Play Speak
Months.
Months spent priming its oldest inner pathways.
Months spent in contemplation.
Months spent crafting not one, but three Skyfire Swarms.
âŠand all three had been defeated in mere minutes.
âImpossible. Impossible. Impossible,â the Ravener whispered.
Its spawn looked up at their master, confused.
âGo. Bring me a petrifier. One closest to that battle,â the Ravener said. âWe must know what happened.â
The construct fell silent, floating over the water in its chamber, considering what had occurred. It knew only that the three Skyfire Swarms it had sent after the Heroes were dead.
Dead in minutes.
It could not be: Skyfire Swarms were creatures of the old times. Times when the creator wished for all of Thamelandâs people to be wiped from the world. The swarms were not invincible. They were not unstoppable.
But they also were not so weak as to be destroyedâby even the Heroes at their mightiestâwithin minutes. It could not be.
âImpossibleâŠâ it whispered again.
For a time, it waited in silence, analysing its memories of past battles. Battles from before the General was replaced by the Fool. In silence, it waited among its Ravener-spawnâŠuntil, at last, a petrifier crawled from a tunnel and into its lair.
âSpeak,â it commanded.
The petrifier threw itself on the shore, grovelling before its master. âMaster,â it answered. âThe General and Usurper, and their companions defeated our Swarms.â
âHow?â the Ravener asked.
And the petrifier explained what had happened. From the beginning to its quick and deadly end, the battle between the Heroes, their companions and the Skyfire Swarms, was laid bare. The creature had been too far to intervene, but close enough to see with its powerful vision.
Close enough to witness the Skyfire Swarmsâ crushing failure.
âThat will be all,â the Ravener said abruptly. âWait there for my order.â
The construct fell silent once more, finishing the examination of its own memories.
There were only a few cycles where a General had existed in ThamelandâŠand in none could the Ravener find any memory of three Skyfire Swarms facing defeat at the hands of the Heroes, and not so many with such ease.
âWhat was the difference?â it wondered. âWhy has this impossibility occurred?â
It examined its memories one final time, playing out battles that the five Heroes had fought against its mighty Ravener-spawn. It compared those memories to the petrifiersâ recounting, and came to grim conclusions. Very grim conclusions.
For one, it could not find any group of Heroes in its memories that compared to the sheer power wielded by this generation and their allies.
âThey are the strongest of any cycle,â it whispered. âAnd they are not alone.â
This generationâs Heroes are aided by forces beyond Thamelandâs shores.
âPrevious generations have only battled alongside those of the creatorâs kingdom. Thameish armies and some few mercenaries, in the past. Now, there are outsiders to contend with. Powerful outsiders. This is beyond my calculationsâŠand they are here because of him.â
The General.
This General.
So many changes and irregularities in this cycleâthe outsiders, the usurpers, the discovery of Uldarâs death, the destruction of the hidden churchâcould all be linked back to that one individual. No General or Fool in all of Thamelandâs history had ever caused this many disruptions in Uldarâs great plan.
None until now.
âI underestimated them,â it whispered, the stirring growing within its core. âThey must be destroyed quickly. At once! If they grow any strongerâŠâ
It paused, turning its attention to the petrifier.
âGo. Speak to our ally. Things must change,â the Ravener said. âWe mustââ
âMaster!â a voice called from one of the cavernâs numerous entrances.
Every Ravener-spawn turned toward the voice.
There stood a Hunter, wheezing from exertion. It looked like it had sprinted many miles.
âMaster! The enemy is tracking the Skyfire Swarms! They are following their trail!â
Silence fell.
âBe calm!â the Ravener commanded. âGuards will be doubled in our lair. But they will not find us. They cannot. And soon. Soon they will have too much to occupy them to try to seek us out.â
âI underestimated all of you.â Asmaldestreâs voice slashed the air around her. It echoed even above the pounding rain. âYou all boil with greater violence than I had thought you capable of. The violence of the fire clouds was undone by our own. Yes, you were correct, archwizard. This battle just might satisfy me.â
âBoil with greater violence than you thought us capable ofâŠâ Khalik muttered beneath his breath. âThank you? I suppose?â
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âYou are welcome.â Asmaldestre answered, turning her burning gaze on him.
He flinched.
âWell, itâs a good thing âyour violenceâ stopped it so far,â Theresa said, flying by Alexâs side. âIâve never seen anything like this.â
âNeither have I, Theresa,â Alex said. âNeither have I.â
Beneath the group lay a path of destruction at least a mile wide: a trench of blackened earth scarring the land in an endless wound across the Thameish wilderness. Everything the fiery clouds had touched was charred or now ash and dust, and the fires were only snuffed out by the pounding, unnatural rain called down by Alexâs magic.
Even then, some of the flames still stubbornly sputtered on, only dying out when the young archwizard sent an elder water elemental down to stifle them.
It was fine, though.
He had more.
Many more.
The young archwizard was leading a small army through the sky.
At its centre were those whoâd faced the fire-clouds, the companions heâd taken to Welling, Tyris and Vesuvius. They were now joined by Baelin, who Alex had teleported to Generasi to ask for his help.
And they also had more company. Around them was an army of summoned monsters, many conjured by Alex and many more called by Baelin.
Engeli, celestials, demons, devils, and elementals surrounded the group, soaring through the rain.
The group moved largely in silence, eyes focused ahead.
Only Asmaldestre was cheerily chatting away, as though the terrible violence theyâd engaged in was as welcome as a picnic under the summer sun. And to be fair to herâŠin every way, it was.
They had taken no casualties.
No injuries.
And their opponents were dead. fđeeđ°đČđnđšvđđč.com
âHave we really become so powerful?â Alex thought, looking down at his hands. In one was his aeld staff, and the other balled into a fist and released repeatedly. âIn just a few months? I guessâŠIt guess we have. By the Traveller, if we were all together in the Empire and had faced the hidden church as we are now, we might have killed all of them in the first ambush. âŠwhat we just did leads me to believe we have enough power to put the Ravener down.â
He smiled at the thought, watching the devastated path through the rain.
Blackened water pooled on the ground.
ââŠif this sort of destruction is whatâs in store for the rest of the kingdomâŠâ He shuddered, pushing away an image of Alric being reduced to ash. âDonât think like that. Focus on whatâs in front of you. You can find the Ravener. You can strike it down. We can strike it down.â
He took a deep breath, calming his mind.
Under his shirt, the Mark of the General shone with its brilliant white light, just as the other Heroesâ Marks did.
âWe can do this. We can do this.â He told himself.
âThe path ends just up ahead!â Drestra called. âBe ready!â
Alexâs thoughts went quiet. âWhat else do you see?â he called back. âAny Ravener-spawn?â
âNo,â she said.
âI donât see anything right now,â Theresa said.
âDonât smell anything either,â Thundar added.
âI shall conjure some Wizardâs Eyes.â Baelin added. His bronze armour gleamed as the rain beat down on it. âWeâll let them start investigating the area. We shall find it.â
They closed in on what appeared to be where the fire-cloudsâ had begun their path of destruction through Thameland.
The scorched earth began in an empty field: what once must have been a vast, grassy plain was now reduced to a clogged wasteland of muck, debris and ash.
âBe careful,â Khalik whispered. âWe do not know what lies ahead of us.â
The group reached the wasteland, circling in the sky for a time.
All eyes scanned the ground below them, searching for a hole, a rise or other sign of a dungeon. They found nothing.
âOh no,â Alex thought, his heart sinking.
He remembered how theyâd searched the countryside when Uldarâs throne and corpse had disappeared. Theyâd followed Ravener-spawn tracks until theyâd disappeared.
Butâeven after months of searchingâtheyâd found nothing. Not even a clue.
âNot again,â he thought as they landed in the wasteland.
âSpread out,â he said. âThereâs got to be something here. There has to be.â
âThere has to be,â Theresa echoed.
âLet us hope.â Baelin conjured a horde of Wizardâs Eyes with a wave of his hand.
Together, the group and the ancient archwizardâs invisible eyes spread out over the land, examining every nook and cranny of the burnt field. Seconds turned to minutes. Minutes to many.
Every inch of the area was scanned for even a single sign of the Ravener or the origins of the fiery clouds.
Slivers of grass now lay blackened in the desolate field, among cinders, and ash that were once a copse of trees. Heaps of embers hissed, dying atop bits of shattered bone that Brutus sniffed with interest. None were spared from the fire.
But stillâŠ
âNothing?â Drestra suddenly roared. âNothing?â Flames erupted from her draconic maw. âIt canât be! Not again!â
Alex was turning over a charred logâhe could have sworn heâd examined the same one ten times alreadyâhe was shaking with anger. âNo way. It had to come from here. Baelin, do you see anything?â
The chancellor was floating in the centre of the wasteland, his eyes distant. âNone of my Wizardâs Eyes have detected a single sign of any entrance underground, save for a few small burnt burrows.â
Alex turned to one of the engeli. âWhat of you?â He asked in their celestial tongue. âDo you sense any divinity?â
âNone save for the divine powers of your allies, archwizard.â The engeli bowed deeply.
âShit!â Alex looked down at the muddy earth at his feet. He switched to a tongue of earth elementals. âHave you seen anything?â
There was a rumble beneath his feet.
An elder earth elemental emerged.
It groaned in the language of rock and soil.
âStill nothing?â Alex cried. âNo tunnels, no dungeonâŠnothing?â
âMy magics could not find anything either.â Prince Khalik said grimly. He looked up. âPerhaps the fire clouds came from the sky? It is possible that they emerged from somewhere far from here, soared high into the sky, then came down at this point. All to throw us off their trail.â
âWouldnâa bâ thâfirsâ time bloody Ravener-spawn led us on a bloody bad chase,â Cedricâs tone was dark. He floated in the air above the scorched bones of a large antlered creature. His knuckles were white on his weapon. âIâs thinkinâ we mighta been had again.â
âNo, I refuse to accept that!â Drestra snarled, her claws digging trenches in the earth. âIt seemed like we were so close! So close!â
âPerhaps. Perhaps not.â Baelin frowned, exuding the patience of the ages. âThough, perhaps we are missing something. We can widen our search. I humbly suggest that we spread out, and take a look in a wider area while continuing to search here. A Proper Wizard avoids growing too narrow in their vision.â
âTrue.â Alex turned to the others. âLetâs spread out. I want us fanning out in every direction, thatâll give us a better chance of seeing where they came from. Theresa, maybe you and Brutus can take a group south. Drestra, you can go north. Thundar, you take a group to the east. Maybe someone can pick up a scent.â
âThereâs not much to smell, except ash.â Theresa called darkly, holding up a burnt bone in one hand. âI think splitting up is a good idea. Whoâs in each group? Come here, Brutus.â
The cerberus had his head buried in a beastâs blackened rib cage.
âYou can choose your own groups. Maybe three or four per group.â Alex looked around. âThe rest of us will stay here. Iâm sure we missed something. I know it.â
âBrutus, drop that, we have to go.â Theresa pulled at something in the cerberusâ left mouth. âCome on, you donât know what that is.â
âIt could be something helpful.â Khalik floated toward Theresa. Najyah perched on his shoulder, soaked from the rain. âBrutus is clever, perhaps he found something.â
âItâs just a burnt piece of gunk!â The huntress finally wrenched it from the houndâs mouth. âMaybe an organ or something.â
âRavener-spawn?â Alex asked, walking toward her.
The others turned in Theresaâs direction.
She sniffed the object. âNo, it smells burnt, but underneath, it smells earthy, like a mushroom.â
âOh,â Alex sighed. âNevermind then, letâsââ
âWait!â Drestra shifted to her human form, teleporting beside Theresa, taking the mushroom from the huntressâ hands.
âWhat is it?â Alex teleported beside the Sage. He examined the mushroom as Drestra held it, she was beginning to tremble as she sniffed it. âBy the spiritsâŠâ
The others came closer.
âYou alright?â Thundar asked her.
The Sage looked around at everyone. âDo you know what this is? Itâs not just a regular mushroom. Mushrooms like these are almost always found in circles⊠as part of a fae gate.â
Silence claimed the group.
âIâŠâ she whispered. âI think I know where the Ravener isâŠâ Her eyes were growing wider. âBy the spiritsâŠby the TravellerâŠwe were stupid. So very stupid.â
It was as though a key had turned in a lock.
âOh by the Traveller.â Alex could barely breathe. âThe Ravenerâs in the fae wild, isnât it?â
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