useless. In the shadows of the gray oaks though, he was still finding the potent ones.

Pael, so used to getting his way now, was discovering that even great magical power had its limits. As much as he wanted to, he couldn’t stop the sun from ruining the mushrooms, and he couldn’t just make the mushrooms appear in his basket either. Therefore, the most powerful wizard in the realm was reduced to crawling around in bird droppings, to find what he needed to execute his master plan.

The Choska demon’s sudden appearance hadn’t startled him, but it had effectively stopped his search for the day. He huffed out a sigh. There was no way around it. He would have to hunt Blood Caps again in the morning to meet his need. He checked the wicker basket he carried to make sure the ones he had already harvested were covered with cloth and protected from the sun’s rays. It wouldn’t do to have them turn to chalk while he conversed with the Choska demon.

Rising to his feet, and brushing the muck off of his robes, he noticed for the first time that Roark wasn’t on the Choska’s back, and that it was bleeding thick, black blood from several wounds.

“Did you get the sword?” Pael asked with growing excitement.

“Nooo,” the Choska hissed. “But the boy has been mortally wounded.”

“Wounds can be healed!” Pael snapped. “Why didn’t you stay and finish the deed?”

“There were others helping the boy, Great Wolves from the northern mountains, and the Witch Queen and her archers. There was a young Beastling as well, but it matters not.” The demon paused, and breathed in deeply.

One of the wounds in its side made a slow, wet sucking sound.

“Look at the wound Pael. The blade was alight with its power when it sank into me! I thought I was doomed, but it was too weak to draw in my essence. Errion Spightre’s power is no more!”

Pael looked. The blade had entered just in front of the Choska’s hind leg. The wound was deep, wide, and near the skin, but more of a stab, than a slash. Black blood had clotted around the opening, but hadn’t been able to seal it in scab. The Choska’s flight had opened, and reopened, the gash again and again, with its wing beats.

With a resigned sigh, and without bothering to wash the poisonous residue of the mushrooms he had been picking from his hands, Pael probed the wound. He spoke a word under his breath, and his right hand began to glow a dull, yellow color that was barely discernible in the bright daylight. Without prompting the Choska, he pushed his arm deep into the wound, and went to work.

The Choska let out a gasping roar, but managed to hold itself still. The pain was tremendous, and probably not necessary. The demon-beast knew that Pael was punishing it for not keeping its promise to bring back the boy’s head or the sword. It had no choice but to take the pain Pael was inflicting. Its wound was as mortal as the boy’s was, and only Pael would bother to heal it. No one else had that kind of power, or would dare to get close enough to do such a deed. The Choska had no choice other than to suffer the excruciating torment until Pael was done.

When the sword wound was repaired, Pael went around the creature, pulling arrows out of its hide, and healing the minor wounds. There were far more arrows than Pael had first thought. The one in the demon beast’s nostril was the one Pael saved for last, and he was far from gentle when he yanked it free. All of the Choska’s agony was quickly flooded over by relief then. Of all the wounds, that one was the most irritatingly painful.

“I’ll need you soon demon,” said Pael.

“Shoookin, you owe me my freedom,” the Choska hissed with as much respect in its voice as it could muster. “You said that -”

“NO!” Pael cut the demon off with a fierce shout. “You were to bring me the boy’s head or the sword! You brought me neither! And now, you not only owe me your service, you owe me your life!”

Pael seethed and veins bulged out on his rage mottled, egg shaped head. A drop of saliva trailed down his trembling chin, and his eyes flared with promises of violence.

The Choska cowered in fear, for Shokin spoke the truth. Pael had saved his life, and it hadn’t completed the bargain they had struck. The Choska demon could not yet claim its freedom from the demon-wizard’s service.

“I will come when you summon me,” the Choska conceded, before it leapt into the air, and winged away in search of a place to rest.

Pael let the heat in his blood cool a little bit, and then transported himself back to his temporary laboratory. He had taken over the modest twin towered castle that sat in the center of the Red City, Dreen. When he got there, he carefully put the Blood Caps in a stone box, covered it securely, and then lay down to rest. The healing of the Choska had taken its toll on his strength. The plain fact that it took far more energy to heal, than it did to destroy, wasn’t lost on him. As he drifted off to sleep, he wondered if someone would expend that much power to heal the boy, and if Ironspike had really exhausted itself of its power.

He found that the low, wailing cries of frustration and anger coming from the crippled undead that were scattered about the city, helped him sleep. Nearly a hundred burned, broken, or semi-dismembered men and women that couldn’t die, had been left behind in the city. Pael had contemplated sending someone around to behead them, to send them to true death, and put them out of their misery. Eventually he would, but not yet. For now, he let the sounds of their restless agony, and their horrid cries of frustration, carry him into that deep place of sleep were Shokin’s powerful dreams came to him.

“I’m sorry General Chatta, those are my King’s orders,” General Vogle, the commander of the Valleyan forces King Broderick had sent to invade Highwander, said dejectedly.

“But why?” General Chatta asked.

His Queen, Queen Rachel, had, after much deliberation, and as much if not more reserve, agreed to aid King Broderick in this attack on Highwander. Now after they had taken two Highwander cities, made the plans, and gained the position to attack the city of Xwarda itself, King Broderick was ordering the Valleyans to pull out. It made no sense.

“Westland’s new King has attacked Dreen,” General Vogel said, shaking his head with disbelief. “Apparently, he already sacked Castlemont, and carved a passage through the Wilder Mountains. I just don’t see how.”

“That’s preposterous!” exclaimed Chatta.

The two generals were in an abandoned city house, getting ready to take supper. Vogel had gotten the message from King Broderick the night before, but had only gotten enough liquor into himself to find the courage to tell General Chatta this afternoon. The two had planned and worked so hard preparing to take Xwarda. The new orders were a grave disappointment. It shamed Vogel to have to pull out now, but if his kingdom’s capital city was under attack, as the messenger had said, there wasn’t much choice in the matter. Already, he had delayed leaving an extra day, and that was far too long.

The combined Valleyan and Seaward armies, had already taken the Highwander border city of Tarn, and here they sat, about to dine in the newly taken trading town, known as Plat. They were barely a day’s ride from Xwarda, and the siege engines and towers were nearly completed. The new developments back in Dreen made everything they had accomplished, and all the blood they had shed, seem like a waste.

Plat hadn’t been hard to take. Most of its people had already retreated to the protection of the great wall Xwarda. There had been some resistance, and a score of men had died, but eventually, the Highwander troops that had been waiting for them there, retreated into the hills between Plat and Xwarda. Both generals agreed that they were waiting there to ambush the advance, an advance that wasn’t going to come, now that half of the army was pulling out to ride home.

The skin around the black tattoo on General Chatta’s bald head was bright, and splotchy, with flustered redness. The tattoo ran from the tip of his nose, where it made a fine point, up and over his head, widening gradually, until it disappeared, neck wide, into the collar of his ringed leather armor. Sometimes, especially when Chatta was angry, General Vogle thought that it looked like Chatta’s head had been split with an ax. Such was the case now, because underneath his civil demeanor, Chatta was fuming with rage.

A sharp rap at the door saved Vogel from Chatta’s hot disgusted glare. Outside the door, a muffled argument was cut short, and then the door flew open. An armored soldier strode in. He looked haggard, and road weary, like he had been riding for days. His normally bright red armor looked brown, due to the grime and dirt caked on it. The man showed no respect for the two Generals’ rank, and it was obvious he was at a point that was beyond that sort of triviality. Chatta stood quickly, and with the rage over Broderick’s decision in his bearing, started to voice his protest of the rude interruption, but the sound of the man’s raspy voice stopped him in his tracks.

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