Balimar quietly sprang to his feet. For seeming days now he had sought to hold himself still so that his endowments of metabolism would not be revealed. Now he sprang with all speed toward the door.
The guard heard him, dropped the bar in place, and reached for the warhammer sheathed on his back. Balimar shoved him against the door and stabbed through the fellow’s ring mail, angling the blade upward, so that the dagger sliced into his heart. He quickly drew the dagger out part-way, then thrust it back in—once, twice, three times, and four.
The guard died with nothing more than a grunt escaping his lips.
Balimar made sure that the door was barred tight, and then turned to peer at the Dedicates in the Keep.
Silently, nine other men had risen up among them, all warriors of the Ah’kellah, each bearing a dagger to pierce a man’s heart, or a cord to snap his neck. Already they had begun the slaughter. Balimar grabbed the warhammer from the hand of the dead guard even as the man dropped to the ground, then sprang among the Dedicates.
He bypassed the women and children who lay in heaps upon the stone floor, recalling Wuqaz’s words: kill the vectors first.
“Raj Ahten,” Gaborn shouted. “Flee!”
And Borenson wondered, What is Gaborn doing?
Raj Ahten seemed to have the battle well in hand. Dozens of men rushed to fight him, stabbing with lances, hurling axes, sending arrows to fly. Amid the swirling mass of bloodthirsty warriors, Raj Ahten danced naked, a dance that left many men dead.
An Invincible raced up to Raj Ahten’s back and hurled a scorpion dagger. Its poisoned blade struck him full, buried to the haft between his shoulder blades.
Raj Ahten shook himself, sending the blade flying. He whirled and drove the point of his spear through the man’s eye socket. He hardly slowed as the wound in his back closed and healed.
He swung his spear, almost as if it were a club, and took out a man’s throat.
He’s too fast, Borenson thought. He’s too strong.
He dared not draw near.
And then suddenly Raj Ahten seemed to stumble. In the midst of his dance, he slowed dramatically. His eyes were full of light, as if a dozen stars reflected from them. Smoke issued from his nostrils. His face contorted in alarm.
Borenson had seen that look of dismay upon the faces of other men. He’d had it upon his own. His Dedicates are dying! Borenson realized. He’s lost his metabolism!
The warriors around Raj Ahten raced for the kill. A fellow from Heredon drove a spear through Raj’s knee. Another swung a warhammer and spiked him through the back of the head.
Borenson rushed forward and would have attacked, but in his mind he heard Gaborn’s voice, the shout of the Earth King, warning, “Hold back.”
He dodged back a pace, just as Raj Ahten thrust his spear toward him.
Then Borenson waded in and swung his warhammer, not with much strength, but with great accuracy. He struck Raj Ahten in the joint of the shoulder, taking off his right arm.
Blood gushed from the wound, and a Knight Equitable saw the game. He lunged with a great-ax and hacked off Raj Ahten’s left arm.
Raj Ahten fell, screaming, and a dozen more warriors surged forward, eager to draw blood. They ringed him about and plunged in their spears, while the Knight Equitable lopped off both of the Wolf Lord’s legs.
Raj Ahten wailed in horror, but such was the force of his endowments that he could not die.
“Stay your hands!” Myrrima shouted. “Don’t kill him!”
Her fearful tone stopped the men cold.
“He’s a flameweaver,” she cautioned. “Kill him, and you’ll loose the elemental within! Let the water have him.”
Cedrick Tempest rushed forward, shouting, “I like that. Let him go for a swim. I’ll even give him the loan of my armor!”
He grabbed Raj Ahten, who now was but a torso, with arms and legs removed. Though blood flowed everywhere, Borenson saw to his dismay that Raj Ahten had begun to heal. The flesh had closed over his stumps, so that they had regenerated in a matter of moments more than a normal man’s would have in months. Indeed, the stumps were lengthening, budding new arms and legs.
Yet such healing came at a terrible price. Raj Ahten’s body had to cannibalize fat and flesh and bones from his trunk in order to nourish the new limbs. He looked skeletal and sickly.
With the eager help of two other men, Tempest picked up Raj Ahten. As cinders rained down from above and a meteor blazed in the heavens, they bore him over the ash-covered field, through gore and mud, out to the ruins of the drawbridge. Gree still squeaked in the air, and the reavers charging in the distance made a distant rumble.
Raj Ahten’s eyes glazed with pain, and he moaned in a daze. “My Dedicates!” Then his mind seemed to clear, and he cried plaintively to his enemies, “Serve me! Serve me. Let me go.”
But he had not enough Glamour or Voice left in him to sway his enemies.
Borenson followed the men, a chuckle rising involuntarily to his throat, as they climbed over reaver corpses to the bridge. The fires on the castle wall cast a dim red glow, creating a surreal tableau.
They reached the water, and Borenson saw huge shapes moving in circles there in the blackness. Salmon, he thought at first, finning in the water.
But the shapes were too large. They were more the size of sturgeon, like the great fish he’d seen in the moat at Castle Sylvarresta.
Water wizards, he suddenly realized with awe. Dozens of them swam in circles, small waves lapping against their backs, creating runes upon the surface of the lake.
There on the bridge, the axman noted that Raj Ahten had nearly grown a new right hand. Indeed, a child-sized nub had regenerated. They took a moment to lop it off.
Captain Tempest stripped his coat of ring mail and began to wrap Raj Ahten in it clumsily. “You wanted to take Heredon for its steel,” Tempest said. “But I’m afraid that this bit is all we’re willing to give.”
Borenson pulled off his own armor, and added it. Thus Raj Ahten was doubly weighted in mail.
With that, Tempest and another man grabbed the stump of Raj Ahten and hurled him into Lake Donnestgree.
He sank beneath the dark waves, his neck wrenching wildly as he struggled to scream. The water wizards circled him, as if excited, as he began to sink. The great fishes bumped him with their noses, like playful dolphins, pushing him up toward the surface, teasing him with the hope for air.
The water smelled so potent here, so omnipresent. The black waves lapped at the castle walls, and made soft sucking sounds.
Borenson stood on the causeway as if at the edge of ruin, unable to believe that Raj Ahten would die, unable to accept that anyone so powerful could be killed.
Light flashed underwater as a great red ball of flames erupted. The surface suddenly bubbled and foamed. Hot gases escaped, forming waves that rocked Lake Donnestgree. In the light, Borenson saw the monstrous elemental unleashed. A creature of flame took form, its hand seeking the surface, and it seemed to grow.
The stump of Raj Ahten’s body fell away, burned so badly that ribs stuck out like ruined kindling, as it sank down into the waves.
The great fishes could suddenly be seen more clearly, darting about in excitement. The bright glow lasted only for a second, as the elemental faded, and then the water went dark again.
Still, the surface of the lake continued to boil for nearly a minute until the water grew calm and black and fell silent again.
Then there were only the dark waves lapping softly against the castle walls.
Borenson looked over his shoulder, saw Gaborn and Iome standing side by side atop some dead reavers, looking down. He could see no victory in either of their faces, no celebration. Gaborn looked grim, worn, while Iome seemed to be shocked and hurt by what they’d done.
Gaborn has lost, Borenson realized. The Earth King has lost one of his charges. Yet even then he noted a change in Gaborn.
Like the child Averan, or the Wizard Binnesman, his skin had taken on a green tone. No, it is darker, Borenson realized. More like the face of the green woman—or like the effigies we make for Hostenfest.