His hand moved with an ancient grace as the old man penned an entry into the
tome that served as his journal. He no longer had to think about what he was doing
it was, to him, just another entry of his days activities and a few personal complaints
regarding matters the annoyed him to no end. He glanced out the window to see
the sun setting. Most would consider the view breathtaking. To him, it was the
same view he had seen since the tower had been completed seventy years past.
He still enjoyed the view but after all of this time it was of little comfort to him.
He knew what was on the horizon.
He shook his head and looked back at the tome. Reading his most recent entry back
to himself, he nodded satisfied. With a long practiced move he slipped the quill pen
back into it's stand and took up his pipe. Sitting back he looked again out the window
and snapped his fingers and bright blue flame appeared from his thumb. Lighting his
pipe and dismissing the flame he rose from his seat and moved to the window.
"Drats and bebothered", he grumbled. "An old man can't even smoke in peace
any longer!" He moved from the window with his pipe clamped firmly in his mouth
and moved to the chambers doorway stopping only long enough to take up his
ancient staff. It wasn't for support , it was a weapon of no small power in hishands. He exited the chamber muttering under his breath as he moved down the
hallway to the stairs. One hand gesturing with practiced ease finishing with a sharp
move that created a dim nimbus around him. He moved down the stairs with the
speed and ease that belied his aged and was soon standing on the first floor moving
steadily toward the sole doorway to the outside.
He practically ripped the door from it's hinges as he tore it open stomping outside
to meet the rider he had seen far above in his study. A much younger man had been
riding fast and hard for several hours to get here he started at the old man's sudden
appearance from the tower. Pulling his horse up short he dismounted quickly and
approached the old man. "Sir, It is time!", he exclaimed breathing almost as hard as
his mount. "Calm yourself boy!" The older man admonished, "If they haven't arrived
yet we have time for you to catch your breath." "When I left the city we could see
the dust from their march!" "They couldn't have been more than a fifty miles
away and it took me at least three hours to get here, we must hurry!"
The old man sighed gently and puffed pointedly on his pipe. "Lad, if they are on
foot and that far away, we have plenty of time to get back and tend to them."
He snapped his fingers and another larger doorway appeared on the tower's wall.
"Stable your horse, we won't be needing it for the return trip." The younger man's
eyes widened at the sight of a doorway 'just' appearing from thin air. He didn't
understand the old man's art and was somewhat fearful. And the notion of what
the old man was suggesting disturbed him more than a little. "Don't you have
any other horses we could use?", he queried. Rolling his eyes slightly the old man
pulled the pipe from his mouth, "No, I haven't ridden a horse in ages. Now quit
acting like a child afraid of the dark." "This will not have been the first time you
have seen magic in play.", He knew the city was home to other magi and surely
the boy had seen magic before. The younger man stiffened somewhat, "Sir, I neve.."
The old man cut him off with a gesture. "Weren't you the one in a hurry a
moment ago?", he asked. The young man stammered and the old man again
cut him short. "I have practiced my art longer than your father has lived, boy,
have some faith!" The younger man couldn't really argue since he knew the need
for haste was greater than his own discomfort. (It didn't mean he had to like the
idea though!)
The aging wizard reached into a pocket and pulled out a disk of polished quartz
and tossed it into the air. "Let's see what our 'friends' are up to.", he said. The disk
stopped midway in it's fall and began to glow gently. An image formed above it.
The horde had made quite a bit of progress since the young man had set out. No more
the twenty miles from the city walls. "Oh my gods, How could they have gotten that
far in only three hours?!", the boy cried out. "Look at them, they seem to just
shamble!". The old man grimaced at what he saw. He knew this foe all too well.
Fifty years before they had first appeared ravaging the world. No one knew where
they had originated and it was doubtful any would ever know for sure but a few
like the old man had seen them as more than a passing problem early on. Kingdom
after kingdon had been attacked by them. No matter what forces were arrayed against
them their numbers only grew. These were not men, they were not alive. They had
once been alive but now some unknown force motivated them. These horrors were
undead. Several prominent sages had been consulted and none could explain them.
The more "common" undead were fairly straightforward in their nature. Priests of
the darker deities would reanimate bodies as well as a few mad magi seeking power
beyond mortal understanding. These though were something different. No magic
animated them. By magical standards there was no logical reason for them to
exist. Their existence was like a disease. A highly contagious disease at that. Soldiers
sent against them had reported seeing their fellows merely scratched by one of
the things and within minutes turn against his former friends and allies, a rotting,
shambling horror. Worse still, they bore an intelligence akin to the living. They didn't
speak or communicate their intent but they generally made their desires know.
They seemed to exist only to kill, destroy, and pass on their "disease".
The aging wizard had his suspicions about their origins but in the time he had studied
them he had still drawn no decisive conclusion. Thirty years earlier he and other magi
from the city had created a magical wall to forestall what they all knew to be
inevitable. Finally the wall had failed and the hour was at hand. The great city was
not the last bastion of humanity though. Other cities and towns had managed to
survive The Horde. Every day was a struggle for many but life went on as well as
could be expected under the endless threat of attack by a foe that needed no food
and had no need for sleep.
He spoke a word and the image vanished and the disk fell to his waiting hand.
"Come along, lad.", motioning the younger man to follow him. He slipped the disk
thoughtfully into his pocket and slipped his pipe into another. Holding the gnarled
old staff he spoke a command and a circle of light appeared before him. The circle
swirled and twisted until it formed a ten foot tall disk of silvery light. The younger man
looked doubtfully at the portal. He disliked the idea of stepping through that thing.
He had travel magically only once before and it had left him quite ill afterward. Sighing
and gritting his teeth he said, "After you sir, I insist.". The older man smirked at
his obvious discomfort. " No no, after you, I have to stay here to maintain the
gateway." Looking more than a little green at the gills the younger man stepped into
the silvery portal. "I'm glad I missed dinner now.", he mumbled.
The portal appeared in a flash of light to the sound of a small thunder clap. People
scattered at it's appearance not knowing what was about to happen. Their surprise
gave way to curiosity as a young man stepped through the surface into their midst
soon followed by the old man carrying his staff. The portal faded then and people
breathed a sigh of relief when they realized who had come. At that moment the old
man recalled something, "You did stable your horse, no?", he teased. Looking slightly
sick and taken aback the younger man stammered for a moment, "No matter, my
stable hands will tend to the beast.", he assured him. Looking confused it took
a moment for the young man to realize what kind of stable hands the wizard likely
had as he lived alone in his tower.
Around the corner there came the rattling of arms and armor as the watch ran
to investigate the sudden unexpected disturbance. At the head of the patrol
ran a man most would have called to old for such duties but he outpaced his
younger charges with ease. He pulled up short when he saw the source of the
disturbance. "Must you always make such a grand entrance when you come to
town you old fool?!", he bellowed in mock outrage. "Put your weapons away boys,
no need to dull them on his hard head... today!", he taunted his old friend. "I hadn't
expected you back so soon, Jerrad but none the less we can use all the help we can
get. This is going to be a long night I fear." The younger man looked up from
queasiness at the sound of his name, "Yes, sir, I pushed the horse as hard as I
dared.", he said. During this exchange the older man reached into his pocket and
extracted his pipe again and puffed on it slowly and thoughtfully until he was
sure he had their attention. (The fact a rainbow of colors appeared in the smoke
rather helped to draw most peoples attention.) "How far away is The Horde from
the city, Wallace?", he asked the watch commander. Wallace looked at the west wall
looking for one particular man holding a banner with the range on it. "Unless my
eyes have finally gone, they are still a good fifteen miles out." He gazed at the sky
and saw it was finally twilight soon it would be night, their time.
"Have they already called everyone inside the walls yet?" The old man asked. "Yes, as
soon as the rangers spotted the unholy bastards after they broke through the
barrier they sent word." "All but a handful have made it to safety, now we had best
get you to tower of wizardry before Allister has a fit." He lead the way to the tall
slender needle of a tower that served as a central meeting place for the magi of
the city and surrounding area. "Jerrad, I want you to stay with him in case he
needs any help.", Wallace directed the younger man. "But sir, don't you need as
many men as you can get to man the walls?" Jerrad asked, hoping to avoid any more
magic today. Fighting an undead horde seemed far preferable to going into the
tower to him. Wallace looked at the young man oddly for a moment before replying,
"Not right now and besides we have plans to stop them before they get to the walls."
"Now get moving before I smack you myself!", He rested a hand lightly on the handle
of his silver warhammer. "Thor be with you old friend.", He said to the old man in
parting as he lead his men to the wall in preparation for the battle to come.
The old man called after the watch commander, "Wallace, try not to catch an
arrow in the backside this time!", Upon hearing this the warrior priest stopped dead
in his tracks unable to walk for the laughing fit that had overcome him. The old man
sniggered not at his old friend but the looks on his charges faces. "Come on, lad, we
have a meeting to attend." Jerrad looked at the tower and sighed. "Yes, Sir." He
followed the old man into the tower reluctantly but steadily, his commander had
ordered it and he would follow his orders to the letter even if he'd rather be elsewhere
just now.
In the tower's uppermost floor a group of magi and apprentices carried out
preparations for the long night to come. One in particular, an older wizard in
a brilliant golden robe look out the western window studying the fast approaching
horde with great interest through a brass telescope normally used for studying
the stars late at night. Allister didn't like what he saw. Not all did he like it. Rotting
shambling corpses moved across the distance with a speed that was as unnatural
as their state was. He pulled back from the telescope to rub his tired eyes when he
heard his name called from behind. "Allister, how does it look so far?", the older
man asked. With a sigh Allister gestured toward the telescope, "Have a look for
yourself Merridus.", Merridus walked to the telescope and peered out at the oncoming
horde.
He stood there for several minutes taking advantage of what little light was left, of
which there was precious little, He stood straight for a moment, "What the Hells?!",
he exclaimed. Something at the very back of the horde had caught his eye but he
could make out no real detail. Allister looked at him and asked, "What? What did you
see?" The old man looked at Allister and ponder his answer for a moment. "I'm not
entirely sure but I saw one at the very back moving differently from the rest.".
"It moved with the smoothness and grace of the living!", Allister looked taken
aback at this. He didn't think to question what Merridus had seen, even with the
fading light he knew the old man's eyesight was probably better than his own.
"A new kind mayhap?", he asked. Merridus pondered this notion for a moment, "I
am not sure but I think what I saw may be what we have suspected for some time
now.". "A living master of The Horde.", he stated.
Jerrad was paying only scant attention to the old wizards, this place always awed
him. What he could never understand is how this room at the very top of the needle
thin spire could be so huge, probably bigger than the first floor was! He still thought
to himself, could facing walking rotting corpses be any worse than this place? He
sighed. "You look worried warrior.", he heard a female voice from behind him. He
started a bit as he turned around to face the young woman addressing him. He
began to speak but his words caught in his throat. She was beautiful! She stood
several inches shorter than Jerrad and had to look up to see him. Extending her
hand in greeting, "I'm Jennyth, apprentice to mistress Elwenn the Grey." She smiled
at the young mans obvious discomfort. He took her proffered hand in greeting and
managed to stammer out, "I-I-I'm Watch of jer... Errr.. Jerrad of the watch." He
flushed a wonderful shade of red in embarrassment at his own awkwardness.
"Jennyth, I need your assistance here.", called an older woman presumably her
teacher. "A pleasure meeting you, Jerrad.", Jennyth said as she made her way to
aid her teacher. He smiled and waved farewell. Well, maybe the tower wasn't so bad
after all as he watched her walk away. "Boy, you'd best watch yourself in here, she
might decide to keep you as pet toad if you misbehave and I don't mean the girl."
he heard from behind him. What was with the wizards sneaking behind me, he thought
to himself a bit dryly. When he turned to look at the old man addressing he saw that
he had produced the crystal disk again. "Time to see if we can get some useful
answers now that I know what to look for!", he exclaimed.
Flipping the disk into the air as he had outside his tower the old man waited for the
disk to reach the right point before speaking the command word. It stopped
perfectly at five feet off the stone floor and began to glow softly. A new image formed
as Merridus focused on what he had seen earlier through the telescope. A figure
walking with a steady purposeful stride followed the wake of the oncoming horde.
Allister approached the old man's scrying device. "Do you recognize him?", he asked.
Merridus studied the figure, dressed head to foot in polished black armor and a flowing
cloak, he couldn't see the figures face since it was wearing a heavy helmet. He shook
his head in answer to Allister's question, "No but there is something... odd here."
Something about the figure seemed strangely familiar to him but he couldn't
say what just yet.
Suddenly the figured stopped in it's tracks and turned until it was facing them. A look
of shock crossed the old man's face. No one was supposed to be able to sense his
crystal disk's scrying! The dark figure raised a gloved hand and clenched it into a fist.
Merridus noticed his disk was wavering in the air. His eyebrows shot up and he
cried out, "Everyone, down now!". Jerrad still pondering the sway of Jennyth's hips
as she moved didn't hear him nor did he see the old man's mad dash as he ran to knock him the floor. The disk flared with a brilliance that lit the room as bright as day before
exploding sending razor sharp shards around the room.
More than a little shaken the magi collected in the room looked about to ensure
that no one was seriously injured from the explosion and resultant shards. One
younger apprentice at the far side of the room had been struck in the shoulder by one
of the deadly missiles. He lay there screaming in pain as one wizard reached him to
give aid to the wounded youth. "Easy, son, try to be still and let me examine the
wound,", he said in an effort to calm the apprentice. "Someone fetch my bag!", he
yelled. His bag was brought to him quickly enough and he proceeded to treat the
boy's injury.
Allister rose from the floor looking more angry than rattled, "Merridus, are you
alright?", he said a bit more sharply than he intended. The old man rose giving Jerrad
a pat on the shoulder after he saw the younger man was uninjured save for be shaken.
"Yes, Allister, I'll be fine but I can show you one person that is going to regret doing
that.", he said in a deathly calm.
In the fields outside the city the dark figure stood laughing mockingly. The night had
finally come in full. His minions shambled onward toward the last city untouched
by them. The figure held up a small crystal sphere and gazed into it's depths for
a moment. The city's defenders had already taken the field planning to met The Horde
and stop them before they reached the walls. The defenders were at least half a mile
from the safety of the city walls and their numbers were much smaller than that of
The Horde. One to his ten, the dark figure laughed yet again, even if their feeble
magi were fielded his minions would overwhelm them and take the city long before the
sun rose. He lifted the sphere to his face and spoke, "Merrrrridusssss, hear me old
fool,", he taunted "Come out and play old one, it is time for you to die. You will serve
me as my personal minion!", he lowered the sphere and walked with purposeful strides
toward the city.
"..for you to die. You will serve me as my personal minion!", the apparition exclaimed
in the tower's uppermost room. With a gust of wind the image vanished. If the old
man had looked enraged before he now looked like he could rip the dark figure limb
from limb with nothing but his bare hands. Jerrad looked as pale as a sheet, "S-S-Sir,
who or what was that?", he asked in a terrified tone. The old man took a deep calming
breath and reached into his pocket for his pipe. Drawing smoke from the pipe his
demeanor seemed the change from enraged to calm again ina matter of moments.
He stood there thinking, so you know my name do you? That voice, something about
it was familiar. He furrowed his eyebrows deep in thought. Allister was busy getting
the other magi ready to enter the battle. He entered a circle in the center of the room
and called the others to him. He looked over at the old man, "Merridus? Will you be
coming with us through the circle?", he asked the old man. Merridus looked up from
his contemplations, "No, Allister, I have been sent a personal invitation. I'll be meeting
him directly.", he said calmly. Allister looked concerned now, he knew what the old
man had in mind now. And he didn't like the idea of Merridus meeting that thing
on it's own terms. He also knew that the old man's mind was made up.
All but the injured apprentice and a handful of novices had used the circle to teleport
to the battle field. The old man looked at Jerrad and asked, "Will you be going to the
wall, lad?". Jerrad thought for a moment, the watch commander had ordered him to
stay with the old man but gave no orders beyond that. He was young, only twenty-
two, and inexperienced in what to do in an unexpected situation. "The commander
told me to stay with you in case you needed help, Sir. I don't want to met that thing
face to face but if you need me and I am not there...", he said with uncertainty. The
old man smiled kindly and sighed. "Come along young Jerrad, we have an army of
horrors and it's master to defeat this night!".
A flash of light appeared in the fields behind the advancing army of undead, the old
man and his young charge looked around carefully to ensure they hadn't popped in
on a rear guard of undead. Jerrad looked up into the night sky. Overcast, he thought
sourly, just great, now we will have to be on top of them before we will even see
them! He didn't stop to consider that the monsters ahead of them while intelligent
weren't the greatest minds in the world. Only their master would know to be on the
look out for his "guests" arrival. Far ahead they could see flashes of light from the
city forces fighting The Horde's relentless advance.
The catapults on the walls were loaded with blobs of tar and casks of oil waiting
for what they hoped didn't happen. Men watched the battle on the field with
great anticipation and more than a little anxiety. The walls didn't have all of the
catapults though, ten of them had been rolled out with the defenders to help,
"give their visitors a warm reception", as Wallace had told one of his subordinates.
As soon as The Horde had gotten within range of the catapults they began sending
out their "gifts" of flaming tar and burning oil casks. The first few shots fell a few
yards short but that didn't matter the shambling corpses just marched through the
burning areas with little concern. Even flaming and "dying" they marched on. The
defenders stared in stark amazement at the sight of the advancing army marching
on aflame. After a short while they would finally drop and not rise again thankfully.
The catapult's loads began to take a real toll the closer they got, entire swaths
of the things were covered in flames and fell within moments but The Horde marched
on.
Wallace paced back and forth waiting for the things to get close enough for his
archers to do their work. He would stop and look every so often until he finally
stopped and grinned wolfishly. "Archers, ready you weapons and take aim!", he
bellowed. A few more steps, he thought. Raising his arm, "Loose!", he yelled. The
first volley of arrows tore into the first rank of foes. "Shoot at will!", he ordered.
Arrows launched into the oncoming army in well ordered volleys, Wallace's men
were well trained and some of the finest archers anyone could ask for. The arrows
weren't as effective as the flaming tar and oil but they took their toll on the undead
horrors. Creature after creature dropped more often than not with multiple arrows
protruding from it's body. The watch commander noticed that the ones that had
caught arrows to the head dropped faster than others. "Hmmm...", he looked to the
nearest of his archers and said, "Harold, try for a head shot on that one.", pointing
at one wearing a red cloak. Harold was almost as old as his CO and smiled, "Yes, Sir."
He drew a bead on the creature and loosed an arrow perfectly into it's left eye. It
fell dead with no other wound. Wallace grinned grimly, "Take aim for their heads!
They'll fall with one shot!", he commanded. The archer quickly complied with the
order and shifted their aims. More than a few arrows missed their intended targets
and struck creatures behind them but the arrows that struck true killed their targets
instantly.
The city's magi were fared almost as well as the watch did. Bolts of lightening, balls
of fire, bolts of pure magical energy hit the oncoming army and tore into their ranks
to great effect. Allister pointed a slender wand at a section of the army and unleashed
a beam of green energy that vaporized at least a dozen with one hit. He paused for a
moment to consider the odds. There had to have been at least ten thousand and
between the catapults, the archers, and the magic being thrown at the things , they
might have destroyed a thousand so far. How long could they keep it up? Could they
stop The Horde before it got to the walls? He glanced up into the night sky trying
to spot one of the other magi who had an idea about a shower of magical acid on
the oncoming horde. He couldn't spot them where ever they were but he could see
the effect of their spell, a section of "zombies", for that is what he started calling them
for want of a better name, began to melt and bubble from the acidic "rain" that fell
on them. He took aim again and vaporized another dozen.
This was going to be a long night...
The old man and Jerrad stalked quietly after the advancing horde seeking it's master.
Then it happened. A ball of light appeared suspended in the air twenty feet up, directly
over the dark figure. It bowed deeply, "Weeellcome to my parlor, Merrrridussss.", it
greeted. It stood at seven feet tall, Jerrad's mouth went dry as he reached for his
short sword and dagger. The figure raised it's hand and shook it's finger at the boy.
"Naughty naughty.", it taunted and a group of his minions came into view. "Kill the
boy, the old man is mine!", it commanded. They shambled toward Jerrad and he felt a
hand tap him on the shoulder followed by what could only be described as something
akin to an electrical surge through his body. "A protection to aid you, lad.", he heard
the old man say.
The dark figure drew forth a sword of dark energy and raised it in salute. "Make
peace with your gods, old one, today you met them.", The figure walked toward the
old man with a menacing determination intended to unnerve his opponent. The old
man tapped his staff against the ground gently and it stood there freely, he removed
his cloak and casually hung it over the staff as if he fought battles like this in his
spare time. He reached to his own belt and drew a sword himself. Where the dark
figure drew a weapon of dark energy, this was an archaic blade of damascus steel.
He spoke a word and the blade began to glow with a strange colorless radiance.
The dark one stopped dead in it's tracks at this sight. "You still wield the Sword of
the Damned, I see. It will not help you here, fool!" The swords name was something
of a misnomer, it had once been carried by a holy knight a thousand years past. It
was related to the damned but not in the way the name might imply, it's sole
purpose was to free to souls of the damned from their torment. "We shall see.", the
old man said flatly. "Now remove your helmet so I might see your eyes, if you aren't
the coward you seem.", he taunted the dark figure. "As you wish, old man.", Reaching
up one hand the figure slipped the helm from it's head and dropped it to the ground
at his feet. A mane of curly golden red hair hung limply from a deaths head of rotting
flesh. "You don't look overly surprised, Merridus.", the figure commented. The old man
looked at the figure with sadness rather than disgust or shock. All he could get out
was one word, "Arnus."
Some sixty years ago Merridus had had a young apprentice named Arnus. A promising
youth with a great understanding of magic and a keen interest in a alchemy. He had
been more than just an apprentice to Merridus, he had been like a son to him but
as Arnus' power grew something changed in him. The old man had seen it happen
before, some people couldn't control the influences the art had on their minds and
even their souls. Arnus began acting secretively about some line of research he had
undertaken in his own time. For some reason he had become obsessed with immortality
and went to great lengths to attain it. Lengths that Merridus could not condone.
One night he had intended to confront Arnus about his secret research demanding
to know what he was doing. He had barged into the small laboratory his student had
used and was overcome with the horrors that the chamber held. Parts of freshly
killed people, plants that were highly toxic and a tome that he recognized as being
a treatise on lichdom. Then he saw his student across the room. A cold dead stare
gazed out from under the hood of his robe. They fought bitterly until Arnus, almost
defeated, fled using magic. Merridus had sought the aid of Wallace to lay the murdered
to rest and destroyed the research materials.
Now here he stood before him. Holding a blade of evil seeking to destroy a city full
of innocents with an army of the undead. The old man raised his sword in salute.
Jerrad found himself hard pressed by a dozen rotting horrors. Slash, stab, retreat.
Slash, stab, retreat. He fell into a rhythm as he had been trained to do. His sword
struck one across the throat half severing it's head and the creature fell. He spared
a glance at the old man and dark one. The old man wielded his blade with surprising
skill and ease. But Jerrad had his own problems at the moment. Eleven of them to be
precise. One of them tried to claw him with a rotten hand but just before it's hand
could make contact an arc of electrical energy shot forth from Jerrad and struck the
creature dead with enough power to throw it's body twenty feet, the smoking
husk crumbled to dust on impact. Maybe I'll walk away from this alive yet, Jerrad
thought to himself with renewed hope. A voice sounded in his mind, Don't get cocky, lad, that spell won't last all night. He shot a quick glance at the old man who had
locked hilts with the dark one. Sweat covered the old man's face from his exertions
and his opponent wasn't showing any sign of relenting.
Then disaster struck.
In his moment of distraction sending the mental message to Jerrad, Merridus lost
a seconds concentration in his fight. Arnus sensed his distraction and took advantage
of it. Send his knee into the old man's belly he knocked the air from his lungs and sent
him sprawling and his weapon flying from his grasp. A cry of victory filled the night
air as Arnus brought his dark blade down into the stomach of the old man pinning
him to the ground. Jerrad saw this and screamed, "Noooo!", he redoubled his fights
intensity knocking two of foes to the ground. He tried to disengage himself to go
to the old man's aid but found himself cut off by his other foes. "Damn it!", he
cursed as he crossed blades with another one and was forced back.
The Horde had finally gotten close enough to engage the defenders with weapons.
Swords rose and fell, maces and hammer swung with great fury. One hammer in
particular shone with a nearly blinding light. Wallace, a priest of Thor, wielded his
holy weapon with a fury this night. He struck monster after monster sending them
sprawling, often with their heads turned to paste. An opening presented itself
and he raised his hammer above calling out to his god. He brought the hammer
down and released it. It flew into the horde and struck several down before returning
to his waiting hands. While the hammer was in flight he took a moment to survey the
battle. Holding his returned hammer, he called out to his men, "Fall back, orderly
fighting retreat! Let's give some ground so we can regroup some!", his men fell back
fighting the entire way. The defenders could still move faster retreating than there
enemies could advance so tightly packed as they were. When enough room opened
Wallace gave the order for the archers to loose another volley. Light was no problem
now, the catapults had been loosing a steady stream of flaming tar and oil casks
since the battle had begun. The Hordes numbers had been greatly thinned since the
battle had started, from ten thousand to less than five thousand now. That was the
bright spot of the battle. Of a less happy note, the archers quivers were almost
completed depleted and the city couldn't risk send fresh supplies. The catapults
were also running out of things to throw into the mass. The magi were running low
spells and their wands and similar items were running low as well. Wallace said nothing
aloud but spoke a silent prayer to his god, Please, let Merridus appear soon.
Arnus savagely twisted the blade making the old man writhe in agony. Something
was amiss though. The old man remained alive still! "What is this?", he screamed in
rage. Merridus looked up and smiled grimly, "The end.", he spoke calmly. With a
gesture his sword returned to his hand. The archaic blade glowed with a fierce
light as he brought it up. Up into Arnus' unprotected neck. The blade completed it's
and Arnus' head dropped to the ground. The blade glowed even more brightly calling
on it's ancient power. The still standing body quivered as something broke through the
polished black chest plate. The spirit of Arnus drifted above the toppling body. It
was the Arnus the old man remembered. It looked sadly at the blade protruding from
his old master and friend's stomach and gripped the hilt with ethereal hands. Drawing
the dark blade from Merridus he tossed the blade aside and faded from sight
mouthing a silent 'Thank You' to the old man.
Merridus lay there in a pool of his own blood weakly summoning his pipe from his
cloak's pocket. He brought it to his lips and drew on it, inhaling the vapors from
it. He held them for a long time and looked down to see the grievous wound closing.
Another draw and the wound healed more. He looked over at Jerrad to see the boy
was holding his own against the monsters. The wound was no longer critical but it
was still sore as hell and would be until he had a chance to rest. "Off your arse , on
your feet.", he muttered tiredly to himself. He stood slowly and with great effort,
looking over the fight Jerrad was engaged he chose the simplest mether he knew to
end it. Twenty bolts of raw power pounded into Jerrad's foes and all of them fell
with their skulls pulverized. Jerrad looked in shock at the old man. Not only was
he still alive but very much still in the fight! "How...", he started to ask but the
old man raised a hand to forestall the questions he knew were in the young man's
mind to ask. "Not now, lad. Maybe later if I feel up to it. Right now we still have
more work to do.", he said tiredly. He started toward the rear flank of the undead
horde puffing on his pipe gaining energy with every step. A snap of his fingers and his
staff and cloak appeared beside him, he slipped his cloak on on the move as the staff
floated beside him keeping pace with his strides. Jerrad followed in their wake.
Allister looked grimly at crumbled remains of the wand he had used. It's power
consumed it turned into little more than dust. Them he saw it. Not his demise but a
bright flash of flames at the very rear of the horde. Merridus had joined the fray
finally. Wallace saw it too and smiled, We might make it to see dawn yet, he thought
to himself. His men were tired, nay, exhausted from the battle. He now gave the order
he knew they had all half hoped to hear. "Fall back, full retreat, To the city walls!"
The retreat was orderly but done with as much speed as the tired defenders could
manage. Wallace drew from under his cloak a special torch, one that would burn a
bright green light that could have been seen ten miles easily. This was a signal to the
defenders on the wall to be ready to launch their attack as soon as they made the
wall.
His second in command saw the flaring torch almost immediately, "Get the catapults
ready!", he yelled. He knew what his commander had in mind here. "Archers, flaming
arrows as soon as our people reach the wall! If it is shambling, I want to see it burning
like a yule log!", the order went all along the west wall and they waited. They made the
wall only a brief time later, panting a sweating but alive and save for the time.
The old man walked with a deliberation that would have made even a dragon take a
step back. Ever gesture and word unleashed magical energy into the shambling corpses.
The five thousand that had remained at the time of the retreat had their number
reduced even further with every spell he loosed. Jerrad could do nothing to help
except walk behind him and act as an unneeded bodyguard. He knew the old man
had to be exhausted but he kept on moving and throwing his spells into the enemy.
He looked into the sky and saw the moon finally, it was in the wesrten sky beginning
it's decent. It would be dawn soon. Then he saw the city's catapult launching their
own deadly payload into the horde. Casks of oil shattered and splashed those nearby
spreading the flames farther and farther among the undead army. Huge globs of
tar hit as well splattering and carrying searing flames into the walking corpses. Flaming
arrows picked off the front lines and fresh fighters charged out of the city
gates to meet the remaining horde.
The old man sat in his study finishing the latest entry in his journal. "..and thus
we survived the long night." He slipped the quill pen back into it's holder and reached
for his pipe. A snap of his fingers and it was lit. He started to gesture for a glass
of brandy but changed his mind and got up to pour it himself. It was three days
after the battle and he was still tired from it. He sat back down at his writing desk
and read over the entry. Nodding satisfied he left it open to allow the ink to dry.
Amazing, he thought, out of the thousand men who marched into battle only forty-
three had been killed. He mourned for their families losses but he knew it could have
been far worse had the horde made it inside the walls. He finished his brandy and sat
the glass back beside the decanter and left the study. One finally piece of business
to tend to, he thought. He moved down the stairs at a much more reasonable pace
than he had three days ago.
He stepped outside and moved solemnly to a funeral pyre he had constructed
earlier that morning. He gazed at the bundle that lay atop it."It was never your
intent when your were my student to become something evil in this world, Arnus.",
his voice cracked slightly on his last word. "The sword already released and redeemed
your soul, all I can do now is lay your body to rest.", he said sadly. He reached down
to the base of the pyre and took up a simple torch and lit it with flint and steel.
using the torch he lit the wood piled under the pyre and stood back watching
as the flames consumed the earthly remains of his former student and friend.
~Fin~
289 Views | Rating: (0 rates)