Play Speak
Where there was once an unassuming hole in the side of a hill in the Coille Forest, a small fortress of wood, earth and stone, now stood.
More than three hundred yards of vegetation had been cleared from the mouth of the Cave of the Traveller, and an intimidating log wall stretched around the hill. A trenchâlined with rows of wooden stakes sharp enough to pierce Ravener-spawn lay in front of it.
Two watchtowers soared above either side of the rampartâs solid gates, and behind them was a campâawash with tents, wooden barracks and guardhouses.
Between the wall and the Coille stood a sea of stumps, left from the trees that were lumbered to build the fortifications.
And that sea was suddenly alive with Ravener-spawn.
From the Coille, Silence Spiders poured.
Hundreds of Ravener-spawn soldiers.
Thousands of workers.
And dozens of Hive-Queens.
Uncounted monster bodies overran the trench, unaffected by the spikes.
Bladed legs silently gripped the walls, scaling them, as both soldiers and workers noiselessly gnashed their teeth. Hive-Queens simply reared up, shooting their webbing, attaching it to the hill and pulling themselves over the rampart.
The killing started the instant they breached the Thameish camp. đđżeeđđČđŻđ§ođel.đođ
âThis cannot be,â the head priest swung his mace at the head of a silence-spider soldier, connecting. The weaponâencased in holy lightâsplit its skull in a single stroke, but two quickly replaced it.
The horrified holy man fought at the Caveâs mouth, alarmed as the fortâone heâd commanded so proudly for over a year nowâwas overrun in seconds. The hive-queens were far too devastating, their soldiers much too deadly and their workers too numerous to be slowed.
Desperately, the garrison held the line at the cave mouth, using the small opening as a chokepoint.
But how long could they last?
He swallowed, deciding on an awful course.
âWizards forward!â he cried. âLoose fire!â
One of his subordinates shouted at him, her eyes horror-stricken. âBut, we canât! If we fireball the camp weâll killââ
âWe must! The Traveller and Uldar will reward their sacrifice in the after-world!â his voice sounded shrill. âWe have to thin the enemy: by the Traveller and Uldar, how did this happen? They came from nowhere!â
The wizards under his command looked at each other, likely for reassurance, and nodded grimly.
Reluctantly, they began casting the spells that would doom many of their comrades, and hopefully, buy the rest of them precious time.
A massive surge of mana suddenly exploded through the air, bringing a wave of concentrated power raining from the sky, coalescing in beams of blinding light. The rays undulated like snakes, striking ten hive-queens before they could even twitch.
Those enormous Ravener-spawn turned to ten columns of dust in a flash.
For a heartbeat, all on the battlefield froze in shock.
Moments later, Ravener-spawn were withering.
Soldiers and workers shrivelled, turning to drying husks in the blink of an eye, soon joined by the remaining hive-queens. They withered, silently screaming as magic from an unseen source ravaged their bodies.
The head priest gaped. âBy Uldar! By the Traveller! Itâs a miracle!â
âNo, itâs the General!â a wizard pointed to the sky.
The head priest leaned forward, peering up at the sky beyond the Cave mouth. Indeed, floating there was Alexander Roth, General of Thameland, surrounded by a nimbus of power.
And beside him were five enormous iron golems with strange, tube-like devices covering one arm.
He was aiming his staff in the direction of the Coille, the air was shimmering around him.
Towering eagles with feathers the colour of emeralds, materialised in the sky, screeching into the wind. Uttering one word, the Hero directed them, sending the eagles swooping down, snatching up withering hive-queens.
Great talons and beaks pierced insectile bodies.
Others were crushed in grips of steel.
Eagles soared high in the skyâclimbing to terrifying heights with a few titanic wing beatsâdropping their quarry to their deaths.
With a wave of his hand, the young archwizard sent a wave of light pulsing through the Thameish army; the guardians of the Cave of the Traveller swelled with power.
âFor the Traveller!â they cried, lifting newly glowing weapons high, setting upon their enemies with unflinching courage and terrible strength.
Moments before, hordes of silence-spiders had been mangling the Thameish soldiers and priests with abandon, overwhelming them with numbers.
Now, those same priests and soldiers were butchering Ravener-spawn like helpless slabs of meat.
âForward!â the head priest shouted. âThe General and the Traveller have blessed us! Destroy these filthy creatures, send their soulless husks back to the pits where they were spawned!â
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He raced ahead, leading a charge outside the Cave, reinforcing the rallying army.
They would take back their fortification.
And they would not allow the Ravenerâs-spawn to enter it again.
Floating above the battlefield, Alex could hear his heart pounding in his ears.
Below, the tide was turning, but it had been a very near thing.
âIf Iâd been even a little bit later, they wouldâve been overrun. How much of Thameland has already been overrun?â he wondered. âShit, I need to work faster!â
He glanced at Shaleâs golems, all five hovered in the air under the power of his flight magic. They were silent. Still.
But not for long.
Floating over to them, he touched two of the twentyâfoot guardians, teleporting them and landing inside the camp.
âProtect the mortals!â Alex commanded the pair. âGuard this place, donât let any monsters enter this camp, apart from the ones Iâll be summoning! If any of our enemies get in, kill them! But remember, protect the humans!â
The golemsâ heads turned toward him.
Two metallic clangs echoed through the air as their hands snapped into fists.
Then, they followed his instructions, zealously.
Glowing from the power of Army of Heroes, the two massive golems crushed Ravener-spawn soldiers and workers beneath enormous feet, rupturing insectile carapaces with every step.
They turned their attention to the fortâs wooden wallsâtowering over themâ aiming their Gale Force Cannons.
The high-pitched hum of a charge building grew, and Alex felt intensepower rising in the weapons.
Beams of blinding white light blew from the tubes, lancing through the air. Lightning crackled, a wave of heat shimmered around the beams, slamming into oncoming Ravener-spawn hordes like fountains of molten lava. Soldiers nearby cried out, jumping back, shielding their eyes from the searing light while recoiling from the heat.
The beamsâas thick around as Claygonâs waistâmowed down lines of Ravener-spawn. Carapaces vanished. Innards boiled, turning to dust. Silence-spiders, standing too near the beamsâ path, had their bodies warped from the waves of forceâchitin crackedâmaking them dance gruesomely as lightning arced from the beams, electrocuting them.
Alex watched in awe as hive-queen torsos vanished, beams passed through them, punching into the forest beyond, leaving fiery paths of destruction through the woodland.
His jaw dropped. âBy the Traveller, Toraka, I could kiss you right now!â
When the beams at last ebbed, hundreds of Ravener-spawn lay dead, smouldering in heaps.
The remaining horde froze for a long moment.
Then, they resumed their charge.
âThe golems will have to recharge,â Alex thought. âIâll need to summon moreââ
Shaleâs iron constructs fired before the General had finished his thought.
Beams tore through the Ravener-spawn once again, sending more silence-spiders to nothingness.
The golems fired again.
And again.
Once their weapons were charged, they needed little time to unleash another barrage of magical annihilation on Thamelandâs enemiesâŠthe weapons showed no sign of slowing down or overheating.
Alex smiled. âThank you, Toraka,â he whispered, waving his staff.
He summoned a horde of Elder Water Elementals to hunt through the forest, killing Ravener-spawn, and extinguishing fires created by Shaleâs devastating weapons.
Alex called to the soldiers of Thameland. âHold the line here! Weâre taking the fight to the Ravener and weâre going to shred every last one of its spawn to nothing! My magic will stop fear from clouding your hearts for a time! So fight on! Fight for Thameland! The Traveller will protect us!â
âFor Thameland! For the Traveller! For Uldar!â the army cried.
Alex nodded, then looked at the mouth of the Cave.
âHannah, if youâre going to get free of the after-world, then I pray you do it sooner rather than later,â he whispered.
With those words, he teleported away.
âKeep your arms steady, soldiers of Alric!â the commanding priest cried. âWe need your nerves steady and your aim even steadier! Loose! I swear if a single one of you has arrows or quarrels left by the time those spawn make it to the walls, Iâll send you all to Uldar myself!â
The soldiers roared, redoubling their efforts.
Bowstrings twanged.
Crossbow cranks turned.
Catapult arms groaned as they launched three hundred pound stones over the walls.
The projectiles sailed above the fields outside Alric, landing among the oncoming horde.
Paul grimaced. They might as well have been flicking coins at them for all the good most of that did
Priests were making rounds along the walls, blessing the soldiersâ projectiles. The idea was to give them extra bite, butâeven thenâmost of the missiles offered scant help.
Blessed arrows punctured bone-charger hides, but bounced off their armoured skulls, doing nothing to the thick armour covering their heads. Blessed catapult stones crushed bone-chargers and cracked behemothsâ armour, barely making a dent in their number.
The horde was simply too big, and too well armoured.
And more kept coming.
From the forest and fields beyond, more bone-chargers and behemoths joined the initial horde. If anything, the monstersâ numbers were growing.
And from the cries of horror coming from the eastern wall, the defenders werenât having much luck against the chitterersâ and gibbering legions.
âThink I could get one of them with my spear before they eat us?â Peter cried, unleashing another crossbow bolt.
âDonât see why not!â Paul shouted, loosing a quarrel. He cursed as it skidded off a bone-chargerâs head, then began to turn the crank. A glance at his quiver gave him some dire news. He had three shots left. Still, he forced a smile. âHells, Iâll get three of them!â
âPfft, theyâll have you for lunch before you can even stick one!â Peter fired back, a forced grin fixed below his terrified eyes.
âTell you what.â Paul finished cranking. âI bet you I kill more than you. We can compare when we get to the after-world.â
âSounds good.â Peter shouldered his crossbow, aiming it at a behemothâs eye. âYou know what?â Iâll start by killing the one Iâm aiming at.â
âTell you what? You take it down and Iâll buy you a drink when we get to Uldarâs halls in the after-world!â Paul forced a smirk on his face, fighting the near overwhelming urge to throw down his weapon and run away screaming.
But, where would he run to?
âSounds good.â Peter took careful aim.
The behemoth was closer now. Almost close enough for Peter to smell the stench of its breath.
He exhaled slowly.
Then touched the trigger.
The crossbowâs string twanged.
Its iron limbs sprang out.
The quarrel flew free.
Peter and Paulâs eyes followed the glowing missile as it twirled toward the enormous Ravener-spawn.
It flew right in the monsterâs gaping maw.
Without warning, a crackling beam of light blasted the creature, erasing its head and most of its upper torso. The beam continued onward, tearing a line of devastation through the horde of bone-chargers and behemoths behind it, leaving a trench of burning bodies and blackened dust in its wake.
The two guardsâ jaws fell open.
Peter slowly looked at Paul.
âG-guess, I win,â he muttered, his eyes unfocused.
âYeah, guess you doâŠbeer in Uldarâs halls is on meâŠâ Paul answered.
Both turned around.
And screamed.
Standing almost directly behind them was a towering iron golem perched atop a mound of earth that they were sure wasnât there a few seconds before. The construct towered over the rampart, pointing a weapon of magic at the attackers.
A heartbeat later, it fired a blast. Then another.
Behind the eastern wall, an identical golem unleashed the same beams of death, and beyond the rampart, chitterers and gibbering legions screamed.
Floating above the town of AlricâŠ
âOh by the Traveller!â Peter cried. âItâs that young Roth boy, ainât it?â
Paul looked up.
Heâd heard the Roth boy was the Fool of Thameland, and that heâd been elevated to some fancy new âGeneralâ Mark.
But he couldnât have imagined the change the former bakerâs assistant had been through in the nearly three years since Paul had last laid eyes on him.
Gone was the skinny, silly bakerâs assistant.
Now, there he was, a Hero, like the ones from legend, powerfully muscled, wrapped in an aura of power and calling a seemingly endless number of monsters, while raining death down on Thamelandâs enemy.
Tears sprang to Paulâs eyes.
âLooks like we might be living yet, Peter!â he cried.
âAye!â Peter laughed, grabbing his fellow guard by the shoulders. Tears streamed down his face, but his smile was elated. âAll hail the General!â he screamed. âAnd thank the Traveller for saving us!â
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