Zephyr 47, 1276 DR
As Hezekiah dropped me onto the stairs, my life slipped away. My spirit rose out of my body. My first thought was to call Hezekiah a lying, sneaking bastard. He had betrayed us, had fooled me and Dagon into believing that he was a slave when, in fact, he was not. For that was the only explanation. The only reason he might kill me. My second thought was to celebrate that perhaps there was a chance, that perhaps the fool paragon still knew what he was doing. I wanted to cheer him on as he rushed forward into the confusion, to the side of the stage where Dagon stood, out of range of the continuing meteor shower, bat-like wings spread wide, a half a dozen arms in motion, shape and skin shifting in the midst of the darkness that surrounds all demons, a handful of eyes looking in every direction. I fully expected Hezekiah to cast the Signet of Amplification, for his spear to light up, then for the blazing shaft to pierce my master’s torso. In those few seconds, my hopes soared. Hezekiah had become my savior.
But it did not happen. Not the way I thought it would. He did run straight for the demon, but upon reaching it motioned anxiously in my direction, shouting something I couldn’t hear over the deafening voices of angels and demons, intermingled like blood and water, and the simultaneous activation of numerous skills by demons and angels. Dagon’s face turned momentarily toward me, where I lay, and then away. It motioned at Hezekiah to follow it, to join up with a group of demons.
As the paragon obeyed, following behind Dagon, I battled with a surging confusion. There—my master had its back perfectly exposed, and Hezekiah did nothing, simply trotted along behind like a loyal dog. Why did he not act? Why did he not slay the other-worldly being? For just a moment I did not understand. Then I realized that even with the demon’s back to him, Hezekiah was still being watched. Dagon had taken a shape similar to many of the other demons—it had eyes on the back of its head.
In that moment it struck me as odd that Dagon should take that shape. The shape just like any of the other demons. No larger. Why not tower above the Astralarium? I quickly remembered its words the night before—it did not want to stand out. Did not want to draw attention to itself. By then, the first meteor shower had ended. The demons had split into several groups—two smaller ones in the air, and two larger ones in the northwestern and southwestern edges of the Astralarium. Dagon joined one of the groups on the ground, merged with them and became just another figure in the crowd. Two demons lay still on the ruptured ground, victims of the meteor shower.
Angels, their skin glowing bright yellow, poured from the building behind me. There was Wez, filling the air with luminescent arrows. They sizzled as they flew, passing through aloft demons as if through paper, drawing out behind them a long string of red as they arced upwards into the air. There was Breenian. Sileman. Haillia. Rhonan. A dozen others I did not recognize, of every class and nationality. Both sexes. All with incandescent weapons shining brighter than their faces. As they reached the base of the stairs, they split into two groups. One headed to the northern edge of the stage, the other to the southern side. Those with spears or arrows focused their aim on the demons gathering in the sky.
I remembered, suddenly, that as a specter I could attach myself to one of my party members. Watch the action from above its shoulder. I chose Hezekiah. He stood behind the group of demons on the northwestern corner of the area, casting shouts to aid his party members. My mind raged to know of his status. Enemy or not?
For several seconds the demons did not directly engage the angels, and the angels did not advance on the demons—except for the arrows and spears. They hung back, circling and shifting position. Hesitating, as if hoping their signet-enhanced shouting might intimidate or break their foes.
Then everything happened at once.
The effects of the Signet of Amplification last exactly sixty seconds. By the time the various groups engaged, at least twenty of those seconds had passed. The next forty seconds, plus or minus a few depending on when the signets were cast, contained the complete magnitude of the entire struggle, compressed and amplified like the history of the world condensed into a few short sentences, chiseled into stone, and then dropped from the a lofty cliff. Beyond that, I can only compare it to a tournament match in an arena multiplied by a hundred. With twenty-four demons on one side, and nearly as many angels on the other, things happened far too quickly for me to notice, monitor, or record everything that transpired. I cannot imagine being in the middle of that milieu, trying to track the action, to notice and digest what skills were being used in what order and by whom. I could only focus on what went on immediately around Hezekiah. Everything in my periphery came as brief images. Short flashes. I remember many things, but their chronology is jumbled. I don’t know exactly when they happened, I only know that they happened in those approximately forty seconds. Bars of light hissed through the air. Whips of blackness lashed out. Flames leapt up. Roars. Battle cries. The ground rocked and folded. Buildings crumbled. Dark mists rose, obscuring the vision, and then were washed away. Bodies collided. Demons exploded into nothingness, banished to their native realm. The light of angels extinguished as their hosts fell.
An unnatural darkness swallowed the Astralarium. Not like the darkness of a deep cave, in which you cannot see things. I could still see the stage, the shattered remains of the bowl, the building and reflectors across the courtyard. I could see the demons in the sky, flanking and attacking the angels at the south side of the area. I watched one blink out in a flash of red. I watched Rhonan engage the demons right in front of Hezekiah, his sword blazing, slicing, deflecting whips of black. Yet there was a darkness. A sensation of the space between objects being dim, evil. It was so strong even I, being dead, felt it.
Yet in that darkness, shining always, was the pallid gleam of the angels. Easy to spot in the midst of that void of light, standing out like stars in the night sky. They moved through the evil like meteorites through the night, slicing their way effortlessly, naturally past the blackness. Beacons of hope. Ensamples of righteousness. Ensigns of liberty.
At one point in the struggle, the very ground erupted into flames. I have never seen dirt or stone burn, but that is what seemed to happen. For a few, brief moments, everything everywhere was fire. It surrounded all of the demons, all of the angels. Its roar engulfed all sound. Its light illuminated the sky and single remaining airborne demon in eerie orange. It lasted only a moment, and then the flames were gone. Healers were mending the damage done. I have no idea what caused the flames other than it was some skill used under the effect of the Signet of Amplification. Whoever used the skill did not do so again. From then on, ash covered every inch of ground. Feet kicked it up with every step. A haze of dust quickly hovered around each person’s and demon’s feet.
It did not take me long to realize that while the demons had the advantage in numbers, the angels had a different, greater advantage. A fallen angel host could be brought back. Not so with the demons. When they died—always to a shining sword, scythe, arrowhead, dagger, or spear tip—their soul leapt out of their wounds, shining and spilling red rays over the ground and nearby foes. And then with that now familiar “Pop!” their bodies simply disappeared. There was no resurrecting a fallen demon. It was gone for good. The angels used this tool to their advantage, often sacrificing their own lives in order to take out a demon, leaping into its deadly arms or ignoring the foes around them. In slaying the demon, they would be killed, only to be brought back a few moments later. A few times, the monks in the group, always staying back, always protected with a few others, would let several of the other angels perish, and then use Light of Dwayna to bring them all back to life. Of course, they were weaker with each death, but less weak than the collective body of demons. All of that changed when Breenian perished, followed quickly be the other two monks.
It was all confusion. The flying demons smashing down onto the ground, crushing or barely missing an angel. The angels using skills to slow their opponents, or to quicken their own motion. Fire fell constantly. The earth rumbled and shook. Summoned spirits wailed. Their chains rattled. Assassins shadow walked at every moment.
Very suddenly, as is so common in battle, everything was almost over. I had watched the numbers of demons dwindle, watched them combine into one group, but hardly realized they were down to so few. And without the monks to bring the angels back, their numbers thinned quickly, as well. And then, suddenly, there it was. The end. The only ones left were Hezekiah, Rhonan, and Dagon. Hezekiah stood in front of his master, shield strapped to his arm and spear held tightly overhead. It makes sense, I suppose, that Hezekiah, a less powerful being, not as much of a threat, would last longer than the demons. Same for Rhonan, who, without an angel inside of him, posed less danger to Dagon. But he stood there, panting, holding his own shield and his blazing sword, eyeing his foes carefully.
The two friends faced each other for only a few seconds, Hezekiah creeping forward, feinting and dodging back-and-forth, Rhonan crouched behind his shield. Dagon stayed back, working some demonic magic that produced a black on one hand. Then, simultaneously, the humans dove at each other. A blur of blades and shafts. Hezekiah’s spear shattered. His shield flew away. So did Rhonans. They sailed in opposite directions. Hezekiah sprawled to the ground, on his chest, arms and legs splayed in four directions.
With a roar, Rhonan raced forward toward Dagon, shining blade dancing. Singing. Practically drowning out the unending wail of Dagon. The demon’s wings convulsed, lifting it into the air. It snapped the whip, as fast as lightning. The time-tested reflexes of the warrior responded, bringing the blade up, shielding his head. But those reflexes misjudged the distance, and rather than the whip striking the blade, it connected with the wrist just below the sword hilt, and wrapped. Dagon yanked backwards. The whip tightened, searing into the flesh with a hiss, and then like a rotating blade it sliced through Rhonan’s skin and sent the warrior falling backwards. The hand, still gripping the shining blade, rotated up through the air, arcing gracefully like a golden rainbow growing across the sky, and then with a dull, final thud landed in the ashen dirt next to Hezekiah. Upon impact, the hand lost its grip and skittered away, kicking up dust. The paragon had already rolled to a sitting position, and there was the blade, shimmering against the black ground, just an arm’s length away.
Helpless new, unable to hurt the demon, Rhonan stumbled back toward. He had to dive across Hezekiah’s body, and as he did Hezekiah’s left hand closed around the hilt. He swung the blade upward, in a perfect path to slice effortlessly through the warrior’s torso. Until that moment, I have never considered what light cutting light might sound like. But in that instant, seemingly slowed to the length of a hundred years, I heard it. It was like the sound of metal tearing, mingled with the ringing in your ears after you have heard a loud bang, and then mixed with the crunching of rock ground beneath a millstone. The light cleaved him in half just below the armpits. One side of him fell to Hezekiah’s right. The other to his left. There was no blood.
For a moment everything stopped. Dagon hovered there, ten feet off the ground. Hezekiah looked in disbelief into the sky. The air in the Astralarium thickened. I found myself holding my spectral breath, unable to accept that what had happened was the end. It was over. Hezekiah had lost it for all of us.
In that moment of inaction, in that deep, final release of breath when the all uncertainty of the outcome had disintegrated, I felt the reality of my cell close about me. I heard the clanking of iron bars. The chinking of shackles. I’d had hope in that minute of action. The prison walls had seemed weak, as if with just a push Hezekiah could toppled them. But no more. Not in that moment.
The stillness passed. Dagon’s form shifted as it lowered to the ground. It shrunk and blurred, and the darkness around its form dissipated. It turned back into that elementalist. With a small crunch of ashes its boots landed it on solid ground. A guttural, wicked chuckle rose from its throat as it stepped toward Hezekiah, holding out a hand. It was the only moving thing in the entire area. In a deep, satisfied voice, it commended Hezekiah for his work, commented that perhaps he had earned a few extra weeks of servitude. It leaned over further, nodding anxiously at Hezekiah, wanting him to take its hand and stand. Elation filled those eyes. Pure and utter victory. That laughing continued, growing louder with each moment, echoing from the shattered remains of the Astralarium.
Hezekiah reached out his right arm, his stump. Dagon grasped it and pulled. Hezekiah flexed his legs and stood. Effortlessly. He did not drop the blade. His arm hung limp at his side. The tip of the sword rested in silence against the ground. Its enchantment would end at any moment.
Dagon interrupted its cackling for a moment and invited Hezekiah to follow it. It looked into his eyes for several seconds. For a moment I thought it would hug him. It indicated that the time had come to raise me, and then continue on to Kamadan. My soul was exploding. I simply could not believe it. We had lost. It was over. There was no reason or possible cause to hope.
It turned its back on Hezekiah, started toward my corpse.
The Paragon struck.
I do not know what possessed Dagon to turn its back. It must have simply been drunk and unreasonable. Unable to think clearly. Giddy with the prospect of ruling Elona.
Hezekiah moved so quickly I almost didn’t see it. It was as if he’d been harnessing all of his energy for his entire life for that exact moment, conserving and coiling. Preparing. If I had blinked I wouldn’t have seen the one, swift motion as he brought the sword in front of him, across his body, into one side of Dagon’s torso and out the other. Red light spewed from each half of the crumbling, dissected body. There was that familiar sucking noise. Deafening. Hezekiah, his energy spent, collapsed to his knees, and then by the force of the gathering energy was pulled toward the two halves of the body. Others around the courtyard—those lying burned, punctured, and cloven—slid along the ground. Rhonan’s halves rolled across the ground, grisly pieces of a broken statue. Stones tumbled. Chunks of columns rattled. The red light expanded, spraying rays in every direction, consuming everything within their power until they disappeared and the sucking noise halted.
Once again, for a moment, there was complete silence and tranquility. And then Dagon exploded with a bright, blinding flash as brief as a lightning strike, with a deafening crack like that of thunder.
The rubble and bodies that had collected around Dagon flew outwards in all directions. Rhonan’s sword, its angelic light fading, soared over the area’s steep walls, and disappeared in the distance. I searched for Hezkiah’s body, and saw it just in time to watch it strike the steep rocks on the Western edge of the area. It collapsed to the ground and lay still. I looked at him as closely as I could, watching for signs of life. I was, quite simply, numb. How had he gone so long without betraying himself? Why had he waited until the last possible moment to make his move? How had he managed, despite all of the adversity and mistakes and foolishness, to pull it off? His chest moved ever so slightly. Hope rumbled in my chest, perhaps like the hope a stranded sailor in a boat might feel at a soft breeze. And then his body stirred. His eyes fluttered open. My heart soared. Dazed, he looked around. Stood. Shaking his head, he trudged across the area, feet dragging through the ashes, shoulders slumped, arms hanging limp, to where my body lay. He cast his Signet of Resurrection.
Although it had been, at most, three minutes since my spirit had left my body, my flesh felt unnatural and awkward in that first moment of re-birth. I stood, disoriented for a moment, regaining control of my arms and legs. My eyes focusing.
Once the disorientation had passed, I realized that I felt different. I was not the same as I’d been three minutes before. There was emptiness. A blessed, glorious void where before there had been obligation and slavery. I was free. I was free. I was free!
The prison walls crumbled. I felt them. All of the possibilities I’d hidden away over the past twenty years flooded over me. I could live in one spot. I could marry. Have children if I wanted. I could travel to any part of the world. Cantha. Tyria. I could sit in a bar all day long and drink myself unconscious. I could sail every sea. I could farm. Learn a trade. Climb a mountain and sit there for days, watching the sun rise and set. I could chart the motion of the stars. I could discard my map. I could read any book I wanted. Develop my own skills or spells. Join a guild. Start a guild. I could teach young monks. I could learn a second profession, then discard it and learn another. I could learn every profession and every skill. I could simply travel to destitute lands, offering my services to heal the sick.
The possibilities were endless. They consumed me. My body quaked. There Hezekiah stood in front of me. Through tears I beheld him with my natural eyes. He looked ten years older. He gave me a sheepish grin. Shook his head. Shrugged. Despite all the torture he’d put me through, and the mistakes he’d made, I loved his heart. I loved his soul. I embraced him, thanking him over and over. He returned the grasp, weakly, saying nothing until we separated. Then, he said, “Let’s get to the work of resurrecting them.”
I nodded, unable to stop smiling or weeping. I was free!
I am free!
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Just a quick note. There are two more entries, and then I will post a "post-mortem" of sorts regarding my story, how I wrote it, what I have learned, etc.
As you know, I have a website where I post the story. I am debating what to do with the site once the story is over. At the bottom of the current entry of my website I explain all of it. If you're interested, take a look:
http://www.gwcartographer.com.
Thanks for all of the input!