“Annara. Can you hear me? You’re going to be fine.”
Aust had set the Eretol woman down beyond the riverbank, where he and his fellow Ytharien could be obscured by a cover of dry foliage. He kept speaking to her as he tore cloth from his pant leg to wrap around her head, attempting to keep her conscious. While he wiped blood from her cheek, he stole occasionally glances to the side, unable to believe his eyes. Part of him wished to think it might be there the next time he looked.
The Aretan King had somehow fled all this mess, spared the fate of the rest of the caravan. Was it coincidence that his Knights had materialized in the morning to collect him? That they had rescued the Magus’ captive in Muon Pond, and now remained among the few survivors after the raiding party had been decimated?
Had Alan anything to do with this destruction of Vicenna? It seemed extraordinarily unlikely, but the strange alignment of these events seemed just as implausible.
Hearing movement behind him, Aust turned to find Juna appearing on the bank. Lothren was slung over her shoulder, one arm hanging limply at his side. The limb had been crushed and looked like the rind of a plum, and his face was caked in blood and bruised hideously.
“Aust, Annara,” Lothren gasped in relief. “Are we all that’s left?”
“Richter lives. He led three others north along the river. Anuwelyn and the twins.” Aust caught Annara as she began slumping to the side, having passed out of consciousness again. “I stayed behind. Annara was hurt.”
“And the King? Set me down here, Juna.”
After settling down, Lothren reached out with his working arm and clasped Juna’s wrist. For a moment he made her his captive, both in hand and in his one open eye. He had told her to leave him, but this hour he still drew breath and saw light because she risked herself to save him. And to think, Lothren had guessed Juna hardly had a fond sentiment left in her body.
“That was foolish,” Lothren said to her. “Thank you.” He released her wrist.
Aust raised his head over the ridge. “His Knights are with him.”
“Then we’ll catch up with the others.” Lothren bared his teeth and hissed as he tenderly adjusted his mutilated arm. “What we did for Vicenna—it was never going to be enough. We must find someone and send word to our home.”
The King stood at the edge of the shallow river, staring out into ruin. After both strangers rode across the river at Alonso’s beckoning, they were momentarily forgotten as the desert caved in behind them. Great shelves of earth dislodged and slid gradually into a hungry god’s cavernous maw. The thunder died away, replaced with a steady, reverberant hum as a newly formed canyon settled into itself. As the debris still fell into unseen chasms, filling them with crumbled stone and sand. With pavers, bricks, blood, and flesh. Mothers and children. Mages and men.
Alonso had dismounted, leaving Captain Serona alone on the horse. The Knight leaned over while he could, grasping his chest with both arms and focusing on breathing. He did not look ahead at Vicenna. Surely he had heard it fall, but it seemed he could not even lift his eyes to it.
Not so for the King. There he stood on Areta’s lip, the dusty wind pulling at his hair and ruffling his short cape. While a madman and a mage bickered behind behind him, Alonso simply gazed out, silent as Vicenna.
There was no sign of the caravan. Of Lothren. Aust and Annara. Or… Juna. Had this been Juna’s fated death all along?
Gone. Everything beyond the river,
gone. What could pull an entire realm into oblivion? Into Hell? And why did it consume only Vicenna, and along
mapped borders?
Unhelpfully, the only thought that came loose inside Alonso’s paralyzed mind was a trite lesson from a fable he’d heard as a child, something the nursemaid used to read to him.
When the house of your neighbor in flames, your own is in danger.“I remember you,” the King of Areta spoke solemnly as he turned, facing the rambling Knight. One of the younger men that Alonso himself had bestowed his title. Unique fellow, but loyal to his last breath. Brave, perhaps to the point of foolishness. The makings of a hero. “Castagher. The missing Knight from Udny Pass. They sent you out here to placate me.”
Alonso didn’t shift his eyes from the Knight, but the mage was remembered in the side of his vision. He was in mixed company, so the King inhaled the rest of his thought and decided to choose his words carefully.
“They told me you disappeared from the Pass days before I arrived. I thought you merely out on patrol.” No one had particularly seemed to
miss the Knight, so no one had gone looking. Deplorable, though understandable. Aretans living this far from the country’s heart remembered more of King Hubrach than his successors. “Taken prisoner, you said?”
Alonso’s eyes fell and dimmed as he absorbed the news into his thoughts. There was too much to think about now.
By elves? The Ytharien had no Knight with them while Alonso stayed among them. There was much to learn, but now wasn’t the time. While Vicenna lied there before them as a pile of dust, it felt so meaningless and trivial. Alonso had no desire to extract a report from a battered knight in front of a recently orphaned mage.
“Those creatures…” The King looked back over his shoulder one last time, then made for his horse. Serona made room after a beckoning tap, coughing once in pain as his ruler hoisted himself into the saddle. He sat there for a long while, rubbing creases into his forehead. “We make for the castle, as quickly as we can move. There is more dire need for Areta’s King than there ever has been. Mage.”
Alonso lifted his head at last.
“I know that my words sound paltry, but I mourn your loss, wizard. Listen to me: Vicenna’s leader lives. He is at my home now, safe with his daughter and escorts.” Viviana Solus, his promised bride. He wondered if the wedding would still proceed after all this. What would be the point? What was to become of them now? Did they still hold any sovereignty at all? “Please, return there with me and my men. If Prime Minister Solus is to hear of the death of his realm, best he hear it from a countryman.”
Alonso kicked his horse into a trot, even if it felt like sacrilege to leave Vicenna behind like an abandoned corpse. What a thing to simply a walk calmly away from the most horrific thing witnessed, possibly in all of human history. Was this reality? The King felt inebriated. Was this his reaction to it all?
“The mage is to be our guest,” the King decreed, riding ahead. “I would like to do for Vicenna what I can. Whatever crime he has done to Castagher matters little for now, as long as he does not cast any magic.” The Knights implicitly knew what to do with him if he did. “We have little for provisions, so we’ll have to make do until we reach the Calhoun homestead, up the river—”
“It’s gone,” Serona mumbled behind him.
“What?” Alonso turned his head.
“The hamlet is gone, sire.” The Captain paused to clench his teeth. “Swallowed.”
The King’s eyes went dead for a moment. Curious thing, the sensation of complete powerlessness, in the hands of a country’s sovereign monarch. He’d felt this once before, as a child standing at his father’s wake.
“Then we ride to Udny Pass.” To Alonso’s relief, Serona had nothing to say about that. “Kolbe.” The wicked Knight was regarded warily, somewhere between respect and resentment, grateful on principle for the honesty but not the manhandling. “Come up abreast with me. Let us pray it is still there.”
***
The trek along the river felt more like a funerary march. Alonso found little to say, even as Castagher and mage exchanged heated words behind him. Occasionally the King looked sideways to attempt to get a read from Kolbe, but the man was positively stone. A childish part of Alonso wondered if he should make some sort of apology, as all children knew to do when they made missteps. He knew better, but the King had been drinking and singing while his Knights, Kolbe’s brothers-in-arms, lost their lives looking for him. Something personal was owed.
Perhaps the time would come when he felt he could explain himself to the scarred Knight, or offer some recompense. Between Vicenna and Udny Pass, that time never came.
Serona drifted off against the King’s back, to which the monarch did not protest. Once in his sleep he mumbled his wife’s name and a fractured apology, and only then did Alonso nudge the man awake. Something about it was unbearable to hear, whether it was the man’s troubled dreams or the missing of someone precious.
Castagher needed rest perhaps more than any of them, but somehow managed to keep up his energy. Nothing had been gained by stationing him at Udny Pass. He had not been able to find evidence of the disturbances along the borders. Been able to provide no warning about the existence of sinkholes or the impending doom of Vicenna. Alonso would be comforted to blame the man’s incompetence, but even the King had noticed little amiss. Antlions could cause disturbances, but they couldn’t sink a nation.
The scepter Kolbe wrested from that creature could be the key to understanding what had happened. Whatever the mage couldn’t explain, scholars in Marion Bay might be able to.
Marcus was the mage’s name. The man without a country. His tragedy was too much to think about. There would be talks with the Court when the King returned to Marion Bay. Long talks, hours of old men arguing and meandering off on wild tangents while Alonso sighed with his cheek on his fist. The noble houses would come forward with concerns about trade, aldermen might arrive with complaints of refugees, and the witch hunters would be foaming at the mouth with bloodlust. There was also still the Prime Minister and his daughter to contend with.
At least there wouldn’t be war with Vicenna.
Udny Pass
The road had been found just beyond where the Calhoun homestead and surrounding hamlet had once been. Now it was little more than a bowl of sand, with pieces of a windmill and a wind vane protruding from the earth. There was no sign of any corpses, not one hint that men had lost their lives here. Nothing to mark the passing of honorable servants of the kingdom who deserved better. Alonso thought of stopping to craft some makeshift graves for them, but felt the gesture would be ultimately hollow. Services would be performed at home when his men
weren’t starving or in need of shelter.
He did not linger there long, as his horse continued to ride lazily by, but he craned his neck as the ruin passed them, and uttered a quiet prayer as he gazed on the banner that Kolbe still carried.
By sunset, the Neratine had taken the King and his men into the redstone cliffs of eastern Greenbank, at last providing the riders with some shade. The dry wind carried to them familiar scents of burning stoves, horse manure, and hot food. Here, waist-high lamps were staked out along the road, still yet to be lit for the evening. Not just the signs of civilization (and thank god for that), but the beginnings of a compact, bustling city.
Once a small village with a humble river port, Udny Pass had developed into an important trade hub along Areta’s eastern border after becoming the seat of Lord Anquis, Baron of Greenbank. The city gave the impression of layers, having expanded to fill a shallow canyon. Structures of stone and iron to make a dwarf marvel sat along the canyon’s shelves, from the base of the river to the lip of the cliffs above. Some of the buildings had been carved into the cliffside itself, transforming rocky walls into brick facades and friendly storefronts.
The King’s men rode toward a stone wall that defended Udny Pass against the elements and threats likes Viceni attacks or elven raiders. An archway at the base of the wall allowed the water to flow on, while a gate stood at the end of the road. Militiamen at the top of the wall hoisted the gate open as they spied the banner of Areta, allowing the Knights to pass through.
Just inside the gate was a deplorable shantytown of tents, and canopies, hastily assembled, which had not been there the last time the Knights passed through. Some few dozen Viceni peasants, having fled here after being driven from their village the night before, huddled around spits and knelt on colorful throws and blankets.
Refugees. Possibly all that remained of Vicenna.
Alonso dismounted his horse as a militiaman with a sword on his belt approached to see to the new arrivals. Though the King wore no crown, he was well dressed and in the company of armored Knights. If he didn’t appear to be Areta’s ruler, he at least looked noble.
“I wish to see Lord Anquis,” the King said with an arm wave. “Call him here. My men are injured and our horses our tired. We are in need of water and succor.”
The militiamen gave a nod and began to deliver orders to the other watchmen. Alonso turned to his party.
“Now’s your chance to get off these damned horses and stretch your legs.” The King passed a sideways look to Kolbe and the spider scepter. “Keep that thing covered up. Not a word of it until we’ve spoken to Lord Anquis. I don’t want to alarm the locals.” A look of warning was sent in Marcus’s direction as well.
***
The elven party arrived by an alternate route, choosing to enter through Udny Pass’s western gate to avoid alarming the King’s battle-ready companions. Richter the dwarf and his companions were nowhere to be seen. All that greeted Lothren and his meager collective were overtired guards leaning over the stony wall.
“Who goes there?!”