The end came with a thunderous crack.
It shook Stormwatch.
“The Shield Wall!” Kathryn cried out and hurried to the fieldroom’s window. Despite the terror, there was also a measure of relief. They had been waiting for the past bell, balanced between certain doom and frantic hope. A thousand plans had been proposed and discarded. Their only true defense was fiery pyres laced with alchemies devised by Gerrod and his fellow masters. But they had too little flame and too much territory to protect. More strategies were waged, to no avail.
So when the ice finally came, Kathryn could not dismiss a measure of relief, ready as ever to make this stand. She had kept the tower for this long night, against wraiths, against witches, against daemons.
Now she must stand fast against a god.
She peered out the window, joined by Gerrod on one side, and Argent and Delia on the other. Father and daughter stayed close. Too late perhaps to know each other truly, but not too late to be near.
Across the yard, as Kathryn watched, a large section of the Shield Wall caved inward, cracked from crown to root. A wall that had stood for four millennia.
Why this show of power? Why not simply freeze them out?
But Kathryn remembered Ulf’s cold countenance. She knew it wasn’t bluster here, some magnificent display to his might. That was not Lord Ulf. He meant to tear Tashijan down, wall by wall, tower by tower, brick by brick.
She remembered his words: There is no way to weed this patch. Best to burn it and salt the ground.
He meant to accomplish that end. It was why he built his ice all night, gathering the cold for this final assault. None would live-but more important to Ulf, nothing would stand afterward.
Another crack reverberated through the cold air. Another section of wall fell. And through the breaches, his ice flowed. Like a mighty exhalation from the storm’s heart, an intense cold blew into Tashijan. The outer towers frosted over. Stone shattered with mighty pops. One wall of the Ryder’s Tower burst as if struck by a fist. Its crenellated crown toppled with agonizing slowness, tilting, sliding, then crashing into the snow.
Kathryn heard echoes of annihilation coming from the other sides of Tashijan. Lord Ulf struck on all fronts. He bore his ice in a tightening noose around Stormwatch.
Kathryn tore her eyes away. The others did the same. Bearing witness would not save them; it would only instill despair.
After all the pickets this night, there remained only one more line to hold. “Sound the Shield Gong,” she said.
Gerrod nodded and headed out to pass on the word.
It was their only plan.
All of Tashijan would gather in the Grand Court, in the heart of Stormwatch. The central Hearthstone was already aflame with alchemies. Pyres burnt at every door. They would make their last stand there.
All around, stone crashed and mortar moaned.
Kathryn turned to Argent and Delia. “Get to the Court,” she said. “I will keep vigil for as long as possible.”
“It is my place to be here,” Argent said.
“Your place is at the last picket, Warden. With your people.”
Argent’s eye shone toward her, once again seeking some argument. Argent to the end. But a hand touched his shoulder.
“Father…let’s go…”
The fire dimmed to something warmer as he turned. He touched the fingers on his arm and nodded.
“Be swift,” Argent said to Kathryn.
She bowed her head in acknowledgment.
They departed, leaving her alone in the fieldroom.
Kathryn crossed to the window. She peered out at the fall of Tashijan, as stone and ice fought. She remembered the offer Lord Ulf had set before her. To escape with the heart, to flee and not look back.
Well, I’m looking, she said silently. But never back over my shoulder. I will face you full on.
And though she saw what swept toward her, she did not despair.
She still held out one hope.
A NECESSARY MERCY
Weighted by despair,Tylar moved back toward the stern of the boat.
The daemon had settled to the island, vanishing among the flames and structures. Plainly Perryl had been ilked to protect the island, a ravening guard of Dark Grace.
How could he hope to defeat the daemon?
Tylar hobbled to the middle of the boat and sat down heavily, earning a complaint from his side, sharpening his breath. The others followed.
He motioned for the giant to pull the skiff farther back out of sight.
Dart settled to a bench opposite him. She was staring as he rubbed his knee. “You’ll be killed,” she whispered, voicing his own worry.
“The lass is right,” Rogger said. “You could barely drive the beastie off last time. Now that ghawl is wraithed and has the full might of the enslaved rogues feeding it.”
“But I have the sword,” Tylar said. “Forged anew.”
Dart met his eyes. “But a blade is only as strong as its wielder.”
Tylar recognized an old adage drilled into every page and squire. It was probably one of the first lessons Dart had been taught by Swordmaster Yuril. He reached out and patted her knee.
Leaning back, he faced the others. “It’s not like this is a battle we can walk away from.”
Brant’s voice was grim. “Maybe Tashijan has already fallen.”
Tylar shook his head. “Until I know otherwise, we must hold in our hearts that it stands.”
He read the defeat in all their eyes as he stared across the boat.
“I’m not saying I wouldn’t prefer a stronger body, but here is the weapon I must wield. If I could pull the naethryn from my body and cure it of the poison, I would. Until then, the stone helps.”
Tylar remembered Perryl’s threat. You are riddled with the blood of Chrism. Nothing in Myrillia. Nothing in the naether can burn this poison away.
“But why?” Rogger asked, drawing back.
“Why what?”
“Why does the stone help?”
Tylar shook his head. “I don’t know…” He remembered how it felt when the stone ignited the sword, a sense of the world tightening and sharpening around him. “I think the stone rallies aethryn and naethryn together. Returning what was sundered. Meeryn’s aethryn must somehow support its naethryn.”
“But not completely,” Rogger said, scratching his beard.
“Not while it’s inside me. Like I said, if I could pull the naethryn out-”
Rogger lifted a hand. “What if instead of pulling it out of you, we went inside of you? Right through that black palm print of yours.”
Tylar frowned.
Rogger met his eye and said one word. “Balger.”
Tylar flashed back to being imprisoned in Foulsham Dell. The fire god of that realm, who had been curious about his mark, tested it with his hand. Instead of finding flesh, his fingers had fallen through the blackness. Balger had reached far enough in to get his hand bitten off by the naethryn inside him.
“A god could take that stone,” Rogger continued, “and hand it to your naethryn. Then perhaps aethryn and naethryn could join more fully and burn the poison away, breaking its hold, like the stone did to the seersong in Miyana.”
Tylar considered this possibility. Perryl’s words echoed. Nothing in Myrillia. Nothing in the naether. But what about something in the aether?
Finally he shook his head. “Unless I can get one of those rogues to cooperate, we have no god to attempt it.”
“No,” Rogger said, “but we do have a godling. And she is able to see farther into our mark than any of us.”
Dart sat straighter, eyes wide as moons. “But I’ve touched his mark before. Nothing happened.”
Rogger nodded. “But what about Pupp? He already walks between worlds. He delivered the stone to Tylar. Why not to his naethryn, too?”
Dart shifted in her seat, slowly nodding. She patted her thigh, plainly calling her companion. “I think I can get him to do it.”
Tylar held out little hope of success, but it would not cost much time to attempt it. For the plan he intended anyway, he wanted the flitterskiff pulled back a fair distance, back to the clear channel. So he had a few moments. He directed the giant to haul them back far enough until Rogger could ignite the mekanicals.