Arc 4: Chapter 26: Separate Ways
Oathbreaker: A Dark Fantasy Web Serial
Arc 4: Chapter 26: Separate Ways
As my oldest friend and I stood there, locked together above the kneeling crowfriar, I felt the rage creep in through the confusion.
âLias.â My voice sounded oddly calm to my own ears. âWhat is this?â
Liasâs green eye narrowed, while the false one remained still. I could make out my own fragmented reflection in the crystalâs red surface, blood-smeared and angry.
Instead of answering me, Lias spoke to the knight confessor. âCan you stand, Vicar?â
He knew the crowfriarâs true name. He knew, and heâd saved him.
Growling, I tried to free my weapon. Lias kept the lock with a deft movement, his form stiffly perfect. I was stronger, but he hadnât been idle the last decade. Heâd trained, and in more than just sorcery. He used leverage with a warrior monkâs expertise. By the odd pressure I felt, I suspected he used aura as well.
Vicar rose to his feet, backing away. His hands were ruined and useless, but even still I didnât trust him not to be dangerous.
My focus remained on Lias.
âStop this!â I snapped. âHeâs a monster. I wonât let him roam free.â
âMonster?â Lias shook his head. âAlken, he is us. He simply serves different masters.â
âAre they your masters now, Li?â I shifted a step, adjusting my grip. Lias responded by rotating his staff, freeing my axe. He carried the motion in a whirling movement, the air whooshing around the length of ebon wood. The iron nail froze under my chin. I batted it away, glaring.
We backed away from one another, a cautious dance. Weâd done this before. Weâd once trained together, he and I. The pang of nostalgia was a bitter medicine in that moment.
It all made sense now. A terrible, horrible sense.
âAll your talk of change and progressâ¦â I shook my head. âI should have known. You were the one who encouraged Markham to lift the trade ban with the continent. You knew, didnât you? You knew it all.â
Lias nodded. âI did.â
âWhy?â I asked, unable to understand. In my mind, I recalled his marions, the continental alchemy in his lab â had there been Devil Iron there, too? I recalled Rosannaâs words, about Lias removing those whoâd objected to the new trade.
Iâd seen all the signs. Iâd just ignored them.
This is why he didnât rescue me from the Inquisition, I realized. He and Vicar have been allies this whole time.
And Iâd put Emma in front of him. Had he known her identityâ¦
How could I have been such a fool?
I knew how. Am I always going to make this mistake?
Liasâs features hardened, the angular lines of his fox face stiffening with emotion. âBecause we are trapped by nostalgia! Because our land is a tired backwater filled with bickering warlords and superstitious peasants. We must change.â
âInto what?â I demanded. âInto what he wants?â
I pointed my axe at the crowfriar.
Lias shook his head. âThere are worse things out there than devils, Alken. There are worse things than apostate lords. There are even worse things than demons. You have no idea just how small we are, how vast the theater in which we play is.â
âThis is not a game,â I told him with bitter anger. âThatâs always been your problem, Lias. You see everything as some grand competition. Your ambition has gone too far.â
A pensive look came over the wizard. âPerhaps. Yet, if the beings who rule this land would keep us trapped in this tired dream, if I must burn it to wake us upâ¦â
He shrugged. âWell, cauterizing a limb is sometimes necessary, to prevent rot.â
I bared my teeth at him. âYou sound like Reynard.â
Lias flinched. Then, mastering himself, he held out his hand, palm up and empty. âPlease, Alken. You donât have to remain their hound.â
âYou think Iâm doing this for the gods?â I asked him. âFor faith? I thought you knew me better.â
His eye and voice turned cold. âWe have been strangers for more than a decade now. I know you little better than you know me, paladin.â
âAnd Rose?â I asked him.
Lias went very still. Then, his one eye narrowing he said, âThis is for Rosannaâs good as much as anyoneâs. She could rule this land, if she was not so afraid of what she might become.â
I remembered then, a conversation between me and my queen. Liasâs queen, too. Weâd both sworn oaths.
Am I a tyrant, Alken?
I remember thinking about it for a long while.
Yes. But this is a war. We can build from here, right?
â¦Iâm not certain.
She had built. Perhaps many people feared her, but fertile seeds had been sewn in these dark times because of Rosanna Silvering.
âThe Choir should have ordered you to kill Markham,â Lias said. âIt would have done us all much more good.â
Heâd learned all the wrong lessons, and Iâd heard enough. I raised my axe, letting amber fire burst to life around it. Lias became dispassionate with calm, the green in his eye turning moon bright. Shadows and mist shifted around him. He lifted his staff, aiming it at me.
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âI will drag you back to the Empress if I have to,â I told him. âThis has to end.â
âYes,â he agreed. âLet us end it, this charade.â
He raised his staff high, and I felt the shifting of invisible, mighty energies in the world. Hidden mechanisms of realities, of potential realities, of memory imprinted like burn scars into the fabric of existence, turned.
Lias had once told me that Art turns reality on your axis, for just a moment. The world turned on his then, and the shadows pressed in to swallow everything except him.
His ruby eye became a distant blood star, his robes of blue and red and silver a nebula.
I formed my own technique, focusing on one of my oaths. The Alder Knights are holders of lanterns in the dark paths that tangle Creation.
But Lias did not make a shadowed road in some eldritch wood. A lantern cannot brighten the void. The light of the red star fell on me, a distant and malign eye wrought in ages long before Urn had even lifted out of the sea.
I had seen him use this once before, to kill the Recusant magi Logan Dee. There had been nothing left.
I had expected him to try to bind me, or subdue me in some nonlethal way. Iâd been prepared to do the same thing â injure, yes, but not kill.
A mistake. He did not let nostalgia chain him down.
Heâs got me, I thought. Iâd told Emma I could beat him, but Iâd been thinking of the Lias Iâd known in my youth. This was a wholly different power.
I felt myself drawn to the center of that nebula, toward the baleful eye. I tried to plant my feet, but there wasnât anything to brace them on. I swung my axe, trying to catch it on the room I knew I truly stood in. Disoriented, I kept falling, unmoored from the material reality around me.
When I touched that starâ¦
I would die.
I felt afraid.
I jerked to a stop as something caught me. A soft, warm light filled the void.
Iâd been caught by golden threads.
The phantasm broke, leaving me in the misty chapel again with the congregation of red-robed priests, the wounded devil, my oldest friend. Lias stared, confused as me.
âAlken!â
My eyes went to the door. There, her fingers working small lines of white-gold aura, stood Lisette.
Liasâs expression changed from cold resignation to dark anger as he turned his staff on the girl. It began to glow with silver light.
Lisetteâs threads loosened, and I leapt. Lias caught my charge out of the corner of his eye and cursed, spinning to face me. More threads caught his left arm, the one that held the staff, stalling him.
He broke Lisetteâs Art as easily as he would have swatted a fly, shattering it with a sharp gesture of his free hand, but a momentâs pause had been all Iâd needed. I swung.
Faen Orgis cleaved through the top of the wizardâs staff, cracking the wood in two and breaking the iron nail free. It went sailing, sinking into the wood inches from a traumatized clericâs foot.
Stumbling back, Lias swiped his hand in a savage motion, spitting some arcane invective. A spiral of silver moonlight struck me across the chest, emitting a keening tone as it burst. Though the rings of the elven hauberk saved me, several broke free of the mesh and the impact knocked the wind out of me.
The force of the blast knocked me back. I spun at a painful angle, hit the ground hard, and slid a ways before stopping.
Iâd managed to keep hold of my axe. I used it to lift myself, turning with a snarl toward the magi. I lifted the axe, cocking it to throw.
I didnât want it to come to this. Iâd come back for him, for Rose, for us.
But there was no us anymore. We three had gone separate ways, and there could be no mending that broken string. Even tied together, all it formed was a knot.
Just as I moved to hurl my weapon, I felt a flash of prickling heat against my skin. My instincts screamed at me, and I rolled aside as a blast of hellfire roared across the spot Iâd been standing. It caught one of the clericons instead, who screamed as he reeled back in a frantic tumble.
Vicar stepped between me and Lias. His eyes blazed with infernal power, and beneath his angular chinâ¦
His throat bulged out against his armor, the skin stretched and transparent, full of flame.
Heâd breathed fire. And that wasnât the worst of it.
Heâd grown larger. His features stretched, the graying hair turning hackle-sharp, the eyes narrowing, ears growing pointed. Cinderous flame roiled and writhed around his form, and within it he became a black shadow, a coal inside a tongue of fire. Mangled human hands curled in on themselves, shriveling, then bloating, then sprouting claws.
Lisette rushed to my side, her face pale with fear. âWhat is he?â She asked, breathless.
âSomething damned,â I replied, taking a guard.
The hellhound stepped out of the bonfire. Bigger than any Iâd seen, twice as large at least as those Jon Orley had called during his fight with the Hunting knights. A low growl, more like the noise a furnace makes than any beast, rumbled through yellowed teeth.
Worse, these flames didnât dissipate into harmless nothingness like normal phantasms. They began to spread across the floor.
âGet out of here,â I ordered the cleric at my side.
âNot without you,â she shot back, her fingers working with strings of aura.
I expected an attack, but Vicar only glared at me, a threatening rumble building in his bloated chest. Heat built in between his huge jaws. I got the message â step closer, and Iâll burn you to ash.
Could I survive it? I tightened my grip on my axe, prepared to take the bet.
I caught sight of Lias, and that gave me pause. Heâd stopped fighting, instead moving behind the podium. I caught sight of a bundle of red robes where the corpse of the Grand Prior lay.
Lias knelt. When he stood, he had the quill in his hand.
The quill with Horace Laudnerâs blood.
My heart became ice.
âLIAS!â I roared, turning. âSTOP!â
I made to rush toward him, but the hellhound leapt into my path. It spat a plume of fire, forcing me to throw a hand up as I flinched back.
Calmly, almost without hurry, Lias wiped the quill on his sleeve, then stabbed it into his own palm. He winced. At first, I didnât understand.
But I knew enough history that my confusion didnât last long.
The Magi had helped found the Church. To the Zosite, who abided by ancient laws, they were as holy as any preost. More so, in some circles.
Had this always been his plan? Or had he just taken the opportunity presented?
I watched him, the man who was like a brother to me, cut our bond.
With his own blood and name, Lias signed the parchment still lying on the cracked stand. The moment he drew his hand back, it burst into yellow hellfire. The flame engulfed the podium, forming a profane altar. I felt a terrible power exuding from it as the contract, the Oath, became inscribed into reality itself.
Lias shuddered.
I stared in horror. Lisette, who didnât understand, stood still and uncertain at my side, not knowing what to do with her magic.
âIt is done,â Lias said, letting out a sigh of relief. âNow thereâs no going back.â
He met my eyes, and had the gall to smile. It was a remote, eerie smile, full of self-loathing and pride in equal measure.
âTraitor,â I called him.
âIn your heart,â he told me, as mist flooding out of the broken chapel window encircled him, âyou betrayed them all long ago. Have you read the book I gave you?â
That froze me. It gave Vicar time to leap back, landing on all fours next to the wizard. The mist wrapped them, becoming dense as a fog in the deep sea. Liasâs power had been in the brume since the moment heâd arrived.
When it faded, he and Vicar were gone. So was the infernal contract.
The Priory clerics had fled during the fight, terrified by their champion turning into a beast of Hell, and by the spreading flames. Some had died in the violence, their corpses scattered across the edges of the room.
For them, this had been a matter of their leader promising⦠what? What had Horace told them about Vicarâs scrap of parchment?
I ignored the dead and fleeing, moving toward the window. I stopped where Lias had stood, staring out into the mist.
Behind me, flames had begun to crawl up the walls.
âAlken!â Lisette cried out. âWe need to go! Itâs going to burn down!â
I paused long enough to kneel and grab something off the ground â the thing which would change everything.
When Lisette saw what I had taken, her already pale face blanched.
âLetâs go,â I told her quietly, feeling an odd calm.
Lias had shown me who he really was. No, Iâd already known since we were young. Only, now we both understand the true trajectory of our separate paths. His would take him to some uncertain and frightening future, one of brutal progress, guided by beings who moved in shadow and secrecy. Mineâ¦
Dawn was coming.