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(This chapter
takes place during the events of Descendants #18)
Once, there
was a beautiful princess, who lived in a simple land in simple times,
who everyone loved. Her father was a great and wise king whose passion
was for the written word.
The king
loved the princess very much and doted on her. But the princess
could tell that the king was saddened by having no son. For without
a strong and powerful heir, his kingdom would fall to ruin when
he passed.
Ever so
clever, the princess saw this and resolved to be worthy of being
the king’s heir even though she was a girl. Now, the princess
shared her father’s passion for words and in one of his many
tomes; a story her told her many times and in many different ways,
she found the answer. She found the truth.
Her path
was the path of magic, for magic is eternally mightier than brute
strength and more subtle besides. So she climbed a great mountain
and begged two goddesses to show her the ways arcane. And they did
show her and the princess’s eyes opened.
The book
that had put her on the path of magic was not a story at all. It
was about her and she was the sorceress from the book. Joy lit the
princess’s heart and she gladly accepted her wondrous fate.
But the
gods secretive and slow to teach. So the princess found a secret
way to learn faster, to surpass the gods and like Prometheus, bring
light to the mundane world.
But like
a modern Prometheus, the gods sought to punish her. They sent a
most wicked devil to strike her blind and ignorant. But he could
not kill her. The princess lived on, forever striving to bring light
into the world.
But again,
the gods sent devils. First, one cast in the form of her mother.
It spoke kind words, but betrayed itself when it tried to convince
the princess that she was mad. So the princess banished the demon
with her light.
The second
devil came as her father, the mighty king and it came with a host
of demon-knights and dark gods. They could not kill the princess,
but they did make her fall asleep for a long, long time.
But soon
a powerful, but foolish warlord found her and allowed his trusted
lieutenant to awaken her and give her new form. The princess awoke
to see the world given over to twisted perversions of the light
she carried within her and set out to banish them, knowing them
to be devils.
To aide
her, the warlord sent her another of his warriors for her to teach
her the ways of the world and the lieutenant gave up her own body
that the princess may be stronger still. The princess even called
upon her own knight to stand against the demons.
But the
knight betrayed her, a foul act beyond even Lancelot, and the demons'
Queen banished the princess into hell itself.
Without
her light, she was lost, but the princess found allies even in that
horrid place and from the corpse of an old god, regained her power.
Now she stands at the gates of Hell, fighting her way up from that
stark underworld praying to have one more chance to bring her light
into the world and banish all the monsters that wear human skin
from the Earth.
“Is
very strange.” Naife noted, slowly orbiting Morganna’s
head as she sat on her throne, staring blankly out over the defile.
“Is awake?”
Defile was a fitting
term for the wide, rugged canyon that separated the Demon Kingdom
Sai’n’shree from what seemed to be the entire rest of
the world. Even before the siege, it had been a gray, lifeless waste
covered in scorch marks and the skeletons of all manner of creature;
most of them broken and shattered from falls from the cliffs which
topped a thousand feet in some places.
More bodies and more
scorch marks had come with the arrival of the Army of Xolinar-Cabanna.
The blackened ribs of a ratulle, a behemoth used by the demons as
a living juggernaut rose in jagged peaks that mimicked the natural
stone crags of the defile.
Fifty ogres had died
bringing it down and butchering it for the mess-hall kept a full
thirty occupied two days later. Its lower jaw had been roughly hewn
into the throne Morganna sat upon, hunched and unresponsive.
In the distance, a sphere
of crackling purple flame filled the far end of the defile, two
and a half miles distant. After their front line guardians had fallen
easily to the ogre onslaught and the power of the heir of Hyrilius,
the demons had raised the deadly thing around their palace and began
only sending probing attacks, of which the ratulle had been one
of dozens. They were looking for tactics, for weakness.
Manikin knew they’d
find none in Morganna’s mad determination. The inhuman advisor
stood beside the throne and waited for her mistress’s fugue
to lift. It was happening more often, especially since they had
entered the defile. Morganna said she was taking to ‘Nightshade’,
though she never explained who or what that referred to.
As she waited, she took
the elevated position of the skull throne to survey the camp, such
as it was. They had bought well over a thousand ogres from Xolinar
to march into the defile. There were only four hundred or so of
that original number, awaiting reinforcements. They sat or knelt
in stone leantos or in nooks carved out by their own thick nails
in the near canyon wall.
There were tents also,
made from freshly planted saplings nurtured by the fey magics of
daoine that had thrown their lot in with Morganna. There were two
score of the willowy humanoids, mostly serving as healers and scouts.
There were almost a hundred spriggans, marshaled by Laup and Suayco.
Most of them slept standing up, rooted to the rocky ground. The
air practically hummed with the wings of pixies, minor fey only
slightly higher on the proverbial food chain than the motes.
The mote cloud that followed
Morganna had increased exponentially in size since ogre King Grott's
death. Their multi-hued forms blotted out the Vault above as they
darted to and fro. They were Morganna’s messengers and spies,
her lieutenants and cartographers. Manikin was astounded to see
a day when mote commanded ogre in battle.
Naife, Renst and Habsi,
the trio that had found Morganna, were first among their kind because
of it. And they were seldom far from their mistress’s side,
nor was Tau, the fading orange mote, so near spawning.
“For being asleep
sitting up, no is good.” Renst replied to Naife’s comment,
also darting around Morganna as she continued to stare into space.
“Should take it to bed.” It bobbed in Manikin’s
direction. “Golem should be taking Mankind to bed.”
“I have no intention
of disturbing her.” Manikin said, glaring at the motes.
“But no is good!”
Naife echoed Renst’s earlier sentiment. “And motes cannot
be lifting Mankind!”
“Motes cannot be
lifting anything.” Habsi added.
“We… I...”
Morganna said, stirring from her reverie, “Don’t need
to sleep.” She took up the staff lying across her lap and
looked out over the defile, her eyes reflecting the purple flames
of the barrier raised by the demons. “N-no one… will
sleep tonight.”
The moment she said it,
a new light awoke from the direction of the palace. A white pillar
of fire rose into the sky, topping the canyon walls and rising into
the night.
Manikin recognized it;
a fire sign used by noble fey like the daoine or the demons. A pillar
of white was an invitation to speak; a sign of peace. Coming from
demons, it was not a good prospect. The only fey exempted from the
Third Law, which prohibited creatures of Faerie from speaking falsehoods,
demons took full advantage of that fact. Even the fire sign itself
was likely a lure toward an ambush.
“Tell me what it
means.” Morganna said to Manikin, observing the golem’s
look of concern. She wasn’t demanding as she was wont to do,
only asking.
“They call us to
speak in peace.” Manikin explained. “But demons are
duplicitous; they can lie at will and take great pride in that.
I advise that we ignore it and press the siege.”
“No…”
Morganna shook her head. “Any… any chance I have to
return to my world… the real world… I must take.”
Manikin set her jaw, but said nothing. Better to harangue an avalanche
in hopes of convincing it not to continue on its path than to argue
with Morganna.
Morganna raised a finger
and Naife lighted upon it, flanked by Habsi and Renst. “What
is it asking of us?” Naife asked, its voice affecting as much
seriousness as a ball of light with a musical voice could.
“Assemble a party.”
Morganna said. “A score… no more than that, plus motes;
bring… two score motes. We… we will leave on the hour.”
“Only twenty warriors
and a flock of motes?” Manikin asked, “If the demonic
envoy has even two in its number, we will be outmatched.”
Morganna studied the
staff of Hyrilius for several long moments before answering. “I
am here. I… I am more powerful than a legion of demons. My
magic is greater than their brute strength.”
“Just because the
demons you’ve seen thus far have tended toward physical combat,
I warn you against complacency, O heir of Hyrilius. Even the least
of the Rae’sha is an entity of possession in its base form.
They invade other beings and twist their form to their ends. Your
predecessor had a ward against them, but it is not in his staff.”
“Tell me more.”
Morganna stood, wrapping the Woodling Cloak around herself.
“Their chief servants
and host bodies are daemons. Those creatures are not fey; they were
left her by the Old Visitors during the pharaohnic age. They are
imperfect shapeshifters, but their forms lend themselves to the
demons’ natural ability to twist their hosts. A demon retains
all of the host’s abilities and the longer they remain in
a single host, the more powerful they can become in their magical
art; Ro Kalum, Blood Magic.”
“Elder Demons have
a single form they maintain at all times and through this, are masters
of Ro Kalum. Their magic is nearly equal to that of an Earthly archmage.
And like an archmage, they will not fall before brute force alone,
nor will by be deterred by the threat of such.”
Morganna’s face
split into a maniacal grin. “Excellent…” she said,
“Then they are all that I hoped they would be.”
The demonic
envoy was waiting for Morganna’s entourage at the halfway
point between the Xolinar-Cabanna camp and the palace. They had
taken up advantageous positions upon rocky outcroppings and with
their backs to the same. There were six in all.
Atop the crags, two heavily
armored figures stood at attention. One had the head of a ram with
the protruding, toothy maw of a crocodile; the other had the head
of an eagle sans feathers. They both wielded long hafted war hammers
with wicked spikes on their butts.
Crouched on the lower
crag between the two was a red creature as broad as two bulls abreast.
Its horse’s face was filled wit teeth and twin rows of barbed
spines ran down its back between a pair of undersized wings to a
forked tail. Its arms were longer than its legs, allowing it to
walk on its knuckles. Not a stitch of clothing or armor covered
its knobby hide.
Below it, two female
humanoids stood. At least they were humanoid in basic body configuration.
The first was ash gray with segmented, red eyes and a bald head.
It stood pigeon toed on three toed feet that pawed the ground in
irritation as its whip-like tail lashed the air behind it. The second
was a muddy blue color with a smooth, chitinous hide. A frill of
bone extended from its skull, sweeping backward into a magnificent
crest, which bore black markings.
Between them, sitting
far back in a stone chair mounted to rollers was the obvious leader
of the group. He was largely human, with pale blue skin laced with
red veins. A pair of stubby horns emerged from his brow and double
rows of teeth showed when he smiled, which he did as Morganna’s
party arrived. At his feet, a misshapen heap lay under a sheet of
thick cloth.
“The Rae’sha
of Sai’n’shree welcomes you, Queen of Xolinar.”
He said, and then noted the staff with widened eyes, “Heir
of Hyrilius. I am Colos, Lord of Sai’n’shree.”
“Demon…”
Morganna said offhand as she approached with Manikin in tow and
Naife bobbing along behind her.
“Please.”
Colos said, giving a flippant hand gesture, “You don’t
call daoine ‘elves’. We are the Rae’sha and we
had that name long before Mankind’s wizards muddied the waters
of reality.” He schooled his expression. “Not that we
have any bitterness. But all the same, only low races use the names
of Mankind.”
“I want the portal.”
Morganna said tersely. “Nothing more. Keep… keep your
world.”
“No pleasantries,
heir of Hyrilius?” asked Colos.
“My mistress wishes
to return to her world.” Manikin intervened. “She knows
that you command the Gate her arrival caused.”
“When I wish to
converse with a worthless thing of wood and wire, I will address
you.” Colos snapped at the Manikin. He set an eye on Naife.
“And don’t even consider speaking in my presence, mote.”
“No, sir.”
Naife said, “Naife no is for to be speaking. Naife will be
silent.”
Colos started forward,
but Morganna raised the staff, calling a ghostly green light into
its jewel. “No…” she said, “Not now. The
portal, demon. I want it.”
Letting a faint growl
leave his throat, Colos sat back. “You are the heir.”
He observed in a low tone, not exactly awed, but with an air of
constrained joy. “My scouts reported one of Mankind’s
children led the army against us. The staff confirms that you are
no illusion.”
He hunched forward, resting
his hands on his knees. “Mankind made for such a wonderful
host. Their emotions… they were so…” The pause
and tone of his voice made him sound as if he was talking about
the taste of wine, “…exotic.”
Smirking, he sat back
up. “But then the wizards left and the Gates became rare.
You, O heir, are the first to cross into Faerie in over a century.
And no fey that has crossed into your world has ever returned…
until recently.”
“What does…
where is the portal, demon?” Morganna asked, growing irritated.
Colos bent forward and
pulled aside the cloth covering the object at his feet. It was in
pieces; plastic and metal panels everywhere, spilling guts of circuitry
on the rocky ground. The words ‘Oceanic Institute’ were
stenciled on one panel. The letters ‘ROV’ appeared on
another.
“Your portal is
no more, O heir” Colos said, in a mockingly apologetic tone.
“This device passed through it. And Gates only last long enough
for one object to move through them.”
“What!”
Morganna raged, eyes flashing a dangerous yellow. Naife flew straight
up, hopefully out of reach of Morganna’s wrath. He was right
to as Morganna called up a ball of fire with the staff and launched
it at the shattered device.
Colos drew a symbol in
the air with a finger and the fireball veered off and exploded on
the far canyon wall, throwing sparks and molten stone into the air.
“Ah, I understand your anger, O heir. But this device is important
to us. Both you and my own people.”
“How?!” Morganna
snarled.
“When this device
passed through the portal, something about it drew one of those
sent to guard the portal through to the other side.”
“You already…
already said that fey cross over anyway.” Morganna countered,
considering which spell could bypass Colos’s counterspell.
“What does it matter?”
“Because the guardian
returned.” Colos grinned. “And it was thanks to this
device. Is sings with words hidden by all but the keenest ears.
And that song pierces the veil between worlds. Guardian Hamata followed
that song to Earth and when Mankind’s soldiers killed his
new host, he followed the song back.”
Hope lit in Morganna’s
eyes.
“Demons lie.”
Manikin said evenly and only loud enough for Morganna to hear.
“Even so…”
Morganna said aloud. “Why do you need me?”
A grin split Colos’s
face. “The song is dying. And even when Hamata used it, it
wasn’t strong enough to send more than one at a time. I want
to sent all of Sai’n’shree and return to Faerie with
a feast of emotion and hosts with which we can rule Faerie.”
His expression turned
deadly serious. “But Ro Kalum doesn’t work. I have some
hope that the magic of Mankind will.”
It was Morganna’s
turn to smile. She held the key to her own destiny. All it took
was another leap of faith; to believe the liar and bare her back
to the dagger. But it was worth it. There were worse demons back
on Earth; creatures that had done worse than feast on the minds
of humans—they had usurped magic.
And defeating them was
the only way that the princess would have her happy ending…
“T-tell me…
friend Colos…” she said, tightening her grip on the
staff of Hyrilius, “Where do we begin?”
End
Rise of Morganna |