• Ready to join Post Terminus?

    Click to get started and submit your first character.

    Getting Started

Firmament - The Sentinel (Working Title), Very Rough WIP

swaswj

Administrator
Staff member
Latens
5,643✦
Exa
⏆32,210
Bounty
⏈0
Dahlitium (⏆50 per)
-100⌯
Bigatium (⏆100 per)
-50⍨
Auritium (⏆300 per)
-5⍫
Vitatium (⏆1200 per)
-15⌭
Caelitium (⏆6000 per)
0⌬
This is an excerpt from a novel I've been working on, still in a very rough state. I normally wouldn't consider this ready to share, but I set a goal of posting at least 1000 words per week, and I don't know if I'll be able to push past my current slump before tonight. It's completely unrelated to PT, but hopefully there will be something in this to enjoy. Feel free to comment, would love to know first impressions, but expect a lot to change before I consider this complete.

Firmament





Before the SEVEN, all was Sand.

NYMPHE Became, and brought Water.

ATLASSE Became, and brought Earth.

Rain fell upon the Sands to fill great lakes and vast oceans. Soil and stone fell upon the Sands, raising land and towering mountains. Sand remained to mark the boundaries between.

AURA Became, bringing Air, Cold, and Dark.

CALDOR Became, bringing Fire, Heat, and Light.

They shared the Heavens, thus creating Night and Day. Ever separate, they began an eternal dance with one another.

CORPUS Became, bringing Flesh and Life.

CINIS Became, bringing Ash and Death.

The gift of Life was empty, without purpose. The gift of Death was empty, without substance. And so They combined the two gifts and together created Mortality, and from it came all that lives.

QUOD Became, or perhaps always Was, and brought the Unknown, Dreams and Mystery, Deceit and Wonder,

And Time's Beginning.


The Sentinel​


Chapter 01: Pride of the Armar​

Part 1​

Wordcount, 2633

Emerald waves crashed upon the white sands, the ever-shifting boundary between land and sea. Just past the sands lay the city of Tulorildril, one of the fine jewels of the small island nation of Maginholm. A tall white tower stood at its center, with a broad parapet at its peak. The rest of the city spread outward from there in several broad terraces. The largest and most ornate structures, including temples to the Seven, stood near the center, at the highest tiers of Tulorildril. With each step downward, the city bustle increased, all the way to the thriving sea port.

People of all races and from all walks of life called the city home. Maginholm was home to some of the most studied scholars in all of Firmament, and Tulorildril was the main trade hub of the small island nation. As the de facto gateway between Maginholm and the rest of the world, travelers passed through the city all the time, leaving with or arriving on the many ships that ran through all seasons.

Edhron Galineth was once such a traveler. He came to Maginholm because he wanted to raise a family away from the ever-present conflict of his homeland. He smiled down at his daughter, giving her hand a gentle squeeze. Saray, recently turned seven, had been born on the island.

Town guards patrolled the roads in pairs, each wearing a chain hauberk and a tabard of cerulean edged in white. They carried black metal staves capped in bronze orbs. Like any city, Tulorildril had its seedy elements, but on the main thoroughfares, citizens and travelers alike, as well as their children, could feel safe.

Saray eagerly followed alongside her father. They moved further down in the city, with the shining tower serving as a landmark that would always show the way home. The crisp morning air carried with it the faint smell of the sea. Roads were laid with stone tiles in bright patterns of red, orange, and blue, alabaster pillars lined up on both sides. Edhron led the way down the winding roads until they reached the market proper. A wide grin broke out on Saray's face as she saw all the people, from the very old to some even younger than her. Her father walked past stalls selling delicious-looking fruit and brightly-colored toys. Saray's eyes lit up as they passed a shop with beautiful dresses in the window, but Edhron stopped two doors down.

While her father started talking with a store-keep about having supplies delivered to the temple, Saray looked back toward the dress shop. It wasn't far at all and she just wanted to take a closer look. She slipped off toward the shop and stood in front of the window. They were made for adults, but she tried to picture herself wearing the bright and colorful dresses. Saray danced a little in front of a light blue dress, imagining wearing it to a fancy ball. Smiling brightly, she turned to run back to her father, letting out a surprised squeak as she bumped into someone. "I'm sorry!" she chirped, and the man just smiled and waved it off.

Saray looked over to the shop where Edhron had been, but she didn't see him. Alarmed, she looked around, trying to spot his bright white tunic or red sash. Another shopper ran into her, tossing a quick apology before moving on their way. Saray quickly rushed over to the building where she saw her father, but the store-keep wasn't there, either. She stuck her head in the doorway, looking hopefully. "Father?" she called out, but received no answer.

As she turned away, she ran into someone again, an old man who snapped something mean at her. Saray shrank back, only to find herself in the way of someone else asking her to move. The throngs of people rushing to and fro began to feel stifling and a looming sense of danger began to prickle her skin. "Father?" she called out again, worried nobody could hear her over all the people talking. She weaved through the crowd, trying to fight back her panic as she looked around desperately for her father. When she turned around, thinking about going back to the shop again, she couldn't even tell where it was.

The young girl's red and white dress stood out from the crowd. It was attire more befitting a temple worshiper. Saray's skin had a golden complexion and her hair was dark, nearly black. She gasped sharply as she felt a hand on her shoulder, and she looked up at a man in dock worker's clothes, his skin tinged red from the sun. He smiled down at her, but rather than being reassured, she felt a cold shiver run down her spine.

"Lost, little one?" the man asked. Instead of answering, Saray clutched her hands tighter to her chest, holding tightly to a silver pendant of the sun. The man laughed. "From the high-roads, are you? Bet your da must be worried sick." She tried to back away, but the man tightened his grip on her shoulder. Despite the rush of people on every side, no one else seemed to notice anything going on. Why didn't anyone say anything?

A second man came to join the first, dressed similarly but while the first man had dark hair, this one was blond. The two obviously knew one another by the look they shared. The blond man reached down and roughly grabbed Saray's hand, pulling it away from her chest. "What have you got there?"

Swallowing the lump in her throat, Saray finally screamed, as loud as she could. The first man quickly slapped a hand over her mouth. "Shush it, don't try causing a scene!"

"What's going on over here?" came a shout, immediately.

"Mind your own woes!" the first man shouted back, but then the crowds parted, and he let out a curse under his breath. A man and a woman, each in hauberk and tabard. Not just guards, though: the tabards were one half cerulean edged in white, the other half white edged in cerulean. Rather than staves, they wore swords at their belts.

They were sentinels, the Armar.

The dark-haired man immediately released Saray and lifted his hands in the air, but too late. The woman of the sentinel pair rushed forward, and in seconds, the creep was down on his knees, face pressed harshly against the wall. Saray could only stare, amazed that it was over so quickly -- and that her rescuer was a woman!

The blond man slipped back into the crowd, shoving others out of the way. The second sentinel started to chase after him, but paused. Instead, he crouched down next to Saray, putting himself more on level with the girl. "Are you okay? You're not hurt, are you?" He offered the girl a comforting smile and she saw that his short-cropped hair and eyes were both the same shade of light brown. Gilder, like her, with a warm golden hue to his skin.

"Yes… yes, sir. Thank you!" Then Saray cried out in dismay when she realized, "He took my necklace!"

The sentinel stood back up. He was slightly taller than most, tall enough that he could stretch and see above most of the crowd. His shoulders were broad, though he was soft around the middle. His partner was binding the first man's arms behind his back, while he protested that he hadn't done anything; she looked back over her shoulder and warned, "Kade, don't…."

The man, Kade, ignored the warning and flashed Saray a smile. "Wait here. I'll get it back," he promised. Then he was running, yelling for the onlookers and shoppers to get out of the way. The thief already had a good head-start, but he had no choice but to fight his way through the crowd. When people saw the tabard, though, they moved out of Kade's way.

Looking over his shoulder and seeing Kade in pursuit, the thief grabbed a nearby crate and dumped it over into the street, spilling fruit over the tiles. That proved to be a mistake: startled pedestrians jumped back out of the way, and that cleared a wider path for the sentinel to vault over the crate. His boots hit the ground and he was running again, not missing a stride. The blond man fought his way through the crowd, shoving two more citizens to the ground, but even he realized there was no way he was going to escape like that.

Up ahead was a small arched bridge over a waterway. Spotting his chance, Kade pushed himself harder, trying to close the distance. As the runaway hit the upward slope of the bridge, it broke his stride. Not a lot, but just enough. "Got you!" Kade snatched at the man's shoulder. Still desperate, the thief turned and twisted, grabbing the railing of the bridge. He vaulted over it, into the rushing waters of the canal.

The shirt ripped, but not before the man's weight yanked Kade forward and his head banged roughly into the side of the bridge.

Kade bit back a curse as he got back to his feet, wobbling. He hadn't expected such a desperate move: the canal sloped steeply downward on that side. Kade looked over the edge, then left to right, finally spotting the thief down at the next block, dragging himself out next to the bridge there. He had lost his shoes in the water, and his torn shirt was barely hanging off one shoulder. It would be foolhardy for Kade to jump into the water with leather boots and be weighed down by his mail hauberk. More than that, his chest was burning as he gasped for air. Even from this distance, he could see the blond man's smile, sure that he had gotten away.

Finding a side-road would take too long, giving the thief too many possible escape routes. Instead, Kade focused his thoughts, driving out his racing uncertainties, and spoke the words, "Vuistio Ge!" The words carried power with them, the language of the divines seeping into the mortal world. For the briefest of moments, Kade felt a shudder, as if the world around him rippled. In the space of a second, he found himself no longer on the bridge, but down on the next thoroughfare.

Such power never came freely, he reminded himself as he felt the burn of mana seeping into his body.

There was no way the thief could have expected the move. "How?" he cried out, all of his shock and confusion contained in one word. If nothing else, though, he was persistent. He turned and started running again while Kade labored to keep up. This roadway was not as crowded as the other, and the thief was a smaller, lighter man. Kade's chest was burning, heart pounding.

At this point, though, giving up wasn't an option. He had made a promise to the little girl, and although not explicitly, he now had a second promise to uphold. The blond-haired man was getting further and further ahead, though. Unless something blocked him, he was going to get away. If Kade was already in this deep….

"Vuistio... Ge!" Kade called out again. As before, reality seemed to shudder, and then Kade blinked ahead. Fighting to reorient himself, the sentinel spun around, holding his arms wide. The thief cried out as he ran right into Kade, nearly tackling the bigger man to the ground. Quickly, Kade grabbed the man by his belt and his shoulder before he could slip away. The newest influx of mana had his nerves on fire.

"Get away, bastard!" The thief grabbed a knife at his belt and slammed it in just under Kade's ribs. With a ringing chime, the blade snapped against the chainmail, but Kade groaned from the heavy blow, his grip weakening. Without missing a beat, the blond man scrambled free and began running back the other way.

Instinctively clutching at his injury, even with chainmail in the way, Kade locked his gaze on the fleeing thief. "Spifui U Reim!" This time the rush of mana he had invited was intense, a searing pain bubbling inside. The air wavered near the fleeing man before throwing him violently to the side. His body slammed into the nearest wall. Two small boxes and the side of a fruit cart were caught in the unseen force, splintering under its power.

It wasn't likely he'd shake that one off.

Kade walked forward, gasping and wheezing, one hand under his ribs. His vision was wavering and his entire body was tingling, starting to go numb. He held one hand up in front of his eyes, turning it left and right to be sure it was really there.

By the time Kade returned to his partner, with the blond man in tow, Edhron had been found, as well as a pair of guards. The guardsmen took the thief off his hands and then he walked over to Saray. She was clinging tightly to her father's hand.

"Thank you both so much! I don't know what I would have done if anything happened." The girl's father was dressed in white with red accents, typical garb for one of the temples in the upper terraces. "One minute she was there, and then the next, she was gone!"

"You overdid it again," Arttoa observed, looking over her partner. She wasn't wrong, either. Invoking that much magic to catch a petty thief was unthinkable, and those weren't the first spells he had cast that day.

Kade managed a warm smile, even though he could barely feel his face, and crouched down. He held his hand out to Saray, her silver necklace in his open palm. "I believe this is yours." Her eyes lit up and she shyly reached out to take the necklace, grinning.

Promise fulfilled, most of the pain mercifully faded away, but Kade was left with a numb, weightless feeling. He could hear the girl saying thank you, could even hear the first criminal insisting that he never intended any harm, but it all felt like it was happening somewhere else.

Someone's hands were on his shoulders… Arttoa's hands. She was guiding Kade over to the nearest wall, and as soon as he touched it, he slid down to the ground, pulling his sheathed sword from his belt to rest it in his lap.

"Guns diu liud cro su pent," Kade chanted, closing his eyes and focusing only on the words, letting them drown out the world around him. "Dae gri cir. Dae fa gri fu."

Saray stared worriedly, still holding tightly to her father with one hand and clutching her necklace in the other. She looked at Arttoa and asked, "Is he okay? What's wrong with him?"

Arttoa frowned down at Kade and then shrugged. Her dark gray skin marked her as char, and she didn't care much for relying on things she couldn't see. "He'll be fine," she promised the girl. "He's just a little reckless, is all."

"Spa diu stens."

"But what is he saying?" Saray started to repeat some of it, but her father quickly put a finger to her lips.

Older and wiser, Edhron explained, "Magic is the domain of the gods. Though it was for a just cause, he needs must atone for begging their power." He smiled and looked to Arttoa. "I had no idea there were any speakers among the Armar. The sentinels' reputation is well-earned, Arma Nuvaes. You can be sure that I'll be sending my gratitude to your order."

Arttoa didn't respond. It would be rude to disparage the offer, but she didn't know how to say thank you. Instead, she just smiled and bowed her head.

"Guns diu liud cro su pent."
 
It is interesting and tough to set the opening tone for a fantasy world. The opening scripture aside, you didn't put in too many strange things so it was a nice landing into the world. The magical chanting was mysterious, but it was meant to be. The island setting and the city seems like a fun place to start. Just as a curiosity on my part, I wonder if the island is more tropical or temperate?

Also, it would be cool if at some point in the story, someone recited the opening part.

Not sure how much comments or feedback you're looking for right now. Just leaving this here anyway. The thing that threw me about this opening was that it seemed like the world was being introduced through either Eldhron or Saray, but then the guard took over as more of the focus character.
 
It is interesting and tough to set the opening tone for a fantasy world. The opening scripture aside, you didn't put in too many strange things so it was a nice landing into the world. The magical chanting was mysterious, but it was meant to be. The island setting and the city seems like a fun place to start. Just as a curiosity on my part, I wonder if the island is more tropical or temperate?

Also, it would be cool if at some point in the story, someone recited the opening part.

Not sure how much comments or feedback you're looking for right now. Just leaving this here anyway. The thing that threw me about this opening was that it seemed like the world was being introduced through either Eldhron or Saray, but then the guard took over as more of the focus character.
I definitely need to spend a little more effort introducing the island. At this point I'm still just sort of slapping ideas together to see what sticks. Ironically, I think I've spent the most time developing my concept of a magical system and the past several centuries of history that formed the current political climate in the world which... well, the magic system is at least partly on display, but the tensions between countries are barely mentioned.

Do like the idea of having characters introduce the Seven organically, but couldn't find a good spot for it here. It's possible it's not even that important to bring it in that early, though.

Appreciate any comments, and sorry for not seeing these earlier. I kind of expected no one would read it and wasn't keeping an eye open!

Feel like this is even rougher, but here's the next little bit. Did want to focus a little more on Kade. Thinking it may be better to reorganize events to give a more direct introduction to him before the scene in the market.




Part 2​

Wordcount, 2408

"Armar, to attention!" The call was answered with two dozen grunts of acknowledgment. Alabaster pillars surrounded the training yard, warm afternoon sunlight raining down on the white sand. As one, the men, and two women, slipped into position, forming two rows on either side of the sands. Each was adorned in the uniform of the Dignitate Armar: black boots, white leggings, a chainmail hauberk, and tabard divided into white and cerulean.

The sentinels were widely respected across the island nation of Maginholm. Anyone could become a town guard, but to become a sentinel took dedication and hard work. With that recognition came a greater degree of responsibility. The speaker, Edoras Sivyr, walked up and down the lines, scrutinizing each of the men and women. "Tomorrow, we are expecting a dignitary ship from Beladhell. You've been selected to supervise the vessel and its occupants. We are only expecting them in port for two days, but while they are here, you will be expected to represent the strength and professionalism of Maginholm and the Armar."

Edoras paused, a faint frown curling beneath his mustache. The sun and time had etched more than a few wrinkles into the man's silvery skin, but despite the gray at his temples, he still struck an intimidating figure. As their captain, he wore the rank of Telum. The sentinels closest to where he stopped stood up even straighter. "Mm, your job will be twofold," he said, continuing the instructions but remaining where he stood. "You will, of course, be ensuring the safety and security of the citizens. However, you may also be called upon to protect the visitors from our citizens." There were some knowing nods of understanding, and the captain's voice grew more somber. "There are still quite a few who are dissatisfied with Maginholm's neutral position and they may be moved to strike out. We must prevent, or quickly resolve, any such outbursts lest they turn into a larger incident. Is that understood?"

"Yes, sir!" Every shout was accompanied by the clap of fist to heart.

Edoras began dictating assignments. The twenty-four gathered sentinels would be split into three shifts of eight. Two would remain with the ship at all times, two more would patrol the rest of the port area, and the last four would accompany the envoys through the city. He finished out the assignments, calling out, "Arma Arttoa Nuvaes and Arma Kadell Halbert, you will be assigned to the docks during the afternoon and evening. Arma Neith Doran and Arma Mattias Serra, docks, late evening and early morning. Hopefully you will find this assignment uneventful, but do not let your guard down, and always uphold the pride of the Armar.

"You are dismissed."

The sentinels responded with another salute and started to file out. Before Kade could leave, however, Edoras held an arm out to bar his path. "Arma Halbert, where is your sword?" Edoras demanded of the man in front of him.

Kade stiffened up; even if he was slightly taller than the captain, the veteran was still intimidating. Although he had earned his spot as a sentinel, putting him above the ordinary town guards, he was among the newest of the order. Most of the other sentinels bore a simple arming sword, as much a part of their uniform as the tabard. Kade, however, had something more unique. He chose his words carefully. "This is a personal weapon, sir, which I believe is superior in performance to the issued sword."

"There's no room for vanity weapons, Halbert," Edoras replied immediately. "The sword you were issued is an excellent weapon, as well as a symbol of your station and the pride of the Armar. I trust you will have no problem retrieving the sword before you report to the docks." He turned away, considering the matter closed.

"It's not a vanity weapon," Kade protested firmly.

The captain turned and in a blink, he had pulled the sword from Kade's sheath, holding it up where everyone could see it. Made of a blue-hued metal, it gleamed in the sunlight. Compared to the Armar sword, the blade of Kade's sword was shorter, but broader. The more unique element of the sword, aside from its metal, was that the center of the weapon was hollowed out, a fuller that pierced all the way through the blade. The hilt had one rear-swept and one forward-swept cross-guard, thick and flat. The handle itself, half a hand shorter than the arming sword handle, was wrapped in a fine chain mesh. The pommel was faceted, flaring outward then back in.

"Ah yes," Edoras said, turning the sword in the sunlight so that it flashed and glittered. "Pure aethuril; gold would not have been enough? I can't believe you held back on encrusting it with diamonds. How many months' pay did this cost you?" Scoffing, the captain shoved the sword back into Kade's sheath. "Regardless of what you think its performance might be, the fact remains that your sword is part of your uniform. I expect you to retrieve it and wear it dutifully."

Rather than conceding, Kade muttered, "Is Doran's monster part of the uniform?" The other sentinel had the hilt of a two-handed spadone protruding over one shoulder.

Edoras of course heard the complaint. "Arma Doran was able to demonstrate his proficiency with his sword, Halbert, and he still wears his uniform sword with it."

"Then I'll do the same!" Kade insisted stubbornly. Behind Edoras, Arttoa urgently shook her head, but Kade ignored her and went all-in. "Right here, right now!" Several of the others who were still nearby groaned but the captain just narrowed his brow.

"Very well," Edoras replied, maintaining a calm demeanor despite the glower in his eyes. "Sentinels, step back! Arma Halbert, stand before me and ready yourself." The men and women stepped back off of the white sand while Kade and Edoras moved to its center. The training yard was little more than that white sand, with a few piles of large stones and standing dummies along one side.

Aethuril was an expensive metal, but it was far stronger than most others. Heavier, too, which was why the center of the blade had been hollowed out. Despite its odd shape, Kade's sword was still just as strong, or stronger, than the steel swords. What was most valuable to him, though, was that aethuril could dampen mana.

Edoras and Kade both drew their weapons. Edoras' arming sword was simple but effective, cruciform with straight, squared quillons, a grip long enough for two full hands, and a ball pommel. The blade itself was straight and tapered, with a shallow fuller. The weapon was unremarkable, but in the hands of a man who had wielded it for over fifteen years, it was frightening.

When Doran made his plea to use a greatsword, it was because he had the body of a god. The bronzed giant towered over even Kade and he felt the uniform sword was uncomfortably light. He wanted to use a weapon that better suited his size and strength. In his challenge bout, he was able to put that size and the range of his weapon to great use, preventing Edoras from getting close enough to do anything.

Kade couldn't count on the same kind of advantage and was, in fact, sacrificing some of the advantage in his height by using a shorter blade. Nor was he as skilled with a sword as Edoras. He was putting his hopes on the captain underestimating him. Certainly, everyone else was: he could already hear one of his comrades behind him putting money on his loss.

The two men faced off against one another, sizing each other up, each gripping their sword in both hands. There was no official call to begin. Edoras began with a simple lunge, prompting Kade to step back. The captain stepped in with an upward cut, then another step and a thrust. Kade was biding his time, carefully backing away. Let the captain think he was afraid to engage, then he would move in suddenly.

Edoras never looked away from Kade's eyes, while Kade kept looking everywhere, watching the captain's feet shift in the sand, watching the way he was breathing, watching the way the sword tip wavered. There! The tip of the sword went too far out to the left! Kade rushed in and slapped the side of his sword against the sword, throwing Edoras further off-balance, cutting in toward the captain's ribs. He had this!

Edoras sped up suddenly, turning his body with Kade's slash, just fast enough to avoid the edge as he stepped into Kade's reach. The cross-guard slammed up into Kade's chin at the same time as Edoras swept his ankle. Kade dropped to one knee in the sand. He felt the edge of the captain's sword against the back of his neck, just above his hauberk.

Then the scrape of steel signified Edoras sliding his sword back into its sheath. "Satisfied now?" Edoras asked, sounding strangely disappointed.

Kade was still frozen in place, staring down at the sand. How? It wasn't just reflexes: Edoras had completely read his moves. What he thought was overextending had just been a feint? He went in hoping for the captain to underestimate him, but instead he was the one doing the underestimating.

"Go retrieve your sword, Halbert. Hang that thing on a wall."

"Once more!" Kade demanded. "Please, Telum."

The irritation returned. "Why should I, Arma?"

"I wasn't giving it my all. I will this time!" He rose back to his feet, dusting sand from his knee.

With a long-suffering sigh, Edoras pulled his sword free again. "When you're ready, then."

Once again, they squared off. Arttoa was still there in the crowd, although she was shaking her head and scowling. Doran was there, as well, a big smile on his bronzed cheekbones. It was impossible to tell if he was rooting for or against Kade; the two sentinels didn't know each other that well. Just looking at him got Kade's mind whirling, though.

Doran had won not by being better than Edoras, but by taking advantage of his weapon. That was the whole point, wasn't it? To prove the weapon better suited him? The biggest advantage had nothing to do with swordplay, though.

Again, they started without a word, both jumping into motion this time. Kade dipped and ducked, slicing whenever he had the opportunity. Edoras was fully prepared, able to block or parry every attack with absolute composure. Every block of Kade's felt desperate, every parry off-balance. The melee continued, growing faster as both men began to sweat. Already, Kade could feel burning in his chest.

"Winded already?" Edoras asked, attacks unrelenting. Kade said nothing, because every breath mattered, but the silence was answer enough. "Then how do you expect to keep this up?" The captain parried Kade's sword downward and then thrust forward. Kade managed to slap the thrust aside with his weapon, but then Edoras was slashing upward, advancing step by step. Kade blocked and parried furiously, gasping for breath.

Edoras slammed Kade's sword out of the way and chopped downward. The tip of the sword squealed against Kade's chainmail hauberk, ripping through the cloth tabard over it. It was over….

Or it wasn't? Edoras was still coming, swinging his sword again. Kade managed to block that one, then the next, but took another heavy hit to the stomach. Still, the captain kept coming, while Kade's reactions kept falling further and further behind. The chime of metal on metal was non-stop, deafening. Sweat poured liberally down both men's faces, but only Kade was wheezing like a blacksmith's forge.

The captain's sword slipped into the hollow at the center of Kade's sword and with a sudden twist, sent the aethuril sword flipping through the air. Stunned, Kade grabbed the dagger at his belt, haphazardly blocking the follow-up attack before diving to the side, rolling through the sand, and heavily climbing to his feet. Edoras was on him in an instant, and the sword was nowhere close enough to retrieve.

"Ga Lui!" Kade spat out, breathless, and almost without thinking about it. The ache in his chest was joined by a seething burn down his arm, the telltale touch of mana, but he needed it only for a second, the briefest of moments: he reached out, an invisible third hand pushing through the sand and grit to take hold of the aethuril hilt, pulling it back to himself from the other side of their arena. As soon as it was in his own hand, the touch of aethuril soothed some of the pain. He let go of the rest of the magic before too much mana overwhelmed him.

Edoras said nothing, continuing to swing, every attack growing more ferocious. Kade kept the knife in his left hand, using both weapons to try to hold his ground, but the captain's sword broke through his guard a third time, then a fourth, and finally Kade fell backward into the sand. His chest heaved, desperately trying to fill his lungs as he stared down the length of the captain's sword.

"That's settled, once and for all," Edoras declared, breathing heavily and dripping with sweat, but still standing, still able to fight. Kade couldn't even muster an argument: he had absolutely nothing left, and doubted he could swing his sword again if he tried. Edoras slammed his sword into its sheath, then grabbed the aethuril sword from the sand. Gritting his teeth, Edoras slammed the blade between two heavy crates just outside the sand and began pulling, preparing to snap the blade in half.

"Don't! Please!"

At first it seemed like he wasn't going to listen, and Kade watched in dismay as the blade began to bend. Then, Edoras relented. He sighed and pulled the sword free, then tossed it back into the sand. "Go and replace your tabard -- your pay will be docked for its cost." The front of his current tabard was now hanging in tatters. "You will wear your uniform sword on your left hip at all times when performing your duties." He scowled and added, "Do that, and you may carry your own sword as a side-arm. You would have done no better regardless of the weapon."

Kade dropped to his back and groaned, trying not to pay attention to everyone talking as they left, mocking his absolute, unquestionable defeat, and the captain's uncharacteristic pity.
 
I actually do have the next part of Keydis' story halfway written, but I would rather not split that one in half. As such, you get another snippet from Firmament. I think it came out more exposition-heavy than I would have liked, definitely need to fix that up later.

Chapter 02: The Raven Comes​

Part 1
Wordcount, 1580

Kade winced as he swept the wash cloth over his ribs. They were still tender from the captain's heavy hits. None of them pierced the chainmail, but he was sure to see some bruises before long. He dipped the cloth in the basin, then began wiping around the back of his neck, getting rid of the sweat and sand there.

"That's a nasty-looking scar."

"Arttoa?" Kade blurted out, surprised. He looked over his shoulder, spotting her leaning against the doorframe. Free of her uniform, she had on a black shirt instead, with an uncomfortably low neckline. "You know, I could've been naked in here," he grumbled as he turned away, a faint flush showing on his cheeks as he grabbed a gray tunic and pulled it over his chest. It immediately stuck to his damp skin.

Unperturbed, Arttoa just noted, "Nothing I haven't seen before." When he cast a weird look her way, she laughed and held up one hand, showing the plain silver band on one finger. "Nothing I'm interested in, either. Besides, you're still a kid."

Kade huffed at that. "I'm not that young, and you're not that old." He reached up to rub his stubbled cheek.

"So you say. Come on, you need a drink." Arttoa turned and walked outside.

Grabbing his sword, Kade followed, brushing his fingers through his dark brown hair. Drinking somewhere public wasn't exactly his thing, but he had worked with Arttoa long enough to know that was as close as she would get to saying she wanted to talk. Probably to tell me what an idiot I was, he thought, sighing.

They walked in relative silence for a while. Kade spent the first few minutes stretching and twisting, enjoying being freed from the weight of his chainmail. It was wending toward evening, and the place Arttoa picked ended up being a bar overlooking the docks. Since they were on the southern side of the island, there was still plenty of sunlight, even as the sky began darkening to orange.

A cold wind swept in, setting hair and clothes aflutter. Far off in the distance, a long, unbroken line of black clouds stretched across the horizon. Arttoa nodded toward it. "The raven comes."

"A few months late, isn't he?" Kade asked.

"Must not have a calendar. Better bring a cloak tomorrow."

"Might need the cloak tonight," Kade replied, looking at the sinister line of clouds. "Depending on how long I'm trapped out here."

"Trapped? I'm not holding a knife to your throat, you know."

The bar she had chosen had an outdoor seating area, where the pair grabbed a small table. The staff had already lit several lanterns even though the sun was still out. After placing orders, Kade leaned back and closed his eyes, enjoying the rushing winds and the clean, salt smell. There was an electricity in the air, an edge of dread preceding the coming storm, but Kade refused to let that bother him. He already had enough on his mind.

The two sat in silence until after their drinks arrived. Arttoa swirled her glass of red wine while Kade took the first sip of rum. He shuddered a bit while swallowing. For a moment, Kade paused to take in the rare sight of his partner at ease. Arttoa had dark gray skin, wrinkles beginning to form around the corners of her eyes but otherwise still holding the shine of youth. Her eyes were green, fiery. Her silver-blue hair was kept tied back in a single, utilitarian braid. While she wasn't overly tall -- the top of her head only reached to Kade's shoulders -- she struck an imposing figure, and even her low-cut shirt didn't obscure the fact that she wasn't someone to pick a fight with. Arttoa had at least ten years on Kade and more than her share of experience taking down criminals, many of them bigger or stronger than her.

She had always been tight-lipped, too. Today wasn't the first time she had shown Kade her ring, but he had never met her husband. He had to be quite a man to keep up with someone like her.

"What was it you wanted to tell me?" Kade finally asked after a few more sips of rum, eager to get the inevitable lecture over with.

"I had some things I wanted to ask, actually." Arttoa was staring off toward the horizon, watching the clouds approaching, slowly but surely. "The priest said some interesting things earlier."

Kade lifted an eyebrow. "A priest?"

"The little girl's father."

"Ah, right! Based on his clothing, a minister to Caldor?"

"Maybe. He didn't say." Here, Kade reminded himself that char culture tended to distance itself from spiritual matters, and Arttoa was no exception. "What he did say was that chanting thing you do, you're begging forgiveness from the gods. I've never seen anyone else do that. I assumed it was some form of personal meditation. What's the deal?"

Kade nodded and took another sip. "It's slightly more complicated than that, but he's not far off."

"He also called you a speaker."

Nodding again, he waited a moment before realizing that was the full statement. "Of course." At her blank stare, Kade rubbed at one of his bruises under the tunic. "Have you never been in a temple at all?"

"Only once," Arttoa answered, frowning. "So I'm ignorant. Fill me in."

"Really? That's, uh, well." Surprising didn't really cover it. Kade leaned back in his chair. "Anyone who can use magic is a speaker. You'll hear all sorts of other names for them, but 'speaker' covers them all. It's because to cast magic, you must speak to the Seven."

Arttoa nodded. "I see. They get mad at you if you talk too much, then? You are a regular chatterbox."

Laughing, Kade shook his head and explained, "No, no, not like that. When you speak to the gods in their language, they will grant you their power. Divine power isn't meant for mortals, though. Their godly power must pass through you, the speaker. Every time you cast a spell, this divine power, or mana, is infused into your spirit… and it hurts. It wears down your mortality.

"Too much, and you die."

Here, Arttoa looked down at the table. "Yeah, I know that part well enough," she murmured quietly. "So the chant..?"

"A mantra of humility," Kade explained, setting down his empty glass. He looked off toward the horizon. The sky had darkened to purple but the line of black clouds was still visible. "'Guns diu liud cro su pent' means 'let my spirit be mended.' It is a plea to the Seven to mend my spirit, to cleanse it of mana." Kade smiled a bit. "'Dae gri cir. Dae fa gri fu.' That means, 'I am mortal. I am not a god.' It's an admission that the power I wield is borrowed, and I have not let it go to my head. 'Spa diu stens,' 'balance my heart.' An invitation to weigh my intentions and judge the results."

While she sat silent for a moment, processing the explanation, Arttoa eventually laughed outright. "A mantra of humility? Well, it doesn't work. You're a cocky little shit!"

"Hey!"

Growing somber again, Arttoa murmured, "I don't think it'd be worth it. It seems like a lot of risk." Arttoa was still looking down at the table. She lifted her glass and sipped at her wine. It was only then that Kade realized she had been staring at the ring on her finger.

He chose not to acknowledge it.

"It is. It's hard to know what the Seven feel when you call for their power. If you are favored, it can protect you from mana burn. If you fall into disfavor, though, they might not grant you power at all. Some are more particular than others. The power of Caldor may only be wielded by those sworn to Him, the power of Aura only by those sworn to Her. Even the most devout may not pledge themselves to both.

"Unpredictable, unknowable, and quite dangerous."

Arttoa nodded and set down her empty glass. She rolled her hand, urging him to continue, before waving to the staff for more wine.

"Why do it, then?" Kade asked for her. When she nodded, he leaned back and considered the answer. His thoughts roamed to the scar on his back that she noticed earlier. "My reason… is personal. I did not seek to learn magic, though. I only sought to learn the language of Deisian. Thing is, they're one and the same. You cannot speak it with just your lips and tongue, or even decipher it with ears alone. It requires a flexibility of spirit, as well.

"Once I began learning, I wanted to know more. As I learned more, I could do more. It doesn't seem right not to use it."

"Even if the gods might kill you for wanting to stop a petty thief?" Arttoa asked angrily.

"Well, did you see the girl's smile?" Kade asked, with a faint smile of his own. The heat faded from Arttoa's eyes and she gave a sigh in response. "What happened with those men, anyway?"

Arttoa began laughing, telling him all about how the two men tried to talk their way out of the situation. It soon turned to the two of them sharing the funniest stories from their days as guards, before joining the Armar.

Thankfully, the subject didn't return to the gods again.
 
Still not happy with the next Keydis chapter. Next week, I post it whether I'm satisfied or not, otherwise I'll get stuck forever again.

Instead, we have another look at how Kade's mind works. I should recompile this using the 'chapters' function later, too.

Chapter 2, Part 2
Wordcount, 3408

A black dawn was there to greet the people of Maginholm. The clouds were thick, impenetrable, and a torrential rain came down continuously. Water poured from rooftops and filled the streets, overflowing the canals and sewers. Covered torches were lit on all of the alabaster pillars that lined the main roads, but the rainfall was so heavy that it was often difficult to see the flickering flames until right up on them, dark as night in the middle of the day. Through it all the town guards continued their patrols, carrying shielded lanterns and wearing cerulean rain cloaks.

The winds were biting, racing inland and bringing the storm with it. Kade trudged through the miserable weather, huddled under a white rain cloak. Beneath the cloak, he was wearing both swords, even if he doubted Edoras would fight through the storm to check. The extra weight certainly didn't ease the ordeal of the long trek across the city. Still, he had set out early and managed to arrive early.

"No sign of the ship?" Kade shouted over the rain to the sentinels on duty, joining them under a sheltered overhang. He started shaking excess water from his cloak.

"No sign of anything!" one of them replied.

Kade looked out at the darkness. From where they stood, he could barely make out the pinprick of light from a lantern at the edge of the pier. High overhead, he could make out the lamp flames of the lighthouse marking the entrance to the port. "Lighthouse is still good. Hopefully they'll see it!" he shouted to the others and they nodded. Looking out toward the sea, he could see the white crests of waves as they rolled forward, slamming into the piers and splashing high into the air.

While Kade had never been on a ship, he genuinely pitied the poor souls that had to sail through such weather.

The three sentinels huddled there for many long, uneventful minutes. They lined up their lanterns on a table so that the combined heat could ward off some of the chill. "Any idea why a Beladhell ship is coming here?" Kade asked, more to ease the silence than anything.

"No idea," one shouted back. "Two days is too short for a treaty negotiation."

"Could finally be demanding Maginholm's allegiance," the other suggested. "Don't need no time for negotiating, then!"

Kade held his hands up in front of the lanterns. "What do you think the Council would do?"

"Give in! What else? Beladhell's armies would destroy us."

The third sentinel frowned. "Maybe, but Honorast wouldn't stand by if Maginholm joined the Dominion. You think Beladhell would come to our aid when Honorast attacks?"

"All depends on--!" Kade argued, pausing for a moment as Arttoa walked in under the overhang. She shook the rain from her cloak and then added her lantern to the table. "Nice of you to join us!"

"The bells haven't rung yet."

"As if we could hear them if they did!" one of the others retorted, laughing. Turning back to Kade, he prompted, "Depends on what?"

"If they suddenly think we're important enough to go after, must be important enough to hold onto!"

Arttoa looked at all of them and shook her head. "Don't know what you all are talking about. The ship's only here for two days! It's probably just a trade venture!"

"And that will also get Honorast fired up!"

With a shrug, Arttoa pointed out, "So the Council will tell them no!"

Far off in the distance, barely audible over the rain thundering against the roof, bells began ringing. Kade spared a bit of pity for the poor bell ringer, forced to endure the horrendous weather for something that most of the citizens wouldn't even hear. Normally, the sentinels would let their shifts overlap on assignments like this, but given the weather and the fact that their ward wasn't there, yet, it didn't seem necessary. "Sounds like you two are free!" Kade called out, flashing a smile at the other two.

"In a hurry to get rid of us, now?"

Arttoa grabbed a lantern and held it out toward the others. "Go on. You've done your share of this miserable wet. Get yourselves dry and pray tomorrow is brighter!"

The other two laughed and took the offer. "Feel free to leave the extra lanterns here!" Kade suggested. "Keep this place nice and toasty!" They didn't. He feigned a disappointed sigh and then looked out at the docks. "Well, I've had a bit to dry off, so I'll go ahead and run the first patrol." If it weren't raining so heavily, they would walk the patrol as a pair, but on days like this, it was better to split it up to space out the drenching. Rather than have both sentinels wet and miserable all day, they would merely be damp and uncomfortable.

Clutching the shielded lantern tightly, Kade ventured out into the rain. Only a handful of ships were in port as most of the trade ships had left ahead of the storm. The docks were deserted, with most of the city taking refuge from the rain. Waves continued crashing against the port walls, sea foam falling almost as regularly as the rain. Still, Kade dutifully walked the entire port, working his way down each of the piers and shining the lantern toward the violently bobbing ships. Until the ship arrived, this was all just tedium.

Just before he finished his final walk down a pier, something caught the corner of Kade's eye. A person, perhaps, but one without a lantern. He stood up straighter, looking off to his left and trying to catch another glimpse. Not seeing anything, he started to shrug it off, but something nagged at him. Longingly, Kade looked over to his right, to the distant dot of light from Arttoa's lantern. He would much rather get out of the rain and back to the little shelter. His conscience kicked in, though, and with a heavy sigh, he began trudging back to the dock, preparing to make his way over to the buildings on the east side of the port, to make sure there wasn't a thief taking advantage of the weather or, more likely, some unfortunate soul who had dropped their lantern and gotten hopelessly lost. They were probably checking every door, looking for someone to let them inside.

At the sound of a distant explosion, Kade spun on his heel. Overhead, there was a bright flash of light, a blazing sphere of fire that slowly fell downward. Another concussion -- cannon fire, he now realized -- and another orb of light appeared overhead. Two more flares were launched, all of them far off in the distance. Black skies turned to gray, but as the lights slowly fell to the roiling oceans, no more blasts followed. Perhaps it was their ship, trying to find the port?

A chill rushed down Kade's spine as he snapped his eyes to the left and realized the terrible truth: the lighthouse lamp had gone out! He burst into a run, racing for the docks and up the road toward the lighthouse tower. His cloak flared open, letting the rain in to drench him completely, but he didn't stop or slow down, even to hold back the rain. By the time he reached the square-sided tower, Kade was panting for breath. He ran to the entrance, grabbed the handle and pulled hard.

There was a heavy clank and the doors rattled, barely wide enough to stick a hand through. It had been chained shut!

Desperately, Kade dropped the lantern and whipped his sword out of its sheath, raising it up in both hands. He stopped, staring at the thickness of the chain. The door handles were also made of metal, and thick. There would be no way for a sword to cut them, not a sword like this. He slammed the sword back into its sheath and racked his brain trying to think of any magic that would help, pacing back and forth.

As he turned, he saw something red out in the sea. While the rain continued pouring down around him, Kade stared in shock and disbelief: a fire, flickering far out in the waters, riding up and down on the turbulent waves. "No," he said in disbelief. He grabbed the lantern and started running again, giving up on the lighthouse and instead rushing for the end of the pier. The ball of flames grew closer, until there was no doubt that it was a ship engulfed in flames, burning strong even in the downpour.

Kade flipped open all the shields on his lantern, raising it high and shaking it, hoping that someone, somehow would see the light and realize they were about to crash. "Turn! Turn, you dumb bastards!" he shouted desperately as the ship hurtled over the waves, tossed all about but rushing headlong toward the port. Kade could only hope someone was even alive and at the helm.

The burning ship kept coming, and soon Kade could hear Arttoa shouting with him. He turned to see her on the next pier over, trying the same desperate tactic. She looked over and the two shared a look that said how hopeless they both thought it was. The rain poured down unabated, perhaps even harder than before, as though mocking their attempts. Closer still, and they could make out the silhouettes of people running across the deck of the ship, highlighted in the glow of the fires.

Fires climbed up the rigging and caught on the sails, confirming Kade's fears: the ship was flying the red flag of the Beladhell Dominion. It was the Lisua, the ship they were there to greet.

Just as Kade was about to give up and run for cover, the Lisua turned sharply, tilting dangerously before a powerful wave rolled underneath the vessel, tossing it the other way. "Oh, praise the Seven," Kade panted out, mind immediately snapping to the next problem. He turned and yelled to Arttoa, "We need to find a way to get people off of the ship! If the rain's not putting the fires out--!"

"Look out!" she shouted back, and Kade turned back, stunned to see another ship materializing from the gloom, larger than the Lisua.

It rammed the smaller vessel amidships, drowning out the storm with the thunderous splintering and snapping. Both ships came crashing ahead into the piers. Kade was thrown into the black waters, staring up at the purple flag of the second vessel: the Republic of Honorast. The cold waters engulfed Kade, dragging him down, weighed down by all of his gear. A wave rolled over him, setting him spinning until he wasn't sure which way was up.

His lungs were already screaming: he had been lucky to hold any breath at all. As he twisted and turned, his boots hit the sand. Kade ripped the cloak from his neck and pushed off from the bottom, kicking both legs as hard as he could. Both boots came off and his chest felt like it was about to burst. Kade's head broke above the surface of the water and he sucked in a big gulp of air. The surviving part of his pier was right in front of him and he grabbed it just before another wave tried to pull him under again. He pulled himself up and out of the water, groaning.

Kade considered tossing his chainmail hauberk before risking falling in the water again. He wasn't sure if he would make it through another dunking. When he looked up, though, pure bedlam had taken hold. The crashed ships were tangled together amid the shattered remains of the piers. Men from the Honorast ship were boarding the remains of the Lisua, and the clash of steel on steel resounded even over the rain.

"Toa!" Kade shouted, looking over to the next pier in alarm. He spotted her, down on one knee but still intact. He wanted to shout for her to fall back with him. The war between Honorast and Beladhell was none of their concern. The best plan of action was to just fall back, let the two foreign powers battle it out. They could deal with the survivors.

Kade felt his blood chill as a scream came from the Beladhell vessel. He looked over and there, silhouetted in the flames, was a child.

The Honorast ship was clearly military, clearly sent for the express purpose of destroying their enemies.

Not so for the Beladhell ship.

Before he could even think about what he was doing, Kade climbed up to his feet, trying to focus past the rain, the chaos, and the whipping flames. "Vuistio Ge!" he shouted, letting the mana sear into his spirit. He heard Arttoa shouting his name, but it was too late: he was already committed, already standing on the sinking ship. Kade darted straight for the young boy, carefully edging around the wild flames.

The boy screamed again when Kade came running, but the big man held out a hand. "I'm with the Armar of Maginholm! I'm going to get you out of here!" Looking at the fighting going on all around, the terrified boy grabbed onto Kade. "Hold on tight," he told the kid as he lifted him up to his left shoulder. He worked his way past the flames at the prow and started looking around. The deck was slanted precariously downward. Where the Honorast ship had rammed in, the deck had been rent open and it looked like the hold of the ship, visible through the holes, was a raging inferno.

Kade tried to ignore the men of the two nations fighting, and dying, all around as he ran across the deck. "Can you swim?" he asked the boy.

"Yes, a little," came the terrified reply.

"Arttoa!" Kade yelled as he reached the opposite side of the ship. He spotted her not far below, pulling a wounded man out of the water. She looked up at Kade and he turned to the boy. "I'm going to lower you down as much as I can and let you drop to the water. See the lady in the white cloak? Swim to her, she'll keep you safe."

"No, wait!" the boy started to say.

"No waiting! Here, we, go!" Kade hoisted the kid over the side, hanging over as far as he could before letting the boy drop to the water. He splashed under the water and then came up right away, paddling desperately. Satisfied, Kade turned away and started looking around for any other non-combatants.

An Honorast soldier rushed up, spear first, and Kade waved both hands, shouting, "Maginholm!" The soldier came to a stop, took a closer look at Kade's tabard, then turned back toward the bigger fray. Letting out a sigh of relief, Kade ran as well, cutting a wide berth around the main fighting but heading deeper into the ship. Inwardly, he chastised himself for doing something so foolish. Not all of the fighting men, of either nation, would hold their attacks.

"Help! Please help!" The cry came from below deck. Kade could see through the gaping cracks in the deck, there was a man and a woman. They were shouting toward their door; a burning beam was blocking their escape.

"Stand back!" Kade yelled down to them, slamming his foot down on the deck boards. They were already broken, he just needed to break enough boards away for them to escape. He kicked again, and again, wishing he still had his boots. Finally, his heel broke through, dropping a big chunk down into the room. The man in the room, seeing what Kade was trying to do, pulled a dresser beneath the hole. Standing on it, he began pushing upward, trying to break more boards.

Kade pulled his sword out, jamming it under a loosened board and pulling upward with a grunt. The sword began bending too far, so Kade yanked it out and then jammed it back in vertically. He pulled, gritting his teeth. The sword broke and he went tumbling forward, biting back a curse. The woman screamed for help again.

Out came the aethuril sword. Rather than repeat the process and break another sword, Kade looked at the blade, then looked down at the splintered deck. Resolved that he couldn't let the couple perish, he called out, "Dulta Ques!" He gripped the sword in both hands and slammed it point downward. A burst of magical force shattered the planking, blasting shards and splinters down at the man and woman. "Get back!" he warned them, too late, before calling out, "Dulta Ques!" again.

Again, he slammed the sword down, blowing away another chunk of the deck. His arms were starting to feel numb, mana wearing away at him. No more, he thought to himself, tossing the sword to the side and taking hold of the weakened planks. He pulled and the couple underneath pushed, all while fire spread into their room and rain poured endlessly. Finally, the wood snapped, first weakening, then breaking completely. Kade shoved the debris out of the way and then held an arm down into the hole.

The man passed the woman up first, and Kade pulled her up quickly, yanking harder when the splinters caught on her dress. The man came next, a much tighter fit. He just barely made it through, minus some of his skin.

"Oh gods, thank you!" the woman was crying. "I don't know what we would have done!"

"Go! You're not safe here. You're going to have to swim, get going!" Kade scooped up his sword and dizzily tried to regain his bearings. Was this enough? Had he done enough? Should he make a break for it? Kade looked over the side at the dark waters.

Then another cry for help came. "No, don't!" Kade looked, seeing a group of three young people backed against the railing by a soldier. Barely more than kids.

Kade rushed over, fighting past his dizziness, ignoring the burning in his chest and arms. Two young women and a young man, clearly not soldiers, dressed too poorly to be dignitaries. "Stop!" he commanded as he ran up.

This soldier wasn't as concerned with honor as the last one. He jabbed his spear forward, stabbing the young man in the thigh. "Belad dogs!" he spat, yanking the bloodied spear back and going for another thrust. Kade body-slammed the purple-clad soldier, throwing him to the ground. No novice to fighting, though, the soldier was up on his feet in seconds.

Kade put himself between the soldier and the three civilians. "You can see these aren't soldiers," he growled out, holding his aethuril sword in front of himself.

"Who cares? You think the Belad whoresons give a damn about that?" the soldier shouted, swiping with the spear. "If you don't move, I'll gut you with them, Maginholm!"

"I can't move," Kade said firmly, staring the man down. "I am a sentinel and my job is to protect. You will not harm them any further."

Is this enough?

The soldier bellowed and thrust with the spear. Kade knocked it aside with his sword, but the man attacked again and again. "Go, you fools!" Kade growled as he tried to keep up with the fierce attacks. He couldn't keep it up forever, though.

The spear slipped through, slamming into the chainmail, ripping past it to sink into Kade's chest. He fell backward, hitting one of the girls. He heard the other girl yell out, "Thal!" as the first one went overboard.

Is it enough?

Kade grabbed the spear with his left hand and chopped down with the sword, slicing through the wooden haft. Everything was a daze as he stepped in closer and thrust the sword, ripping through the soldier's leather armor. The man fell back, clutching his wound and the broken haft of his spear.

Pure agony coursed through his body as his lung filled with blood. He could barely breathe. If he hurried, he might be able to heal the wound, might be able to….

"She's unconscious!"

Was this enough?

"What do we do? What do we do?"

Kade turned and stumbled to the railing, looking down. It was a long fall to the water. The girl was sinking beneath the roiling waves. "Vuihis... Da," he rasped out, dropping his sword and dropping over the rail.
 

Chapter 03: Embrace​

Part 1
Wordcount, 1406


Kade hit the water gracelessly and the sudden shock of cold brought his awareness back into focus. He almost wished it hadn't. Everything was cold and dark. The waves rolling by overhead sent his body tumbling, even under the water. Each and every tiny little movement sent hot shards of agony racing through his body, every slightest movement twisting the spearhead deep in his chest.

Don't think about it.

Eyes open, Kade fought past the sting of salt water and the enshrouding blackness, kicking his bare feet and searching for some sign of the young woman that had been swept away under the waves. The spell he had uttered before plunging into the crashing waves would allow him to breathe underwater and, it seemed, with a deadly hole in one lung. It wouldn't last for long, however. He wouldn't last for long.

As he frantically kicked and searched, everything felt detached, unreal. The only thing that felt truly real was the pain, coursing through his body and his spirit both, sharp like shards of glass, enduring like a red-hot brand. Kade recognized the symptoms, and could only push himself harder, hoping to do something, anything worthwhile he still could. Already his every movement felt sluggish. Kade tried to kick his legs, feeling the legs following through seconds afterward.

Darkness slowly began to fade while Kade floundered, but it wasn't a natural brightening. He pushed himself harder, biting back the pain. It was so hard to think of anything else: everything hurt. Mana intoxication had dulled all of his senses except the pain.

The brightness began to coalesce into a shape, like an airy breeze given form. Kade's eyes followed the flow, making out the silhouette of an arm greater than a titan's. Ash-gray but emitting light, the arm stretched down to the sands beneath the sea port, never quite touching them. Kade paddled harder with both feet and one arm. He saw her, the young woman they had called Thal, floating just above the sea floor. The arm was reaching out for her.

She wasn't moving, save for the rocking of the stormy waves.

∴ Angovos Clic ∴


The voice thundered in his head, pulsing, lingering. It was not so much a voice, but a thought that was not his own. Kade looped an arm around the woman's middle and kicked off the bottom, sending up a small cloud of sand. The hand pulled sluggishly away. Kicking furiously, Kade fought back his pain and aimed for the shore.

∴ His Tusci Frax Mae? ∴


Kade's head emerged from the surface of the water just in time for another wave to crash down, throwing him and Thal tumbling forward. Pain blossomed anew as his back slammed into a barnacle-crusted pillar. Thankfully the chainmail saved him from the worst of the lacerations. Not that it would matter in a few minutes.

At last, the pair made it to shore, a sandy patch just beneath the piers, stinking of salt and fish. Rain continued to pour down. Kade grunted through the pain as he dragged Thal's limp body, getting her far enough from the crashing waves. Once there, he bent over the woman, staring down at her blearily. Even in the darkness, eyes blurring from the salt, Kade was somehow struck by the girl's beauty, transfixed by her silvery skin.

Not right for one so young and fair to die in such a way.

Red droplets splattered down onto Thal's dress, blood dripping from the spear still embedded in his chest. Everything was heady and disconnected, but every pulse of his heart sent new throbs of agony through him, and Kade soon became aware of the ash-gray light around him.

There was something else, too, hard to define. Kade felt as if an arm was draped over his shoulder. He didn't look, but he feared what it meant. The heavy thoughts slipped into his head once again, both insistent and mocking.

∴ Angoscix Ferbi! ∴ His Plist Frax Mae? ∴


Kade shuddered, too wracked by pain and uncertainty to even try to decipher the words. The airy flows of ash-gray passed through him, beginning to wrap around the woman's body.

∴ Ix... ∴ Gru Viub Glecel Cups Pro ∴


The strange sensation felt as if it was pulling away, and Kade rasped out, "Scod." Please. "Meuc Vi." One more.

The otherworldly entity hesitated and then a single word entered his head, one he knew.

∴ Scix ∴


Speak.

"Angohis Da," Kade said while looking at the woman in the sand, his strained voice little more than a whisper. It was the spell he had used to breathe underwater, but now meant for Thal. She would receive some of the mana, but most of it would go to him, as the one who cast the spell, the one who made the plea. Kade grimaced as the power flowed into him and passed to her, clearing her lungs and filling them with breath. His mind had grown numb to the pain, even if his body and spirit were still locked in the throes of it.

Thal's eyes flew open and she sucked in a desperate breath, clutching at her chest. The ashen mist surrounding the girl disappeared. Kade managed a wan smile down at the young woman before turning and dropping to his back in the sand. Rain was still pouring around them both but as he looked upward, Kade saw stars, a sky full of them, more than he had ever seen before. There was a faint green glow in the air, and in the distance, Kade could see the silhouettes of strange tree-like arches. Specks of light floated skyward. He no longer smelled dead fish and brine, instead something like dew on morning grass.

This was enough.

Directly behind him, Kade saw a vaguely humanoid shape, and within it an entirely new sky, a reflection of an unseen cosmos. In his mana-addled mind, Kade thought he could see a face, of a sort. Imperious and amused. "Vuicad Gest..." he said quietly, thanking the god, whichever it was, for granting the one last request. He thought he could see a smile.

Thal sat up and gasped in horror as she saw Kade's grievous wound. The lune girl began calling for help, but with the battle probably still raging, no one would find them for some time. "Don't worry," she assured him, "I can heal you!"

If he had the energy to laugh, he would have. "Too much," he rasped out before hacking up blood. Too much mana is what he wanted to say, and hoped she understood. It didn't matter, though. An influx of mana from a healing spell would almost certainly kill him, but he would die from the wound regardless. If not from blood loss, then from the loss of a lung, or the inevitable infections. Even as he thought that, Kade could make out the second godly figure, its form rising up toward the heavens, impossibly long arms reaching down. The ash-gray arms circled around him, gentle but cold.

This was fine.

Besides, he had things he needed to ask. Haze began clearing from his mind and Kade found a revived sense of urgency. "Wait!" he shouted. His voice echoed around him and he realized he had left his body. He was rising up, clutched tightly in the chill embrace. "Wait!" he shouted again, then, "Crohau!" The hand continued rising, ignoring his cries. "I need to know!

"Eighteen years ago! Why did you--?"

There was a sudden, surprising jolt in his heart that cut him off. Kade's eyes flew open and he sat up sharply, clutching at his chest. Rain poured down around him, and the stench of salt and fish surrounded him again. Kade looked skyward, seeing nothing but pitch-black and, as his eyes drifted southward, clouds dyed red by firelight.

Kade looked down at his chest; the spearhead had been removed, but the wound was closed, sealed by an angry red scar. Stunned, he looked over to the woman, eyes wide. "How..?" was all he managed to ask before a wave of dizziness overtook him, and his head fell back to the sand.

Before darkness took him, one last message appeared in his mind.

∴ Unt Angive Clic ∴ Unt Angoclis Clic ∴ Ceu Angocro Sex! ∴

 
Chapter 3, Part 2
Wordcount, 1005

"Aha! This will be your final battle! You will never defeat the Indomitable Adamas!" The heroic Adamas pointed his sword at his sworn enemy, Belad the Conqueror.

"Pitiful! Your Knights are nothing to my Eredhell Assassins!" Belad retorted, pointing his sword back. "Get them!"

The fearless Knights of Honorast lifted their shields just as the Assassins rushed in, each carrying two short swords. The weapons clashed against one another as the two leaders began their fated duel. The assassins were too fast, too fierce, and the first knight was quickly forced back. He let out a death wail as the assassin landed the killing blow, clutching at the wound with both hands and falling to his knees, then over onto his side. Both assassins turned on the remaining knight, laughing triumphantly as they overwhelmed him.

Belad and Adamas battled fiercely, blades locked as they tried to force each other back. The powerful Belad grinned, sensing his impending victory. That was his mistake. As soon as he was sure that he would win, Adamas pushed forward! He beat back Belad's sword. "You're defeated!" he declared as he sliced the Conqueror's neck. The victory was short-lived, however, as the assassins stabbed him from behind.

"Victory is ours!" Belad retorted, laughing.

"No, we win!" Adamas argued. "I killed you first!"

"Nuh-uh!" Belad countered. "Your whole team is dead!"

Kade sat up from the ground and pointed a finger at his cousin. "But we killed you! If the leader dies, we win!"

"Psh, you didn't even do anything, runt!" one of the other boys mocked. Kade was a few years younger than everyone else.

"Yaya, if you'd lasted just two whole blinks, we'd have been fine!" the other 'knight' grumbled.

"Whine all you want, I still killed you before your two slugs got me!" Adam argued, pulling his Adamas mask off and lifting his wooden sword in the air. "Unless you want another go?"

"You know I do!" Palas demanded, pulling off his Belad mask. He shoved it toward Adam. "I get to be Adamas this time, though!"

"No way, I'm Adamas. It's my name!"

One of the other boys grumbled. "So? That doesn't mean you always get to be him!"

Another asked, "Why can't I be Adamas?"

"Because we're older," Palas explained. "So we get to be the leaders."

"I don't care who the leaders are, but I don't want to be stuck on Kade's team again."

Adam scowled at his friend and came to the defense of his younger brother. "Aw, come off it. He's not that bad!"

"How about we have a race, and first ones to get there get first pick of which team they're on?" one of the 'assassins' suggested. Kade's eyes lit up. In a race, he'd be more in his element.

"Yeah," Adam said, nodding. He tossed a wink at Kade. "That's perfect! Let's go to the Blind Man's Cave!"

The woods were thick and overgrown, though light managed to break through in patches. The six boys took off running. Kade shot off like an arrow, small but quick, ducking under branches and hopping over roots, laughing all the while. He knew his brother was going to beat him, but then again, what if he didn't? As he dashed through the undergrowth, Kade ran up on a creek and leapt, splashing mud and water as he almost cleared it.

Undeterred by his wet shoes, Kade ran on, ignoring the shouts of the others behind him. They weren't far off, so he had to run even faster, prove he wasn't just a weak link! He hated that Adam always had to stick up for him and had to force the others to let him play. Kade let out a shout as his toes slammed into a root he didn't quite see. He stumbled, managed to stay on his feet, but it was enough for his cousin Palas to rush past him, laughing.

Kade started running faster, but then Adam called out, "Don't slow down," as he passed.

Making a snap decision, Kade cut to the left, toward an old quarry. Everyone else was running along the deer trails and circling around. It was dangerous and crumbling apart, and hadn't been used in nearly a hundred years, since the redstone veins had run dry. If Kade could cut across it, though, he could beat the others to the cave. Maybe then they'd treat him with some respect!

The trees thinned out suddenly as Kade broke through into the quarry. It was a giant bowl in the ground, overgrown with grass and ground foliage and some scattered saplings. Huge piles of loose stones dotted the bowl, and in a few places, rotted scaffolding was still standing, if barely. A hundred years of exposure and they were more deathtrap than anything. He could have run down the side of the bowl and up the other side, but some of the piles of stones looked close enough to jump between. It would save him the climb out of the depression.

Kade ran forward and jumped, landing atop a pile of granite. He started windmilling his arms with a, "Whooa!" as the rocks shifted, but he regained his balance and jumped again to the next pile. He almost missed that one, but managed to clamber on top. Have to go faster! he thought to himself. He couldn't hear the others anymore, only his own rapid breaths.

With a yell of excitement, Kade jumped to the next pile. He started to slip, and reached out to grab onto some of the surviving scaffolding for support. It felt like the pit of his stomach dropped: the rotted wood snapped. "Whoa!" Kade cried out as the rocks rolled out from under his feet and he fell forward. He banged his chin into the rocks, then tumbled backwards. For one brief moment, he was airborne.

Then Kade let out a shriek like never before as he landed, and a spike of cold, jagged metal punched deep into his back.
 
Chapter 3, Part 3
Wordcount, 2716

Kade's eyes shot open and he sucked in a sharp breath. He was on his back on something hard and stiff, somewhere inside. For a long moment, he just lay there, watching shadows dance on the rafters above him. Finally, he slowly lifted himself up and looked around. Kade was lying down across a table in a tavern, he realized. Probably the closest place they could move the injured to, he realized as he looked around, spotting at least half a dozen other injured people. On the far side of the room, a woman was bent over one of the patients.

He didn't recognize the tavern. The air inside was surprisingly warm after the shocking cold of the stormy water. There was a roaring fireplace on one side of the room, with benches around it. One of the sentinels sat there. An older gentleman stood behind the bar, mixing something together. Kade assumed him to be the owner, and to be making drinks, before the woman took one of the mixes and started applying it to her current patients' leg.

Fighting off light-headedness, Kade looked down at himself. His hauberk, tabard, and shirt had been removed. The red scar on his chest drew his attention, and once again he tried to puzzle out how that young woman had managed to do something like that. In the depths of mana intoxication as he had been, a healing incantation should have spelled the end for him. Besides the scar, his chest was also covered in bruises, at least some of them from his bout with Edoras. He reached out to touch the scar itself and hissed in pain, the hiss turning into a cough as his lungs lit up painfully. Magic healing would normally not leave a scar, either, or be so raw to the touch.

As a child, Kade received a severe injury to his right lung. It still gave him trouble, eighteen years later. The newest wound had now damaged the good side of his chest. With the threat of immediate death no longer looming, Kade began to wonder if he would even be fit enough to continue as a sentinel. Every breath felt like it was tearing the inside of his chest.

His lower back was also sore, just above his hip. Kade reached back, feeling bandages there, and remembered being thrown against the barnacles on the pier. The soles of both feet, and one heel, were also wrapped up, probably from trying to break through the deck to free the trapped couple. As he discovered each injury, it was as if his awareness awoke the nerves, new flare-ups of pain blossoming. Beyond the visible injuries, Kade felt exhausted, weak. He had lost a lot of blood before Thal did whatever it was she did, and clearly he hadn't recovered much, if any, of it.

"Don't move around too quickly," the woman warned, pulling his attention away from his wounds. Kade hadn't even heard her walk over. She was pan, with bronzed skin and dark hair. Middle-aged, perhaps, but certainly not elderly. There were bags under her blue eyes, and she looked like she had been busy. The thin white robe she wore was stitched with the sign of Corpus, marking her as a doctor. "My name is Adeline. I've already given you some medicine to help with pain, but due to your acute blood loss, rapid changes in your head's elevation may have caused you to black out. If you move too quickly, especially from laying down or sitting to standing, it will happen again."

"Thank you, doctor," Kade replied, exhaustion apparent in his voice. He took her advice and lifted onto his feet slowly. He winced as his bandaged feet touched the ground, but the stinging was manageable. "Can you tell me what's going on? What happened with the attack?"

"I'll let Arma Serra discuss that with you. They have said that you're not permitted to leave without him." Adeline offered him a tired smile. "You have a note there, from one of the people you helped save." Seemingly satisfied that Kade hadn't passed out again, Adeline wandered off to check on her other patients.

Before heading over to speak to Mattias, Kade turned and saw the note mentioned. Kade pulled it open, surprised at how elegant the handwriting was. The silver-skinned young woman was clearly a scholar of some kind.

Arma Halbert,

You have my deepest gratitude for your bravery. If not for you, my friends and I would never have made it off the Lisua. Please forgive us for the grievous wound you have suffered on our behalf. I hope sincerely for your full recovery and wish that I had some way to repay you, besides. All I can do is return your sword to you, recovered by my companions.

Thank you, truly.

Sincerest Regards,

Thaleia Menodora


Beneath her signature, in less practiced hands, were the names Sylvia and Leto. Kade smiled, glad to hear that the other two had made it safely off the ship. He repeated Thaleia's name in his mind a few more times, trying to remember her face. Sadly, all he had was an impression in his mind that she had been beautiful: the details escaped him.

Gradually, the smile dimmed however. He realized that if the two companions, Sylvia and Leto, made it off the ship, then the wound he had dealt to the Honorast soldier could very well have been fatal. Necessary, perhaps -- his new scar was proof of that -- but it wasn't the outcome he wanted. Kade looked at the lump of his chainmail and tabard. He lifted up the chain shirt, wincing as he got his first glimpse at the hole in the rings and the red stain on the links below that.

The other sentinel walked up, startling Kade. "Leave that here for now," Mattias suggested. "Now that you're awake, I have to take you to Edoras."

Kade dropped the chainmail back on the seat. He folded up Thaleia's note and found an empty pouch on his belt to stow it in. It and his pants were surprisingly dry, though the shirt and tabard still seemed completely soaked, and the chainmail was damp. "How long was I out? What's the situation?"

"Hours. The situation is complicated," Mattias replied. He was nemau, like Arttoa, but his dark grey skin seemed somehow paler. His hair was a silver-tinted green, his eyes pale blue, and save for the difference in colors, he could have passed for Kade's twin, the two standing at the same height, with the same broad shoulders, both a little soft around the middle. "You two did what any of us would have done, but it's looking like that might cause some problems."

Pieces began falling together. There would be political backlash depending on how Maginholm addressed the catastrophe. Kade asked. "That's why you don't want me to put on the tabard, huh?"

"Don't want you to put on the tabard because it's soaking wet!" Mattias snapped. "I'm not clapping you in irons, but at least until the captain can clear things up, you're going to be under armed escort. Here, put this on." The sentinel passed over a dry cloak, which Kade pulled over his shoulders. Next he tossed down a pair of simple shoes for Kade to step into. They were little more than leather socks. It was better than nothing, at least, and the relief he felt from even that thin barrier was immense.

When Mattias led Kade outside, he was surprised to find the storm had broken. It was late evening, the sky already painted in deep reds and oranges, but most of the clouds had gone. They were right next to the port, and Kade looked out at the charred husk of the Beladhell ship. It was almost completely broken in half by the larger ship ramming it head on. While most of the ship was underwater now, the upper portions of the ship were black. Debris floated all around the sunken vessel, with men out in small boats trying to gather it up. Until the wreck was removed, it would be difficult to move other ships in and out of the port.

The Honorast ship was nowhere to be seen.

The town guard swarmed over the piers, some of them escorting men clad in purple. Even if the ship had escaped, it appeared some of the men were left behind. Soon, Mattias and Kade found Edoras surrounded by a cadre of sentinels. The captain was listening to each of their reports with a grim expression. Kade checked for Arttoa, but she didn't appear to be among the group. Edoras let the sentinel finish speaking, then held up a hand and turned to the approaching men. "Arma Halbert, good to have you back. You've put us all in a difficult position, I'm afraid."

"I'm sorry, Telum," Kade responded immediately. "I never imagined that the two nations would start a battle on our doorstep. I know it wasn't my place to get involved, but I couldn't just stand by. There were children and--!"

Edoras cut him off with a raised hand. "I don't fault you for your actions, Arma. None here will." He looked around at the others as if to challenge them to say otherwise. "However, this puts us in a difficult position. Maginholm has always remained neutral in this war. Always. The Council has already received a complaint from the Republic of Honorast, claiming we have violated our treaties by assaulting their soldiers. In order to save face, it's possible the Council will offer you and Arma Nuvaes as scapegoats."

Kade pursed his lips. "Telum, I wounded only one man this day, and it was after he had already dealt a grievous wound to myself."

The captain looked at the red scar and nodded. "So I've been told by some of the survivors. Your actions are helping to smooth over talks with the Beladhell Dominion. Their initial reaction was to suspect Maginholm was complicit in the attack."

"It's entirely possible," Kade murmured, frowning. At the captain's questioning look, he described how the lighthouse fire had gone out just before the attacks began, and the mysterious figure he thought he saw. "The Honorast ship may have sent someone ahead, of course, but there was definitely someone already here.”

“What were they after, though? How did they know exactly when the ship would be arriving?" Sighing, the captain waved for Kade to follow and began walking. Mattias and the other five sentinels followed along.

Sensing that what the captain was about to say wasn't something to be said in the open, Kade instead asked another important question. "Did any… were there any casualties?" he asked. Arttoa's absence was starting to feel ominous.

"No one from Maginholm died, but Arma Nuvaes and Arma Doran received heavy injuries. While only you went directly onto the ship, Nuvaes pulled people out of the water and stood alone in their defense until reinforcements arrived. Doran was the first to join her." The captain led them to a squat building of grey stone: a guard barracks. It was filled with barely serviceable cots and small chests, as well as weapon racks along one wall. No guards waited inside; after that attack, the city was probably on full alert. "The Lisua was said to be carrying sixty crew and passengers. Of those, we have only found thirteen survivors. While we don't know the total numbers of the attacking ship, we have at least twenty-eight confirmed dead, and four captives."

Maginholm had always remained neutral, separate from the wars fought on foreign soil. Hearing the stories about the horrors of war, such miniscule numbers wouldn't have left an impact on Kade at all. He was right there, though, right there on the sinking ship where so many people had died. All of his effort, pushing himself to the brink of death, and what had he really accomplished in the end? For every person he had saved, eight others had died. Kade dropped to sit on one of the cots, physically sick from the realization.

"The Lisua came to Maginholm to return an artifact, taken some decades past: Quod's Seventh Eye," Edoras explained.

Kade looked up. "The Prophet's Vision?" No one else seemed to recognize it.

Edoras frowned at the interruption. "I only know as much as I've been told. The Seventh Eye once belonged to Maginholm but was stolen. It has been in the possession of the Beladhell Dominion for a long time, but they wanted to strike a deal with Maginholm and offered the artifact as payment. This wasn't meant to be public knowledge. I bring it up because the survivors of the Lisua say that the Eye was taken."

"Did Honorast want the artifact?" Mattias asked. "Or did they just want to prevent the deal with Maginholm?"

Kade was wondering much the same thing. "To know that, we'd have to know what Beladhell hoped to gain from the arrangement," Kade muttered. "The Council has always refused to pick a side in the war. I can't imagine they would trade allegiance, even for the return of a treasure."

Edoras nodded. "That's where it stands right now. There's nothing we can do for now, unfortunately. The crow brought some terrible storms this year; it has made the seas treacherous. Tulorildril will not be sending any ships out for at least a few days. If the storms don't sink Honorast's ship, it will have far too great a lead to catch up to.

"The Armar will protect the survivors of the Lisua until Beladhell can arrange for their travel. The prisoners are being transported to the dungeon. For diplomacy's sake, we must also ensure their health and safety until Honorast decides to retrieve them."

Here, Edoras paused and sighed. "In the meantime, Kadell Halbert! You are suspended, pending investigation, and will remain under house arrest unless escorted by a member of the Armar." While Kade wanted to protest, he understood that Edoras was already pulling strings just to give him such a lenient 'sentence.' Whatever faults the man might have, disloyalty was not among them. "We will have a doctor come to you."

Kade rose to his feet and offered a salute against his bare chest.

Trying to make the best of the unpleasant situation, Kade forced a smile. "Just as well, sir. I'll need a little time for a new sword to be forged." He pointed at the empty sheath on his belt. "See, I used my sword just like you wanted, and the damn thing broke." Thaleia’s note mentioned my sword. Where is it?

While the others in the room started laughing immediately, Edoras just stared in disbelief for a moment before the older man finally stroked his chin and letting out a chuckle. "I suppose next you'll be asking for a new hauberk because you got a hole in the last one?"

Another round of laughter rolled out of the men, while Kade held a hand over his scar. "Well, if it's not too much trouble, sir."

It wasn't the cheerful, happy ending he would have preferred, but there was a degree of comfort here, knowing that the rest of the sentinels had his back. All the way on the long walk to his home, escorted by Mattias, Kade's thoughts wandered. He hoped Arttoa and Doran would recover from their wounds. Both were strong, stubborn as oxen, so he knew the worrying was needless. He let his thoughts drift to the Lisua and to the shadowy figure he had seen near the lighthouse. He wished he could discern more details, wished he had noticed the problem sooner. None of that helped him now.

By the time they reached Kade's home, night had fallen. He looked up at the night sky. While mostly clear, there was another dark line of clouds that overshadowed the moon. The year of the crow promised to be a tempestuous one.

Mattias looked skyward with him. "It looks like another storm is on its way. At least you'll get to stay dry, right?"

"Do you really think that?" Without waiting for the reply, Kade clapped Mattias on the shoulder and headed inside. First, food. He needed to recover his strength. After that, there was a book he needed to research.
 

Chapter 04: Prophecy​

Part 1
Wordcount, 2306

Over the following days, the city was buzzing with activity. While no citizens of Tulorildril had been injured in the attack, wild rumors flew that Honorast or Beladhell or both would be coming to destroy the entire island nation. People swarmed up to the white tower, where the Council met, and demanded answers. Others began booking passage away from Maginholm or setting off for a smaller town further inland.

Kade was only aware of it all second-hand, through the guards that came to ensure he didn't violate his house arrest. Some good news came, as well: both Arttoa and Doran would recover from their injuries. They both were under house-arrest, as well, so he couldn't see them personally. Until the Council made a decision on what punishment they would suffer, if any, the three of them were in a gray zone, prisoners but not. Kade was sure that if not for Edoras, they'd be waiting in dungeon cells, instead.

Strangely, he couldn't even find it in himself to blame the old counselors. The war between the two powers had been going since shortly before Kade was born. Theirs was a rancor that wasn't easily quelled, and the repercussions for crossing either of them could be dire. Maginholm was a tiny nation, and both the Honorast Republic and Beladhell Dominion had swallowed up dozens of nations just as large, or larger. It would be a miracle if they didn't decide to offer up the three sentinels as a sacrifice to appease Honorast.

The one saving grace was Beladhell. Among the people they had saved, two were high-ranking dignitaries, and they had immediately sent off messages to the mainland to assure their commanders that they had survived and had Maginholm to thank. With Beladhell ingratiated toward them, an attack from Honorast would potentially be facing the might of the Dominion, not just the meager defenses of Maginholm, and of the two, Honorast would be the one at a disadvantage geographically. Even that would come at a cost, of course. By accepting Beladhell's protection, Maginholm would inevitably fall under their banner, and be swept up into the rest of the war.

The ideal outcome would be for the leaders to both decide that the island wasn't worth the trouble.

A knock came from Kade's door. He jumped up from his seat, wincing as he pulled the scar tissue on his chest. "What is it?" he called out as he walked through the small home.

"Visitor!" the guard yelled back through the thick wooden door. "She says you know her!"

She? Kade immediately thought of the pretty lune woman. He knew she was still on the island -- until the matter was settled between the nations, no ships would actually be allowed to depart, no matter how many people were trying to flee. The door had no window, so Kade pulled it open.

Immediately, his hopeful expression drooped. "Kade!" the girl -- not woman -- shouted as she ran up and threw her arms around him.

"Ari," Kade said, voice dry but a smile fighting to break out as he ruffled her hair. The guard laughed, leaning against his black metal staff. Kade hadn't learned the man's name but found him to be an alright sort. "You had me thinking it was somebody important!" Kade accused.

"Niece?" the man guessed.

"Cousin," Kade clarified. It was a reasonable guess. Arima was his second cousin, and there was a strong family resemblance. They had the same golden complexion, same dark brown hair and light brown eyes. Their facial structure was similar, strong and straight, although she still had the softness of youth. Arima was tall, as well, but unlike Kade, reed-thin. Although only twelve, just under half his age, the top of her head almost reached his shoulders.

"I still call him uncle sometimes," Ari put in, flipping her long braid over her shoulder. She bent down and picked up a steaming pot by its long metal handle.

"We aren't going to cause an international incident if you let her in, right?"

The guard waved it off. "I don't see a problem. I'm here to prevent you from leaving, not to keep your family out."

Ari stood up straight and clapped her fist to her heart, pretty close to a professional salute. "Thanks, mister guard." Kade waited for a moment, hoping the guard would offer Ari his name. After so long, it would be too awkward for Kade to ask.

No such luck, so Kade smiled and led the girl inside. "What are you wearing?" he asked as soon as the door was closed.

"What? What's wrong with it?" Ari looked down at herself. She had on black sandals, tight red shorts with a sort of half-skirt in front and back, and a white, hooded shirt with wide, flapping sleeves.

"Half of you looks ready to go for a swim, the other half looks ready for temple."

"Well, all of you looks ready to go on shore leave!" Ari countered with a huff.

Kade laughed: he was wearing short black pants and an unlaced blue cotton shirt, both wrinkled and stained. "Sharp," he noted, leading her down the small hallway. The walls were white plaster and the floor was laid with grey stones. Several lanterns kept the small home well lit, and warm even without a fireplace. The main room had a cushioned reading chair and a handful of other wooden chairs, as well as a short round table. Books and papers were scattered over the table, so Kade bent down and scooped up an armful, moving them out of the way.

Needing no invitation, Ari lifted her pot and set it down on the cleared spot. "Brought you some food. Steamed mussels in a tomato garlic broth." She was acting like this was a casual visit, like nothing out of the ordinary was going on.

"How are you, Ari?" Kade asked, retreating to the tiny kitchen near the back and returning with a pair of clay bowls. "I've heard things are chaotic out there. How are you and your father?"

Ari shrugged, looking away. "I'm, well, I'm okay. Father is fine. Called you a lot of dumb things, said you're a moron, you're going to get us all killed. Then some oafish man called you a traitor, and father knocked his teeth in." She grinned at that, miming the punch in the air. "Your parents are fine, too. Said no one's been bothering them, so don't worry."

"Thanks. I was worried," Kade admitted. He set the bowls down and as he did so, Ari let out a gasp.

"How did that happen?" she asked, pointing at his chest. The unlaced shirt was open enough to reveal the red scar. "It's from the war, right? Oh man, the guards just said you were hurt, not how bad!"

Kade sat down and put a hand over his chest, remembering the heavy punch of the spear breaking through his chainmail. "Yeah. One of the soldiers from the Republic got me pretty good."

"Why, though? Couldn't he tell you're from here?"

"Well, he was going after some unarmed people. That's the exact opposite of what a soldier should do. I threw myself in front of them and told the soldier, 'I'm a sentinel, and these people are under the protection of Maginholm! If you want to get them, you have to go through me!' And that's what he tried to do."

Ari sat cross-legged in one of the other chairs, leaning in curiously. For the next hour, Kade shared the harrowing tale, only embellishing it slightly and leaving out some of the darker aspects, all while sharing the mussels. Her eyes were wide and she flinched every time he mentioned something painful, imagining what it must feel like to be stabbed or get lost under the dark, stormy waves.

Kade had no kids of his own, and he always enjoyed telling the girl stories. For years she had been sent to him -- and later came of her own accord -- so he could help with her academics. His cousin Palas, her father, was far from stupid, but he had no patience for teaching. He hadn't been too happy with Kade when he realized Ari wanted to join the Armar rather than following Palas' footsteps as a tradesman. Ari was bright and brave, though, and Kade was convinced that she would figure out her calling when she was old enough. She could do so much more than just tromping around with a sword like Kade, or swinging a hammer like Palas.

It was still fun to fill her head with tales of danger and excitement.

"Was she pretty?" the girl teased when Kade talked about Thaleia.

Kade rubbed his chin thoughtfully, seeking something suitably poetic for the young romantic. "Beautiful as the silver moonlight on the alabaster sands, void of the blinding radiance of morning's light and instead possessed of something altogether calmer, a cool white flame silently fueling quiet passion."

Ari stared, wide-eyed, and then giggled at the impromptu imagery. Again, though, Kade lamented that he couldn't honestly remember the young woman's face.

Touching the scar through his shirt, he explained, still playing up the drama, "Her name, I later found out, was Thaleia. It was she who saved me from the wound to my heart, though I know not how it was possible."

"It was fate!" the girl immediately blurted out, forcing a laugh from Kade. Ari seemed taken with the idea, though, nearly swooning in her chair.

"I don't know about that," Kade said, dropping some of the flare. "We'll have to see if our paths ever cross again. It may have been a once in a lifetime encounter."

"Aww!" Ari folded her arms, her floppy sleeves adding to the childishness of the gesture. "You just have to have faith!"

Before Kade could muster an argument, a new knock came from the door. Surprised, Kade got up and walked toward the door. "What is it?" he yelled out. This time the guard didn't respond. Not all of the guards would, though, and the shifts might have changed while he was engaged with his young cousin. Kade pulled open the door.

The man on the other side of the door was shrouded in a dark cloak with the hood pulled down low. "Who are..?" Kade started to ask, but then he looked past the man and saw the guard down on the ground. "Ari stay back!" he yelled, jumping back and lifting his fists defensively.

The cloaked man slipped inside and closed the door. "Calm! I don't come for trouble!"

"Forgive me if I'm a little skeptical!" Kade growled.

"Kade!" Ari called out.

Kade turned, seeing that Ari was holding a kitchen knife out to him. That was a mistake: as soon as he turned, the mystery man rushed forward, grabbing Kade's wrist and throwing an arm around his neck. The man was fast! Just as big as Kade, stronger.

"Shh, shh, calm! Don't come for fight!" the stranger insisted. His accent was unfamiliar.

Kade growled and slammed his back toward the wall before jamming his elbow in hard under the ribs. The attacker groaned and loosened his hold. It was enough for Kade to break free. He grabbed the knife from Ari, ripping it from its leather sheath and pointing it at the hooded man. Immediately, the man's hands went up into the air and he began backing away.

"Calm, Arma Halbert," the man repeated. "I have need to speak, but none can know I was here! That is why policeman must sleep!"

"Lose the hood and drop any weapons you're carrying," Kade demanded, adrenaline pumping and making his arms shake. Ari wisely kept well back and Kade made sure not to allow any opening for their guest to get past him, to her.

"Call me Jonquo." The man, Jonquo, pulled his hood back. Lune, middle-aged, with a pink scar down the left side of his face. His hair was white, and might once have been an aristocratic style with ringlets. Now it was disheveled, greasy. Green eyes gleamed with desperation. "I carry no weapon."

"Show me," Kade insisted, gesturing for Jonquo to take the cloak all the way off. He then moved in closer, checking for any hidden weapons. Satisfied, Kade pointed with the knife. "We're going to take this outside. Ari, stay here."

"Not outside! Give just a moment, this not take long!"

From behind, Ari murmured uncertainly. "Maybe you should listen to him..?"

Reluctantly, Kade looked back at the girl, then to Jonquo. "Make it quick, then." He made no commitment to let the man go afterward.

Jonquo stared at Kade, looking worriedly at Ari behind him, then back at the closed door with the unconscious guard waiting outside. He closed his eyes. "Following the Black Storm," he began. The accent was less noticeable, the words rehearsed. "the fattened Rat will flee as is his lot. The coming Raven, blotting out the stars, heralds what has been wrought."

"What are you on about?"

"The day that Black turns Grey to Red shalt be the day that Darkness dreads," Jonquo continued, growing louder while Kade thought uncomfortably of the red glow in the clouds that night, "if the Stoic, twice embraced by Cinis, still beside Corpus treads."

A chill rushed down Kade's spine, and the knife in his hands began to lower.

"For as a Champion shall he oppose the reigning Apostate, one to live, one to die," the man continued, pausing to swallow before finishing, "The survivor guiding the Hands of Fate."

For a long moment, Kade just stared, wondering what the cryptic words meant, where they came from. Why did they strike such a strong chord with him?

"Come tonight, to temple of Nymphe," Jonquo blurted out quickly. While Kade was lost in thought, he had already slipped back to the door. Before Kade could lunge over to grab him, he was out the door and rushing away.

"Stop!" Kade shouted, but it was too late. Grumbling, he rushed over to the guard instead, checking his injuries and working to rouse him.
 
Chapter 4, Part 2
Wordcount, 2597

"Ohh no…." The voice seemed distant, like he was underwater and someone was shouting from shore. "No, no, no, this is bad. Damn, this is bad!" Someone grabbed his wrist, then put a hand to his forehead. "Kade! Kade, can you hear me?"

Slowly, Kade opened his eyes, giving a faint nod. He wasn't sure how long he had been there, but he felt cold. It was hard to move, and as soon as he tried, he felt pain blossom in his back, in his chest. He wheezed weakly, looking up at his brother, barely able to recognize him. Everything seemed dark, aside from the motes of green light flitting through the air. Fireflies?

"Hang on, Kade, you have to hang on!" Adam was shouting. "Why are you standing around? Go, go now! Find a doctor!" Kade was distantly aware of someone leaving, running away. Adam closed his hand around Kade's and squeezed tightly. "Hey, don't worry, they're bringing a doctor. It'll be just a few minutes, so hold on." It would take at least a quarter hour, probably closer to half, for anyone to make it to them. "After you're all patched up, you can play Adamas, okay?"

Kade already felt so cold. He tried to squeeze Adam's hand back, but he couldn't tell if he succeeded. His brother's warmth gave him an anchor point, though, something to hold onto. Looking upward, he was surprised to see stars. Had he been lying there all day? Was that even possible?

Adam kept talking, squeezing Kade's hand, doing everything he could think of, but it all started to fade into the background. Kade watched as a giant humanoid shape seemed to appear, standing behind Adam and reaching all the way to the sky. It was vague, foggy, but as he watched, it slowly bent down and reached a hand toward Kade. He wanted to open his mouth, say something to his brother, tell him goodbye, thank you, sorry, anything. The foggy fingers curled around Kade, easily lifting his entire body.

More ghostly figures were there. One was just as large as the first, but red as blood. Another was smaller, seeming like living water. It, or she, bent over Kade to look at him, saying nothing. The next one was dark grey, a rough-hewn statue that never seemed to move. Every time Kade blinked, though, it was in a slightly different position.

Before he could look closer at the others, a single word rippled across his consciousness, drowning out any other thoughts.

∴ Nomiunk ∴


Suddenly, his head was filled with words, pounding into his head, as all of the gathered beings spoke at once, arguing with one another. Kade screamed, eyes shut tight, trying to drown out the noise. He wanted to block his ears, but he couldn't lift his arms, and the words were in his head. It was the most exquisite torture for the mortal boy, enduring the shouting match between gods. The words meant nothing, but they were filled with power, conviction, ferocity!

Each moment seemed an eternity, but one by one, the voices grew quiet until only two were left, and then silence. Kade dared to open an eye and for just a moment, he could make out the night sky standing in front of him like a man. It pointed at him, more words hammering into his head, words he didn't, could not understand. The very final words lingered in his head, though.

∴ ...Mi Fur ∴


He blinked and winced as sunlight stabbed into his eyes. Warmth seeped into his body and he gradually became aware that the crowd of deities had become a crowd of people, including an old man in a white robe. Kade started gasping for breath, panicking as pain flared in his chest. Suffocating... not enough. No matter how hard he tried to breathe, it didn't feel like he was getting enough air! He coughed, and blood came up. "Careful, son! Don't move, breathe slow. Slow!" The doctor put a hand to his chest, trying to physically calm him, and then Kade felt the prick of a needle in his thigh, followed by numbness that rapidly spread throughout his body.

"We have to get him off the ground. He won't make it through the night if we don't get back to town," the doctor was saying as Kade's ragged breathing slowly came back under control. "It's a miracle he's survived this long."







Once the guard came to, others were summoned. Kade gave them a description of the man, Jonquo. Prisoner or not, most of the guards trusted Kade. He was one of their own, after all. Ari was there to support his story, as well, and they had the cloak that the mysterious man had been forced to leave behind.

Even though Kade was open and honest with the guards, even repeating the cryptic message, he failed to mention the meeting. Ari looked at him curiously, but when she gave her statement, she likewise left it out. "It sounds like a prophecy," one of the guards said. "I've never heard it before."

"Ramblings of madness, more like."

The man who had been knocked out shrugged. "Only time tells the difference, right?" He rubbed at his throat and groaned. "Thanks, Halbert. Sorry for letting him catch me unawares."

"Call for Edoras Sivyr," Kade requested. After a brief pause, he clarified with the captain's rank. "My Telum. I would like to speak with him directly. In the meantime, I recommend keeping two guards here, and have extra guards outside the residences of Arma Nuvaes and Arma Doran. It's possible they will also be approached." He smiled at the ambushed guard. "Even in the Armar, we don't have eyes in the back of our heads. That's why we're always assigned in pairs. There's no shame in a surprise attack." Turning back to the others, he noted, "If necessary, I'm certain Edoras will explain the need for extra manpower to your superiors."

"Yes, sir!" For a moment, it was as if they had forgotten that Kade was a prisoner and they were in charge.

"Also, please send a messenger to Palas Halbert. He owns a smithy in the Red Wings. I don't want my young cousin to walk home alone, and there's no need to overtask your men further."

Ari jumped forward and waved her arms. "No need for that! I already got father's permission to stay here tonight, and I'm perfectly safe with you men at the door."

Kade sputtered for a moment. "Stay the night? When were you planning to ask me about that?"

"When it was too dark for you to argue!" Ari answered immediately. The guards chuckled.

"Palas will have my head!" He was reasonably sure she was lying about having permission.

The girl folded her arms and huffed, then turned to the guards instead. "Please, sir guards! Don't let him send me away!"

"Ignore her," Kade commanded, scowling.

"Aw, come on, he's under house arrest! You don't have to listen to him!" Ari argued. "I'll be much safer here with you strong men, and Kade's no slouch, either."

The three men looked at one another. "Well, she is right, we don't have to listen to him…."

Kade groaned and put a hand over his face. "You don't have to let a twelve-year-old pluck your strings, either."

The young girl looked down for a moment, lip quivering. Then she leaned closer to whisper to Kade, just loud enough that the other men could hear. "What if it's my last chance to see you, though?" She looked up at him, eyes welling up. Kade stared back, trying to hold strong. He looked over to the three guards, and they were staring back expectantly.

With a sigh, Kade finally relented. "As you wish." Ari brightened up -- suspiciously quickly -- and Kade could see the other men were happy with the choice. "Please bring Telum Sivyr, though. I need to speak with him before tonight. For now, I'm leaving the front door open. That way, no more surprises."

The guard who had been ambushed was chosen as the one to leave. The other two took up post outside while Kade led Ari back inside. "What was that all about?" he asked once they were out of earshot. "The last time you'll see me?"

"Everyone's saying it," Ari explained, her victorious grin fading away. Kade sat back in his reading chair and the girl sat on the edge of the table. "They say you all violated some treaties by killing the knights of Honorast, so the old men might execute you to avoid war."

"Soldiers," Kade corrected absently. "Barely that." The sworn knights were renowned for not only their prowess in battle, but their chivalry. They would not have participated in such a base attack on civilians. "I wouldn't say we violated any treaties. We acted according to our laws, we fought to protect life. The Republic of Honorast is in violation of our treaties by waging battle in Maginholm's waters. However, the sad truth is that it might not matter who is right or wrong. If the Council feels like war is imminent, and sacrificing a mere three lives will prevent that, they will do so.

"If it comes to that, I will gladly lay down my life so others will live." It was a bitter pill to swallow, but he was sincere. However unfair it was to be condemned for doing the right thing, he would rather die than risk others dying to prove a point.

"It's not right," Ari complained, frowning.

"It's not," Kade agreed, with a noncommittal shrug. It felt like a waste, like there was so much more he could do with his life.

Ari sighed and stood up, grabbing the hooded cloak of the mysterious visitor from the floor. They had already rifled through it, and there were no clues to the man's identity, no hidden pockets, no symbols. "Are you going to the temple?" Ari asked. She looked at him over the shoulder. "Is that why you didn't say anything to the men outside?"

"I don't know," Kade answered. It was an honest answer.

"That prophecy, it was talking about that night, wasn't it?" Ari moved over to sit in one of the wooden chairs, turning the cloak over in her hands, searching again for some kind of clue. Her eyes met Kade's. "What did the rest of it mean? The part about Cinis and Corpus and an Apostate?"

"I don't know," Kade answered again. It was less honest that time, though. Ari's frown deepened. Realizing she wouldn't accept that answer again, Kade reached into his shirt, touching the sore red scar on his chest. "I mean, there's one idea that springs to mind. Cinis brought death into the world, Corpus brought life. So then, the one who is twice embraced by Cinis is one who died twice. If he's still walking with Corpus, then he's still alive."

"That doesn't make sense. People can't come back from the dead."

There, Kade smiled wryly. "So sure of that, are you?" He touched his scar again but offered an alternate scenario. "What about the lady I rescued, Thaleia? She had stopped breathing before I could get her to shore, her heart stopped beating. Maybe it was only for a moment. For that moment, though, wouldn't you say she was dead?"

Ari's eyes widened and she breathed out, "You brought her back to life?"

Shaking his head, Kade made a clear distinction. "I asked the Seven to grant her breath. With it, she was able to live again. I didn't bring her back to life."

"You cast the spell, though!" Ari argued. "It's stupid to act like the gods would have done it without you!"

"That's not the point," Kade replied calmly. "It's not really a lesson for today, either. My only point is that there are people alive now who have died. Even though I'm using a mundane example, the prophecy might be referring to a more miraculous resurrection, too. If the prophecy is real at all."

"Do you think it is?"

That was a difficult question. It spoke to him on a level he wasn't comfortable with. Kade wanted to run off to Nymphe's temple and demand answers. Ever since the storm, he had been thinking about what would happen to him, the fallout of his actions that night. He'd been dreading the thought of being executed for politics, of dying in such a pathetic way. It would be a waste.

He would never find the answer he had been hunting.

Kade talked to priests about the visions he had seen as a child. As he lay there dying, with a shard of metal piercing through his back into one lung, he was certain he had seen the Seven, or at least some of them. Their words haunted him, beyond his understanding and yet so full of meaning and power. The last words was etched into his memory: Mi Hur. They were among the earliest words of Deisian that he learned.

Together they meant 'destiny.'

For years, Kade had studied Deisian, each word presenting a new struggle. As he told Arttoa, there was more to the language than the sound alone. His hope was that something would jog his memory, reveal more of the message from his childhood. Why had the Seven spared him, keeping him alive long enough for a doctor to arrive? Without their intervention, he was certain he would have bled out. He distinctly remembered the shouting, gods divided.

What was the destiny they saw for him?

Was it related to this prophecy?

"I think it might be," Kade answered, finally. While he couldn't mention it to Ari, his thoughts also went to the stolen artifact Edoras spoke of, Quod's Seventh Eye. Little was known about it outside of certain circles high in the temples. Kade had heard of it only in passing in his many years of study, and he had found out precious little more in the days since his house arrest began. It was known by a second name, the Prophet's Vision. It was too coincidental for an artifact related to prophets to disappear just before a man came spouting prophecy.

"Then you have to go to the temple," Ari said matter-of-factly. "If there's a chance it's real, then you wouldn't want to anger the gods by ignoring it." A smile curled at the corner of her lip. "You go and I'll watch your back!"

"Absolutely not," Kade said immediately.

Ari raised her hands defensively, sleeves flapping. "Nothing dangerous, I promise! If some dastardly people club you over the back of the head, I'll run for the guards right away!" Taking the cloak, she threw it over her shoulders and pulled the hood low. "They'll never even notice me!" With the cloak hiding her figure, she was at least tall enough to pass as an adult. From a distance, maybe, and in some shadows.

"If I go, I won't be going alone," Kade promised. "If this has to do with the war between Honorast and Beladhell, I absolutely cannot let you get involved, no matter how willing you are. You'll stay here, and if I don't return, then you'll tell everyone where I went and why."

Realizing he wasn't budging, Ari sighed and gave a reluctant nod. Satisfied that the matter was settled, Kade rose and went to the cupboard to get a drink. It seemed like he would never get used to waiting, and waiting gave him far too much time to think. Already he was second-guessing his decisions.

From the living area, Ari suddenly asked, "Hey Kade, do you think this was the same hooded man you saw near the lighthouse?"
 

Current Date in Araevis

Back
Top