“I can drop you off to Iliyal first.” Fer said, pulling the cloak around her tight, to Paida. The Goddess of Rancais shook her head as she turned back to the smoking city. Her troops were getting out of the town, but it was a slow process to get more than twenty thousand scattered n out of a city. Losses reports were coming in already, and sixty-percent was looking to be the optimistic estimate.
“I thank you for the offer, but I have n to lead here.” Paida said as those purple eyes looked down on Fer. Ignore it. Ignore it. Ignore it. Fer blinked as she realised she had shut down again and started moving.
“Don’t let Anarchia catch you.” The tiny Goddess said and Paida nodded. It was respectable, Fer would do the sa if it was her pack in this city. She wasn’t going to tell the woman off for being loyal.
“I won’t.” Paida said, Fer quickly turned and disappeared into the hold of Raptor Two. The jet was parked on a dirt road that had been smoothed down, near the outskirts of Aris. The road next to them was filled with a convoy of vehicles all in retreat, with tanks and n scattered about to provide cover and shoot down anyone who tried to give chase. Fer got to the telephone to talk to the pilot. She had to reach her hand above her head to grab the tiny device.
“Doug?” Fer asked into the phone.
“I’m here.” Captain Douglas replied. Fer didn’t know why she had been worried it was going to be soone else. The Raptors were always piloted by Doug or Erik, but she was glad it was one of them. “Hello?” He asked.
Fer realised she had zoned out again. She had to get a hold of herself as she had to run away. “Do you know where Dad is?” She asked.
She heard Douglas stamr sothing and saw the blinking red right of the cara turn to face her. “Do you an God Arascus?” Fer faced the cara as she replied. The situation was bad, but she wasn’t to show it to anyone. She needed the exact sa of support that she provided for her sisters, but she knew that all of them were beyond incompetent when it ca to issues like this. She needed soone to cry it out with.
“I can ring Iliyal, he’ll know.” Douglas quickly said, so panic in his voice as Fer sighed with relief. It was good that the man was smart, because she herself wasn’t sure if she could explain anything in her current state.
“Good.” She about to put the phone up when she realised the man cut off a syllable of a word. He was nervous, nervous for her no doubt. Fer sighed and smiled to herself. That was good. That ant she had sothing to fix and work on instead of trying to contain herself. “Do you have sothing to say?”
“It’s…” Douglas cut off for a mont. “It may be inappropriate for to say.”
“Say it anyway.” Fer ordered.
“Are you alright?” He asked. For a mont, Fer wished she had just let the man be and didn’t press him. That she had kept her mouth shut and just put the phone back. What sort of question was that even? Did she look fine? Look at her! Fer sighed, and answered as honestly as she could, in as flat a tone as possible because she knew that the mont the rivers of emotions started to flow, she wouldn’t be able to stem the flow.
“Douglas. I am on the verge of collapse right now. I am holding it together. Take to my Dad.”
Kassandora grabbed Neneria’s wrist and pulled her sister back. “Wait.” The Goddess of War said as the corners of her eyes noticed the grey-green ethereal glow that always heralded the marking of a ghost. To their right, the trundling Torchbearer tanks ca to a stop as Kassandora called upon her blessing.
There were no flashing lights, no great explosion to signal the sound beginning of Kassandora signalling her power to activate, but all who were led by Kassandora heard the violin that signalled the beginning of War’s Orchestra. The entire vanguard stopped to the sound of a single drum that only they heard, soldiers started leaving their APCs silently. No orders needed to be given, the only sound that filled the tunnels was the sudden turning of tracks and the slamming of steel against stone as ramps dropped down. Boots started to echo in the illuminated darkness as the soldiers of the Underground Expeditionary Legion marched to the soundless tune of drums.
Kassandora saw through their eyes and through her own. She saw Kavaa look up and place her hand on the hilt of her sword on the other side of the convoy. The Goddess of Health hadn’t been enlisted into War’s Orchestra, but she must have worked out that Kassandora had taken charge of the situation. There was not a single order given, not a single shout, not even quiet polite requests to move out of the way. All who heard War’s Orchestra played to the tune without needing a word to be said.
“I can just clear them out Kass.” Neneria said quietly.
“They don’t need help.” Kassandora said. This is why she was sending n out, because a thousand sets of eyes were better than just her own. It had been on her mind how the dwarves had withstood Tartarus for a millennia. That shouldn’t have been possible. The only thing that stopped Tartarian portals was their forceful closing. That wasn’t difficult in itself, but dwarves simply lacked whatever it was that humanity had which granted the latter the access to magic.
“Are you sure?” Neneria asked.
“I need to see how they survived this long.” Kassandora said. If worst ca to worst, they would help. But not yet. The tune of War’s Orchestra spread like a plague, backwards through the convoy. Vehicles kept on turning, their drivers suddenly aware of the fact the convoy had stopped without a single word or command needing to be relayed down the ranks. Kassandora found Iniri through the eyes of one of her own soldiers. The man approached the Goddess of Nature with a steady step.
Iniri was pulling roots out of the ground that were forcing the treads back on a tank as engineers were underneath it. “Iniri.” The soldier said and the Goddess of Nature turned to look down at the man. She stood in a dark black coat with hints of green, with a thick sweater underneath it and heavy gloves covering her hands. A short Divine, the man only reached up to her chest.
“Iniri?” She said flatly, sowhat amused.
“This is Kassandora.” Kassandora spoke through the man. “We’ve reached the hold. There’s a battle there.” The man leaned to look at the tank. Iniri may not know, but Kassandora had taken it upon herself to study all the faults of her vehicles. This one had dislocated its tread and cooked so of the fluid it looked like. “Fix up here and then get to the front. We are already there.”
The Goddess of Nature looked at the man, sowhat in doubt. “That’s you?”
“Let’s not pretend there’s much of a difference between speaking through soldiers or through flowers Iniri.” Kassandora answered through the man, then the sound of an organ within War’s Orchestra ordered him back. Back at the frontline, n pulled out binoculars, gunners looked through scopes and the caras from vehicles zood in so that Kassandora could watch exactly how it was that a race without power both magical and chanical could sohow survive for so long.
A hellhound turned a corner, it was as large as a direwolf. Its ragged red fur was sared with its own dark blood but Kassandora had faced these creatures before. It had a gash running down its shoulder, great and deep and bleeding. A wound like that would behead a man. To the hellhound, it was rely a scratch. The dog’s pause left the ground of smooth grey surface that made up the interior of the dwarven hold steaming. Beasts like that left prints in tal and stone.
A squad of dwarves silently lowered their tall pikes to make a phalanx. It was easier to describe each figure as an animated brick rather than a suit of armour. They had skirts upon skirts, around their legs. Their helms were simple things, with tiny slits for eyes and not much else and there wasn’t a single inch of flesh showing. Even the insides of their palms were armoured. That phalanx took a step forwards.
That was a new style of armour. Kassandora had to give them that, but was that it? The sealing of the World-Core had left them without power. They had no animated statues, they had no self-powering forges. They lacked the great machinations and early tanks that had once safeguarded these highways. It couldn’t be just armour, could it?
The squad of two dozen dwarves in tight formation advanced in unison. The huge hellhound snapped. Its beastmaster rounded the corner supported by what could only be lesser demons. Figures armoured in black plate and skin the colour of bright-red blood. They had burning eyes. The hellhound snapped its ferocious jaws and jumped forwards.
It impaled itself on the tight formation of pikes, Kassandora wasn’t surprised. There was sothing almost relieving to know that Tartarus still relied on endless waves that of forces. The armour of the demons was new. The fact a few held sothing akin to rifles was also worrying. They seed to have exchanged the ancient straight sword for thick cleavers, the sort that butchers would use to separate bone. And axes had been substituted for hamrs.
The hellhound slid all the way down the trio of pikes it was impaled on, and it gave one final thrash as the demons scread and raced forwards. One of its thick legs, as wide as a man’s torso, knocked one of the dwarves into the air and against the wall. It was as if a cannon-ball half the size of a man had just been launched into a cliff, the sound that dwarf made could rival the sound of artillery. Kassandora made a face in confusion. Trading even one for a hundred would an that the dwarves would have long been extinct. And it was obvious that they had not created so incredible weapon that made them untouchable.
She saw the suit of armour drop its pike and slide down stone wall. And then she saw the suit of armour stand up without even a pause. Kassandora blinked as she watched a dwarf that obviously had just been killed move into action. Even most Divines would need a mont to recover.
Kassandora’s vision from dwarf to dwarf as she looked through the eyes of her n. One of them noticed that the dwarf who had just been launched into the wall left no blood, as most of the other looked to a demon a full head-taller than a man swinging his cleaver to cut the pikes down. A few of the closer dwarves dropped their spears imdiately to pull out short-weapons. Axes and swords, one of the half-n stepped forwards to swing and was kicked by another demon.
Another pike pierced that demon’s black armour and ended the creature’s life. One of the largest invaders stepped forwards, a tail whisking behind his back and his chest covered in a thick armour that the pikes simply bounced off. Another team of dwarves appeared looked over one of the bridges that led from one balcony to another. They loaded steel…
Not crossbows but arbalests fashioned out of pure tal, each one had to weigh more than a fully grown man. They readied them and prepared to fire as the largest demon picked a dwarf up by the arm and held him in the air. War’s Orchestra played the tune of a light trumpet and one of Kassandora’s n turned their attention from the dwarf to the demon’s arm. Kassandora saw strands of muscle turn and twist and veins pop as the demon tried to crush the dwarven armour, but then the monster gave up.
Instead, he brought him lower to the ground and Kassandora realised what those rifles were for. They weren’t rifle in the first place, instead being handcannons. A smaller demon, smaller aning only the size of a human, ran to the dwarf, pressed the end of the barrel against that layer up layer of steel and pulled the trigger. A great burst of fire roared from the end of the cannon. It was a huge wave of fla and iron and steel, as what had been fired was grapeshot. Louder than artillery, this one.
That wasn’t true though, it was simply shards of the dwarves’ great armour that been knocked off as the demon still held it in the air. One of Kassandora’s n watched the demon who just fired run away, another watched a different demon, its handcannon loaded, co close, a third noticed the lack of blood again, a forth looked at the dwarf, a fifth peered into the steaming hole ringed by molten tal, a sixth caught their breath in surprise.
Glowing bone, inscribed to the extre with runes of power that Kassandora did not realise. The dwarf… or skeleton within the armour did not even notice the damage, instead, it pulled a cleaver to match the demon’s out of its belt and swung at the arm holding it. The sound of wind and bolts releasing, followed by the high pitched twanging of steel ca from above as steel bolts penetrated into the demons. Each one was the thickness of a rat or a mouse, and the length of a forearm. No, Kassandora changed her mind. Those weren’t bolts, the dwarves were simply firing sharpened steel ingots that left huge holes the size of small dogs through the demon’s armour.
One of Kassandora’s n noticed that they had gone for those cannoneers, those demons collapsed, their bodies utterly shredded into pieces by the blows from above. The demon roared as the dwarf swung its blade up at it, and then fell onto the ground as flas burst out around it.
A succubus? Incubus? Kassandora looked around, but she couldn’t see what was casting the magic. Either way, it didn’t matter. Tartarian flas did not burn like fire, they burned stronger than the sun. In the Great War, they had been used to lt through fortresses and walled cities. Kassandora still rembered them well. She kept watch as to how the dwarves would react. Panic was out of the question but a charge forwards? Maybe a retreat?
But the steady step-by-step advance, she would not have predicted. The team of dwarves once again rallied, they even put up a shieldwall as those flas turned from roaring orange to a searing purple. And as if they were standing in nothing more than a midday drizzle, the dwarves took another step forwards.
In that mont, as she watched the armoured suits step into searing Tartarian fla that lted stone and even caused that armour to steam, Kassandora realised that within those heavily skirted suits of armour, there wasn’t a single dwarf that was actually alive. All of them were skeletons. All of them marched forwards in unison, utterly ignorant of the heat around them.
Another team of dwarves stepped into view. A ring of dwarves flanked by more of the hulking bricks of skirted grey armour. When Kassandora had seen them before, she had assud that the skeletons were rely servants or a labour force. She kept silent, but her mind started asking the important question: How did they manage to get past the inherent fragility of bone? A few of the dwarves here were alive. The lack of faceplates covering their helms revealed faces with skin and lips and nose and eyes rather than just the bones of a skull.
Runemasters, Kassandora had seen them in the past, and the lack of weaponry had not changed. One of the dwarves brought out a steel ball the sized of a closed fist from his satchel. He brought it to his lips and whispered? Breathed? Kissed it? He did sothing to it, that was for sure, because imdiately the ball flickered alive with runs.
The dwarf tossed it into the air. The ball ca to a montarily stop, and then it shot forwards. There was no acceleration or charge up. It was simply still, then it beca a blur. A crash and shout ca from the corner that the ball had disappeared behind. The flas went out. A cloud of grey dust rolled around the wall.
The death of the caster marked the end of the battle. The skeletal dwarves were unstoppable. They advanced without any great speed, but they were an unstoppable bulldozer. Twice, the demons managed to damage their armour again. Another hellhound even managed to tear the arm off a suit of armour with its crushing jaws. It should have killed the half-man within its paws, but instead the half-man calmly ignored that he was missing a limbing, pulled out his axe and swung it straight into the dog’s head.
Kassandora got her question answered. The dwarves had not survived, at least not the majority of them. They had died, but they had managed to separate wrest death out from the claws of defeat and claim it for themselves. Kassandora had tried it for entire ages during the Pre-Great War eras, and the best she had managed to do was force victory into the sa bundle as death on occasion. Death was the end, death should have been the end, but sohow, they had managed to make death into a stepping stone.
It was rare that Kassandora got amazed, but she was glad she could still feel the emotion, as rare as it was.
As the battle ended, one runemaster turned, squinted, and waved towards the lights. He gave them a loud, cheerful shout, as if unaware of the fact he was up to his calves in blood. “Humans hello! We have awaited your return!”
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