I scrambled for the last place I’d seen the Scythe. I was bleeding, but it wasn’t life threatening, at least not until I collapsed from blood loss and woke up on the wrong side of that Hellgate.
Both of Tam’s hands were sunk into the Hellgate membrane on either side of the slit. All around him, forms writhed and pushed against the milky surface-big forms, hulking; one hand trying to press its way through was twice the size of Tam’s head. Tam saw that massive hand and his incantation sounded more like a snarled string of goblin obscenities. There were bigger, meaner, and more dangerous things desperate to get through that Hellgate before it sealed.
If Tam could seal it.
I ran up the stairs to the dais, and to Tam.
“What can I do?”
The demon queen’s voice rang out from the vaulted beams supporting the ceiling. I didn’t know the words, but I knew what it sounded like.
A call to arms.
Volghuls poured like purple tides through four of the five mirrors.
Tam’s black eyes blazed. “Get the Scythe!”
I didn’t want to leave him there.
“Now!”
I jumped over the side of the dais to where the Scythe hopefully still was. There it was, gleaming in the dark, the first thing to go right all day. I snatched it up and a mini-Volghul came with it. I shrieked; I couldn’t help it. The little bastard sunk his teeth up to the gums in my leather sleeve, his claws raking my bare hands.
My shriek gave way to swearing, which led to stabbing. The thing was trying to eat me from the fingers up. The Scythe was a knife, and I used it. A couple slashes and a stab later, one less Volghul was going to reach adulthood.
Mychael and his Guardians were battling the Volghuls coming out of the mirrors. Piaras had joined his soon-to-be brothers. Those mirrors needed to be shattered. Anything thrown through magically linked mirrors would go in one side and out the other. But if something were coming through at the same time, it’d be like two people trying to come through the same door from opposite sides. Except in this case, the thrown object would break the glass.
Broken glass, no more Volghuls.
I desperately looked around for something, anything. The Assembly was a ruin, there had to be chunks of stone, something. I spotted one. It was close to the mirrors, but I had one shot at it, so I needed to be as close as I could get. I scooped up the rock, saw a demon head coming through, and threw it with everything I had.
The mirror shattered, leaving one less demon door, and hopefully a demon with a concussion on the other side.
“Raine!”
It was Phaelan. My cousin was in the safest place a non- magic user could be in a room full of magic-flinging mages and demons-behind Carnades’s stone altar.
You know the saying “I wouldn’t wish that on my worst enemy”? I did, and I wished I didn’t. If Carnades Silvanus wasn’t my worst enemy, he was at least in the top five. I’d have liked nothing more than to have left him right where he was, but I couldn’t. I wasn’t a particularly nice person, but I wasn’t a murderer.
I’d unlock his manacles, but first I’d take what I needed from him.
The Scythe was good and sharp. Carnades’s white linen sacrificial robe was nice and clean. My throat needed a bandage. I grabbed the hem just above the elf mage’s ankles, plunged the blade through the material, and slashed my way around the robe.
Carnades screamed in appalled rage through his gag and tried to kick me with his bare, manacled feet. If he could have made some coherent words, I’d probably have been turned into a slug.
“I’m not trying to kill you,” I snapped.
I wrapped the cloth around my throat a couple of times to try to stop me from getting any more light-headed from blood loss than I already was.
I flipped the Scythe point down and reached for Carnades’s ankle manacles to pick the lock.
Phaelan couldn’t believe what he was seeing. “What the hell are you doing?”
“We have to let him go.”
“No, we don’t.”
“Yes, we do. We’re not killers.”
“Speak for yourself.”
I ignored him and kept working. A second or two later, Carnades had free ankles.
A pair of spells collided, ricocheted, and sent a comet of green flame shooting straight for us.
“Incoming!” Phaelan yelled. He ducked behind the altar and pulled me down with him.
The flame smashed into the stone tiers behind us, blasting a hole that was big enough to sit in. I popped back up and went to work on Carnades’s wrist manacles. They clicked open just as another green comet blazed toward us, twice the size of the first. Phaelan swore, I added to it, and we both grabbed handfuls of robe and hauled Carnades over the side of the altar. He landed hard and face-first.
I didn’t mean to do that. Really.
Carnades sat up and tore off his gag in fury. “You planned this from the very-”
That did it. I didn’t hear the demons; I didn’t hear the explosions. It was just me and a mage who had blamed me, degraded me, and pissed me off for the last time. I got in his face.
“Let’s try this again,” I said between clenched teeth. “I am saving your life for the second time in two days. I tried to warn you, but you didn’t listen. I don’t like you, I don’t believe in anything you stand for, but I don’t stand by and let people get killed. If I can help, I will. That’s the kind of person I am. You can believe it or not; right now I don’t give a damn!”
Carnades was speechless. Phaelan was checking out his robe.
“White robe, chained to an altar-what are you, some kind of sacrificial virgin?”
“I am not a… virgin.”
Carnades almost choked on that last word. Highborn elves were notoriously uptight when it came to sex. It was a wonder there were any of them left.
“I bet you don’t even wrinkle the sheets,” I muttered.
The next explosion made all three of us duck and cover. That was way too close. As the blast faded, I heard tearing or peeling or…
… Oh crap.
I looked up and saw a Rudra-shaped indent in the Hellgate. The goblin was gone. Escaped.
Phaelan and I swore and scrabbled away from that altar. It was cover but it was also a death trap if Rudra Muralin was crouched on top. He had weapons; between Phaelan and me, we had one knife. Carnades stayed put. Fine.
An explosion shook the Assembly, and the stage floor buckled from underneath, slabs of the stone jutting up at sharp angles. Phaelan and I were already on the floor, and after that, so was everyone else. Two mirrors toppled and shattered. That left only the citadel mirror and one other. We had to reach that mirror.
My mouth was bone-dry, my body was determined to bleed to death, and breathing was entirely too much work. “Phaelan, I need you to-”
A Volghul slammed into me from behind and tore the Scythe out of my hand.
Carnades had to have seen it coming and the son of a bitch didn’t say a word. Phaelan was right; I should have left him on that altar.
In a flash of opalescent flesh, the demon queen dropped from the ceiling attached to what looked like a spider’s web. I didn’t want to know what part of her it had come from.
She landed in a crouch at least twenty feet from the citadel mirror. The distance didn’t matter; she covered it in two leaps and dove through, the Volghul with the Scythe right behind her. Rudra Muralin dashed out of the shadows where he’d been hiding and was right on their clawed heels.
The demon queen, Rudra Muralin, and the Scythe of Nen-all in the citadel, close to the Saghred.
If she got to the rock and opened it, the disembodied souls of the demon king, Sarad Nukpana, and the worst that could ooze out of the Saghred would possess the first bodies they could find, and those bodies would be Guardians. They would turn the most elite magical fighting force in the seven kingdoms into the most elite and evil magical fighting force.
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