mighty on the field of battle indeed. Their magic filled the air with crackling energy and dangerous pitfalls for the enemy.

'That way, men!' shouted King Korox. 'Meet them halfway!'

Korox forced his way past the Magistrates guarding him, stepping into the fray and leading a charge toward the newly arrived cavahy. His sword bit through cloth and magical wards. His fist came down like the gavel of justice, slamming aside the wicked and the unlawful. His actions spoke louder than his words, and the Crusader King found his place at the head of his troops once again.

Meanwhile, Lord Purdun and his elite guard closed from the other side, using the height of their mounts as an advantage. They charged the line of assassins, pinning them between the barding of their horses and the blades of the Magistrates.

The cavalry slammed into the attackers and bowled them over backward. Swords met swords. Hooves collided with chests. And bolts of magical energy sailed into the fray, knocking the minions of the underworld from their feet.

Blood spilled. Men died. Ridets fell from their mounts, and the battle raged on.

Then a foul wind blew up from the valley. It shook the dead grass, rattled the brittle leaves, and brought with it the stench of rotting meat.

'The beasts have arrived!'

Xeries's horde of twisted monstrosities fell upon the fighting men and women of Erlkazar. They bit the heads from assassin and Magistrate alike. They tote into the flesh beneath plates of metal armor. They traded blows with the strong and the quick.

In the distance, the Obsidian Ridge began to move, slipping away from the valley and out over Shalane Lake. Its shadow lifted from Llorbauth, revealing the dead, cracked land it had left behind.

Chapter Thirty-Four

Evelyne sat on the floor, waiting.

Her cell was in the middle of a lava tube. A magical barrier had been placed over the opening, and a pair of guards had been stationed in front. They had looked in on her every few moments. Why, she hadn't a clue. She was stuck inside a tiny little hole inside a much larger hole, inside a huge floating volcano.

'Where do they think I'm gonna go?' Her voice had returned to her once she was no longer inside Xeries's chamber.

But then the guards had just left. There was no ceremony, no sound or alarm, no indication of why. One moment they were there, and the next they were gone.

'Guess they got tired of waiting for me to do something.' She tossed a chip of obsidian against the wall and watched it shatter to the floor.

Picking up another piece of the stone, she hurled it at the same spot. When it hit, the whole wall started to shake. Chips of obsidian rained down from the ceiling, and the floor undulated from side to side.

'What the…?'

Evelyne leaped to her feet and was neatly thrown back to the floor. 'It's moving.'

The entire citadel was shifting back and forth. This wasn't the same hum and vibration that seemed to permeate everything inside the volcano. That was still there, but now it felt like a ship on the high seas, rocking slightly but definitely moving somewhere.

More of the broken stone rained down on Evelyne. She covered her head with her hands and ducked into the corner, trying to protect herself from the falling ceiling and walls.

Larger and larger chunks fell into her cell, each shattering as it hit the ground. Tiny pieces bounced and ricocheted around the small, carved-out hole. Then just as suddenly as it started, the shaking and movement ceased.

Evelyne slid out of her corner, sent sprawling by the sudden stop. She put her arms out to catch herself but ended up face-down in a pile of tiny stone shards.

'Makes me miss the Cellar.'

Getting up off the floor, she brushed the obsidian chips from her clothes. Looking up at the ceiling, a smile spread across her face.

'Whoa,' she said. 'This should be fun.'

Right above her head, the movement of the citadel had shaken loose an entire fault line. The result was a huge crack in the stone-big enough for a small person to squeeze through, into the lava tube beyond.

Chaos ruled the fields outside Klarsamryn. Magistrates fought half-ores, half-elves, humans, and the black beasts. Enemies winked out of existence, the mages at the back of the line transporting them far away. Lord Purdun and his elite guard held the line of battle with their mounts. King Korox and Captain Kaden fought side-by-side.

The rest of Xeries's army scampered up the low hill toward the open field, crushing the dead vegetation into a fine powder as they charged toward the palace. It looked like a wave of tar, flooding over itself as it crashed against the dried, brown dirt of the shore. Surely this was a scene from the Nine Hells.

As the wave broke across the open ground, it spread out, washing around the cavalty, the assassins, and the Magistrates. The blackness, with its jutting fangs, sharp-edged limbs, and spiked tails slowly surrounded everything else. King Korox stood in the middle of it all, a beacon of light against all that was dark.

Just as Xeries's army arrived, the voices of two thousand men filled the battlefield. They burst through the dense, dead foliage as they charged to the side of Korox Morkann.

The king's army had arrived to join the battle.

The fight to win independence from Tethyr had been a long, bloody affair. The wars that followed against the united might of the goblin tribes had been fiercer still. But this battle, now swirling through the fields and courtyards of Klarsamryn, was by far the most wicked contest ever waged in the history of this young country.

Three hostile armies clashed at once. The assassins sent by the Matron focused their rage toward King Korox and his subjects. The Magistrates and their allies fought on two fronts, against the forces of the underworld and the forces of the arch magus. And Xeries's beasts bore down on them all, killing anything they could claw or bite.

'Assassins of Waukeen!' shouted King Korox over the clattering din of battle. 'You were sent here to dethrone me. To take control of Erlkazar, so that you could rule it as you saw fit. But you are fighting the wrong foe.'

He flipped his sword around, and grabbing the hilt in both hands, pounded the tip into the oncoming mouth of an obsidian attacker. The blade ripped though flesh, teeth, bone, and sinew, dropping the beast's innaids on the ground to mix with the blood and mangled flesh already collected there.

'We may have our differences,' continued the king, 'but together we are part of this free nation. And as your king I ask for your help on this battlefield.' He lifted his enchanted, blood-coveted sword high in the air. 'Together we can win this fight, for Erlkazar!'

'For Erlkazar!' came the cry from the Magistrates, elite guard, and regular army.

For a brief moment, the shout overtopped the ringing of metal and the sickening sound of tearing flesh. Then silence descended over the fields beside Klarsamryn, as the king and his warriors held their attacks, waiting for the response.

King Korox stood his ground, his hand lifted high in the air. He could hear the sound of his heart pounding in his chest as the silence seemed to drag on and on.

Then finally, 'For Erlkazar!' shouted one man.

'For Erlkazar!' screamed two more.

'For Erlkazar!' came the cacophony.

And the battle resumed in full force, this time with a united front.

Men, half-ores, and half-elves who had come to the palace to wrest it from the hands of the king, were now fighting in the name of their country. They worked the tools of their trade, employed their expertise as killers, in an effort to repulse these invaders. The men and women of the Magistrates-a group formed with the express purpose of defending Erlkazar from the forces of the underworld-fought by their side. These were desperate times, desperate people, now protecting a desperate land.

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