my choice.” I just wanted this to end. My punishment had been too long in coming.

“You chose some Elven woman over her. Over us? Over your own fucking people? We believed in you. We loved you and thought you loved us.” Malek’s voice cracked and it sounded like he wanted to say more but he stopped. I didn’t dare open my eyes. I clenched them tighter and gave another futile wish that this could just be over.

“How did you deceive us, for all that time?” Alexia’s voice was less than a whisper now.

“There were no tricks. He knew the Elven. What was she to you?” Malek questioned.

“If I told you, it would make even less sense.” I sighed and struggled to force my tears back into their ducts.

“She was the daughter of the chieftain in the tribe we belonged to,” Thayer said. “She was known to be ruthless and evil, even among her kind. I never interacted with her. I saw her a few times watching from the hillside while Kaiyer and I trained. I did not even realize she was at the last battle. I did not figure out who she was until we captured her. But I still do not understand.” He grunted and I heard his chair creak.

“Perhaps it doesn’t matter anymore, but I would still like to know why. For her.” Gorbanni’s voice had calmed, but the anger had not left it.

“Can we negotiate?” I had successfully kept the tears at bay and I opened my eyes.

“Fuck no!” Thayer seethed. “But you owe us answers.”

“No.” I felt myself growing angry. “I owe the four of you nothing I haven’t already given. I owe Shlara answers and an apology.” They looked stunned but I didn’t give them a chance to reply. “I swore we would destroy the Elven race. They are all but wiped out now. Our people are free. I trained you, taught you, guided you, loved you, and led you to the victory I promised. You have created a civilization from their ashes. I am proud of what we accomplished, but I want no part of it. I just want the Elven woman, and to be left alone.”

“What kind of madness possesses you?” Malek’s eyes squinted. “These aren’t the words of Kaiyer. They are the words of a man who thinks nothing of his people.”

“I spent most of my life thinking of my people. What more can I do? What more do you want from me? My work is done.”

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