They were a way distant, probably a couple of miles and maybe more, and the demons were clamouring to get at them, whoever they were. Dystran took a quick look down into the occupied parts of the college. It was all but deserted. He took a deep breath and stepped out of the ColdRoom construct and onto his balcony, signalling his guards to flank him, ready to haul him back if any threat appeared.
Immediately, the feel of mana energised his body, a tonic for the weary like the sun on cold skin. He wasted no time in casting to augment his vision and reaching out to see what was approaching.
Men, flying. Mages. Pursued by demons who were bursting through the clouds around them and faced by more rising up from Xetesk. They flew hard, pushing the limits of ShadowWings, dodging, splitting, reforming. A battle where a single touch would be fatal. Where one side could not strike at all.
He concentrated harder, searching their faces, and his jaw dropped. At their head, a man who despite the weight that had fallen from him was immediately recognisable.
Dystran turned and ran from the tower, shouting for his mages, shouting for his library raiders. It was the diversion of his prayers and he was going to grab the opportunity with both hands.
Vuldaroq had no idea how any of them had maintained their concentration in the freezing air high above the clouds. They had started out exhausted, they had trimmed their wings for speed and they had pushed the limits from the word go.
But that was not all. The escape had been a nightmare scene of pulsing demon bodies; brave men facing them down, sacrificing themselves for their mages. It had been dark, dark corridors, shadowed halls and the stench of rotting flesh. It had been the pleading cries of the enslaved; the squeals of the newborn into horror and the briefest graze of a demon"s finger that had chilled his soul. And ultimately, it had been the flight through the gla.s.s domes that roofed the chamber of light with the shrieking of demons just far enough adrift.
All leading to a day of pure torment. As quickly as they outpaced a demon pack, another would rise to block their path south and west. They could smell the mana from so far away. It meant they could not rest in each other"s arms as they had planned and so cycle their effort.
How many times had they cowered behind clouds, dived at suicidal pace or spun dangerously close to each other risking collision? It was something of a miracle that they had lost only one of their scarce number. There was no time for reflection. There had not been time to mourn the fading scream.
And so they faced the final run. They"d dived from the clouds a little early but that didn"t bother him. What did was whether Xetesk had seen them or not. It took only a few heartbeats to realise the demons had. Like a multi-hued cloud in the morning gloom, they lifted off, their alien calls taken up by their current pursuers who drove a little harder.
"Come on!" called Vuldaroq though he knew his words were lost in the battering wind on their faces.
He led the four remaining mages down sharply, off-balancing the pursuers who lost a little ground. Any chance was worth taking. Vuldaroq was surprised to feel a thrill pa.s.s through him. So close to death for so long but with relative sanctuary almost within reach, he had never felt more alive.
He breathed the feeling in deep, felt the energy revitalise his aching body and pushed more speed from his ShadowWings.
"Come on, Dystran, you b.a.s.t.a.r.d, now"s the time."
Vuldaroq glanced back through his gossamer-thin wings, the protective film over his eyes adding to the slightly unfocused outlook. They were all still with him. The demons flitted in and out of his vision, blurred reds and blues, trying to steal a few feet to pressure the mistake. It was hard to tell how many there were. Ten or twelve at least.
But he considered them too far adrift if he and his could maintain their punishing pace just a little longer. To maximise their speed, the mages were all flying head first, arms pressed to their sides, legs straight and feet pointed backwards. It left little room for communication but they had organised a few signals in quieter moments of the flight and Vuldaroq knew they would all be looking at him for their cues.
In front of them, the seven towers of Xetesk stood grim and gaunt against the dull sky. A few lights burned in Dystran"s but the others appeared closed and dead. Much like the city. It was wreathed in an undulating dawn mist trapped within its walls and punctured only by the glimmer of a handful of fires.
The demons rising from the city had fanned into a wide net. Some were streaming towards them, others hanging back. There had to be two hundred at least, thronging the air above the silent buildings, flashing greens and deep blues.
Vuldaroq went hard at the line approaching them, saw it straighten to counter their expected direction. It was a surprisingly naive move, but then the leader caste was not among this vanguard and without them there was little spatial awareness.
Dordover"s Arch Mage flickered his fingers to draw his mages" attention. Then, he pointed up with his index fingers before splaying his hands. All he could do now was hope they had seen him and trust they would react when he did. Delay carried the severest of consequences.
Vuldaroq clung to his courage. He closed with the demons at high speed and sensed his few mages come onto his shoulders in a tight group. The demons mimicked them instantly, a good sign.
"Keep coming," he breathed. "That"s it."
He was so close he could hear their calls when he angled upwards at practically ninety degrees. The mana shape controlling the wings strained. Physical wings would surely have snapped. Vuldaroq felt the braking force across his whole body like he was going into reverse. If not for the demons racing beneath him and the undeniable forward motion driving him on, he would have believed it.
One quick look told him they"d all made it this far. Below him, the demons were braking and turning from all directions. Vuldaroq spread his arms, his body adopting a cruciform shape, falling forwards in the air to arrow vertically down.
They all knew the sign. It was the last run and, of necessity, it was every man for himself. Mouthing good luck to any that were watching, he plunged groundwards. He had about a mile of distance and a thousand feet of height to lose. No distance at all but surely the longest flight of his life.
"We"re moving!" shouted Dystran. "Now!"
He pounded along the corridors from his tower and into the dome complex, seeing the torpid surprise register on dozens of faces.
"Up. Warriors to the doors. Mages, let"s be thinking about focused Orbs. We"re going outside. Library team, make ready."
His orders were carried on down into the catacombs. Puzzled expressions faced him. He paused.
"I do not have time to explain," he said. "Time to trust me. Allies are flying in from the north-east."
"Allies?" a warrior, standing, questioned.
Dystran grabbed the filthy blue kerchief tied at his neck and pulled. "Yes, allies. Anyone who isn"t a demon is an ally now. Clear?"
"Yes, my Lord."
The sound of running feet came from all quarters and he waited for the gaunt, sick-looking figure of Commander Chandyr to appear before issuing orders.
"No time for whys. Dordovans in the sky heading this way. The demons have all but cleared the college to hunt them. I want eight mages out there giving covering fire as they come in. Another four will defend the flanks from demons still hidden inside the grounds. Twenty warriors as spotters, in and outside the doors. And the library team is going in now. We"ll not get a better chance. Move."
"All right, you heard him!" Chandyr clapped his hands together. "Mage teams one and two, cover duty. Swords two and three, spotters. Sword four, you"re on the doors as back-up. Library raiders, to me. Gentlemen, it is time for some fun."
Dystran had to admit Chandyr was good. They moved for him, respected him. The Lord of the Mount himself, they just feared. He liked it that way.
Noise battered around the dome. Men shouting, weapons and armour clashing. Metal-shod boots ringing on stone and marble. Dystran swallowed on a dry throat. The great doors swung open onto the cool, misty dawn.
"Go!" shouted Chandyr. "Forming up flanks quickly. Focused Orbs for attack, I want an IceWind cover for area attack, ForceCones on defence. Ready for changes any time on Lord Dystran"s word." His voice cleared the din easily. A commander"s voice brought back to life by the promise of action. "Spotters, I only want to hear numbers and direction."
Soldiers and mages ran through the doors, across the marble ap.r.o.n and down the stairs in front of the tower complex. Out of the protection of the ColdRoom lattice.
Dystran followed them, buoyed by the flow of mana that coursed through him and the beautiful fresh air in his lungs. He pulled in the shape for a focused Orb, following three mages taking up a central position. A quick glance showed him the defence and spotters deploying. Behind him, Captain Suarav led the library raiding party left and out of sight. His last three archivists were with the scarred garrison commander under the eye of Sharyr. It was a gamble that couldn"t afford to fail.
In the grey sky north of Xetesk, the desperate flight neared its conclusion. Tens, hundreds of demons thronged the sky, a net for the five shapes that darted, twisted, ducked and soared trying to dodge them. It was hard to see how any of them would get through.
"A path," muttered Dystran, then raised his voice. "Let"s make them a path. Concentrate on the area dead ahead, where the lead flyer is coming in. Time it, my mages. The gaps we make will fill quickly."
Spells flew and the first demons perished in fire and ice, blasted aside to give Xetesk"s erstwhile enemies a chance of life.
Blessed emptiness on the approach. The raiding team slipped left, pa.s.sed the dome defence and trotted quickly and quietly around the base of the complex. The library doors stood open, hanging from their hinges. The timelock ward was no use now, broken when the timbers had been battered apart in the early days of the occupation.
In the bloom of spells across the spectrum, the augmentation they gave their sight to counteract the gloom inside the library went unnoticed. Sharyr led three archivists, Captain Suarav and a spotter soldier up the edge of the broad steps where the shadows remained deep enough and the mist clung to the stone.
Inside, he could make out the shapes of bookshelves and tables. Little seemed to have been seriously disturbed though the wind picked at the pages of a few volumes scattered on the carpeted floor.
There would be demons in here somewhere. An earlier abortive raid had reported what appeared to be a systematic search through every piece of work. They"d had two years to find what they wanted but still the searching went on. Sharyr wondered briefly what it was.
He checked the team. They nodded their readiness and he moved in, every footstep fraught with the potential of a protesting floorboard. He felt naked outside the protection of the ColdRoom yet energised by the connection with the mana spectrum. The crack of the first spell behind him told him he was not alone.
It was a curious mix of feelings. He"d grown accustomed to the aura of security the ColdRooms provided but always lurking was the pain of being shut off from the spectrum. This way round, he had the comfort of mana at his command. All he had to cope with was the dread that accompanied it. Death a mere touch away.
Suarav came to his right shoulder as they entered the library. Sharyr"s augmented eyes picked out objects and edges in sharp, monochromatic relief. It showed him Suarav"s face, lined with concentration, beaded in sweat despite the chill of the air. He felt a surge of respect for the man. Nominally, he and the other soldier were spotters. In reality, they were there to sacrifice themselves to save the mages should the need arise.
The grand three-floored building was silent but for the ruffling of loose pages. Light was edging through the stained-gla.s.s windows leaving deep shadow untouched under stairwells and recesses.
Sharyr kept to the centre of the carpeted path, the team bunched behind him. Their eyes would be everywhere. Left and right past every aisle of shelves, up into the arches and upper floors, ahead into the heart of the library and down lest they kick a stray book or put boot to bare wood.
He could feel the tension soaring. Suarav repeatedly tightened and relaxed his sword grip. Sharyr had to fight hard to keep the ForceCone construct steady. The breeze outside threw unsettling eddies into the library, like the downwash of wings. Sharyr drew in a deep breath and moved further in.
The signs of the demons" search were everywhere. Bookcases had been moved, gla.s.s fronts smashed. Parchments, volumes and tied scrolls were heaped in piles on shelves, stacked on the floor or scattered into corners. The damage was worse than at first sight. Ripped pages sat in drifts on lower shelves. Ancient texts were torn, spines broken. The knowledge of ages discarded. Whatever it was they were looking for, the demons had gone about their work methodically.
Sharyr felt his heart fall. This organised demolition was going to make their job all the harder and they couldn"t afford to be in here a moment longer than absolutely necessary. Looking about him, he wondered if they"d find anything useful at all.
At the base of the grand staircase that swept left up to the next floor, he took them from the central path and underneath the marble steps. The demonology section was just ahead. It was the first of three they"d identified. Sharyr checked them all again, saw the strained but determined faces. Outside, spells cracked and echoed in the quiet of early morning. Distantly, a demon screamed.
He turned back and there they were. Floating gently down from the upper floors. He wasn"t sure how many. Ten at a quick count. He backed up under the stairwell. Suarav just in front of him, the others behind, all wanting to feel a wall at their backs. The demons were stark grey against the deeper background, shining slightly. They were all of one strain. Long faces containing huge oval eyes. Tiny mouths but rimmed with fangs. Distended skulls. Delicate feathery wings and long slender arms at the end of which spidery fingers writhed.
"Keep calm," said Sharyr. "Keep your concentration." He had lost his ForceCone construct and was desperately trying to reform the shape. "Don"t show them fear. We can take them."
"You heard him," growled Suarav. "They"ve got to get past me first."
He stepped square in front of the mage team, indicating the conscript do the same. The man didn"t move but for the quaking of his body. A whimper escaped his mouth.
"Stand aside, Captain," said Sharyr.
"They will not take you before me."
"You"re standing in the line of our spells."
"Just tell me when to duck."
The demons watched the exchange intently. Sharyr, who hadn"t taken his eyes from them, felt as if he were being examined. Studied. He became aware that he could hear the whirring of their wings at the edge of his consciousness.
"We don"t want to have to cast," he said.
"The damage to the library would be considerable," replied one of the demons immediately, voice soft and seductive.
The conscript muttered again.
"Strength," snapped Suarav. "They don"t know what to do."
The demons spread slightly, moving to cut off any escape back towards the main doors. There was a gap to the back of the library. It had been left quite deliberately. No escape there.
"They"re going to get us," said the conscript.
"No they aren"t, not if we stick together," said Suarav. "Keep your blade out front."
"Won"t do any good. Just one touch."
Sharyr felt the soldier tense to run. They had little time. "Mages, what do you have? Speak quickly."
"Orbs."
"Orbs."
"Ice."
In concert, the demons opened their arms and glided in. "Your souls will replenish us."
"No!" The young soldier broke left and ran, colliding with one of the archivists and sprinting away into the shadows.
"Structure down."
"Reform!" snapped Sharyr.
"Get back here!" roared Suarav.
"Forget him and duck," said Sharyr. Suarav dropped to his haunches. "Orbs now."
It was a single focused FlameOrb and it struck the centre of the pack. The glare was painful, the effect brutal and instant. The tight globe of flame singed wings and burned coa.r.s.e hair. It ate demon flesh. Smoke roiled. The scream was terrible. Sharyr followed it with his ForceCone. He directed it at the left side of the group. Unprepared, the demons were flicked away, twigs in the gale. He drove them up and back, flattening their bodies against the marble bal.u.s.trade opposite. He wouldn"t kill them but it represented s.p.a.ce and time.
"Ice, right!"
Hardly had he uttered the command than the spell washed out, sucking and tearing at demon bodies, driving freezing air through their mana protection. Gouging, flaying.
"Now run, left. Find that idiot and get searching. We"ve still got a job to do. I"ll hold these here."
His men obeyed without question, scattering into the back of the library. "And be careful of what"s down there!"
Sharyr took stock. He held four struggling demons in check. The others were dead or dying. The IceWind blast had covered shelves, texts and tables over a ten-yard area with a thick coating of frost. That wasn"t what worried him. It was the fire taking hold where the Orbed demon lay. And as the first scream of pure terror rang out from the back of the library, he turned to warn them that time was running out even faster than they had first thought.
The four surviving mages flew in at a frightening pace. Left and right, spotter soldiers called out the locations of demons now turning their attentions to the Xeteskians in front of the tower complex. Focused Orbs scattered out in a wide arc. In the thinning mist, demons howled and the noise grew as more and more ignored their airborne quarry. And in the centre of the mage defence, deep blue ForceCones and IceWind kept open the slimmest corridor.
"Let"s be moving back slowly!"
Chandyr"s voice towered over the slowly rising panic. They had to get this just right or they"d lose more mages saving Dordovans than if they"d all stayed inside and let their erstwhile enemies die. Dystran eyed the sky again. Vuldaroq was at their head, the other three now in close attendance. They had abandoned any thoughts of evading the ma.s.s of demons closing around them and were flying headlong and head-first straight at the doors of the complex. The timing was going to be tight.
"FlameWall preparation now," he barked to the mage at his side.
Both men formulated the rigid, single-sided structure into which was built the mechanism that caused the flames to decay slowly. It was a static spell. They could cast and forget. Right now that was more than merely a blessing.
From his left, Dystran heard a sudden surge in shouting. Demons were attacking hard on the flank, threatening to overwhelm the flimsy mage defence.
Chandyr"s voice sounded softly in his ear. "It has to be now, my Lord."
Dystran nodded his understanding. "Ready," he said.
"Last spells and retreat!" shouted Chandyr. "Don"t look back, get inside the ColdRooms. I want men ready if any of those b.a.s.t.a.r.ds follow our friends in. Go!"
Heartbeats later, a volley of spells clattered into the ma.s.s of demons still a hundred yards distant but closing hard. To the left, the distance was not so great. Mist burned away, screams filled the sky and cold washed out over the college, IceWind finding its targets and flaying the skin from its victims. But there were so very many of them. They choked the sky and now the ground in front of the college. All the spells had done was buy them a few moments.