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Now reading: Book 2: Chapter 77: Blind from Path of Dragons, a Action novel by Infancy.

“Bring her back,” growled Carn, staring down at the woman in the chair. She couldn’t have been more than twenty years old, and once upon a ti, she’d been quite lovely. And she would be again once Keith was done with her. She glanced at the Healer, seeing hesitation on his face. “Now.”

“I’m not comfortable with this,” he said, wringing his hands. He’d already brought the woman back from near death a half-dozen tis, and as far as Carn was concerned, he would do so a half-dozen more before they were done. And a hundred more after that. It would keep going until she gave Carn what she wanted.

“I don’t care. Do it.”

“Carn…”

All it took was a scathing glance before he went silent. Then, he used his healing spell – Carn had no idea what it was called – and the mostly-dead woman gasped in surprise. Keith kept channeling the spell until she was back to perfect health.

“Please…I didn’t…I had no idea…I didn’t want to –”

Carn didn’t care about the woman’s excuses. She’d never even asked for a na. All she knew was that after that despicable excuse for a human being had taken Miguel, they’d lost him in the woods. However, their search had yielded so results when they’d found two won trying to hide nearby. They’d been cloaked in so sort of skill ant to camouflage them, but all it took was the direct attention of one of Silverado’s scouts to strip them of the effect. Laid bare, they’d quickly surrendered.

Since then, they’d learned the error of that course of action.

One was already dead, the result of Carn letting her temper take over and push her much too far. And she’d co close on more than one occasion with the other, which was the woman sitting right in front of her. That was where Keith had co in.

Carn had beaten the woman near to death so many tis that her knuckles had cracked and broken under her own Strength. And yet, the ally of that monster had refused to reveal anything. It would have been admirable if Carn wasn’t so furious – with herself as much as with the Outlaw who’d kidnapped her son. And with Roman, who’d doubtless ordered it.

With the world itself.

So, she took it out on the helpless prisoner she’d tied to a chair.

At first, it had been an attempt to get information, but it had quickly devolved into sothing much worse. Sothing far more primal. Once, she’d have looked down on anyone who used such thods, on those who would let their emotions get the better of them when confronted by evil. Now, she embodied that wrath more than she’d have ever thought possible.

It wasn’t surprising.

Alyssa’s death had changed her, and in more ways than she wanted to contemplate. Before, she’d looked at the world with a fair amount of optimism. But now? That seed like such an alien viewpoint that she couldn’t understand how anyone could see the world through such rose-colored glasses. And when she’d seen Trace fleeing through the woods with her son thrown over his shoulder, Carn had snapped.

It had almost cost Colt his life. He’d been so thoroughly injured that it took Keith and the town’s other Healer nearly six hours to save him. Even then, he wasn’t entirely whole. anwhile, Carn had stomped through the woods in a vain attempt to catch a man whose very existence scread of an ability to hide. He was a rodent. A pest that needed to be exterminated. Yet, like all pests, he was incredibly difficult to pin down.

So, when the two accomplices had been found, Carn hadn’t wasted any ti before employing the worst of the worst interrogation tactics, and to almost no effect. Sure, she’d discovered so pertinent information, like the fact that Trace was the head of so sort of secret police in Easton. Or that he’d been sent – along with what sounded like a harem of young and beautiful apprentices – to spy on Carn. What was unclear was whether or not he’d chosen to kidnap Miguel on his own or if it had been part of the plan.

“Where did he go?” she asked, pulling back her fist. She hit the woman again, breaking the delicate bones in her face. “Where is he keeping my son?”

“I…I don’t…know,” she muttered, spitting blood with every syllable. “I didn’t even know…”

Carn hit her again.

And again after that.

It was the sa answer, over and over again. So, she kept going until, at last, soone grabbed her arm. Then, when that wasn’t enough, a second person joined in. And a third. In all, it took four people to restrain her, and even they were barely capable of the job.

Colt, injured and pale, scread, “We know where he went! You don’t have to do this!”

That cut through her fury. “What?” she spat, her eyes wild. “Where?”

“We found a trail,” Colt stated. “Heading toward Easton. That’s where he’s going. I’m sure of it.”

“Kill her, then,” Carn growled.

“No, ma’am.”

“What did you just say?” she demanded, still struggling against the people restraining her. She glared at the tall, slim man. “Do you know what she did? Do you understand –”

“She didn’t do anything,” Colt said, his voice calm. “The one responsible is Trace. This girl is a victim, sa as anyone else. You know that.”

“I don’t,” Carn responded. “I won’t…I can’t…”

She tried to pull away once again, but much of her fury had dissipated. Instead, it was replaced by hopelessness. “He can’t be gone. I…I can’t…I…I…”

She collapsed into sobs. Colt stepped forward, saying sothing Carn didn’t hear. Then, she was suddenly free. But she didn’t launch herself at the bound woman, as she would have just monts before. Instead, she collapsed to her knees. Colt knelt beside her, wincing in pain as he put his arm around her shoulders.

“It’ll be okay. If they was gonna do sothin’ to him, they already would’ve,” he said. “We have allies in Easton. We can use them to make Roman give ‘im back.”

Carn barely heard him. Instead, she wept as she tried to process the chain of events that had led her to such dire straits. If she hadn’t flown off the handle and killed Verin, things might have turned out differently. Yet, she knew that would never have been possible. The mont the Healer had revealed her part in Alyssa’s death, her fate was sealed.

Finally, Carn wiped the tears from her eyes, sniffed loudly, then said, “Then we need to go. Now. Get one of the trucks ready.”

“What about her?” asked Colt.

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Carn glared at the injured woman. “Heal her,” she told Keith. “But we’re not letting her go. Now, let’s move.”

Everyone in the room did just that, and Colt helped her to her feet. “You okay?” he asked.

“No,” Carn answered. Then, she said, “Put on your armor. You’re going to need it.”

“Yes, ma’am,” the cowboy said before heading toward the door.

“And Colt?” she said. He turned back to face her. “Thanks.”

“Yes, ma’am,” he repeated.

From there the small town erupted into a whirlwind of activity as Carn and her most loyal followers assembled. The civilians within the town were vulnerable, but the remaining combatants were more than capable of guarding them against all but the worst threats. That, Carn reasoned, would have to do. After all, as much as she wanted to protect the people who had put their trust in her, she cared about her son infinitely more.

Soon, she found herself leading a small caravan of trucks through the wilderness toward Easton. Fortunately, the road had been cleared, which allowed the electric trucks to make much better ti than normal. However, there was no chance that they would catch Trace. By the ti they’d figured out which direction he was traveling – which seed obvious in retrospect – he had almost a day as a head start. Still, Carn and her people didn’t waste any ti, and over the next couple of days, they managed to reach the region surrounding Easton.

But when they reached the gate, Carn was t with an issue.

“Wait right here, ma’am,” said the guard, who was dressed in the blue-and-white uniform of Easton’s guards. The gate itself was massive, and though Carn had seen it before, she found it extrely imposing. More troubling was the fact that she counted twenty guards nearby, which was more than normal. On top of that, they were more than enough to overwhelm Carn’s people.

The guard disappeared into the gatehouse. The wall to which it was attached was nearly a hundred feet high and half as thick, but more distressingly, it pulsed with enough ethera to give Carn pause. There was far more at play than simple bricks and mortar.

“Don’t like this one bit,” said Colt, who sat in the passenger’s seat. Three more combatants were in the bed of the truck, and just as many occupied the following vehicle. “Feels like an ambush.”

Almost as soon as those words left Colt’s mouth, a trio of high-level guards ca out of the gatehouse. The mont they locked eyes on Carn, she knew they hadn’t co to talk. That supposition was supported by the fact that one of them drew his sword.

Carn shouted, “Go!”

It was the signal Colt had been waiting for, but he was still too late. The second the truck surged forward, the portcullis of the gate fell. It clanged to the ground before the truck’s tires even got any traction. Seeing that, Colt did what they’d discussed on the way to the city, and after spinning out for a brief mont, he whipped the truck around and fled. The other vehicle followed.

Arrows and various spells fell upon them, but the guards’ aim was inferior to the task of hitting a moving target, so both trucks escaped with only minor damage. Carn swore as they tore off through the woods, going offroad to avoid pursuit. After thirty minutes, Colt said, “I think we lost ‘em. Where to?”

“I think you know.”

“The rebels aren’t ready,” Colt said. “And only about a third of the warband has any gear.”

“He has Miguel. We can’t wait.”

“Ma’am, I don’t think –”

“I’m not asking you to co with ,” Carn stated. “I’m just telling you what I’m going to do. It has to be now, and for more than just Miguel. It won’t be long before word gets back to Roman. He probably already knows what’s going on. So, we need to strike now before he has a chance to prepare. You know that’s the only play here.”

“Let sneak in,” Colt said. “I can –”

“You can’t sneak into the palace. You’re a samurai, rember? Not a ninja.”

Colt ground his teeth, clearly frustrated. Carn could agree on that front. However, she also knew there wasn’t much either of them could do about it. They only had one chance to get Miguel back, and that ant they needed to put everything on the line.

“You could send soone in to talk to him. Negotiate,” Colt suggested.

“You think he’d listen?” Carn asked. “The only way to deal with sobody like Roman is from a position of strength. He doesn’t understand anything else. Besides, he needs to die. I’ll do whatever it takes to make that happen.”

“We’ll get Miggy back,” Colt insisted.

“I know. Or I’ll tear Easton down to get him,” she said. However, in the back of her mind, Carn knew that wasn’t feasible. She had power, but it wasn’t the sort of strength she would need to take on a whole city. Even in a one-on-one fight, without all the support that ca with running a city, she would co up short against soone like Roman.

But that was why she’d made allies. Now, it was ti for them to live up to their side of the bargain. So, she directed Colt to move on. He didn’t need directions because he knew as well as anyone where to find the warband. Everyone did, even Roman and his people. Yet, they maintained a tentative peace because neither side wanted to give up their advantage by pushing an attack. For Roman, that ant he and his forces remained in Easton where they could defend from a position of strength. anwhile, the warband – which was called the Crimson Eagles – stayed just close enough to the city to pose a credible threat.

By any asure, it was a cold war.

Carn intended to apply so heat.

With that in mind, they soon arrived at their destination, which was an old mall that had been converted into a veritable fortress. The alterations weren’t pretty – not like Easton – but they were functional, with rough walls and towers made of timber. Guarding the compound were hundreds of combatants, each with a raw and ragged look about them.

Carn understood it. These people had been fighting since the very beginning, and without much in the way of safety. But they weren’t the villains Roman and Easton’s council made them out to be. Instead, they were composed of castoffs and undesirables as well as the people who’d vowed to protect them.

Quite a few had been turned away from Easton at one point or another because they didn’t have useful classes. Most of the fighters were the n and won who refused to abandon family and friends who’d been denied entry.

There were also a few bandits in there. A couple of people who only wanted to murder, pillage, and raid. Though Carn had been assured that those were kept on a tight leash, their presence was still a point of contention. However, with what was on the line, she wasn’t nearly as concerned as she might’ve once been.

“Sothing is wrong,” Carn muttered.

“What?” Colt asked. “I don’t –”

Just then, a flight of arrows erupted from the surrounding woods. So hit the trucks with the power of gunshots, but most targeted the tires. Colt slamd the truck in reverse, but it was no use because, only a mont later, soone leaped out from behind a rock. He was an enormous man, wielding a giant hamr that he sent on a collision course with the truck’s front end.

The head of the weapon hit with resounding force, tearing through the hood and destroying the engine. At the sa ti, a bunch of n and won wearing the armor Can and her people had created descended on the other truck with rciless fury. Carn’s people tried to fight back, but against such a focused and sudden assault, they were powerless.

Colt leaped from the truck’s passenger seat, drawing his sword at the sa ti. He lashed out, slicing the giant, hamr-wielding man to pieces with Blade Storm, but a second later, soone tackled him to the ground. anwhile, Carn dove free of the trick, summoning her blacksmithing hamr. But before she could bring it to bear, she had soone clinging to both arms.

In a second, they had forced her arms behind her back and shoved her to the ground.

Furious, Carn looked up to see Laramie, the man behind the warband, looking down on her. He was a tall and muscular man with dark skin who favored armor that made him look like he’d stepped out of a Mad Max movie. But he had clear, intelligent eyes that belied the barbaric appearance of his armor.

“What are you doing?!” she demanded, struggling to free herself. It was useless. Whatever they’d used to bind her arms was stronger that steel. “We’re in this together!”

He lood over her, saying, “We were. But things change, Carn. We got a better offer.” He squatted down. “I hate Roman. I want to see him dead for all the things he did. But I’ve got people to feed. Civilians to protect. And he can give us that. You can’t.”

“You asshole! He took my son!”

“He took a lot of sons. Daughters, too,” the leader of the warband said. “But the reality of survival doesn’t care about that. I’d hoped you would understand, even if you didn’t want to accept it.”

Then, he pushed himself to his feet and called for the prisoners to be taken away. That included Carn, and though she struggled, she was incapable of escape. Instead, she and Colt were half-dragged, half-escorted into the mall before soone shoved the both of them into a makeshift dungeon that had once been so long-closed clothing store.

“I’m sorry,” Colt said. “I keep failing you.”

Carn didn’t respond. Instead, she turned her attention to their surroundings. The forr store had been stripped of everything but a few mannequins, and the entrance was guarded by a roll-down cage. Moreover, both she and Colt – the only two survivors – were bound so tightly that neither could properly move.

That’s when the reality of her situation hit her. Her capture had probably sealed her son’s fate. If he wasn’t dead, he soon would be. And she wouldn’t be far behind him. Colt hadn’t been the only one to fail.

“There’s a lot of that going around,” she muttered.

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