Chapter 19
It was as sudden as it had been the first time.
In a rush so abrupt that it almost took his breath away, his conscious
roared back over the numbing magic which had it under his control, even as that
magic seemed to wane and fade away.
Blinking his eyes, Tarrin instantly stood up from the filthy straw in
which he'd been sitting, and he was angry.
Anger wasn't quite the word. Pure,
sheer, abject utter rage was a better definition.
But instead of going mad and acting like an animal, he focused that sheer
rage into his surroundings.
He was in deep trouble. He
had indeed heard and remembered everything, so he fully appreciated where he
was, and what was standing between him and freedom.
He was deep in a vast
underground complex occupied by a large number of armed men.
From what he heard, many of the priests above knew about this place, and
were indeed members of it. But many
others were not. He had been
brought down through a series of secret passages that led off a side corridor in
the quarters area. He heard every
word of what Irvon and Jula said, and then she had brought him to this tiny
cell, and a man had locked huge manacles on him, with a thick chain designed
more for a Troll than they were for a human.
A chain ran from the manacles to the wall, secured into it by a huge eye
bolt.
Something had disrupted the magic on the collar.
That's what freed him. He
could feel a very powerful force blocking off the entire area from the
Weave...it had literally peeled back the strands and pulled them away from the
entire area. Very powerful
Sorcerers were maintaining that barrier, even now.
He could feel it on the edges of his awareness.
Had they found him? They had
to have. Why else would they be
blocking magic over the entire region? They
had tracked him down somehow, and had cast the barrier to do something.
But it also had the side effect of freeing him from the collar's magical
control. That meant that they had
to be close to him, and they may be armed and in force.
If he could reach them, he could get himself to safety.
He had to get out. He was
having enough trouble controlling his rage, to keep from snapping and going
berzerk. This was the time to
think, not to fight, because he couldn't afford being caught without getting
close to the exit. And he was chained to a wall, with a collar around his neck,
inside a tiny barred cell. Every
fiber of his being screamed out to be free, building inside him an almost
uncontrollable instinctive need to
break out, to escape, to do anything
he had to do to be free. It caused
him to tremble, to lose control of his breath, as it built into a cold thing
in the pit of his stomach that threatened to tear him apart.
The first thing was the collar. Desperately,
he grabbed it in both paws and pulled against it, wrenching it side to side,
until he felt the metal begin to give way.
It squealed faintly under his pads, until it came loose of his neck with
an audible klink. He threw the
collar into the straw, resisting the urge to jump up and run, fighting against
the impulses that sceamed nothing but flight into his mind.
Chains rattled as he pulled them taut, testing the bolt.
It wasn't that large, but it was solid.
The chains themselves were very thick, and seemed to be well made.
The fear built and built and built, and every tug on the chains made it
stronger and stronger, until his heart was pounding in his ears and his
breathing came in short, ragged gasps. He
had never felt fear like that before, and it terrified him almost as much as the
fear of being imprisoned did. His
heart began to race, and he could see his pulse behind his eyes, hear it in his
ears, feel it in myriad places under his skin, as he pulled and jerked and
snapped at the chains, desperation beginning to take firm hold inside him.
"Ere now!" a voice came from outside.
"They ain't never said nothin' about you makin' a racket!
Shaddup and sit back down, mangy critter!"
Tarrin put a foot against the wall and yanked, pushing off at the same
time. Metal squealed, groaned, and
then rang as the bolt twisted in the wall, and then was broken off at the
mortarline even as one of the chains broke free of the right manacle.
"Hey!" the voice outside shouted, and the door thumped loudly.
Tarrin could hear nothing but the pounding of his own heart, and the
incessant, undeniable, animalistic urge to be free.
Grabbing the chain on the left manacle, he twisted the eye where it was
connected to the manacle and twisted it off, and then set his paws as far apart
as he could to make the chain connecting his paws taut.
Snarling soundlessly, his inhuman strength suddenly attacked that chain,
as Tarrin pulled his arms apart with every ounce of his incredible power.
The chain did not break, so he put his wrists together and yanked them
apart, giving out a bestial cry as manacles tore skin, muscles ripped from
anchors on bones, and ligaments tore and snapped.
His overpowering need for freedom had overwhelmed his sensation of pain,
and those arms inexorably pulled further and further apart, straining the heavy
chain connecting them together.
The sound of the chain snapping under the irresistable force of Tarrin's
augmented strength was accompanied by the sound of the throwing of the bolt on
the door, and murky torchlight suddenly flooded into the room.
"I said sit down and shaddup!" the voice called again as the
door opened.
The pain had been too much. The
pain, the rage, the inescapable fear, they assaulted Tarrin's mind in harmony,
and he could no longer control them. His
consciousness was again shunted off to the side, overwhelmed by his animalistic
urges, conquered by the Cat. The
Cat would be free.
The Cat would be free!
The man, a slim, unshaven sellsword, with a rank scent and a scarred
face, took one look at the hunched Were-cat, arms free of the chains, a broken
chain the size of a man's wrist hanging between the manacles.
His eyes glowed from within with an unholy greenish radiance, and the
look on his face was one of pure, unadulterated hate.
He took one look at the man, his ears laid back, and he roared, his claws coming free of their sheaths.
"Sweet mercy!" the man screamed, slamming the door in the face
of that apparition, even as it lunged forward.
But there was no mercy left. Tarrin's
paw exploded through the closed door, opening up and grabbing the man by his arm.
The man shrieked in agony when that inhuman grip closed over his arm,
crushing bones beneath it, but it turned into a whoosh
as Tarrin yanked, shattering the door by pulling the unfortunate man through it.
The sound of the imploding door echoed through the passages, and they
were quickly accompanied by horrified, agonized shrieks and screams as Tarrin
systematically savaged the guard. Unsatisfied
with simply killing him, Tarrin unleashed his full rage upon the man's body,
tearing, breaking, ripping, destroying, feeling the rush of flesh tearing
against his claws, revelling in the sound of bones snapping within his grip.
Tarrin's voice, a screeching roar of pure animalistic rage, drowned out
the man's weakening screams and pleas, which were cut off when Tarrin grabbed
the man's head between his paws and pushed,
utterly destroying everything above his neck.
Blood, bone, brains, and worse flew in every direction, spraying Tarrin
and the walls with grisly ichor, and the smell of it drove him utterly mad.
Even that was not enough. After
the body fell to the floor, Tarrin continued to destroy it, sending gibbets and
shredded bits of flesh, bone, leather, organs, and cloth in every direction, to
stick to the walls and ceiling, to hang from Tarrin's body like grotesque
jewelry, to slick the floor with blood and gore.
When there was nothing even remotely human left to identify, when the
remains of the man were spread all over the floor and the walls of the small
cell, Tarrin raised his head to the ceiling and screamed, a raging howling roar
of pure hate, pure rage, the purity of the need to survive at any cost.
Two more men appeared at the destroyed opening of the cell, and Tarrin
whirled to face them, covered in the spoor of his defeated foe, and a look of
pure rage, utterly devoid of rational thought, twisted his face into a
fang-bared snarl.
"Holy Karas preserve me!" one of them gasped, but it was too
late. With a roar, Tarrin sprang
forward, killing one instantly when his paw found the man's face, and drove that
head back and against the wall behind it, where it crushed between the wall and
Tarrin's paw. The other managed to draw his sword, just in time for it to
fall from nerveless fingers when a full swipe of Tarrin's clawed paw ripped the
man's head completely off his body.
Tarrin gave another howling roar, a scream of rage, but also of triumph.
He would be free! Now he
would leave, using the memories of his human half, memories of hallways and
passages that would lead back to the top, back to the outside, out of that
prison! A man spotted him, then
turned and ran down a side passage, but Tarrin didn't give him any mind. The Cat inside him was trying to get its bearings, to decide
which way it was supposed to go in order to find the way out, and it struggled
to comprehend human conceptions to make that decision.
A sudden clamoring of bells startled the Cat, and it couldn't grasp that
it was an alarm. Giving up for the moment, the Cat decided that moving was
best. So Tarrin began stalking down
the passageway, seeking something familiar that it could use to find the way
out...a scent, a movement of the air, anything that seemed familiar.
He turned a corner, and found himself staring at at least ten armed men,
who immediately shouted at him and drew weapons.
But Tarrin had no fear. Snarling,
he issued a raging howl, then rushed to the attack, totally oblivious to any
danger. Swords pierced his flesh,
but he felt nothing, ripping and raking and tearing, even biting, anything that
he could get his claws on. He tore
at faces, gouged out eyes, slashed throats and chests with his claws, raking
with his feet to disembowel his adversaries.
Skilled thrusts and swipes cut his flesh, drew deep blood, chopped off
his left paw at the wrist, just below the manacle, but the enraged Were-cat felt
no pain, no fear, nothing but the overwhelming need to destroy, to kill, and he
had no mercy.
A brief episode of pain registered to him as his left paw grew back,
almost as quickly as it had been severed. Their
weapons were not magical, and the magical barrier that stopped magic seemed to
be incapable of affecting his innate pseudo-magical abilities, such as his
regenerative powers. But when
Tarrin took that brief rest to allow it, it was because ten mangled bodies lay
in various stages of dissasembly on the floor around him.
He was standing ankle deep in entrails.
That began a pattern, as Tarrin randomly stalked the hallways of the
underground complex, looking for the way out, killing absolutely anyone who got
in his way. He did not chase them
down, but anyone who challenged his forward momentum or failed to flee at the
sight of him was instantly and savagely attacked.
A trail of savaged bodies marked his path along the dark, shadowy
tunnels, as the mercenaries and warriors and guards sought to locate the
intruder and neutralize him. Tarrin
attacked them all, no matter how many there were, and he was soon soaked in both
his own blood and that of his victims, leaving swords and daggers protruding
from his body as grim testaments of the attempts to slow him down, not feeling
the pain in the haze of his utter rage. He
killed them singly, in pairs, in groups, he killed anyone he could find, he
killed them with utter ruthlessness. They
were enemies, seeking to take away his freedom, and they had to die.
In short minutes, dozens and dozens of the dead marked his grim,
systematic passage along the winding, intersecting tunnels, creating a grisly
path for others to follow to find him.
It came to a head in a wide passageway, almost like a gallery, with a set
of stairs at the far end. A large
complement of guards had gathered at the far end, at least thirty of them, and
they all pointed and shouted as Tarrin stepped from the shadowy tunnel and into
the brightly lit chamber, covered in blood and with a dagger sticking out of his
shoulder. He narrowed his eyes and
laid back his ears, then roared at the large gathering in a horrific scream of
hatred and rage, and he hunkered down into a pouncing position.
"He's mad!" someone shouted as Tarrin gave out a harsh scream,
and then charged.
"Go for the head!" someone else cried, drawing a sword.
It was a clash of rampaging, animalistic fury against desperate
self-preservation. Tarrin attacked
the men headlong, swatting away only what weapons came in for his face and head,
and destroying anything he could grab hold of.
Screams of pain and the dying quickly echoed up and down the passages as
Tarrin killed anyone that came within reach of his paws, driving forward with
such savage ferocity that the score of men remaining were unable to wrap around
him, unable to take him from behind. They
did eventual fold in around him, and he became a lightning-fast whirlwind of
death, killing anyone foolish enough to try to stab at him with a weapon,
grabbing swords and hands and arms and yanking their owners within reach of a
decapitating blast from the other paw. The
men between him and the stairs melted away under his mindless fury, and the
others quickly began to spread out further and further.
After more than half of them were dead, the remaining men finally
realized that they had no chance against him, and they broke and scattered in
every direction. The unfortunates
that tried to flee up the stairs died swiftly as Tarrin caught up to them and
dispatched them with decapitating rakes and head-crushing blows, sending bodies
and body parts tumbling back down the stairs.
The young, robed woman at the top of the stairs, immobilized by the
sounds of death and pain from below, was the first to see the Were-cat emerge
from the dark stairs, covered in gore and eyes blazing with an unholy greenish
aura that preceeded the outline of his body as it emerged from the darkness.
She was a thin thing, small, pretty, and she stared at him in a horrified
gape, seemingly unable to move, paralyzed by his appearance.
Others began to appear, armed men and even women, shouting and pointing
and rushing towards him. But the
pretty young lady was right there, mesmerized in some macabre fashion by the
Were-cat's approach. She was
unmoving, she was trembling, and she was helpless.
She was the first to die.
They were in place. Lilenne
nodded to Keritanima, who tapped Manx on the arm, who gave a signal to his men.
They rushed forward quickly with their swords drawn, their boots making
little noise on the cold cobblestones of the large paved plaza surrounding the
hammer-shaped building. The Wikuni
Marines moved quickly and efficiently, covering each of the six entrances in
four-man squads. Six Knights
advanced over the fence for each team, and they quickly reinforced those Marines
at the doors to prevent anyone from coming out or going in. A larger group rushed the massive main doors of the
cathedral, which opened into the Nave of the church, where even now the High
Priest of Karas was conducting the Service of the Ending Day, the last day of
the ride, before a large congregation.
Keritanima was wrapped in an icy resolve.
The Ward prevented her from locating Tarrin, but she was still searching
the fringes of the barrier, seeking any hint of him should he cross through it. She would not allow
them to keep him. He was her
brother, and that term meant alot more to her now than it did only a month ago.
Allia stood beside her, just as grim and foreboding, and they were both
feeling the same rage and fury. They
were true sisters, and they were getting their brother back.
They had been through too much together for her to abandon him now.
She had never believed that she could ever feel the way she did for anyone,
but she had to admit that she did. Tarrin
was her brother, her friend, her dear companion, and without him, her life
seemed empty. The very thought of
him being lost to her filled her with a nameless dread, and caused a fury in her
so towering that she would be willing to fight the entire Cathedral with her
bare hands to get him out of there. She
had no idea what was going on, how they were treating him.
They could be torturing him!
"Come on," she told Allia in a tight voice.
"Darvon, Manx, Azakar, with us," she called. "Let's go
knock on their door."
Binter and Sisska moved up behind the Princess with their huge hammer and
axe, a truly formidable barrier to any who wished to do her Highness harm, and
the group of very dangerous people dismounted and started across the plaza.
It took them a moment to reach the huge, bronze-inlaid double doors that
led into the Nave, with the Hammer and Scales of Karas etched into that
burnished golden covering. Azakar
took one door and Binter took the other, and they pushed them open with a sudden
jerk that made them boom against their thresholds on the far side.
That sound caused the chanting voice of the High Priest of Karas, a
short, pudgy man standing on a pulpit on the far side of the massive chamber, to
falter. He looked up the long row
of pews, at the wildly mismatched group of people entering the church, and did
not pick his sermon back up. The
church was very full, and almost all of them, commoners and nobles alike,
dressed in their best, turned to look as the group of grim-looking visitors
moved into the main gallery.
Keritanima strode in with a look and demeanor that anyone would take for
a Queen, her amber eyes blazing as she kept them locked on the pudgy man
standing on the pulpit behind the altar. It
was a flat look, one of icy danger, and it made the priest slightly
uncomfortable.
"All are welcome in the house of Karas," he said in an urbane
voice. "Please, take a seat,
my children, and we will continue the sermon.
There is no shame in being late."
That caused a few light chuckles, but Keritanima's cold expression did
not change. "You will release
Tarrin Kael, and you will release him now,"
she said in a savage voice. "If
he is not standing before me in five minutes, I'll have my Marines and your own
Knights raze this cathedral to the ground."
"There is no call for this, threatening," the priest said in a
calm voice. "I'm afraid I have no idea what you're talking about,
um, Inititate."
"You will address me as Princess
Keritanima," she snapped. And
for the first time, she meant it. "Darvon," she barked.
"My Lord Irvon, you are holding the Knight Tarrin Kael within this
building. You will release him immediately,
or the Knights will take him by force. And
as you've heard, we've had her Highness bless us with support from her own
Marines, as well as a complement of katzh-dashi
from the Tower. We have the
cathedral surrounded, and the katzh-dashi
have Warded this entire area against magic to prevent your acolytes from trying
anything foolish."
The man gave the Lord General a look, and then it paled into one of pure
horror.
"We know he is here, Lord Irvon," Darvon said calmly, but there was
steel behind his eyes. "We
will take him when you give him to us, or we will take him after bringing this
cathedral down around your ears. Either
way, we will take him.
The choice of how it is done is yours."
The man Irvon looked unable to speak, but then he somehow got his
composure back. The congregation
began to whisper and gasp, murmuring excitedly among themselves as they drank in
Darvon's words. "You are free
to search, my Lord General," Irvon said in a strained voice.
"I'll file my people out of here under guard and let you comb the
cathedral, but I assure you, you will not find anyone that does not wish to be
here. There is no need for violence
or destruction."
"Then start turning your people out, Irvon," Keritanima said
coldly. "Darvon, bring in a
company of Knights to assist the priests with their evacuation of the Cathedral.
Just so nobody gets overlooked."
"That is ridiculous!" Irvon said.
"I am being very accommodating to you, people, just by offering to
empty the Cathedral so you can put your minds at ease.
But sending in armed men to take my people prisoner goes just a bit too
far. I give you my word as a priest
of Karas that we will cooperate with you."
"That word means spit to me, Lord Irvon," Keritanima snapped
hotly, making many of the onlookers gasped.
"I really don't care how
ridiculous you think it is. You can
let the Knights escort them out, or you can pick up their remains when my
Marines storm this building and kill anything that moves.
It's your choice."
Irvon paled again, and stared at Keritanima in shock.
"You would dare--"
"I dare anything," she interrupted, glaring at him.
"Binter," she said bluntly.
"I think the Lord High Priest is stalling.
Would you go up there and brain him for me?"
The monstrous Vendari started ahead of the Princess, his massive
warhammer held lightly in his right hand, his black eyes flat and promising
death as he advanced up the central aisle to a cacophony of gasps and not a few
screams from the congregation. "No!"
Irvon said in a strangled tone, even as a group of armed priests quickly formed
up around the altar and pulpit. "Alright,
alright! I'll do as you ask!"
Binter looked back to Keritanima, who only motioned with her head.
He turned and moved back towards her, and the entire popluated Nave
sighed in relief. It was in that
moment of silence that it was heard.
It was faint, but it was very audible.
It was a rolling, howling cry, the ear-keening call of a Troll, the sound
they made while fighting.
"Troll!" Darvon said immediately, reaching for his sword.
"Binter," Keritanima said sharply, "where did that come
from?"
"It came from beneath us," Allia answered for him, kneeling and
putting a four-fingered hand on the floor.
"It is under here."
"What's under the floor, Darvon?" Keritanima asked.
"The crypt," he replied uncertainly.
Eyes widening, Keritanima turned and fled back up the aisle, leaving the
others confused. She had no time to explain.
She burst through the open door, pointing towards Lilenne and screaming
in a very impressive, booming voice.
"Lower the Ward, Lilenne! Lower
the Ward NOW!"
Panting, the Cat wasn't sure if it could take this enemy.
He was covered in blood, both his own and that of his foes, and it had
been a long and brutal path. Tarrin
had been stabbed, slashed, hacked, poked, and slammed by a myriad of weapons,
weapons that the Cat completely ignored. But
the constant regeneration had began to slow, and it slowed more and more as he
was injured by those who opposed him. The
regenerative abilities he enjoyed were quasi-magical, but they still drew
strength from his body to operate, and that strength was nearly gone.
Wounds that would have sealed instantly if he were refreshed were taking
long, long moments to slowly knit together now, and it had left his body weary
and his reflexes slowed. His body
was tiring out, and even the Cat understood that he had to get free soon, before
he was left incapable of healing a mortal blow.
It was a grisly marker by which his fatigue was measured.
The hallways behind him were absolutely littered with the dead,
mutilated, and the dying, as he cut a swath of destruction and murder right
through the ranks of his opponents. There
was no grace, no honor, and no mercy in his method of killing.
He simply charged forward, accepted any injury that the victim dealt upon
him, then ripped him limb from limb. Anyone
who crossed him died, from armed guards to unarmed servants, they were all
treated with the same merciless finality. Tarrin's feet left prints of red behind as he stalked forward
in the large chamber, where a single Troll stood on the far side holding a huge
club made from the gnarled taproot of a tree.
Trolls were natural enemies of the Were-kin, and Tarrin challenged it
with no fear as he stalked forward, paws out wide and preparing to rush the
thing and tear out its throat. Men
and women rushed in behind that Troll, some of them obviously spellcasters, but
it was the ones with crossbows, bows, and swords that caught the Were-cat's
attention. But there was no
surrender, no mercy, no turning back. There
was only forward, there was only rage, and there was only freedom.
With a savage roar, Tarrin burst forward, but his moves were not as fast,
not as sharp, as they usually would be. Arrows
and crossbow bolts slammed into him, staggering him, but he neither fell nor
stopped. The Were-cat ignored the
hammering missles, keeping his attention on the advancing Troll.
He ducked under and away from a massive sweep of that club, and lanced
inside its swing as it carried through. His
claws were out, and they flashed once and once only as he slipped up and inside
the Trolls' stance, sweeping upwards from the floor and raking right through the
area covered by the foul monster's fur breechclout.
The crippling move would have worked, had he not missed and struck the
Troll on the inside of his thigh rather than the crotch.
The move made the Troll give out a ear-shattering bellow, and the
Were-cat found himself flying across the room.
He struck the far wall head first, bringing stars to his eyes and sending
to the floor in a heap, but the shuddering of the floor beneath him warned him
that the Troll was advancing to finish him off.
He rolled just as several more arrows and crossbow quarrels struck the
floor where he had been, then kicked out with his foot.
The blow didn't have much behind it, but it was still enough so crack the
shinbone of the Troll's advancing leg as it set it to drive Tarrin through the
floor with its club. The Troll
hopped back and bellowed again, taking its massive club in both hands and
raising it over its head. It moved
with surprising speed, catching Tarrin just under the arm as it quickly feinted
the overhand smash, then switched to a vast underhanded sweep that caught the
weary Were-cat off guard. Tarrin
sailed through the air, landing heavily on the floor some paces away, arrow and
bolts tearing out or breaking off as he rolled and skidded to a stop. Tarrin was dazed, so dazed that the Cat nearly lost its
control of his mind and allowed his conscious mind to return, but the Cat was
still too enraged to relinquish control yet.
Not until it was free.
The Troll limped forward with men and women advancing behind him, coming
to end the Were-cat right then and there, and the Were-cat was too tired to be
certain it would survive.
And then the Weave flooded back.
Screaming in sudden fury, Tarrin's eyes turned from their unholy green to
a blazing, incandescent white as the Cat reached out and seized hold of the
Weave, using its animalistic ferocity to take command of it.
Raw power flooded into him like water over a fall, but where Tarrin's
conscious mind could not control it, could not bear the pain, the ferocity of
the Cat could.
His paws literally exploded into Magelight, and the Cat lashed out with
the deadly weapon immediately and brutally.
A wave of solid air blasted past the Were-cat's thrusting paws, taking up
the entire height and width of the room, and it moved at a speed that defied
sound. The Troll's body simply crumpled
against the horrific force. In the
blink of an eye, the entire far wall was smeared with red stains, bloody
clothing, and shattered weapons and armor, from the bodies of everyone that had
been before him. They had been
crushed into liquid by the supersonic speed and force of the wall of solid air. There was a sudden ear-shattering BOOM, like thunder, that shook the entire complex and caused dust to
shake free of the ceiling.
More. The Cat could control
the power, but it couldn't allow it to build up, because not even the Cat could
stop that mad influx of magical energy from flowing into him.
If that happened, it would destroy him from the inside out.
He had to expend that power, almost as fast as it built inside him.
Raising his eyes to the ceiling, Tarrin's entire body became engulfed in
the wispy white energy as he gathered in the power he needed to use his magic to
free himself in one mighty blow. He
wove together a chaotic weave of Fire, Air, Earth, Confluence, and Divine power,
adding the flows of Water and Mind just so they could be present within the
weave of High Sorcery, and give the weave the true power of which it was
capable. That weave built inside
him, burning him with its power, its purity, scouring away his pain and
replacing it with the true might, the majesty, the awe of the Goddess and her
Weave.
He was one with the power, and he would use that power.
A low growl in his throat built quickly into a scream that seemed to go
in harmony with the shimmering sound caused by the aura of magic around him, as
he built up the power, the will, the rage to unleash his magic, to accept the
searing, beautiful pain of High Sorcery and use the gift granted him by the
Goddess to free himself from the prison of his enemies.
Then the weave was suddenly unleashed in the direction of his pointing
paws, driving into the ceiling. It
moved at speeds that transcended imagination, searing through the rock and
mortar above him, burning through the layers of natural stone and earth, and
vaporizing a hole through the floor of the crypt above.
It continued on, blazing a hole through the crypt's ceiling, through the
floor of the Nave, through the ceiling of the Nave, and up and into the heavens.
Allia watched Keritanima run, but she immediately understood that it was
not cowardice. She heard the Wikuni shout for them to lower the Ward, and
Allia felt it when it was done. The
Weave flowed back into its normal place within the cathedral, the strands
returning to their rightful places within the Nave.
Allia didn't quite understand why her sister was so rash.
Lowering the Ward was allowing the priests access to their magic!
And then Allia felt a weave of horrific
power form, manifest, and then disperse in the blink of an eye.
The entire Cathedral shook and shuddered in the aftermath of that
incredible weave, and a loud boom
rocked the floor beneath them, making the stone groan and squeal as it settled
back into place. What power! She had never
felt its like, never dreamed that anything like that could be done!
She could feel it below them, a power twisting the very Weave itself, drawing
it towards it as it built up power to do something else.
That was Tarrin! Nobody,
not even a circle, could make the Weave do that!
"Get back!" she suddenly screamed in fear.
She could feel it build, and build, and build,
and she realized with horror that Tarrin was about to do something serious. And he was directly
under her feet! "Holy
Mother, everyone get back!"
Allia pushed Darvon out of the way, and the others scattered just as a
strange light appeared in the floor. And
then a beam of pure, intense, blinding white light erupted from that spot,
splitting the air in a loud shattering scream that caused Allia's ears to start
bleeding. It burned through the floor in an instant, then travelled up
and through the ceiling of the Cathredral to travel towards the heavens.
It sustained itself for no more than two heartbeats, but it made
absolutely everyone within the Cathedral drop to the floor and scream in fear
and terror.
The light faded to its blinding incandescence, but remained as a
painfully bright shaft of pure white light that illumunated the Nave as if
someone had pulled the sun into the chamber.
Allia winced against that painful brilliance, then her mouth dropped when
the silhouette of a humanoid being appeared within that radiance, fading enough
to show the outline of a long tail. Even
with the light, Allia could see that he was absolutely covered
in blood. From head to foot.
And he had arrows sticking out of him!
"Tarrin!" Allia screamed in surprise, joy, and fear, shouting
over the pulsating, choral shimmering sound emanating from that bright light.
She feared her brother at that
moment.
Floating within a cushion of his own power, Tarrin rose from the molten
tunnel created by his weaving, raised into the Nave of the Cathedral of Karas,
utter fury making his face a twisted mask of rage.
Incandescent white eyes, blazing from within with the power of High
Sorcery, locked on the pulpit where Irvon stood.
The fat cleric stared at Tarrin in pure horror, unable to move, unable to
act, unable to do anything but watch.
A black ball of sizzling power formed in his paw, crackling with
electrical energy, as Tarrin built a weave of Confluence and Divine energies,
with only token flows of the other spheres added to give the weave the power of
High Sorcery. That black ball swallowed up the light, dimming it around
him, sucked up the light into its utter black depths, even pulled the air into
it. Tarrin gave the priest a
merciless, snarling shout, and then hurled it at him.
The priest, paralyzed by his own fear, could only stand there and watch
as his doom hurtled towards him.
It struck him in the face, and where it touched him, it sucked everything
inside it. Irvon's head contracted,
pulling into that ball, bone splitting and spraying blood into the air, blood
which stopped flying outward and fell back into the black ball.
Irvon's body began to be sucked into the small ball, crushing down and
into the small thing, no larger than a child's toy, yet pulling the entirety of
the fat priest's corporeal form inside. The
gloriously decorated and gilded pulpit too crushed under the magical force of
that black ball, breaking asunder and following Irvon's body into its
unimaginable black depths. The ball
hovered in midair a moment, hovering over where Irvon and his pulpit once stood,
and then it simply vanished.
Tarrin whirled around within his shaft of light, and his eyes fell on
Allia. That face, that beautiful
face, was like a slap in the face to him. It
declared to the Cat beyond any measure that he was indeed free.
Allia was near him, Allia would protect him.
She would gather him up and carry him to safety, because he knew that as
soon as he let go of the Weave, he would fall unconscious.
He has pushed himself too far. The
Cat looked at its sibling, its sister, and it rejoiced, fading back into the
background of Tarrin's mind, allowing his consciousness to regain control.
Tarrin looked on Allia with pure horror in his eyes, and then those eyes
rolled back into his head.
The light rising up from the floor of the Nave wavered, and then it
vanished. Tarrin's inert body
crashed to the floor, unmoving, leaving an entire church full of awed, terrified
observers to stare at him in shock.
©2000, James
Galloway. All Rights Reserved.