Lito Laeth turned the Wasps over in
her hand. They seemed alien to her—tools from a different time.
Paene Umber had left the cell,
leaving Lito alone with her thoughts. She placed the swords on the ground, and
stood up. She tried to run her fingers through her hair, in instinct, and old
anger flared up again when her hands touched a ragged stubble instead. She
trailed her fingers down, to the sticky stump that used to be her ear. She
shuddered.
Lito put her weight on one foot,
and then the other. They both seemed to be in good order. She swung her arms.
They were weak, but serviceable.
Paene better been telling the
truth—if not, she was walking into a trap. In any case, she had her Wasps, and
would take some people out with her, regardless.
She picked her butterfly swords off of the ground, and headed out of Raven’s Run, towards the courtyard.
* *
* * *
* * *
The Sunset Knight had been
tremendously surprised to see the majority of her forces standing there. They
looked as battered and bruised as her.
Paene had apparently brought out
weapons and armor for her troops. It was all true.
As she buckled on a set of armor, Lito
tried to think of who could be attacking them from that side of the Wall, and
came up short. But it was not her job to deal with impossibilities. Other
people would tease out the how’s and the why’s later. Her job was to clean up
the mess, and take care of the city.
“Listen up!”
Her voice carried in the courtyard,
and her soldiers craned to listen. She took a great deal of satisfaction in the
wondrous whispers that spread throughout the group—no doubt they had all
assumed that the Carpenter had tortured and killed her a long time ago. It was
only half true.
“Caeledonia is under attack. I know
that you’re weak. I know that you are low on sleep, food, and energy.” Lito
took a deep breath, and ran her hand over her head—across her scalp, and down
the remains of her ear again. Let the troops see it. Let them know that they
weren’t as worse off as they could be. Let them know that their commander had
gone through immense pain, and was still going to march to the city's defense,
regardless.
“We don’t know the enemy’s
strength. We don’t know the enemies plans. We don’t have time to make any plans
of our own, so I’ll want you in groups of three—stick with your squad mates, if
you see them. Roam throughout the city, be on the eye out. Engage enemies if
you think you can handle them; wait for other groups if you think that you
can’t. I want this city clean by evening. Let’s give them a red sunset.”
She strode out of the courtyard
promptly thereafter. Lito thought she heard some ragged whoops behind her, but
she didn’t pay attention to it.
Lito hurried down the bridge,
running as fast as her legs would take her. There was a strange ringing in her
ear—and an even stranger silence where her ear used to be.
She ran passed the crumbling holes
inside the Wall that the Carpenter blasted out of. It had all been ruined—every
plan, every chance, every attempt that she had made to keep the city safe. She
wiped her eyes, trying not to think of—
Lito came up completely short
during her run. There was a woman walking away from a corpse by the checkpoint
on the Cael Proper side. She had a bag slung over her shoulder, and was heading
towards the broken entrance of the Wall.
Something about the situation
seemed wrong to her. If it was a civilian, why weren’t they in more panic? The
city was being attacked; she knew that for certain from the shouts of fighting
in the streets. And if it was an attacker…
Lito remembered seeing the broken
Wall for the first time. Her heart had stopped as she had wondered what could
have happened if the Wall had truly been destroyed.
The Sunset Knight continued running
across the bridge. When she reached the checkpoint, she took the stairs two at
a time to get up.
* *
* * *
* * *
The caverns were dripping with
condensed water. Every footstep that Lito took echoed in the dark caverns. She
looked around for a torch, but couldn’t find one. The only glow was the
alchemical lights, dim and unused, that the Carpenter must have set up during
his long stay here.
At the end of the cavern, close to the
Wall itself, knelt the woman. She was dumping powder from the bag onto the
ground.
“Stand up,” Lito said, harshly.
The woman stretched herself out,
and turned to face the Sunset Knight.
Lito drew the Wasps. Each blade was
light and deadly in her hand, and she was glad that the hours of time in the
jail had left her the strength to wield them.
“I’m surprised you followed me,”
the woman said. “I didn’t think anyone saw.”
Lito didn’t reply, and crept
closer. The woman’s eyes flicked downwards, taking in the blades.
“Those look sharp,” she said. “You
could hurt someone with those.”
“I intend to,” Lito said. Twenty
feet between them now, and Lito was slowly closing the distance.
The woman continued to lounge against the Wall. Her fists were closed at her sides. “You are brave,” she said. “Why aren’t you defending the rest of the city?”
Lito didn’t respond, but continued
to stalk closer.
She cocked her head to one side. “Is
it because you worried that something terrible was going to happen down here?
That must have been a sacrifice… do you wonder about all the people who are
dying out there that you can’t save?” The woman’s face fell as she said this. “Do
you worry about everyone who is in immense pain, losing their will and their
resolve… wishing you could have done something for them?”
Lito didn’t listen to the words. Of
course she had worried about it—she was one of the best fighters in the city,
and every second she was in here was a moment she couldn’t be out there,
defending her people. But one glance at the powder on the floor convinced her that
this was a more important, if less glamorous, fight.
Lito lunged forward, blades in
hand, just as the woman said, “Me, too.”
The Wasps punched through the woman’s
sides, but she seemed not to notice or care. The woman’s hands wrapped around
Lito, and they tumbled to the ground. The Wasps were stuck; she couldn’t get
them out for another strike. The woman was bleeding from her side, but she wasn’t
screaming in pain. She had Lito’s arms locked around her side, but with a
savage twist she broke one of the Sunset Knight’s arms.
Lito tried to roll away, and with a
sudden push she did. She stood. Her right arm stuck out at a funny angle, and
she couldn’t move it without feeling pain.
The woman, too stood up, and pulled
the Wasps out. She twirled them in her hands, even as the blood flowed from her
side more freely.
“You don’t have long,” Lito said,
panting.
The woman nodded. “You’ve done your
duty. Rejoice in that.”
Then she lunged, both Wasps aimed straight
for Lito’s throat. Lito threw up both arms in defense, and her broken arm took
the full force of the woman’s weight. It crumpled in pain, and she felt broken
bone grind against the rest of her.
The act prevented her own blades
from slicing through her throat; instead, they sliced her at the shoulders and
lower neck.
Both women collapsed to the ground. Apparently the woman only had enough strength for that final attack.
“Gods,” Lito whispered. “Help.”
“They will,” the woman promised.
She was moving. “They will.”
“What are you doing?” cried Lito.
She tried to pull herself onto her side, but her head felt dizzy and she lay
back down in agony.
“Helping,” the woman said. She was
fumbling with something to do with the powder.
“Gods,” Lito cried. “Why have you done this? Damn them, damn them, damn
them!”
All of the pain and aching of the
last few weeks came rushing back to her. Not being able to save the city from
the Carpenter. Not being able to save Elaene, even after all she had done to protect and go along with her plan. Not hearing
from Dane, who alone could have saved
the city. Why in the Sunken Hells were the gods such miserable wretches, who
cared nothing for their people?
“No,” the woman said. “No, don’t
say that.”
“Damn you,” Lito said. A red mist
was clouding her eyes. When she reached her good hand up, her neck was sticky
with blood.
The woman had ceased her work and
was screaming. “No, don’t say that! You’re going to be fine, you’re going to
live in the Silvery Halls—we still love you!”
“Gods… don’t care…” Lito gasped. “If
they did…”
The red mist was slowly eating away
at her vision. She could no longer see the light of the halls. She struggled to
find the words, but could not.
Her arm fell limply at her side.
Lito had never felt so betrayed.
And she never would again.
Chapter 29 1,572 | 62,386/50,000
Author’s Note in Comments
Hello, dear readers,
ReplyDeleteI wish I could spend more time with this chapter-- but, alas, the NaNoWriMo train rolls on.
Thanks, as always, for reading,
john
I love the very last line of this chapter. The layers...
ReplyDelete:D
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