Read Blinded by Power: 5 (The Death Wizard Chronicles) Online
Authors: Jim Melvin
Torg heard Lucius yelling at the Daasa: “Wait
. . .
stop!” Then the firstborn and Bonny stomped after them.
“Kusala,” Torg said. “Remain here with Laylah. And remember your vow.”
“Only if you fall
. . .
”
Just then, Laylah’s eyes rolled to the back of her head, and she collapsed, releasing her grip on Obhasa. The chieftain caught her and lowered her onto her back on the turf.
“Only if you fall,” Kusala repeated, tears in his eyes. Then he reached out and handed Obhasa to Torg.
“Agreed,” said Torg, reclaiming his ivory staff.
“Lord, it is bitter not to be able to fight by your side one last time. I love you.”
“You can do more for me here than anywhere else.”
The chieftain sighed. “I will do my best.”
Torg turned away, but then looked back. “I love you too, Kusala. You are my brother.” There was nothing more to be said after that. Torg swung around and strode toward his doom.
Just a short distance away, there was a swell in the plains north of the road. On it stood an average-sized man, adorned in golden robes. At the base of the swell was a ring of Daasa, each snarling and slavering but hesitant to attack. On one side of the wizard rode Rajinii, Manta, and the remaining necromancers. On his other walked Ugga, Elu, and Burly, all of whom had chosen to dismount. The Asēkhas fanned out and joined the Daasa. Bhayatupa circled high above.
Finally Torg came close enough to make out the details of Invictus’s face. The whistling had stopped, creating an eerie silence. The Sun God wore a wry grin, as if a pathetic gathering amused him. His demeanor betrayed no signs of concern, but Torg could sense anger boiling just beneath the surface.
Invictus was the first to speak, but it was to Lucius, not Torg. “General Lucius, we meet again. It has been long since you and I last spoke. You have changed.”
The firstborn growled. “
You
have not.”
“I am a Sun God,” the sorcerer said. “Why should I change?”
“You are a monster!” Lucius rasped. “Worse even than those you employ, though most of them are now dead, including Mala.” With a lumpy hand, the firstborn gestured across the corpse-riddled battlefield.
Invictus chuckled. “I am a monster
. . .
and you are not?”
Lucius had no answer.
The sorcerer smirked, as if his former general had been properly dismissed. Then he turned his attention to Rajinii. “How fare you, Pale Queen?”
“I am not well,” she said, her voice quivering. “But after you are slain, I will feel much better.”
“Knowing me as well as you do, you still dare to threaten me? Would it not be wiser to beg for mercy?”
“Unlike before, I am not alone.”
“No?”
The sorcerer bent back his neck and gazed upward. “Lord Bhayatupa,” he called in a loud voice. “I was witness to your demise, yet you still live. How can that be? And where is your necklace? You would so blithely discard such a beautiful gift? I am insulted.”
“Your gift lies in the dirt, where it belongs,” the dragon called back, his voice also magically amplified. “As for why I still live, you will soon learn the answer.”
As if disinterested, Invictus grunted. Then he returned his gaze to those on the ground and focused his attention on Torg. “Death-Knower, we meet again
. . .
at last. You’ve taken good care of my sister, I presume?”
“Your jokes are pathetic,” Torg replied.
“Perhaps I am not joking.”
“In that case, you were successful.”
Invictus grunted again. “I am always successful.”
“Only a child believes such things of himself.”
The sorcerer’s eyes flared, and the tiny hillock seemed to tremble. “This is not the first time you have accused me of immaturity.”
“I speak only the truth, but you will not listen.”
When the sorcerer sighed, Torg felt the air temperature increase at least five more degrees. Never, anywhere on Triken, had there been a day so hot. Sweat gushed out of his black eyebrows into his eyes, and he noticed that Ugga’s thick beard was as wet as if he had just stepped out of a tub. The barded destriers breathed heavily through flared nostrils.
Invictus raised his arms and spoke to them all. “You have defeated my army
. . .
but not me. All of you
combined
are not my match. I am
Akanittha
, wielder of the Highest Power. Compared to me, even the dragon and Death-Knower are weaklings.”
“We’d rather die than be your slaves,” Ugga bellowed.
Invictus cocked an eyebrow. “Is that so?”
“It is!” Churikā shouted.
“Ema!
Ema!”
the Asēkhas chanted.
The sorcerer smiled, exposing teeth so white they glistened like desert sand. “You underestimate me. Not all my slaves are mistreated.” Then he pointed his right index finger at Elu, and a thin yellow beam sprang from the tip and enveloped the diminutive Svakaran, causing him to scream.
Ugga reached for him, but the golden aura cast him aside.
The Asēkhas leapt forward, but Torg shouted, “Not yet!” And they froze.
Meanwhile, Elu writhed in apparent agony, collapsing to his knees and pressing his hands against his ears. The tiny suit of Jivitan armor split along the breastplates and backplates, and then the cuisses burst asunder. Now naked, Elu’s body began to bloat. Bubbling lumps formed on his shoulders, first oozing viscous blood and then vomiting bizarre chunks of flesh and bone.
A skull. A foot. An eyeball. Wiggling fingers.
Still screaming, Elu rose to his full height, which was now just a span shorter than Ugga or Torg. Then the Svakaran stopped screaming and looked down at his new body. He was as large as a Mogol.
“I’m whole,” Elu said, puzzled but not displeased.
Even Ugga was impressed. “The little guy isn’t little anymore.”
“You see?” Invictus said from above. “I am not evil.”
Torg ignored the sorcerer and turned to Elu. “When the fighting begins
. . .
run,” he said in a near-whisper. “If you can get far enough away, he might ignore you.”
“After all you’ve done for me, you ask me to flee?” the new version of Elu said, his voice much deeper than before.
“If any among us survive this day, it will be a victory. Perhaps you might even reunite with Rathburt. Can you imagine how pleased he will be to see you like this?”
“What’s all the whispering about?” Invictus said in a voice loud enough to cause the destriers to squeal. “I don’t like it when people talk behind my back. Let me show you what happens when I’m displeased.”
“No
. . .
wait!” Torg said.
But too late. Another beam leapt from the sorcerer’s finger, this time enveloping Ugga. The crossbreed dropped his axe, arched his back, and cried out. Then his armor blew apart, casting angry shards of twisted metal. Ugga collapsed onto his side, first screaming, then whimpering. Grotesque body parts spewed from his broad back, including a pair of human heads. When Ugga rose on all fours, a great black bear stood in his place. The bear snarled at Elu and then sprinted northward toward Mahaggata.
“Go with him, Elu
. . .
help
him!” Torg said.
With one final look of regret, the Svakaran hoisted Ugga’s massive axe over his shoulder and ran.
“A chastisement,” the sorcerer said, his voice again proud. “As you can see, it is not wise to cross me.”
Without warning, Arusha and the other destriers bolted in such hysterical panic that Rajinii, Manta, and the necromancers were cast from their barded mounts, landing heavily on the grass in a series of thumps.
Invictus laughed. “At least your beasts have sense.”
Rajinii stood, held her staff aloft, and strode toward the hillock, her gray eyes ablaze. She passed by Torg, squeezed between a pair of Daasa, and started up the hill.
“No more
. . .
no more!”
“Rajinii!” Torg said. “We must fight him together.”
Either the queen didn’t hear, or she refused to listen. Instead, she aimed the head of her staff at Invictus, who simply shrugged. A torrent of energy leapt from the fist-sized jade, scorching the air with its fury. Suddenly, the sorcerer was bathed in green fire. Surely not even he could survive such an assault.
All others, even the Daasa, seemed paralyzed.
Rajinii howled hysterically, pumping more and more power through her staff, though not without personal cost. As the magic that had kept her young was ferociously drained from her body, her face aged rapidly. Suddenly, her oaken staff split down its middle, and the chunk of jade flew into the air and burst into sparkling shards. The conflagration was so bright, even Torg was forced to cover his eyes. Then, for a time there was so much smoke it was difficult to see.
When it cleared, Invictus remained standing, a broad smile on his boyish face. He was unharmed. Even his robes were immaculately intact. “I am
Akanittha
,” he said calmly.
Rajinii lay on her side, sobbing. Manta went to her and helped her to sit up. Torg gasped. The queen’s face was worn and wrinkled, and her long hair, once the color of ebony, had become as white as her skin. Rajinii’s magic was gone.
“Your highness,” Manta moaned. “What has he done?”
“What have I done?” Invictus countered. “I did nothing. Why blame me?”
Without prompting, the Daasa attacked next. Torg would have stopped them if he were able, but their rage could not be denied. For too many years they had been the sorcerer’s helpless victims. Now they intended to tear him to shreds.
“Hmmph!”
Invictus said, before flicking his right hand. A circular band of yellow energy sprang outward. The Daasa, some of which had approached within a single pace, were tossed back like tumbleweeds in a desert storm. Yellow magic continued to cling to their pink hides, sparkling and sizzling. Soon after, every Daasa had reverted to its original self: smaller and far less dangerous. In unison the pink-skinned, purple-eyed creatures looked at Lucius with bewilderment.
“Go
. . .
” the firstborn said. Then louder:
“Go!”
To Torg’s surprise and relief, the Daasa rushed off in the direction of Dhutanga. Torg doubted he would ever see them again.
“Another gift,” Invictus proclaimed. “And you, Lucius, are next.”
Yellow energy encased the firstborn. Torg reached for him and was battered back, but Bonny, filled with desperate love, fought her way through the conflagration and hugged Lucius. The sorcerer’s wicked magic enveloped both of them and forced them to transform to their original selves, naked and helpless before the most powerful being in the world.
“What shall I do with you?” the sorcerer mused. “This, certainly, is not sufficient punishment for your traitorous acts.”
The firstborn stood shakily, still holding Bonny in his arms. Finally, evidently realizing that they could fight no more, they ran in the same direction as the Daasa. Invictus raised his hand as if to strike them, but then was distracted by Bhayatupa, who continued to circle above, as if waiting for a sign that had not yet come. Without prompting, the Asēkhas gathered around Torg, who advanced from below.
“It is time for the final test,” Torg said in challenge.
Torg lowered his ivory staff and willed blue-green flame to burst from its rounded head. At the same moment, Bhayatupa swooped down and hovered a stone’s throw above where Invictus stood, bathing the sorcerer with crimson fire laced with blue. Manta and the other necromancers added green flame. Even Burly the enchanter joined the attack, blasting the sorcerer with energy from his tiny wand. So powerful was the combined assault, the hillock collapsed, as if an earthquake had undermined it, and the sorcerer was knocked off his feet.
As Invictus attempted to stand, Podhana leapt upon him and slashed at the sorcerer’s neck. But before the Asēkha’s
uttara
could cleave flesh, it struck a pale shield of golden light that encased the Sun God from head to toe. The Tugarian sword—capable of chipping stone—was no match for the sorcerer’s magic. The curved blade incinerated. All that remained was the ornamented handle. The Asēkha stared at it in amazement.