clouds. ‘Let me go!’ Ebbin pleaded. ‘You’re finished!’
‘Nay. I have won. The Moranth are defeated. They cannot touch me.’
‘Your attack failed!’
‘True,’ the creature allowed. ‘That was … impetuous. But live and learn, yes, scholar? I will bide my time.’
‘No — you are lost. You’re revealed for what you are.’
‘And what is that, dear scholar?’
‘A monster nightmare of our childhood.’
The hand released his neck. The Tyrant stepped away from him. Mocking laughter rose from behind the graven gold oval. The embossed lips seemed to drip it. ‘Oh, scholar. If you only knew.’ The mask snapped away. ‘Enemies gather … but not the one I was expecting. Of course, the same may be said for me. We will continue this discussion later, scholar.’
The figure swirled away, but Ebbin’s awareness remained. He groaned and held his head once more.
‘There. That thing. In your crossbow.’
Scorch lifted the weapon to take a look. ‘What? Nothing.’
‘No — the …’ Exasperated, Leff stepped out to tap the stock. ‘Look at that bolt. Where’d you get that?’
Scorch stared. His mouth opened in amazement. ‘Would you look at that!’
Leff cuffed him. ‘Keep it down,’ he hissed, fierce. ‘Where’d you get it? You holding out on me?’
‘I ain’t never seen it afore in all my life! I promise.’
‘You stole it, didn’t ya?’
‘What? Never.’
‘Well — we need to give it back. Got our position to think about. Can’t be wavin’ stolen goods about.’
Unnoticed, the Legate stood to step down from his throne. He stopped before it, hands clasped behind his back.
Leff grabbed the stock. ‘Look at that thing. All engraved. Wax on the head, too — real fancy, that. Gotta give it back.’
‘No — let go. Don’t …’ Scorch knocked one of Leff’s hands aside. Leff tried twisting the weapon from his partner’s grip.
‘Just cooperate! Let me …’
‘Watch it!’ Scorch hissed. ‘Don’t …’
The crossbow fired, jerking in their four hands.
The bolt slammed into the Legate, who spun round with the force of the impact.
Four eyes swivelled to see the Legate straightening. He touched at the feathered end of the bolt where it stood from his ribs. The mask turned their way. A hand stretched out to them.
Scorch and Leff looked at one another, eyes hugely wide at the enormity of the accident. And at the magnitude of their immediate danger.
‘
Leff’s bolt threw the Legate back another step. His knees appeared to weaken briefly as he staggered. Yet he came on. Smoke streamed from the two wounds.
‘
Leff reached into the sack at his side and was briefly surprised to see that every single one of the bolts he possessed had intricately engraved blackened shafts and gleaming iron heads encased in wax. None of this stopped him from frantically reloading.
‘He’s still comin’ for us!’ Scorch yelled, nearly bursting into tears.
‘Fire ’em all!’ Leff howled.
Lady Envy left a second-storey terrace overlooking the front battle-grounds. Tapping her fingertips together she crossed the abandoned darkened office.
She remembered impertinences recently suffered from one Imass in particular and her mouth hardened.
She headed for the stairs.
Yet something whispered from the dark drew her to a pause. A presence.
‘
The barest whisper from the night.
She raised her defences. Her Warren crackled, sending papers flying and bursting into flame around her. ‘Who’s there! I demand that you show yourself!’
‘
That voice! So familiar. Who? ‘Who are you?’ she called, tentative now, a hand at her throat.
‘
A flash of munitions lit the room, and in a freeze-frame instant revealed a tall man all in black. Face, eyes and hair all black. Envy backed away, her hand at her mouth, and gasped, choking and stammering, ‘Father …!’
And she fainted dead away.
One of the Moranth guarding Galene gestured, pointing through the woods, and Torvald joined in squinting at the nearest building corner. There one of the mages had been standing — the hunched, oddly proportioned one — and now while they watched he was down on all fours attempting to get up, clutching at his chest.
‘There! Look there!’ Torvald hissed. He almost reached out for the Moranth Silver. ‘Something’s happening.’
The red tube still in her gauntleted fist, Galene shifted her attention.
The mage managed to straighten but fell backwards against the wall. Panting, in obvious agony, he hugged his chest as if he would burst. Then he disappeared.
‘There!’ Torvald exclaimed. ‘See that! We’ve won!’
‘Contain yourself, Councillor,’ Galene said. She gestured to one of her guards. ‘Check in with the wing commanders. What’s going on?’
The Black trooper ran off through the woods.
Up hall after hall they duelled. The heavy flint sword was a blur in the hands of the tireless Imass. Palla retreated step by step, yielding, slipping all blows, leaving countless gashes across the fleshless ribs and skull and hacking apart rotting furs. She struck for the joints, hoping to sever ligaments and cripple the creature, not knowing if it was even possible.
But she was tiring. Her reactions were slowing. The weakness of complete exhaustion now stood between what she wanted to do and what she could. She knew she would fall; it was merely a question of when and how.
It came unseen in the form of a closing feint from the creature, a stunning elbow to her temple and a choking grip on her neck. Blinking, Palla found herself staring into two empty eye sockets where only a low glow simmered, like distant campfires.
‘You would have beaten me, Sixth,’ the Imass growled, slamming her into a stone door and releasing her to fall, ‘had I been alive.’
The Imass walked on.
Rallick watched from a window high up in the Great Hall while the two guards hammered bolt after bolt into the Legate. Then he watched them throw down their crossbows and run. Amazingly, the creature still stood. It