#14
by Kyanite
107 Frost AoK 21
Cora had noticed Elyna’s withdrawal from the group, but it was the distance between her and the noble woman’s children that stung the most. Did she no longer trust them or was it that Cora was so close to delivering another one of her own? When Kyanite came to her with the news of his plans to follow Elyna back to the land of kings, her heart sank and that night, she had gone into early labour. When at dawn, Kyanite was presented with his new daughter, Cora was already on her feet and ate breakfast with the rest of her kin.
What will you call her? Kyanite asked his wife.
Rain Cora smiled, in honour of her father’s clan
Kyanite pressed his temple to Cora’s and stared down at their newborn. It's a good name, he agreed.
I’m sorry, my love, Cora waved.
Sorry? Why?
I promised you sons.
Kyanite lifted his hand to his wife’s hair and held her close. If Rain is half as strong as her mother, she will strike fear in the hearts of men wherever she goes.
Cora smiled again. How could he know what to say when she believed nothing could ease her woes? I look forward to our reunion, she said. Cora would not tell the man she would miss him, nor would she sow doubt in the form of worry. She will be strong by then.
Rain is our daughter. She is strong already, Kyanite said.
Jaeger stepped into the ger to meet his new niece. He embraced his brother before turning to look upon the babe.
Rain, Kyan signed, meet my blood… your blood, Jaeger.
Jaeger pressed his temple to Cora’s. Strong, he signed, already feeding. You did well, Orna.
Cora greeted the man warmly. Where is Ari, River, Arrow, Archer?
Tired after a night up with you, Jaeger grinned. Not all can be as strong as our Orna.
Cora smile at him and squeezed Kyanite’s arm.
Jaeger followed Kyanite from the ger. When do you leave? He asked the Onkarl.
Soon. Elyna says a ship will meet us at shore.
I will take care of them, brother, Jaeger gestured to the tribe.
Kyanite nodded. Don’t hump my wife, he warned.
Jaeger laughed. If you do not return by the dark season, I will take her as my wife and fill her with sons.
The brothers wrestled one another like a pair of bears, both ending up on the floor, laughing at the end of it. Come back, Jaeger said, or I really will have her.
I have every intention, Kyan told him.
He went to see River and Arrow to say his goodbyes before gathering his things and heading out into the grasslands after Elyna and the twins.
1 Bloom AoK 22
It had taken the men and women of Burhan the better part of five days to cross to the capital, be it by ship, foot or air and when they arrived on the fifth day, it was to bloodshed and ruin. There was a hole in the high stone wall of Lowtown, but Warrick had never made it beyond that point. There had been some kind of swift withdrawal, though the reason appeared unclear.
The battlegrounds were littered with horse and man alike, their number too high for even Renmere to spare. The colours of Andaris, Venora and Warrick all looked the same under the cover and dried blood and wet mud. Liam made a quick count, but the carnage stretched as far as the eye could see. “Fifty, eighty, two-hundred,” he kept counting until a wave from Emily silenced him.
“No… but the battle was not to start until today,” Pavoo said. “We fight in the light… Who would order slaughter in the dark?”
“A boy king,” Emily murmured, the fight stripped from her, replaced only with the cold chill and stink of death that surrounded them.
Kyanite got Elyna’s attention from the sky beside her and pointed to the wall. The blast, he signed, it came from inside.
Emily looked across the ground. She could not understand much of the Ontari language, but she had been able to make out the man’s hand gestures. The use of his left hand did not go unnoticed by her. Sure enough, it appeared the stone wall had shattered from within, sending shards of broken rock into the camp. How many had been killed even before the battle had begun?
The king's men had retreated to Midtown where, from the sky, Elyna would see them posted.
Pavoo called to a man poking through the rubble. “What happened here?” The Duke asked.
“Three nights ago, m’lord,” the peasant called.” He could tell Pavoo was a duke via his dress and surrounding guards. “The king attacked the camp, killing all that remained. It was a slaughter, led by The Butcher.”
Pavoo twisted in his saddle to stare up at his daughter and waved for her to land.
“What do you mean, those who remained?”
“Some prisoners escaped a few days before. Warrick started to retreat. Those who were left behind to pack up were slaughtered like cattle. They chased the rest,” he pointed west, “and haven’t returned since.”
“By the seven,” Pavoo mumbled through his thick beard. “We need to move now and flank The Butcher.”
“Would it not be wiser to secure the throne?” Liam suggested. “None know the lands of Warrick better than Jared himself. If they follow him, surely it is to their peril?”
“The closer you get to the seat of power, the more deadly you’ll find these walls,” Pavoo said. “We need to get to Warrick and regroup. If we attack the throne and lose half of our number in the attempt, we will be useless to Warrick.”
“I agree we should head to Warrick,” Emily said, “if Jared and Malcolm are alive, they will be there.”
“No time to waste!” Pavoo said, “the ships will get there faster than our men on foot. Return to the docks and set sail at once!”
“Yes, m’lord,” Pavoo’s trusted captains agreed.
He turned to his daughter. “We should have sent a scout… this is my fault,” he said. “I was so concerned with making sure Edmund stayed behind. Forgive me?”
“Don’t worry, Elyna,” Emily said, reaching up to touch her boot, grasping her by the ankle. “They escaped. You will be reunited soon.”
They passed the king’s army by air two days later, camped in the valley between The Burning Mountains and the borderlands of Warrick. The majority of their tents were Andaris colours, but trade wagons from Venora could be seen moving along the main road, eager to supply the king's efforts. The rain had been relentless and an attack now of fire by air would have proved useless. They could not risk their mounts this far from the village of Warrick, not with all their men in ships sailing up the coast. They carried on to Warrick and met their ships on the River Kyo.
At the gate they were faced with a wall of Skyriders, ready to attack. Pavoo rode with a white flag and was granted access to the settlement to talk. An hour later he emerged and his small army of four hundred was welcomed in. Ben was there to meet them at the gates. He embraced Emily a little longer than a friend might, but the woman had saved their lives and he would be eternally grateful. Liam did his best to look away, but jealousy burned anew in his core.
“Elyna!” Ben called, gathering her up in a bear hug. “Thank the seven you’re alive. We should have remained in Aramane as long as it took to find you. I’m sorry we ever returned to this miserable place.”
“Lady Burhan!” Vaughn called. He ran into her arms to embrace the noble woman who had once saved his life.
“Will you wait here?” Benjamin said, “if I go and fetch him?” She knew who he meant, Ben was sure of that. Vaughn skipped along after the knight, trying to keep up with him.
Their mounts were secured, fed and watered. Men carried goods from the ships along the docks. Construction was taking place along the west wall where a couple of Endor wagons were parked up. The village was alive with knights and Skyriders alike working to secure the Warrick stronghold. The rain did not seem to dampen their spirits, even if the earth was soaked underfoot. Gloomy clouds hung heavy in the sky, a gentle shower warning of the oncoming storm.
Kyanite, free of his mount, moved to stand beside Elyna. This world was so strange to him. Why, he wondered, would anyone choose to live in the mud behind walls three times the height of a man. He studied Ben as the giant walked away, unsure as to whether he had been the king the noblewoman spoke of. I like your home better than this one. More trees.
Two men dressed in Endor colours walked by carrying a pair of clay pots each. Their hair was dark, stark against their pale skin, true men of the mines. Kyanite watched them place their pots down near the stables before returning to their wagon to fetch some more. As they passed a second time, he couldn’t help but follow them with his gaze, curious—what was that strange smell? They looked as if they had never seen the sun in their lives. How do people live like this? Kyanite signed, not sure if Elyna had noticed, for as he moved his hands, Benjamin reappeared on the steps of Warrick House with Malcolm in tow.
The dark haired knight nodded to his brother, lips tilted in a tired smile. He blinked at the light of day and followed the direction of Ben’s outstretched arm in search of Elyna. Kyanite reached back blindly to grab at the woman’s upper arm. Before he could warn her, the familiar zip of an arrow shot by them from the south. Malcolm’s gaze found Elyna, but that tired smile was short-lived. He stumbled backwards as a second arrow struck him, much to the horror of his brother, who then spun about in an attempt to catch the regent king.
Somewhere behind them there came an inaudible shout and the hiss of flames. More arrows, but this time pointed at the stables. One of the clay pots was knocked over and black oil poured out across the ground. A second and third and then too many burning arrows to count, sparked as they struck the the onyx liquid, setting the stables alight. Someone in blue made a grab for Elyna and she was sent to the ground as Kyanite put himself between her and the stranger. He swung the tip of his crow’s beak hammer into the man’s head. There was a crack and a roar as the tribesman moved into action.
From where she fell, Elyna would see her brother on the deck of one of the Burhan ships. “He refused to give me what I needed to follow him,” Edmund said to the man standing next to him, holding a bow. “Perhaps his son won’t be as foolish as he.”
Owen plucked another arrow from his quiver and strung it to his bow. He lined up his third shot, only to find Malcolm had been dragged inside. “You’ll be Lord Commander yet,” Owen said, “and if the shock of this betrayal doesn’t kill your father, the battle surely will.”
Edmund barked an order at his men in blue, but it was impossible to hear over the sound of distant horns and the much closer cries of horses and volareon alike, burned alive where they stood, trapped in the stables. A black dragon rose into the air and looked about for its keeper. A moment's pause in all the confusion was all it took to bring it down again, with a harpoon from the ship piercing one of its wings. Grounded, the dragon tore the weapon from its limb and slivered between the narrow alleyways in search of Elyna. Another pair were shot from their nests on the walls where they awaited their riders. One got away, circled overhead and then flew southwest towards its birthplace.