best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 54 – THE BATTLE FOR SIDASTRA

Ascendant (Songs of Chaos, #1)

Holt

Three days since arriving in Sidastra; two days since he burned his fatherโ€™s body upon the pyre; hours at most until the swarm arrived. Even with all the activity surrounding him, Holt had stayed put, Cleansing every impurity and Forging every drop of magic into Ashโ€™s core, standing now because there was nothing more he could do.

Ashโ€™s core shone diamond bright, more silver-white than ever before. Holt thought it had become denser too, a result of his fastidious Forging over the last thirty-six hours. Especially at night.

If only the clouds would part to allow the moonlight to rain down, then there would really be a difference. No matter. For now, Holt had done all he could. He and Ash were as prepared for a war โ€“ magically speaking โ€“ as they could be under the circumstances.

Ash stirred from his nap.ย โ€œFinally, youโ€™re up.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s for your benefit you know,โ€ Holt said. โ€œCome. We need to pick up your food.โ€

After speaking with Talia heโ€™d decided to wait until battle was upon them for Ash to eat his venison. He appreciated what she said about marginal gains, but he thought given the circumstances they should take every edge that they could.

She had taken her leave sometime around supper to continue preparations with Ealdor Harroway. Holt had feigned deep concentration at the time, still raw and a little ashamed from their heated conversation. He had not explained himself well.

As painful as her choice would be, sheโ€™d be welcomed by the party she chose to commit to. Whereas Ash and himself would be outcasts wherever they went. Still, he didnโ€™t like how they had parted, especially before a battle. Heโ€™d try to find her and make things right before it began.

He and Ash walked across the palace grounds together, heading for the kitchens. Soldiers called to each other along the walls. Torches and braziers attempted to relieve the gathering night. A smell of potato and leek soup lingered in the clammy air. Holt told Ash to wait in the yard then entered, weaving through the staff as naturally as one of them. Most had their heads down and didnโ€™t notice him, those who did betrayed the fear in their eyes. Had he looked that afraid when the scourge burned the Crag? He must have.

The kitchens were as vast as heโ€™d envisioned: red brick arches held up a high ceiling, allowing air to breathe despite the great charcoal fires and ovens running down both walls. Every type of pot, pan and utensil hung above the long oak tables, their pristine copper reflecting a warm glow of their own.

And he had thought working in the Cragโ€™s kitchens had been hectic.

The head Cook caught wind of Holtโ€™s arrival and rushed to greet him. โ€œHonored Riderโ€”โ€

โ€œPlease just call me Holt. Iโ€™m a Cook, like you.โ€

โ€œForgive me, yeโ€™honor, but old habits.โ€ He bobbed on the spot and snapped his fingers at a group of kitchenhands. They brought a black roasting dish over and the Cook pulled off the lid, letting loose a strong, gamy smell tinted with licorice.

โ€œThis type of dragon is new to me,โ€ said the Cook, โ€œbut I thought roasting the haunch with aniseed would be a nice starting point.โ€

That explains the smell, Holt thought. Heโ€™d have to remember to note down Ashโ€™s reaction to it, if he got the chance.

โ€œItโ€™s been left to rest so it should be tender,โ€ the Cook said.

โ€œSo long as it gives my dragon more power, heโ€™ll wolf it down however it tastes,โ€ Holt said. โ€œWe canโ€™t be picky. Wrap it in linen and Iโ€™ll take it with me.โ€

Once he had the meat in hand, he found it awkward to leave. The other servants bowed to him, repeatedly, likely wondering why he hadnโ€™t swept from the hot, noisy area yet. They must have heard of his story by now, or a rumor of it. Perhaps they admired him; one of their own who had elevated himself. Or did they secretly curse him too as a chaos bringer while smiling to his face? It was impossible to know, and whatever their feelings Holt didnโ€™t think knowing would bring him much comfort nor cause further distress. He was an outsider now, even inside a kitchen which should have been his domain.

By the time he made it out to the yard horns were blowing.

โ€œThey have come,โ€ย Ash said.ย โ€œTheir stench is thick in the air; their shrieks pierce the night.โ€

Holt clambered onto Ashโ€™s back, placing the meat in his lap. They werenโ€™t going to waste a single mote from it.

โ€œTime to show them what a lunar dragon can do.โ€

Talia

Pyra heard them first. A quiver ran across their bond. Talia heard them a few seconds later and leaned on the ramparts, squinting to get a glimpse of the enemy. The black clouds over the city might be thick, but miles beyond the boundaries of Sidastra a glimmer of the true night sky remained. A sliver of starlight lit the swarm as it closed in, and even under Silasโ€™s storm the wet sheen of the bugs gleamed.

Talia checked Pyraโ€™s core. The bonfire raged clearer than it had that morning although she hadnโ€™t had the time to Cleanse all the smoke away. It would have to do. Pyraโ€™s core was more mature and denser than Ashโ€™s, and fire still hit the blighted filth hard if not as well as lunar magic.

They would burn many before falling.

And while Holt and Ash were powerful, they were limited in the ground they might cover. Ash needed Holt to fly, whereas she and Pyra could be apart and remain effective. Pyra covering the air, and she on the wall.

She drew back from the rampart and took a deep breath. Beside her, Ealdor Harroway sighed. It seemed a sigh of relief, and Talia too released the breath sheโ€™d been holding. There was something calming about the battle beginning, after all. Worse than the fight was the agonizing wait.

โ€œI trust every siege team knows to shoot a gray dragon on sight?โ€

โ€œThey have been briefed,โ€ said Harroway. โ€œHave hope, Talia. We are not so reliant on the riders as many say.โ€

โ€œLet us hope you are right.โ€ She looked this great Ealdor of the realm up and down. She did not recall him from her youth; his father had held the title in those days. โ€œYou must have defended Sidastra during Feorlenโ€™s last incursion.โ€

โ€œI did.โ€

โ€œI was only a young girl. I hid in the tower above my room.โ€ โ€œAs children do.โ€

His gaze was all on the swarm. Clacking, shrieking, and buzzing grew ever louder.

โ€œAre you ready to die, Ealdor Harroway?โ€ Her tone was level.

He finally looked at her โ€“ right at her. โ€œYes.โ€ He gulped and his jaw quivered. โ€œI am. For whatโ€™s left of my honor. For you.โ€

She turned away.ย Already he treats me like his queen.

โ€œFight for our home instead,โ€ she said. โ€œNo matter what they make me swear, this is still my home.โ€

โ€œForย ourย home. My only fear is rising again to be part of its destruction.โ€

Over on the shore, the front ranks of the swarm enveloped the waypoint beacons. They were in range.

โ€œIt begins, Master of War.โ€

She reached behind her head, grasped the ever-warm hilt of her riderโ€™s blade, and drew it with purpose.

Harroway moved off, passing orders. Signal fires were lit, repeated back across the islands. Before long, the first flaming payloads from the trebuchets soared into the writhing darkness. The swarm passed another beacon; they were close enough now for catapults and to be seen.

Flayers sped ahead of the horde, their blade arms scything before them; huge hammer-headed beetles, the juggernauts, stampeded like bulls; swollen carriers and fast-moving stingers filled the skies. And of course, masses of ghouls.

The swarm passed the final beacon and met a hail of arrows. Ghouls fell. But more ghouls just ran over them while the juggernauts passed through unscathed.

The noise was incredible. That was something they never prepared you for: just how easy it is to lose sense of things when you can barely hear the person screaming next to you.

Talia focused inwards.ย โ€œStingers are the priority,โ€ย she said to Pyra.

โ€œThe carriers are easier targets for the ballistae.โ€ โ€œWith pleasure.โ€

Pyra answered the swarmโ€™s bellows with a roar of her own, loud enough, defiant enough, it caused the soldiers on the western wall to cheer.

โ€œAnd where is Holt?โ€ย Talia demanded.

โ€œAsh says theyโ€™re on their way.โ€

โ€œThey better be,โ€ Talia said aloud. She gathered a Fireball and aimed for a flayer on the banks of the shore. Too fast for her, the flayer avoided the attack on its determined surge toward the bridge. A group of juggernauts led the scourge charge, their armored skulls lowered to ram against the gate. A ballista bolt hit the leading juggernaut but even that did not slow it down. Flayers followed close behind. They would attempt to scale the walls โ€“ their

uncanny agility and spiky bodies allowed for this, but while climbing they would be easy prey for the defenders.

Yet this was no ordinary incursion, and this no ordinary swarm.

Talia watched in horror as the first flayer leapt, right into the path of a second bolt heading for the lead juggernaut. It fell dead to the water, and the juggernaut slammed into the gate at full tilt. More flayers did the same.

All the usual strategies and expectations could not be relied upon.

Before Talia could think of a solution, the buzzing of wings rose to dominance. Low flying stingers raced above.ย Why are they flying so low?ย She drew from Pyraโ€™s core, empowered her legs, and launched herself straight up, keeping her blade held high. She impaled one bug, ripped her sword free, plunged it into another on the way down, and kicked the corpse free of the wall so it wouldnโ€™t crush soldiers beneath. She hit the battlements in a crouch, rose and ran for the gatehouse.

The gates had to hold. As long as possible. Retreat was inevitable but this would be too quick a defeat if the gates fell so soon.

Orders rang along the wall. โ€œSwords!โ€

โ€œCarriers inbound!โ€

Now the low flight path of the stingers made more sense. They were covering for the carriers. But carriers were supposed to fly high over the defenses as well, to land at weaker points within a city.

โ€œTalia, theyโ€™re making straight for the walls.โ€

Pyraโ€™s words had barely registered when sheer instinct brought Talia skidding to a halt. A fat carrier crashed down, crushing soldiers beneath and throwing others aside. Arrows had ruined its wings already, but the impact alone must have broken its body. Yet even as its death throes gurgled, ghouls loped out from under the raising carapace of its back.

The carriers too are being suicidal. All to take the walls quicker.

It was unlike anything Talia had heard of. But it made a grim sense. When the swarm won, many of the dead would rise to join the swarm. Sovereign could sacrifice a large portion of his existing swarm to ensure victory and swell his ranks afterwards.

Soldiers nearby looked as shocked as Talia felt, but the time for despair was still a long way off. She channeled fire into her blade, igniting the red metal.

โ€œWith me!โ€ she cried, running to meet the enemy.

Holt

โ€œWe have to make for the walls,โ€ย Ash said.

โ€œWe will,โ€ย Holt said.ย โ€œI just need to see this with my own eyes first.โ€

He willed Ash to head to the southern tip of the western quarter, where the quarantine zone could be glimpsed as a black shadow on the lake. Ash perched on the roof of a townhouse just behind the wall. Soldiers gawked and called to him, wishing his blessing. Holt only had eyes for the isle to the south.

โ€œPyra says we are needed now!โ€

โ€œTell her weโ€™re on our way. I need to know.โ€

โ€œWhat do you need to know?โ€ย Ash stiffened his neck, pointing forward like the needle on a compass.ย โ€œThere is more death than life there already.โ€ย Holt looked down to Ash, which given they were sense-sharing meant Ash was also looking down on Ash. Thinking it through just made him feel

dizzy.

โ€œWhy do you linger on this?โ€ย Ash asked, sounding impatient for the first time. A reasoned explanation was clearly demanded of Holt.

Yet that was it. Holtโ€™s feelings werenโ€™t wholly reasonable. It was all in his gut, his guilt-ridden squirmy gut. A philosopher might explain it, perhaps someone old and wise.

From his right, he heard the swarm close in on the city. On his left, came the swish and thrum of the trebuchets.

โ€œI justโ€ฆโ€ Holt began, โ€œwish things could have turned out differently.โ€

โ€œI do too. One day weโ€™ll make things right.โ€

A sudden thought entered Holtโ€™s mind, one he had to get off his chest before the night was over. โ€œIโ€™m not sure I ever said Iโ€™m sorry to you, did I? Iโ€™m not sorry I saved you, but I am sorry for your blindness and how other dragons treat you.โ€

โ€œNever worry about my eyes โ€“ Iโ€™m glad to experience the world as I do rather than not at all. And as for others of my kind, they can accept me or not as they choose. I will not allow my own worth to be determined by them.โ€

โ€œYou might be the bravest person I know,โ€ Holt said.

Just then Ashโ€™s ears pricked. Holt heard it too โ€“ lighter over their shared senses but still there. Screaming from the quarantine isle, and many buzzing

wings to the south. The squirming in Holtโ€™s stomach boiled into cold fury. Ash roared so loud it caused the soldiers nearby to duck and clap their hands to their ears.

Holt started unwrapping the haunch of meat. โ€œWhatever happens, Iโ€™m glad youโ€™re my dragon.โ€ย โ€œIโ€™m glad youโ€™re my boy.โ€

The dragon bond burned fiercely. Stingers whizzed overhead. Ballista bolts sailed into the night with greatย thunksย andย thwacks.

And Holt tossed the venison in a high arc.

Ash raised his long neck and snapped the meat out of the air. He munched greedily. The taste echoed on Holtโ€™s own tongue from sense- sharing; the dragonโ€™s pleasure flitted across the bond. Raw lunar motes poured into the orbit of Ashโ€™s core.

โ€œPull them into a breath attack,โ€ Holt said, as they took off for the western wall. โ€œHold it as long as you can!โ€

Talia

She entered the tower on her side of the gatehouse and took the stairs. Bodies clogged the stairwell; blood and bile flowed down the spiraling steps. She took the first exit onto the wall directly over the gate, leapt over fallen soldiers and blocked the strike of a ghoul hoping to make a corpse of another. Dispatching the ghoul, she pivoted and raced for the parapet.

From her right came the sound of breaking wood and screaming. She skidded to a halt and looked up to find another fat carrier where a ballista and its crew had been moments before. What soldiers remained on the gatehouse rushed to the stairwell of that tower, ready to engage the ghouls as they descended.

โ€œStay close to the remaining tower at the gate,โ€ย she said to Pyra before continuing to the parapet.

As she reached it, the gate shook. Below, the juggernauts withdrew from their latest assault. Another two were charging down the bridge. Other than the stingers and carriers, the full might of the swarm sat with chilling ease on the opposite bank, allowing the juggernauts and flayers to bring down the gate for them.

And Talia had hoped to hold here for hours at least.

Sheathing her blade, she brought both palms together and pulled power from Pyraโ€™s core. Fire lashed forth in a searing, twisting line toward the closest juggernaut, striking it on its thick forehead. Talia poured power in, too much for one bug but she didnโ€™t see another option. Her target fell.

She wrung her hands and took aim again. Fire lashed, and a flayer jumped into its path. She cut the attack and aimed again. A flock of squawking seagulls descended, soaking her flames. They swerved up and around, engulfing her in a storm of pecking and flapping wings. As a few sharpened beaks jabbed into her face and neck, Talia howled in rage, and slammed a foot into the hard stone. Her Flamewave ran low over the gatehouse, burning few of the birds but it drove the rest away.

She rose and made it to the rampartโ€™s edge just in time to see a flash of writhing purple-black power. She ducked as the shadowy bolt of dark magic shattered against the battlements. Even their casters were providing cover from afar.

No regular swarm indeed.

Talia unsheathed her sword and rose again, ready this time. More bolts of black magic hissed from the shore. She dodged one and blocked another with her blade. Steel forged at Falcaer Fortress could handle the punishment. Now with just one hand she tried again to weaken the assaulting juggernauts, but it wasnโ€™t enough.

Weโ€™re going to lose the gate.

โ€œLook out!โ€

The call came from behind.

Talia spun only to be thrown back by the impact of another swollen carrier. Bony fists punched their way through the carapace shell, sending the carrier itself into fits of pain as whatever it bore ripped free.

Three giant skeletons emerged. The bones of these blight victims had mutated, growing larger but leaving the rest of their bodies behind. Muscle, sinew and ragged clothes hung from exposed yellowed bones. Oversized skulls swiveled on vertebrae the size of fists. Hollow sockets scanned for prey. Each bore a great two-handed weapon that looked small against their frames. Dark magic fueled them where nature could not.

Abominations. Talia had feared meeting these the most.

โ€œPyra, I need help here!โ€ โ€œComing!โ€

Breathing hard, Talia raised her blade, and rocked on the balls of her feet. As large as they were, they were surely lumbering and slow. That would be her chance.

Every soldier left upon the gatehouse had rightly backed away. The abominations opened their wide jaws in rattling cries, raised their weapons

โ€”

Then a blinding beam of white light hit the carrier. Another shock wave rushed out from the epicenter of the strike, cutting through the abominations like scythes through a meadow. And a white dragon came hurtling down.

Ash landed on the stone scorched by his lunar magic, roaring in triumph. Silver vapor spilled from his mouth like steam. Talia ran to him as Holt jumped down.

She shoved him roughly. โ€œWhere have you been?โ€ Before he even opened his mouth, she carried on. โ€œNever mind. What was that?โ€

โ€œMarginal gains.โ€

She snorted, beamed at him, then started dragging him back to the ramparts. โ€œAsh keep those ears trained above us. If anything even thinks about landing, I want you to blast it into oblivion.โ€

โ€œPyra, help Ash out. Weโ€™ll need the sky above us clear if weโ€™re going to have a chance.โ€

โ€œMany are getting past,โ€ย Pyra said.

โ€œMuch of the outer ring is empty. Let them waste their time there. If we donโ€™t hold the gate now, weโ€™ll be lost before we get a chance to fall back properly.โ€

The gatehouse shook again. More juggernauts had completed a run. โ€œCome on,โ€ she yelled to Holt, throwing him forward. To his credit he

didnโ€™t protest, and pre-charged one of his Lunar Shocks. They reached the edge of the wall.

โ€œTake the juggernauts,โ€ she said. โ€œIโ€™ll keep the rest from interfering.โ€

Holt unleashed his Shock. It did a lot more damage to the armored juggernauts than her fire, but it still took him a good two or three blasts to kill one.

Talia scorched stingers as they flew in, just enough to chase them off; staggered flayers with fully charged Fireballs; cleared the way enough that a ballista bolt landed a clean strike into the softer side of a juggernaut while Holt took down another.

When the last juggernaut fell, she pulled Holt back from the edge. The slightest tremor shook the edges of her bond.

โ€œWell done,โ€ she gasped, more from nerves than exhaustion.

She watched as Ash aimed one of his beams of light at a carrier overhead. He missed initially but drew the beam after his victim and seared a hole through its bulbous body. Maintaining the attack like that was no small feat. Maybe they could buy more time than she thought.

โ€œWe should get ready for the next wave,โ€ Holt said.

She caught his arm. โ€œWe canโ€™t hold this spot on our own forever. Our bonds will fray.โ€

โ€œWe killed themโ€”โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ve bought time, thatโ€™s all. I want you and Ash to head down into the streets and find the choke point Harroway set up by the east gate โ€“ we need to get the troops off this island and you can hold the scourge at ground level better than me. Tell him to start the retreat to the inner ring. Go on,โ€ she added, waving a hand. โ€œGo before more juggernauts come.โ€

He looked like he had something to say but bit his lip and nodded. Then he ran to Ash, got on his back, and together they descended into the west quarter.

She called Pyra down and got onto her back. Soldiers appealed to her and she told them the same thing she cried to everyone as they flew circuits around the walls.

โ€œTo the inner ring! Fall back!โ€

You'll Also Like