My destiny.
The warriors took positions around Teldin, who turned to face the double doors into the Armory. The doors were sealed with a disk of metal that gleamed like silver, bronze, and gold all at once. A three-pointed star was molded into its surface.
"Have people tried to get in this way before?" Teldin asked Stardawn.
The elf nodded. "The seal can be broken with the right weapon, but after our people have gone inside, they've been tossed out, unconscious or dead, and the thing seals up again."
Teldin nodded and stood squarely in front of the door. The seal was exactly the size of his amulet, he saw, and bore the sign of the Juna. He smiled and instinctively closed his eyes.
He felt the breeze flow between his outstretched fingers, through his hair. The cloak flapped softly against him. Its energies billowed through his body like a cool-warm breeze, and the three-pointed star shone in his mind's eye as a focal point for his powers.
Then his amulet glowed from within. The sign of the star was revealed in white-hot light and crackling bolts of energy flew between the two disks, flowing along the contours of the amulet's pattern like a maze to be solved, as though the pattern were a combination to a lock.
The amulet flared a brilliant blue-white, and the metal seal melted away from the doors with a final bolt of energy from Teldin's amulet. The doors burst open by themselves, and the darkness of the Armory greeted them. The molten droplets that had been the armory's seal fluttered on the floor as though they were alive, and they trickled silently into the shadows ahead of the warriors.
"This is what you were meant to do," Djan said. "This is what it has all led up to."
Teldin smiled at his friends. "Let's go in."
A series of twin explosions echoed off the surrounding towers. The warriors turned as the ship rocked with the impact. "There!" Na'Shee shouted, as a great ball of flame erupted from the giff tower.
"What is happening here?" Teldin said to himself. "This has to come to an end." He touched his amulet protectively and closed his eyes. "This must all end soon."
Chapter Twenty-Seven
"… The Armory and the Dark Tower are mysteries waiting to be solved. Adventurers have sought their secrets, only to be rudely dispatched by the Nameless Servants. Rumors abound, chief among them that the enemies of the Spelljammer are imprisoned in the holds of the Dark Tower, and that the Armory bears weapons and treasures unimaginable and very well protected…" Rambergius, cleric of the Tower of Thought; reign of Coronas.
The number of ships that Teldin and CassaRoc had originally seen through CassaRoc's spyglass had now almost quadrupled, dotting the flow with vicious shapes that were speeding dead on for the Spelljammer. There were seventy-one of them now-tsunamis, tyrants, wasps, deathspiders, scorpions, eelships, and more-swarming through the flow like black, furious insects, grappling each other with their hooks and lines, battling among themselves with their catapults and powerful ballistae.
Many aboard those ships had touched the cloak; many knew of magic spells to trace the cloak and the warrior who had claimed it. They came from all across the spheres to rendezvous here, where their crystals and spells and philters and psionic powers had told them they would find the legendary Spelljammer and its ultimate helm, the Cloak of the First Pilot. Behind the ships, mere specks against the chaotic phlogiston, more ships followed-twenty five warships, in a fleet as yet unidentified, racing toward the Spelljammer recklessly.
All were converging in a dance that had started an eon before, a dance that played on amid the music of death and violence.
The ships battled ferociously in their zeal to both defeat their enemies and reach the Spelljammer first, to assume command of the godlike vessel. A specially outfitted wasp dove straight for a nautiloid and rammed straight through the side of its shell-like hull. Immediately, a score of warriors swarmed over the grappling ram and through the great rent in the nautiloid, attacking its crew upon sight.
Below the Spelljammer, a squid ship and a hammership battled it out at medium range. Iron-tipped missiles were shot from the three ballistae on board the squid, and two of the projectiles tore through the underbelly of the hammership. The other shot went wild and bounced harmlessly off the underside of the Spelljammer's port wing.
The hammership dipped precariously, losing speed and altitude. The captain refused to give up, and she responded to the squid ship's attack by banking and aiming the catapults at the body of the squid. Boulders were sent hurtling through the flow to crash into the squidship's top deck and straight through the bottom. The broken bodies of mind flayers floated out, twisted and bloody, to be swallowed into the cold, lifeless flow.
The hammership listed to port and started spiraling down. Within seconds, the wounded ship spun out of control. Its downward gyre suddenly slowed. For a moment, it looked as if the hammership was straightening, slowing its momentum. Then the ship veered wildly off course and took off on an erratic path straight for the black wall of the Broken Sphere, where it crashed helplessly into the impervious crystal wall, spitting bodies and splinters of wood and metal into the emptiness.
Above the Spelljammer, two dragonflies swooped down to overtake a slow-moving Shou dragonship. Warriors aboard the swifter dragonflies stood ready on the main deck, their bows and crossbows cocked and armed. Each dragonfly closed in on one side of the Shou craft, and as they sailed past, the dragonflies' arrows arced through the flow like birds flying in formation. Most of the Shou warriors on the dragon-ship's deck were at the ship's three large weapons and were left unable to protect themselves from the bolts that suddenly appeared from the sky, blindly nailing their brothers in their chests and heads.
The survivors on deck wasted no time and quickly shot their catapults and ballistae at the dragonflies as they swooped past. But the Shou weapons were too slow, and their boulders were sent harmlessly into the phlogiston. The missile shot from a Shou ballista hissed just feet past a speeding dragonfly, and found a target in the hull of an elven man-o-war that had been descending on the Spelljammer.
The elven ship suddenly changed course, the missile protruding from its side like an oversized spear. The Shou watched as the ship banked and turned straight for them, seemingly on a suicide run. As the vengeful elves on the deck readied their catapults and ballistae, elves at the bow were aiming at the dragon ship with their hand-held weapons.
The man-o-war closed in. At the last second, the elven warriors simultaneously let loose their fire. The dragonship rocked under the onslaught of granite boulders that battered the decks and crushed Shou under their weight. The black waves of arrows and bolts from the elves skewered the Shou on deck, and the iron-shafted ballistae impaled the dragon-ship's hull as though it were made of paper.
The man-o-war swept gracefully up and over the Shou craft so that its hull passed inches from the tip of the dragonship's sail. The elven ship was up and away, gaining distance between itself and the battle and providing time to repair the Shou's ballista damage. The dragonship lurched far to starboard, and Shou warriors slid across the angled deck to grasp futilely for handholds along the sides of the ship. Some were able to grab hold of staves along the main deck; most, though, spilled into the flow, to float there with the bodies of the dead.
Across the vista of the Rainbow Ocean, sidewheelers and shrike ships, a whaleship, even a dwarven citadel sculpted i from an asteroid, assaulted one another with their weapons of wood and steel and magic. Catapults twanged, reverberating through the flow as their stone shot was sent careening into the hulls of other vessels. The war for the Spelljammer hud become a free-for-all, one more battle in a second Unhuman War-a war that would very likely produce no clear victor, except for the bloodthirsty warrior known as Death.