captured their caster in his gramerhain. Which meant he knew that those blinding flashes of light ripping through the darkness like trapped lightning were totally non-arcane in nature.
Which, of course, was impossible.
'I don't know what it is,' he grated, in answer to the captain's question.
'Well, what happened to the light, then?' The armsman sounded accusing, and Garsalt couldn't really blame him.
'Wencit turned it off,' the wizard replied.
'How-?'
'I don't
Garsalt's voice trailed off as he thought furiously. The vicious spits of light in his gramerhain continued, mercilessly cutting down the armsmen who had expected to be the ones doing any ambushing, and the wizard swore viciously in sudden understanding.
'He didn't turn them
'But to do that-'
'To do that he had to know the tunnel's exact dimensions before he cast the spell.' Sweat beaded Garsalt's forehead, and he shook his head fiercely. 'He
'Well, whether it's possible or not, he seems to've managed it!' the captain snarled.
'I know that, idiot!' Garsalt stared down into the gramerhain's crystalline depths as one final explosion flashed within it. Unlike the armsmen trapped in the sudden darkness, Garsalt's scrying spell needed no light to see what had happened.
'They're all down,' he said flatly. 'Two or three of them managed to run away-all the rest are dead or wounded.'
'
'That's almost a quarter of our total manpower-
'I'm thinking I'd sooner have you on my side than the other, Ken Houghton,' Bahzell Bahnakson said, surveying the carnage.
The tangled drifts of bodies were astonishingly clear through Houghton's magical goggles. Many of those bodies lay still and dead, but others were still alive, whimpering or screaming with the pain of their wounds. Their pain sounds were thin and distorted in the fragile silence filling the wake of Houghton's thunderous weapon, and their agonized writhing sent ripples of movement across the heaped bodies.
The hradani surveyed them, and his brown eyes were hard and cold behind the NVG. Honorable foes he could respect, but men who gave their swords to the service of scum like Carnadosa or Sharna were something else. He remembered the village, those shredded bodies piled in the muddy street where they'd died defending their children against the horror these men had chosen to serve, and there was no pity in him.
'Well, yeah,' Houghton agreed, standing beside Bahzell and surveying the same scene. 'On the other hand, we've only got sixteen more grenades for this thing.'
'A man can't be asking for everything,' Bahzell said philosophically.
'And why the hell not?' Houghton demanded. The hradani looked down at him, and the Marine shrugged. 'All my life, people have been telling me I 'can't have everything.' I'm just wondering why that is.'
'Why, now that you've asked, I've no answer at all,' Bahzell told him, with a deep chuckle. 'I'm thinking I'd best be introducing you to Brandark and letting him explain it to the both of us.'
'I'm not sure how practical that's going to be,' Wencit put in from behind them. 'And, if you'll pardon me for pointing this out, if you're ever going to have another conversation with Brandark, Bahzell, we'd best be moving on, don't you think?'
'Aren't you just the peevish one?' Bahzell replied. 'Still and all,' he continued before the wizard could fire back, 'you've a point.'
He stood for a moment, head cocked, as if he were listening for something none of the others could hear, then pointed to the right.
'There's an intersection up ahead there,' he said. 'The tunnel we're wanting leads to the right.'
XV
Trayn Aldarfro's fingernails cut deep, bleeding wounds in the palms of his fisted hands. Sweat covered his face in a thick, solid sheet; breath hissed between his clenched teeth in jagged, explosive spits of air; and every muscle quivered, shuddering with the waves of agony rolling through him.
He could have escaped the torment anytime he chose, which made it even worse in many ways, yet in truth, he
His spine arched, until only his heels and the back of his head touched the stone floor, and an animal pain sound ripped from his throat. He'd never imagined such agony, yet he knew that despite all he could do, what he was experiencing at this moment was only a fraction of what that girl he'd never seen was suffering.
He was with her as she writhed, twisting and jerking against her chains on the gore-encrusted altar. He was with her as the chanting ghouls who worshiped Sharna leaned over her with their knives, their pincers, all the unspeakable instruments of torture consecrated to their Dark God. There was no secret of pain, no possible torture, which they did not know. All the agony which could be inflicted upon the human body was theirs to command, and their victim shrieked as they visited it upon her with a cold, methodical calculation worse than any frenzied explosion of homicidal madness.
Trayn would have given his very soul to save that girl from the atrocity being visited upon her, and he couldn't. He
He felt the glowing knot of her life, her soul, like the fluttering of terrified wings