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Authors: C.E. Stalbaum

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BOOK: Eve of Destruction
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Amaya just stared at the girl, her head shaking in disbelief. No one spoke like that to Chaval, not even General Hovien or other important people. The hairs on the back of her neck stood up, and she studied Chaval’s face for a reaction. His eyes simmered with barely controlled fury, and she had the mental picture of a volcano on the verge of eruption…

“How many of the inventions here in this Hall are actually yours?” DeShane pressed. “I looked at them as I walked up here, and after a few minutes I realized you didn’t come up with a single one of them yourself. Your only real invention was figuring out how to sell people on a lie—a lie that this technology of yours would suddenly fix all their problems. You convinced them that by stuffing themselves into your factories and working themselves to death, they might one day rise above it. But they never will. And you wouldn’t let them even if they tried!”

“You speak of lies,” Chaval said, his voice little more than a dark whisper, “and yet here you are, standing before me as a mage. Even the best of you, your so-called priestesses of Edeh, have done nothing to curb the suffering outside of their temples. They hide themselves behind their holy books and their cryptic doublespeak, insisting that faith is the only shield we need against suffering—and all the while the masses starve and freeze in the streets.”

“You drove the temples from your city,” DeShane countered. “You forced them to abandon this part of the country for fear of their lives.”

Chaval snorted. “You really believe that, don’t you? You’re a pawn of the Enclave and you don’t even realize it. They
wanted
the people here to suffer—they wanted them to live in such misery that they would come crawling back to their false Goddess and spend their lives on their knees worshipping her—worshipping them.”

“That’s not true and you know it.”

“Isn’t it?” he asked sharply. “Even now the Enclave insists that anyone from farmer to spoiled heiress can go to the university and educate themselves, but how many Arkadians ever take, let alone pass, the Oath Rituals? If you want to speak of lies, Evelyn, you should start by looking in the mirror and appreciating what you represent.”

DeShane slowly shook her head. “That’s what this is really about, isn’t it? It’s not about justice for poor torbo masses—it’s about revenge. Thirty years ago the magi turned their backs on you. They wouldn’t let you into their little club. And now you’re willing to do anything—to harm anyone—to get back at them.”

“If that’s what you think,” he scoffed, “then you’re just as blind as your mother ever was.”

DeShane stepped forward, her amber eyes glinting like an animal sensing weakness in her prey. Chaval, by contrast, still looked on the verge of eruption. His usual composure had waned; his arms and fists were trembling at his sides. Amaya could scarcely believe it. The calculating man, the legendary politician and entrepreneur, and a nineteen year-old girl was provoking him?

“I don’t think so,” DeShane said. “It’s really quite simple. The Enclave hurt you. They prohibited you from taking the Oath Rituals at Valmeri, and they did their best to sabotage your early inventions. They wouldn’t let you be one of them, and you’ve been brooding about it for three decades.”

“I never had any desire to join the Enclave,” Chaval growled. “None of us did. We knew what type of monsters they were even at that age.”

“You thought that of the Enclave, but not the magi as a whole.”

Chaval snorted. “There’s hardly a difference.”

“Of course there is,” DeShane said. “Not every mage supports the Enclave, and not every torbo is a Dusty. You can’t just lump everyone into categories and expect the world to make sense.”

“You don’t appreciate the extent of their control,” Chaval said with a bitter smile. “How could you? You’re still a child.”

“Just like you were back then,” she countered. “And just like you, I’ve faced the pressure of wanting to be a part of something bigger than myself. I understand what you felt. You were part of the Seven, of this group with these lofty ideals and expectations…and then the Enclave took it all away from you. Then suddenly college is over and you’ve been left out of the club. Everyone else took the Rituals eventually, but not you. You were left to be a simple torbo—and it drove you mad.”

“I have accomplished more than any of them could ever dream,” Chaval insisted. “I have built an empire in my name, and what have they done? What did your mother ever do?”

“She married someone that wasn’t you,” DeShane replied coolly. “And for all your wealth, all your power, I bet that’s the one thing that still keeps you up at night.”

Chaval stepped forward, his hands balled into fists. Amaya had seen him furious, but she had never seen him lose control. For a moment she thought he might leap forward and try to choke the girl with his bare hands…

“You really are just like her,” he whispered. “So snide, so arrogant. You, the Avenshal, the one whose power will destroy the world, and you see fit to stand here and judge me?”

“I never said I was here to judge you,” DeShane told him. She extended both of her palms, and sparks of Fane energy crackled at her fingertips. “I said I was here to kill you.”

Chaval laughed. It was not his polite giggle or his dinner party chuckle. It was a bitter and blackened sound that echoed off the walls of the arboretum. Amaya took a step backwards despite herself, and DeShane’s veil of poise seemed to lift for just a moment.

“You couldn’t hurt me even if you wanted to, my dear,” he told her.

“Because of your lackey, here?” the girl asked, glancing to Amaya. “I’m the Avenshal, remember. Do you really think one Talami harlot with a gun is going to stop me?”

“No,” Chaval said, taking a step forward. “And do you think, my young Evelyn, that I would rely on a foreign slave for protection all this time?”

Amaya winced and glared at him. Was he just baiting the girl now? Did he really have a death wish, talking down to a mage like this when he wasn’t even armed? Amaya was his only protection, and demeaning her was hardly—

And then, in a sudden epiphany that sent a chill down her spine, it all clicked neatly into place. Amaya turned to face the girl, and it was clear by her expression she had come to the same impossible conclusion.

“You’re a mage, aren’t you?” DeShane asked breathlessly. “All this talk about hating them, all your thugs hunting them down and killing them…you never took the Rituals, but somehow you learned to weave anyway.”

Chaval smiled. He flicked his wrist, and a brilliant flash of white light exploded around him. When Amaya blinked away the afterimage, Chaval was encapsulated in a sphere of energy, his entire body rippling with magical power.

“I knew you would come here, Evelyn,” he said menacingly. “Just as your mother said you would. She knew you would seek revenge; she knew that you would wish to protect your friends from what you feared you might become. But the truth of the matter is that you cannot possibly defeat me—not here, not without embracing your full potential.”

Chaval gestured broadly to the plants around him. “This building teems with life even as the city around it withers. You can feel it—I’m sure of it. You can taste the raw power here, and you know you could use it to destroy me. In the end, that’s the only way you’re going to survive. It’s the only way you will taste vengeance.”

DeShane took a step back and her body stiffened. All the momentum she had gained—all the confidence she had worn like a second cloak—abruptly vanished as she started in horror at the man in front of her.

“You’re insane,” the girl breathed.

“On the contrary,” Chaval said, “I exist in a state of perfect clarity. Your mother helped me reach it once before she betrayed me, and now, thirty years later, her daughter will do the same. There is only one way for you to get what you want, and that means becoming exactly what you fear.”

DeShane glanced outside the glass dome to the fires on the horizon and shook her head. “You don’t care about any of this, do you? This isn’t about revolution or technology at all.”

His smile widened. “You were right all along. This is about revenge—revenge, and truth. I will reveal to the world the evil that is the Enclave. I will show them the lie that is the Fane and the charlatan that is their beloved Goddess. I will teach them that their one final hope is to turn against the magi and purge them from this world.”

Chaval opened his palms, and the room exploded in a flash of light.

Chapter Twenty-Seven

 

Glenn Maltus pressed himself more tightly against the alleyway wall as another volley of gunfire thundered from across the street. A few moments later a pair of cannons joined in the cacophony, and a nearby building crumbled into a flaming pile of rock and debris. At this point the Steamworks soldiers seemed utterly unconcerned about firing into civilian buildings if their opponents were using them as cover.

They weren’t, of course, which might have been the most tragic thing about it. The squads of Enclave magi were prowling about the streets cloaked in magically-deepened shadows or other such illusions. They wouldn’t get pinned down in straight-up battles if they could avoid it—Enclave units were built for tactical, surgical strikes, and that played perfectly into this type of urban warfare.

Maltus wondered idly if Wilhelm had planned this entire assault himself, and if so, how long it had been sitting on his drawing board. Weeks, probably, and perhaps even months—so far the Enclave strategy bore all the hallmarks of a calculating, methodical man who thought in cold numbers instead of lives.

“This is a massacre,” Gregori murmured. “Simon’s people aren’t trained for this type of fighting.”

“Few people are,” Maltus said, wincing as several nearby screams were abruptly cut short by another explosion. “The Council knows that.”

“How could they do this?” Jean asked softly. Her arms were wrapped tightly around herself as she crouched between them. “How could they willingly order this slaughter? Don’t they know what the Exarch will do once she hears about it?”

Maltus pursed his lips. “If she hears about it. I doubt their plan involves leaving survivors to tell the tale. And even if it does get out, it will be too late for the Exarch to do anything about it.”

“She’ll renounce them. The entire church will.”

“Will they?” he asked gravely. “They’ll see a country with no leader and a government on the verge of complete collapse. They won’t be able to keep the peace without help.”

“Not to put a damper on this cheerful speculation, but I don’t think this is the best time,” Gregori said between labored breaths. He was even more out-of-shape than he’d been at Valmeri, and that was impressive. But he was handling himself well, all things considered.

Maltus nodded. “You’re right. After the next break in fire, we should make our move.”

“I should be able to mask us until we get to 2nd Street,” Gregori told them. “Assuming the Enclave didn’t just level the entire hotel, that’s where Karyn and Janel should be.”

“Goddess protect them,” Jean whispered.

Maltus glanced down to her. “Are you all right to move?”

She scowled at him. “I’m younger than you, you know.”

“That’s not what I meant,” he said as another burst of cannon fire obliterated a building farther down the street. “Just focus on the destination, and try not to think about—”

“You don’t need to coddle me,” she growled, standing up. “I spent three months as a missionary in northern Poleria and another six in Talam. I’ve seen war and death. I know what to do.”

He nodded. “All right. Then let’s go.”

They dipped back out of their cover after another volley of gunfire and dashed across the rubble-strewn streets. Between the moonlight and the flaming debris, it was easy to see where they were going, and Gregori cloaked their movements behind elongated shadows and other visual trickery Maltus himself barely understood. His old friend had definitely perfected his craft over the years.

BOOK: Eve of Destruction
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