Authors: Angela B. Macala-Guajardo
Was their son starting to fray? He looked paranoid, as if anticipating Roxie jumping out and attacking him at any moment.
Kara, does he look as unnerved to you as he does to me?
Baku said telepathically.
Yes. All the more reason to talk now.
Scowling, Nexus took a step forward. “I see that look in both your eyes. What are you hiding from me?”
Maybe you shouldn’t, Kara. It might push him farther away from us.
I have to try.
Good luck then, my beloved.
Kara took a tentative step forward. When Nexus didn’t shy away, she took another. “Nexus, we’re hiding nothing.”
“You were speaking telepathically. Try harder to mask your lies.”
“I’m sorry.”
“No, you’re not.”
“It was necessary.”
“You betray my trust, Mother. Now leave me be.”
“Nexus, you’re not acting like yourself.” She took another step closer.
“I said leave!”
She held out her arms. “Is that you or Vancor telling me to leave?”
Nexus opened his mouth to retort but he only sucked in a breath and fell silent, his brows creased with doubt. “I must concede we have no way of knowing, until I find a way to remove his hold over me.”
“Then let’s focus on getting that done first.”
“No! The culmination of my prophecy comes first. In addition, I’m trying to get used to this new awareness of worlds and mortals that are now mine. Leave me.”
She lowered her arms. “How do you know the prophecy is what you want?”
“It has given me the power of a Creator. This is what I’ve wanted for so long. How many times do I have to tell you?”
“What about the part of your prophecy that goes, ‘and prophet: beware the sword of light’?”
The wild look of a cornered animal passed over his face again. He looked around the realm and held out his arms. “Do you see any sword?”
“Roxie had one.”
He glared but fear lined his dark eyes. “Do you see her, either?”
“She’ll try to get back here.”
“Like Thanatos will let her march right out of his own realm. He’ll kill her like the intruder she is.”
“I’m certain he’s aware of your prophecy and how it’s upsetting things. What’s to say he won’t help Roxie in hopes of stopping you?”
“Because he’s the outcast of our divine society. He likes dead things, that’s why.”
“You don’t know him,” Kara said patiently.
“No more than you do.”
“Perhaps. He’s very reclusive. But that’s beside the point. If neither of us know him very well, then how can we know what he’ll do?” She took another step closer, bringing herself to just outside arm’s reach. “I’m trying to prepare you for your least-favored outcome and save your life.”
“What do you mean?”
“Say that Roxie makes it back here. She’ll try to kill you or break your will, so your prophecy can’t be fulfilled.”
“Aerigo was a thousand times the warrior she is and I killed him.” Nexus smiled. “Are you so desperate to persuade me that you’ll try to make me afraid of a child?”
“You
are
afraid. You tried to have her killed before she even knew Mana and Frava exist.”
“Father’s the one who created her. Not my fault she’s so young and inexperienced. I was simply being thorough.”
Kara’s eyes hardened. “Then tell me: would you have arranged to get Daio killed as well, if Aerigo hadn’t been forced to kill him for you?”
Nexus smirked. “Of course. He thought he did a good job of hiding his hate. He spelled his own doom with his lack of loyalty.”
Kara took another step and slapped her son across the face. “Vancor, release your hold over my son now!”
Eyes wide, Nexus staggered and clutched his cheek. “You... slapped me.”
“Nexus, I don’t want you to die! You’re my son and I love you, flaws and all.”
“Then protect me from your beloved Aigis you insist I should fear.”
“I am trying to right now but you don’t see it.”
“What I see is you trying to persuade me to call off my prophecy.”
“Because that’s the only way I see how to save you.”
Nexus gave her a flat look. “I’ll take my chances with a child. I’m not giving up on what I’ve worked so hard to accomplish. Now leave me.”
Bowing her head, Kara turned to Baku with tears in her eyes. She looked up at him and his heart broke with her.
“I tried,” she whispered.
Chapter 24
Glory
Oemaru felt sick to his stomach when the round from the ivory tower failed to bring the warring to an abrupt close. Some huge... flock... of winged females had created a bowl to catch the plasma round by linking their bodies and creating a magical shield to contain the blast. His trump card had been rendered almost useless, killing only those females. Glory had not yet been achieved.
If only he’d been permitted more than a thousand soldiers, counting himself, this battle would’ve been won with ease. But no. Vancor had spoken of limitations due to the need for balance for reasons that couldn’t be helped. That was the way of the universe. Oemaru cared about winning; not balance, but Vancor had repeatedly assured him that the head count limit was beyond his control.
Oemaru was beginning to regret partaking in this war.
Brevelan and a handful of other manticores wrestled with the last ivory tower’s stability legs, pulling on one together, until the tower shifted with a metallic screech. The cannon swayed as it smoked and cooled. The manticores yanked again with their concerted efforts and the tower began to list.
Shaking his head, Oemaru snapped out of staring like a novice idiot and sent his starcallers at them, aiming for their wings. He also ordered a handful of soldiers over and they opened fire on Brevelan and the others.
The first volley peppered them and one of the manticores stepped in the line of fire, shielding its comrades. The manticore presented its back and Oemaru guided his starcallers around it as his soldiers turned the lone beast to a burnt heap of flesh and fur. The manticore flinched at every plasma round as they tore up its wings, ignited its mane, and by the time its body toppled over, the other manticores took cover behind the tower, which stood with a severe list. His men ceased fire and studied the cannon.
It tilted towards them, moving slowly at first, then built momentum as it began to fall. Metal groaned and snapped.
“Evasive maneuvers!” Oemaru shouted.
They scattered, shouting to allies as they pointed towards the cannon. Friend and foe ran together and Oemaru took cover by a crippled ivory tower, his starcallers back near his head. He still had his plasma pistol and one last surprise for Brevelan, but hopefully his blades would get to finish the job they started.
Brevelan flapped his ripped wings and more hopped than flew at Oemaru, who sent his blades after the manticore. Brevelan landed and, skidding to a halt, blasted him with air, sending the blades to the ground. Oemaru recalled one but the other lay jammed in the ground, sticking up like a tombstone. He pressed a button on a glove and the blade wobbled and whined until it popped free.
Right as the blade became airborne, Brevelan’s massive body cast a shadow over Oemaru, and three sets of claws came down at him.
Desperate, Oemaru pressed a button on his belt and an energy shield winked to life, encasing him in a golden sphere covered in hexagonal lines. Brevelan’s claws bounced off but the impact sent Oemaru rolling inside his shield, tumbling backwards into an ivory tower. He looked up between his boots as metal groaned. The cannon loomed overhead, falling towards him like a hammer coming in for the strike. Oemaru cancelled his shield and scrambled away, chased by ear-piercing screeches and deep thuds as the cannon shaft snapped off. Oemaru ran until the ground shook. He fell on his hands and knees but popped right back up, directing his starcallers back to him. They orbited his head, but one wobbled with the telltale sign of a bent blade. That one he could no longer aim with, unless repaired.
Brevelan charged him, crouching low, tucking his intact arm against his torso, wings out for balance. Oemaru sent his starcallers at the manticore’s face, but the beast swatted the wobbly one into the ground as he jumped over the other with agility Oemaru hadn’t expected from such a large creature. He activated his energy shield again and felt bile rise in his throat when the shield bent under the manticore’s paws. He’d seen firepower do that, but never a foe’s brute strength.
This one-on-one duel for a bit of glory wasn’t working. His starcallers couldn’t move fast enough or bite deep enough to slow the manticore down. His energy shield was failing, the ivory towers were destroyed, and it’d take too many shots from his plasma pistol to kill him. Oemaru was going to have to swallow his pride and ask for help.
During his training and lifetime of conquest, he’d come across an array of leaders with varying degrees of prowess, yet a common character flaw in most: hubris. It often led to their death. Oemaru had almost fallen down that path, but he almost lost one of his early campaigns because of his own pride. What’d saved him was his desire to win no matter what. He’d asked his underlings for aid and the tide of battle shifted to victory. He’d felt humiliated for not being able to win alone and feared his men would look at him as weak. Instead, they loved and respected him all the more for not having a swollen ego. They trusted him even more as well. He wouldn’t throw away a single life for the sake of pride.
This was how he’d stayed alive so long. This was how he’d achieved a lifetime of conquest: being honest and candid enough with his and his men’s limitations, and never underestimating a foe. Brevelan, quite honestly, was beyond his ability to defeat alone.
Brevelan swatted the energy shield, putting all his weight into the blow, and the shield crackled with electricity as Oemaru went tumbling backwards. He bounced around inside as it rolled over corpses and into a boulder. He scrambled back to his feet, pistol in hand. He couldn’t fire his gun or control his starcallers while the shield was up.
Brevelan charged him again and Oemaru, canceling his shield, ran to his nearby men. “Turn your fire on the manticore!” He pointed at the beast. “Be prepared to use energy shields.” He turned and took aim, and a clawed paw swiped at him. Pain lanced up his arm and he dropped his pistol as his body spun. His men opened fire and cries filled the air as Brevelan took them down one by one, slashing throats and bashing them with each other’s bodies as he absorbed round after round of plasma fire.
Oemaru sat up, retrieved his pistol, and fired, aiming for Brevelan’s feet. The manticore ignored the shots as he slashed the last soldier and chucked him away. Oemaru kept firing and Brevelan presented his shoulder connected to the ripped-off arm and flapped a wing.
Oemaru staggered. The gust hadn’t been as strong as the others. The manticore’s wings looked too ripped up for flying. He looked too bloody and shot up to be alive but somehow he was.
Oemaru was bleeding from his shoulder wounds again. All that tumbling had ripped the bio gel from his skin. Brevelan came at him with a bloody claw and Oemaru activated his shield, crouching low in case he was sent rolling again, but the manticore stopped with his paw hovering over the golden sphere and glared, baring fangs tinted with blood.
Oemaru flipped a switch on his pistol and held the gun low in both hands. Brevelan glanced at their surroundings. If anyone was paying attention to them, they were all preoccupied with their own fights. Brevelan eyed the pistol, then studied the shield a moment before placing his paw on one side, his bloody stump on the other, and began squeezing.
Oemaru’s heart started pounding. This was it. Either the overloading pistol shot would take the beast down, or it wouldn’t. At the very least he hoped it’d take Brevelan down with him. If he could at least accomplish that, it would be enough consolation.
The shield warped under Brevelan’s exertion as blood trickled from his stump. The pistol vibrated in Oemaru’s hands, signaling that it was ready. He aimed at the manticore’s head.
Oemaru didn’t want to die but death would find him eventually. It was one foe no mortal had ever defeated, one foe he’d never dared try to beat. He’d lengthened his life with centuries of cryosleep, but that’s all it was: sleep; not living. He didn’t want his life of conquest to end today but his gut told him that this was it. He’d been maneuvered into a corner. If he tried to flee, he’d be killed with his back turned. But if he bravely held his ground, he might not die alone. His chapter in Neo-Joso’s vast history would have a heroic storybook end. Neo-Joso’s greatest military mastermind would die while staring death in the face, humbling accepting it, instead of denying his own mortality. Future Generals would study his career and learn much.
Brevelan tried sinking his fangs into the shield but he couldn’t wrap his bite around the curve. He adjusted his balance, raising a foot and bearing more of his weight on the shield, and it began to crackle and flicker.
Oemaru felt a bead of sweat trickle down the side of his elongated face. He was scared. He was staring down death, about to enter the great unknown. His only regret was that he’d never learned who those glowing-eyed beings were, or gotten a rematch with them. Still, compared to all he’d accomplished, it didn’t matter. However, it was one blow to his pride he’d struggled to recover from.
If Brevelan was smart, he’d back away, instead of present himself to a pointblank shot. Maybe he believed he’d survive it. The beast was proving to be exceptionally robust. Or maybe he didn’t care if he died. Whatever the motive, it didn’t matter. Yes, Oemaru was curious. He wanted to understand all his foes, but many questions that’d cropped up over the years had gone unanswered. This would be yet another one.
He adjusted his am and focused on steadying his breathing. He needed all his concentration for this one shot.
The shield crackled and began to fade. Brevelan growled as he bore all his weight on it. Oemaru tunnel-visioned on the beasts jaws, intending to send the blast down its throat. His belt button controlling his shield warmed against his belly and began beeping furiously. The shield flickered one last time and went out with a pop. Brevelan’s massive body came down on him as Oemaru pulled the trigger. The blast buried itself in Brevelan’s throat, and his gaping maw came down on his face.
* * *
Roger and Whitman were struggling to keep the army organized by communicating through walkie talkies and the manticores. Mishitan had returned shortly after the dragon had fallen out of the sky. She was covered in injuries and missing one eye, but she helped bring organization back with her telepathic communication.
They were down a lot of allies, but so was the other side. The front lines were a mess and only half of their allies were sure of who was fighting with them. The front half was in the fray, taking down enemies in short bursts, until confusion reasserted itself. Whitman barked out order after order, pulling people back in some places, and needling with attacks where it became obvious their enemies lay.
Mishitan let out a bellowing roar that made Roger flinch and Whitman fall silent. She roared again and again, her fur bristling and feral eyes glazing over with rage. She flew off without saying a word, heading straight for where that cannon shot had come from.
“Mishitan!” Whitman yelled, lowering his walkie talkie. He ran a few steps towards her dwindling frame. “Mishitan, get back here! That’s an order!” The manticore flapped her wings and dodged over and under projectiles, flying out of hearing range.
Whitman raised his talkie like he was about to bash it on the ground, but then paused, thought better of it, and took a breath and cursed.
The ground under Roger’s feet shifted and felt loose, as if he was standing in surf and a retreating wave was pulling the sand out from under his feet. He backed towards the edge of the battlefield and hefted his rifle in both hands. Whitman grabbed a second rifle and backed away as well.
“What in--?”
Dirt and rock sprayed the air, and out burst huge blue monsters that looked like mutated snapping turtles.
“Whoa, there!” Whitman bellowed, undaunted. “Looks like we made some friends, Alcadere. Let’s give ‘em lead presents as a welcome gift!” He wielded a rifle in each hand, clamping them tight under his arms, and opened fire.
Roger fired as well, aiming for the monsters’ heads, which were as big as car tires. His bullet fire glanced off their armored backs, but shots to the eyes and mouth made them flinch and turn away, and a few fell lifeless on the ground. More monsters sprang up all over the back lines. Archers and spell flingers adjusted their aim onto their latest foes.
Whitman laughed every time a monster went down under his fire. It was awesome taking down monsters as big as elephants, but Roger couldn’t bring himself to join in the laughter. It was taking all his concentration to make every last shot count, along with not hit an ally.
The monsters’ numbers dwindled but they took many fighters down with them. Whitman and Roger burned through magazine after magazine, but they couldn’t slow down, or they’d be overwhelmed. The monsters were trying to reach them, approaching from around a mound of corpses.
The ground loosened again and they ceased fire, backing to the very edge of the asteroid. Glass littered the airless space in a constellation of glittering and rotating shards. Roger switched to a fresh magazine and took aim at the monsters.
Half a dozen heads erupted and the two men opened fire. One monster went down, falling back into the hole, and the other five stomped towards them as dirt rolled off their shells.
The section of rock Roger and Whitman stood on shifted, making them flail to maintain balance. Roger resumed firing at the nearest monster, heart pounding. Those turtle things must’ve dug big enough holes to start making the asteroid fall apart. They needed to move. But, to do that, they needed to get by the monsters.