The Raven Collection

Chapter 18.

The mist soaked into them, penetrating deep into their skins where it simply dissolved the linkage that bound the mana to them. Immediately, Erienne could see the mana sloughing from the demons. Tiny particles glimmering in the ma.s.s of energy trails. Undetectable to everyone except her but, if she was right, absolutely deadly.

Dimly, she heard the thump of a sword point on the ground, rhythmic and sure.

Thraun was desperate to run faster. Demons were after him. Swooping low, raking at his back with claws and talons. Biting down on his body, slashing at him with sharpened tails. He wove this way and that, ran through thick vegetation, slewed through streams and leaped hedge and fence to enter the farm lands of Blackthorne.

His howling had brought them on as he had desired but their stench had gripped him and he was afraid. His heart was pounding and there was a shudder along his flanks that threatened the rhythm of his legs.

He dared not look around or up, instead he ploughed on. Men and women, their expressions cold, stared at him. Children with dark eyes pointed or ran. A few animals scattered but they need not have feared him. He was not hunting. He was hunted.

A demon"s jaws snapped shut just above his head. He felt a deep chill and sudden pain flared in his ear. The beast climbed high into the sky. In front of him, another dived, arms outstretched, taloned hands grasping. He did not flinch but veered at the last instant as he would from a man holding a weapon. Behind him, the demon screeched its anger.

He was past the last people now and the dwellings he ran by were silent and empty. The streets were deserted and the smell of life was gone from the ground and weak in the air. But ahead he could hear shouting, rising in volume. The sound of weapons clashing and the vibration of feet on packed earth came to him too. He pushed harder and the demons behind him did the same.

Thraun felt a tap at his hind leg and almost lost his balance. He half sprawled but maintained his momentum while the reek of demon filled his head and dragged desperate barks from his throat. From either side of the road he ran, demons closed in. So many of them, crowding his way. He howled again and ran at them, eyes open, terror pulsing in his neck.

He darted this way and that, slewed almost to a standstill, jumped away, ran headlong. And ever more, those claws and teeth grabbed at him, looking to bring him down.

At the very last, one of the beasts clamped jaws on his back. Thraun tumbled, rolling in the dirt with the demon. The cold fired through his body. He convulsed but his speed carried him on. His vision clouded and he barked again, weaker this time.

The shouts were around him then, the ring of steel harsh and loud. He heard a squeal and the pressure on his back was lifted. He shivered and lay in the dirt while men ran past him to hold a position at the edge of a row of dwellings. One man shouted louder than the rest. His voice was close.

Thraun picked his head up to look round. He could feel the breath ragged in his throat and the cold of the bite ate at his flesh. A human squatted in front of him. Dark-haired, strong, and with the scent of a leader just as he had remembered.

The man looked at him, his frown turning to comprehension. He said something to Thraun but the wolf had no ear for what men said. The man stood, shouted. Other men ran. And then he knelt once again and rubbed warm hands across Thraun"s heaving flanks.

He spoke once more but Thraun did not hear him. And deep, deep inside, his humanity prayed that he had done enough.

Chapter 18.

The Raven lengthened their stride with the demons screaming in. The Unknown"s sword thumped onto the ground, keeping time with their footfalls, c.h.i.n.king on shale. Beside him, Hirad readied himself, circling his arms, sword in his right hand, its weight feeling good for the fight. It had been too long.

"On my mark, Raven!" he shouted. "Denser, you have Erienne."

Fifty yards distant and the demons dispersed, scattering into the sky and making flanking moves. A core of eight came straight on. Immediately the elves responded, falling back to protect the mages.

"Looking, Raven. Mages, targets and hold."

Hirad"s voice sounded above the calls of the demons and the rush of wings. He could see three coming directly for him, another trio just to the left moving hard at The Unknown.

Twenty-five yards and closing.

"Brace and hold. Let"s take these b.a.s.t.a.r.ds down."

Elven arrows streaked out. Hirad didn"t see them strike but he heard the squeals of pain and surprise. He smiled. Deep blue and bright yellow flashes lit the sky. FlameOrb and Ice Wind scoured the air. Demons screeched. Hirad focused ahead. The Unknown"s blade struck the ground twice more and the demons were on them.

Hirad knew the impact would be hard. He half-crouched. Watching the trio closing. Their speed had tempered after they watched others pierced by arrows that should have had no effect. But still they were confident. Mottled green and with vein-etched wings they attacked, claws outstretched and jaws agape, calling their fury.

Left side was on him too early. Hirad ducked and struck, feeling his blade bite deep. Dark fluid gushed from the wound and the demon yelped and spiralled away. Centre and right were in concert and he was barely ready for them. One came in, reversing its body to aim its feet at his chest. The other c.o.c.ked its hands to slash on impact. Hirad ignored it for the moment, concentrating on the other. He squatted and rolled, feeling the creature part his braids, and was up in the same movement, swiping at empty air. The other demon lashed out a claw, snagging his armour and half turning him round.

Both beasts climbed to turn back to the attack and it gave Hirad a moment to orient himself. He was facing The Raven now. The air seemed full of the deep-coloured shapes of demons. His ears rang from their calls. To his left, Auum and Duele wove death at great speed, their backs to Erienne and Denser. Auum faced two. He lashed a roundhouse kick into the first"s chest, sending it sprawling. He continued his spin, short blade flashing in the sunlight and carving into the second"s neck. It howled and dropped, fluid sluicing into the dry earth.

Right by Hirad, Darrick and The Unknown fared well. The General fenced with a single a.s.sailant who was already bleeding from several cuts and weakening fast. The Unknown had one by the throat at arm"s length and, with Hirad watching, drew back his blade and plunged it into the creature"s stomach, casting the corpse aside.

Hirad"s two demons rushed back to the attack, one from either side. He took a two-handed grip on his sword and waited, seeing both close from steep angles. They had reached the point of no return when he spun on his right leg and carved the air above his head, turning two revolutions. His blade cut into the face of one and took the arm from the other at the elbow. Both thundered into him, bowling him from his feet.

Half-dazed, he struggled to strike again. One of the demons was on top of him. He could taste the rank stench and feel its blood running across his armour. He scrabbled backwards, keeping hold of his sword, and tried to shovel the beast from his legs. From nowhere, a claw whipped into his face. He reacted fast but the nails dragged at his cheek. Cold pain fired into his head and he was knocked back against the ground. He felt faint for a moment, his vision dimming for a heartbeat. Fear flashed through his body and he grabbed at his chest as if that alone would keep his soul in place if the demons could really touch it.

He saw more spells detonate and heard the heavy thud of steel against flesh. A hand gripped his shoulder. The Unknown hauled him upright. At his feet, the bodies of two demons. One moved feebly, the other had been decapitated. Dark gore ran down The Unknown"s sword. He shrugged.

"I think we frightened them off," he said.

Hirad breathed deep, feeling blood on his face. He wiped at it gingerly with a gloved hand. The demons were retreating, those that could. The ground was littered with their bodies. Twenty, perhaps more.

"We"d better get moving. Anyone else hurt?" he asked.

Shakes of heads greeted his question. He nodded. Erienne smiled at him, looking a little tired but satisfied.

"I"d call that a successful test," said Denser, hugging her to him.

"Just about," said The Unknown, leading them on towards Blackthorne. "What was that pirouette?"

"Something Auum taught me."

"I"d have preferred it if you"d just ducked and rolled."

Hirad smiled. "I"m still learning."

"Hmm." The Unknown pointed at his cheek. "You were lucky. If you hadn"t turned your head, it would have had your eye. You feeling all right?"

"A little cold around the wound but otherwise fine." He chuckled, though his body trembled along its length. "Can"t just grab our souls, can they?"

"Fortunately not."

They crested a rise and looked down the last mile to Blackthorne. The town was teeming with activity. Demons on the ground and in the sky hurried about tasks. Many were headed towards the castle where Blackthorne"s flag still flew proudly. There was a gathering of people, clearly none were demon captives. They held weapons and the bark of orders carried across the quiet s.p.a.ce to The Raven.

"Welcoming committee?" said Darrick.

"Reckon Thraun must have got through safely," said Hirad. "What next?"

The Unknown began trotting down the slope, the others following him. Left and right, the elves moved further ahead. "Let"s not keep them waiting. I hardly think the demons are going to usher us in. Can you hang onto that wound until we"re inside?"

"It"s not so bad," said Hirad.

"Good. Erienne, ready for a repeat dose?"

"No problem."

"Let"s go, Raven."

Wary now, demons flew high, tracking them all the way. Dead ahead, a formation was building above Blackthorne. It was large, over a hundred, and spread like a net over the town, covering their route in. The Raven were committed now but Hirad shared an anxious glance with The Unknown at the scale of the force laid out before them. Whatever it was that Blackthorne had planned, it needed to be effective.

The Raven ran on, having no option but to trust themselves and their friend on the other side of his ColdRoom protection. Hirad found himself trying to look everywhere at once. Left and right to check the elves, about and behind him to make sure The Raven were one, and ahead and above him to try and second-guess the next action of the demons.

But it was quickly clear that the demons were unsure. The slaughter of twenty-plus of their number by The Raven had undermined their sense of automatic domination and inside Blackthorne the Baron was making no secret of the fact that he was ready to strike out. It bought The Raven the time to make over half the distance to relative safety. It was a hiatus that couldn"t last and duly, with The Raven and elves pa.s.sing the outlying farm land, the demons moved.

"Watching, Raven," warned The Unknown. "Let"s try and keep moving. Erienne, you"re up."

The hoots and croaking cries of demons choked the air, echoing across the open s.p.a.ce. Hirad felt a chill down his body and gripped his sword tighter. His cheek burned where he had been caught, a numbness spreading to his jaw. Moving in towards the outskirts of the town, the Raven line tightened appreciably. Auum and Duele fell in behind the mages, leaving Rebraal and Evunn scouting ahead, bows in hand.

"We"re moving too fast," said Denser. "Erienne can"t hold this pace and cast."

They slowed. Darrick dropped back to the other side of her, Hirad and The Unknown directly in front. From above, the cries of the demons intensified to a stunning crescendo. They packed and attacked.

"Dear G.o.ds." Hirad almost froze. "We"re in trouble."

"Holding positions, Raven. Spells at full spread!" shouted Darrick. "Let"s give ourselves a chance."

They stopped again, needing the cohesion of a static formation to give them any chance at all. Hirad could hear Denser murmuring words of encouragement to Erienne.

"We can"t afford that, Denser. Cast. They"re on us."

"Can"t afford for Erienne to fail either."

"We can"t afford that for any of us. Please, Denser, not now."

"Got it," said the mage, an edge to his voice.

"Come on, Baron," whispered Hirad. "We need you."

He couldn"t count how many demons were coming at them this time. It had to be twice the number of the first probing attack. Enough to overwhelm them if they weren"t all right on their game.

From the direction of the castle came simultaneous deep orange and blue flares. The sound of a detonation and the cries of hundreds of men followed it. More spells struck out, tearing at the demons still hovering over Blackthorne. They were joined by those of the elves. DeathHail flayed across the clear blue sky, more IceWind surged behind it, catching the leading edge of the demon attack. But still they came on and Blackthorne"s intervention was too late.

Sudden calm fell in the air, pressing on Hirad"s ears. Behind him, Denser swore.

"Cover your eyes," he shouted. "Now!"

"Do it, Raven!" ordered Hirad.

He closed his eyes and put an arm across them. An instant later there was a flat crack. Searing light ripped across the sky. Hirad could see the glow through his squeezed-shut eyes as it flared through the flesh of his arm. Screams filled the air all around him.

"Safe!" called Denser.

Hirad looked up. The sky was a confusion of blinded demons. They crashed into one another, flew very high to escape the chaos or tried to land, tumbling. Some hovered where they were, their fists wiping at their faces. But most blundered on, trying to use other senses to reach their prey but distracted by the pain that would be pounding in their skulls.

Hirad and The Unknown glanced at each other, The Unknown nodded.

"Raven!" roared Hirad. "Raven with me!"

And they ran hard, all pretence at an organised fighting line gone. SunBurst was a spell rarely used and easily combated by area reverse castings. But when it worked, its effects were spectacular but, as they all knew, short-lived. The demons" sight would return and soon.

Auum"s Tai and Rebraal took the lead, racing through Blackthorne"s all but empty streets. In places, demons and humans alike clung to walls or sat with heads in hands, briefly united in their distress. Where they filled the road, the enemy were unceremoniously beaten aside.

Closing on the area of the town still under Blackthorne"s control, Hirad had an idea. He sheathed his sword.

"Unknown!" He grabbed at the big man"s arm as they ran. "We can save some. One each."

The Unknown nodded. "The others will follow the lead. Take the young, we can carry them."

Ahead, Blackthorne"s men were beating a path clear for them among the disoriented demons who nonetheless tried to fight back. Spells roared out, engulfing hapless victims, and cudgels and clubs knocked sense from any who got too close. Hirad shot past an opening and saw a small boy, perhaps ten years old, yelling for his mother, his fists buried in his eyes. The barbarian slithered to a stop, darted back down the pa.s.sage and grabbed him, throwing him over one shoulder, heedless of the knocks he"d take.

"Safer with me, boy," he said.

Panicked, the child began to beat on Hirad"s back, his frenzied screaming reaching new volume. Hirad didn"t have time to pause. He glanced right at the end of the opening and saw the demons regrouping and charging through the air.

"Time to go." He sprinted for safety. "Come on, Raven!"

Erienne and Denser had picked up a mother and baby between them and were chairing her to the line. The Unknown, typically, had one infant over either shoulder. In the midst of the crowd of demons milling in their path, Auum and the elves got to work.

They were a blur, kicks, punches and pulls driving the demons back and away. The mages killed with FlamePalm and close-focused IceWind. Ahead, the humans had retreated to the safety of the ColdRooms, edges marked by stones in the earth, and were beckoning them on. Darrick was furthest ahead, carrying something in his arms. The Unknown was behind him. Hirad dropped his pace to see Erienne and Denser to safety.

With the enraged screeches of the demons closing in on them at frightening speed, The Raven reached the relative sanctuary of Blackthorne"s domain. Hirad carried on running for thirty paces until a familiar voice yelled at him to stop.

Lungs labouring, chest heaving and sweat running down his face and mixing uncomfortably in his cuts, he pulled up and turned round. Blackthorne was striding towards him, a broad smile on a face that couldn"t quite believe what it was seeing. Hirad released the hysterical child into the arms of others and greeted the Baron with a long hug.

"Couldn"t you have sent a note?" asked the Baron, stepping back. "I"d have cleaned up a bit."

"Well, we sent Thraun," said Hirad. "Clearly he got here."

Hirad looked around for the wolf, a little worried he wasn"t immediately apparent.

"He did but he was hurt," said Blackthorne. "Don"t worry, we"re looking after him, but it was a demon bite. He should be dead."

Hirad chuckled. "Like me, eh?" He pointed at his cheek. "The Raven aren"t that easy to kill."

"So I"ve noticed."

"Is he still a wolf?" asked Hirad.

Blackthorne nodded. "But he"s calm enough. I"ll take you to him."

"And at the same time you can tell me how you worked out from one wolf that we were coming. He"s not exactly talkative like that."

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