Helkey 34 — The Battle of Sunken Crag, Darkest Pit, Brightest Light

My eyes lock on the flailing red serpent in Rarhquick’s mouth as he approaches. My Vortex, taken from a defeated horde of devils, vibrates underneath me as I angle it toward the big Plumacat. The weird unicycle sprouting a half-dozen pipes roars like the loudest Harley I’ve ever encountered. This engine noise combines with a pained, banshee-wail of a damnable worb at its angry heart. Its exhaust is a constant coal roll. The worb — being one of those nasty soul-torture devices that devils use to power both their machines and their magic.

The red serpent, the Uktena, is lashing about trying to bite Rarhquick. Fangs extend, drip some kind of venom. To no avail. The big Plumacat has him by a horn. So the devil snake can’t turn his head enough to deliver a bite. I look down at Zaya. She’s standing on my lap, staring. Rage lights in her eyes. She’s got her mouth clamped, keeping back angry words. Yeah. I understand why she’s pissed. That horned flying snake devil is one of many who’ve hunted her kind to near extinction. An Uktena scout for the army of devils who’re still trying to kill or enslave us all. I don’t like the little genocidal jerk either. I drive up to the devil-snake.

“What’s your name, Mr jackass Devil Snake?” I ask him, not even trying to keep the anger and sarcasm out of my voice. I’m using omnis scientia and interpretor to translate into Minosian. I can talk devil. But I don’t want to right now. I’ve got about a thousand things on my mind. Besides, it’d feel like a defilement to my mouth and the last time I had an opportunity to brush teeth was nearly two days ago. My magic horologium watch says it’s 7:01 AM Hell time. So my two day anniversary in this hot, stinking, out to kill me and take my soul joint’s about eight hours from now. Joyous cause for celebration — not! “Got anything to say before I have Rarhquick put you in the sack?” I extend one of the bags I looted off the devils in Poacher’s Cave. It’s this weird sack made out of some kind of skin from some poor creature. Typical devil regalia. Barf!

The Uktena bobs toward me. I can tell it’s having trouble seeing. Welts and burns cover its body. Yeah, my Urdrake buddies blasted the shit out of it. Good fucking job! It hisses as it recognizes me. “The mage!” it exclaims. “You will be a slave! You know you cannot escape Regina! Surrender to me now and…”

“Got it!” I interrupt. “Completely understood! Your name’s Hassle! Good to know!” and with that I shoot my arm out toward Rarhquick, plop the bag over the Uktena’s head as the big cat releases, then close it over his writhing body. I hear it shout in protest as I tighten the bag down. “Now I’ll check back with you after I’m done destroying more of this Regina’s army. Thanks for the name! I’ll expect you to give me a full report on her when I do!” I thump the bag for emphasis. After a few more muffled shouts and hisses, the bag grows quiet. I can practically feel the sullen seeping up through it. Serves the little fucker right.

Rarhquick and I rejoin the Vortexes as we race toward the ailing scorpions. A small group of devils on Vortexes runs away from us, kicking up rooster tails of dirt and crud. About ten in all. They’re halfway to the jagged bridge crossing Sunken Crag’s black and swarming pit. In the distance, a larger group of devils spills over that bridge. A hundred-or-so riding more of these damn Vortex Hell cycles. They’re running ahead of a huge main group coming from Overseer that’s about three times as big. I can’t see much of Regina’s main army. Dust and haze covers most of it. But I guess that main force hosts about three hundred fracking devils and will reach Sunken Crag in a little less than ten minutes. By then, that lead group of a hundred devils will be closing in. Off to my left, Zorfang and his Urdrake are moving steadily northward near the hills. Grimjaw’s scouts are running up behind me. A glance back tells me they’ll link up with me in about five minutes.

Regina. So she’s the chief asshole in these parts. It’s an oddly normal name. Hell’s history has been tangled with Earth’s for ages and ages now. So I shouldn’t be surprised. It’s just weird. Like I have an evil aunt named Regina hurling armies of devils at me from a tower built on the backs of thousands of enslaved souls. Yeah. Totally fracking normal.

Position of Rebel and Devil Forces During Battle of Sunken Crag, Darkest Pit, Brightest Light

Shapes of Vortex-mounted devils emerging from the bridge over Sunken Crag and hurtling toward us are starting to resolve in the early daylight. I can just make out little glints of light reflecting off the metal bikes in this most recent swarm. I glance at our thirty three bikes. Sure, many of us doubled up. But even Regina’s forerunner force has us outnumbered. And a total of more than four hundred fucking devils are bearing down. So fucking outnumbered. Always outnumbered. That damn Hell sun is rising. Hurling its heat as it lifts. Sweltering night becomes boiling day. The air itself feels like a second sun as it seems to capture and redouble the Hell sun’s rays. Sweat dribbles down my neck. Mottle shudders on my back as he works to cool me. His concern seeps through his touch. He’s worried about me. Always. The Plumacat spit compress over the hole in my torso itches. I’m tired. So goddamn tired after the never-ending fighting, the constant live-wire of magic burning through me, my wound, and Hell’s fucking goddamn hot and stink always, always beating me down.

We shoot over a rise, run through a low spot, rise again and then we are there — in amongst the scorpions. Close up, I can see little streamers of smoke rising off the three that are still functional. A fourth is collapsed and burning. I’m pretty sure it crashed after Zorfang blinded its crew. Its tail ruptured and sparks from its vats are igniting more flames. “That one!” I shout to Featherstar. “Get those big vats away from the flames! They’ve got wisps in there!”

A group of Plumacats and Urdrake approach. The ‘cats hang back as the Urdrake lumber in. Their tough bodies seem resilient to the fires. Hell, they look like walking tanks… turtles… Godzilla things. Their big claws do swift work. With a shriek, the first vat is ripped free. Then another. Soon all six are piled up. I’m watching this from a hill as I’m considering the other three scorpions. Featherstar returns. I point to them. “I don’t have time for captives. So get the devils that are still alive, tie them up with whatever cord or rope you can find and leave them on that hill.” I point to the small rise behind me. I’ll worry about them if we effing live. “Then I want you to stop those scorps from moving. I’m going to want all the vats.”

With a growl of affirmation, Featherstar bounds off. I look down at Zaya. “How are ya feeling?” I ask.

“How’re aya feelin’?” She replies, doing her best to mimic me. Man, my girl has some spunk.

“Like I’ve been chewed up by a T-Rex, gone through the bowels, then shat out the other end.” It’s the goddamn truth.

Zaya’s looking at me like I’m crazy.

“You know what a shark is but you don’t know a T-Rex?”

Zaya’s look doesn’t change. She still think’s I’m full of crazy. I guess they have sharks in Hell but never knew a T-Rex. That settles it. Sharks are fucking everywhere.

“Right, you probably don’t know about a T-Rex. So what I meant to ask is — are you good to do another big wisp transformation so soon?”

Zaya cracks a grin. “Sure. I did it all with your magic the last time.” Her expression grows serious. “You’re brimming with it now. I could probably shape a Bowflit or four along with many others.” She pauses again, strokes my chin, looks down at my wound. “You’re the worry. Can you handle another shaping?”

Yeah. I’m pretty fucked up. But I gotta do this. Otherwise, we’re all goners. I shove aside her worry. “A Bowflit? You spoke of them before. What the Hell are they?”

“Enormous flying beauties. Special horns from their heads. Their tails make rainbow spines twice as long as you — which they fling.” She spreads her arms wide like wings. “Bowflits!” she shouts. As if a gesture were an explanation. She’s getting really excited about it. I gotta admit I’m intrigue by the notion of ‘giant flying beauties.’

I gun the Vortex over to the pile of scorpion vats, summon my moonshadow blade. Magic courses through me. My energetic vessel — again more than half full and rising fast. Fat sparks fall in a stream from my name curse. I’m a goddamn giant walking sparkler. It feels like my flesh is just a tattered vessel for my magic now. Like my body’s fraying and the energy of me, of all the souls I keep safe, is my real being. Not my failing, wheezing, bleeding, Hell-battered flesh. I jump off, kick the nasty, wailing, stinking Hell-bike aside and stand over the vat. “Sounds fucking glorious! Let’s form up some Bowflits!”

Zaya flies over to me as I slice the vats. That nasty liquid devils use to stun souls gushes out. Belabored wisps spill to the ground. I turn to my Vortex, carve its awful worb to bits. Souls emerge from the terrible, toothy thing. The light around me grows. Grimjaw flies up onto a rise. He blinks down at me. His Mottle flares behind him as his companion scouts fly up. Wisp light reflects in their proud eyes.

“Now, everyone! Abandon the Hell-bikes! We use them no more! Strike the worbs! Liberate the souls! Free the captives!”

In a chorus of growls, the Plumacats, Urdrake, and Mottles dismount. They turn their fangs, bodies, and claws on the devil bikes. They rip through stinking engine compartments. Hell’s fuels spill to the ground in black gushes. The burrowing claws reach the worbs binding souls to terrible engines. Torture devices made to squeeze more power out of those black drops of devils’ juice. They rip, gnash, tear. Around us all, souls spill out. Their light grows. The swarm around me composes scores. But I am not done. “Featherstar! The vats! Slash them open!”

Featherstar’s group flocks atop the captured scorpions. The Hell machines are now idle, scattered across an area roughly the size of two football fields. Devil captives trail away, led by Urdrake and Plumacats toward a hill. Featherstar hears my command. She lets out a loud yowl in reply. Urdrake and Pumacats atop the scorpions bite and claw the vats open. Loud shrieks fill Hell’s morning air. The light of souls grows yet again. Hundreds swirl about me like a field full of giant fireflies — each light the size of a basketball.

“Zaya! Call them!”

She rises up on gossamer wings. Her voice rings out through the scorched air. She sings! The souls rise. Sluggish, they respond to her. The pull of her voice is like a tide, drawing them closer, closer. Zaya’s song fills my ears. The wisp energy within me responds, spills out. Sparks shoot from my name curse to streak through the wisps. “Fuck! It’s gorgeous!” I croak hoarsely.

Zaya floats back to me. Offers her hand. “Our glory.”

I push my hand toward her. Our palms spark as they touch. “Hell yes! We make glory here!” I shout as my magic rises, as my energetic vessel tips once more to spill its vast flow through my bond with Zaya. The flood is now frigging enormous — fueled by the bright wisps sheltering in my name curse, by the dark wisps lurking in my shadow. Hundreds now. Each pumping its own flow of magic. Zaya pulls deep from my vessel. I have so much to give her. Light rises in my flesh, it shoots through our bond. It fills her. The energy lifts us. No curse magic. We’re held up by pure magical force. Sparks fly from me. I am a goddamn Fourth of July all by myself. Zaya bursts in her own light show. The sparks around me streak through her, then leap back out. Vila’s lightning roars up from her. Each bolt, swelling wide as a river. The bolts bend up and outward, then rebound into her. They form a shape like a lotus — with Zaya and me for its center. Its lightning arcs rise hundreds of feet above and around. They enclose all the gathered wisps. We flicker together in a strobe. Then, from this lightning-flower’s center, a tower of bolts shoot up. White running up through Hell’s nasty, puke-green sky. The bolts leap thousands upon thousands of feet, blast through strands of shadowy webbing beyond the puke, then spread wide in a roof of light.

******

Devils for hundreds of miles around, dwellers of Eastern Infernia, see it. They stare in shock. Oblivious. The light travels as far as Fortress Invicti atop its smoking pits filled with lava and burning coal, retching in its oily gasses. There the white light briefly brightens the dark pollution. For a moment, the attention of its lord, Asmodeus, is pulled from his Curse Rider’s hunt. For just an instant, the dark lord ponders this odd little light. Then the light fades and his gaze returns to the Hunt for Beatrice, for Mori. To the awakening of his prophet Ivan.

******

Lightning fills the wisps. Through my bond with Zaya, I sense them all. I know their number. Each one touched by my magic, each wisp sheltering within me. Their count flares in front of my eyes in ghostly letters, formed by a pattern set into my name curse. Counting souls. Another thing I knew I could do before the memory draught blotted it from my brain. A thing I’ve been doing all along ever since I defeated Bob the Stelo Mal. I just didn’t realize it. Now, the force of my magic makes the wisp count so brilliant it is impossible for me to miss. Within the lightning Zaya made from my magic are seven hundred and seventy seven. Four hundred and two dark wisps cast their shades, three hundred and seventy five light wisps burn bright. Zaya flings the four hundred and two into my shadow. She hurls a hundred and fifty three light wisps toward the dome of my name curse. My shadow bulges to three times its normal size. Sparks burst out from my name curse, rise to my brow, then shoot off in all directions as the bright wisps arrive. I am a home, a safe haven, now to eight hundred and sixty four souls. Two hundred and thirty three bright wisps, Six hundred and thirty one dark. Their numbers dance above my brow. A sigil of safety.

Zaya pulls more of my surging magic into her. Two hundred and twenty two light wisps bulge as they develop bodies. The wet, elongating forms are now familiar. Plumacats, Udrake, Mottles take shape in nearly equal numbers. Four separate to enlarge into something new. They grow and grow, becoming immense. They stretch — sprouting wings, tails. They grow blue, yellow, and green feathers. Each feather — as long as I am tall. Their heads arise, wedge-shaped. Mouths fill with rows of dagger teeth. Forward-facing horns like those of unicorns but about eight feet long sprout outward. From between plumes on their tails emerge hedge-rows of crystalline spines. They are Bowflits! They remind me of dragons, of unicorns, of big mama versions of the frigging amazing ikran from Avatar. Each is nearly a hundred feet long. Their wings span nearly two hundred feet, forming a sheltering tent from Hell’s hot sunrise. One stoops over a scorpion. Its crystalline talons rend the Minosian metal as easily as knives cleave butter. Another tilts its head down to me, blasts me with a spray of moist air from its nostrils, then rubs a feathered wingtip over me. I’m knocked on my ass.

Zaya’s drifted back down to the ground beside me. She’s hugging me. Tears are running down her face. Two hundred and eighty five pairs of eyes stare at us. The feeling I get from them is one of pure adoration. It’s effing weird standing in the middle of a battlefield in Hell watching them all moon over us like that. I get it. We saved them. Gave them a means to fight. For now. It is so much more than they had. Stuck in vats and worbs. Ground down to serve devils in the worst sort of slavery. I can’t even fucking begin to imagine what that must’ve been like.

“Mother!” Featherstar yowls. “Father!” Grimjaw growls. A loud cheer rises up from the new-formed and the rest. They are hours, minutes, seconds old in their new bodies. Who knows how old their wisps are.

In the distance, from just behind the black and gaping pit that is Sunken Crag, twelve of those goddamn Hell balls begin a ponderous rise toward us. Oh yeah. The devils definitely saw that lightning we just made. I’m pretty sure by now they’ve figured out that it means trouble. I’m also pretty sure they don’t know how fucking much trouble they’re in right about now. But Hassle is sure kicking up one Hell of a fuss in that bag I stuck him in.

“Mottle, Zephyr! You know the drill by now! Go tell the new Mottles what’s up! Then have them tell the rest! We’ve got like two minutes to start hauling ass!” I point up to the incoming Hell balls. Mottle flies off my back. I feel the heat again. Grit my teeth against the swoon. I’m ready for it this time. I still have to lean on the Bowflit’s giant wing to stay standing. I look up to the great beast. It dips its head toward me. I dig up a name from a fantasy series I read back in Middle School. Luthiel’s Song. Beatrice gave the books to me on my twelfth birthday along with a secret smile. Told me it was “a true fantasy straight from heaven.” She’s always like that. Saying cryptic stuff. The books were written by someone who apparently knew the real history of my mother’s people from thousands of years back. Us regular earthlings called them angels and made up our own myths about them. The name I recall from the tale comes to my lips with a smirk.

“Faehorn,” I say to the Bowflit.

It gives a questioning vibration in return. The low hum travels through its horn and toward me. What a cool thing.

“That’s your new name. Faehorn.” I stretch my hands up toward the wonderful creature. “Can you lift me?” I ask.

It drops a wing down, scoops me up with a set of giant feathers that enfold me like fingers, then deposits me upon its back. My view from up here is pretty amazing. I can see all of my company… three companies now… clearly. The small group of Vortexes fleeing us are now hauling ass. The group of one hundred-ish devils that just crossed the bridge is reeling back. I bet their commander is having a gigantic ‘what the fuck?’ kind of moment. The older Mottles have done their knowledge transfer thing with the newer Mottles. Now all the Mottles flit off to share their knowledge with the new-formed.

Zaya flies up to sit on Faehorn beside me. She lays a hand on mine. “You going to make it?” she asks.

“I’m about to pass out where I sit. But yeah. I think I’ll make it. Why’s it so goddamn hot? Oh yeah. I’m in fucking Hell.”

She squeezes my hand. I pull out some Perry-fuckin-A and take a long swig. When the fuck is Mottle coming back? I’m getting fucking hot. I look up. The Hell balls are just reaching their apogee. A constellation of destruction burning above us. We gotta get fucking moving. I pat the Bowflit’s neck. Faehorn. I’m calling him Faehorn. “Can you start picking up some of the Urdrake?” I say to him. I’m not certain the enormous, glorious Bowflit understands me. But his plate-sized eyes seem to hold a deep intelligence. He lets out a roar, then his horn hums again with resonance. He begins lifting Urdrake with those amazing feathers. His motions are somehow both powerful and gentle. Glancing behind me at his wide back, I figure he might be able to carry about ten Udrake. They’re going to have to hold on tight. But Bowflit carrying Urdrake makes the most sense. Those frigging Plumacats and Mottles are fast. The lumbering Urdrake won’t get out from under such a massive Hell ball barrage. And the notion of Urdrake shooting their laser-like beams from the backs of these giant Bowflit causes a grim grin to split my face. Soon, nine Urdrake are blinking their reptilian eyes at me from atop Faehorn. “Wow! That was fast! Can you tell your buddies to go get more Urdrake? Pick ’em all up if you can. Also get Theri and Zel. They can’t run with the Plumacats.” I motion down to the pair who’re staring around. They’re looking pretty awestruck about now.

Faehorn vibrates his namesake again. The other Bowflit vibrate their horns in response. Soon they’re all picking up Urdrake. Theri and Zel are lifted together. Zel gives me a giant shit-eating grin and tilts his horns at me. It’s some kind of devil gesture. I don’t have a clue what it means. But I guess he’s thanking me or somesuch. The number on Faehorn’s back swells to fourteen. He looks pretty loaded up. I hope he can still fly. He’s frigging huge. But those Urdrake are pretty beefy as well.

Mottle returns to my back. His touch sends an empathic reassurance. His body again radiates Hell’s horrible heat away from me. My energetic vessel’s filling up fast with all the magic from my new wisps. I’m about as ready to fight as I’ll ever be given all the punishment I’ve taken. The Bowflits are bursting with Urdrake. We’ve got them all loaded onto Bowflits. Barely. The Plumacats and Mottles are linked up. No more goddamn Vortexes. Thank ever-loving Christ!

“Let’s move!” I shout to them as the roaring Hell balls grow larger on descent toward us. Fucking planet bombs every one. The twelve of them fill the fucking sky with fire and blackness. I can feel their heat. They’ll cover a huge area. It’s going to be fucking close. The Bowflits beat their wings. The Plumacats and Mottles leap-fly away. Damn! They’re so quick. Good!

We lift off and fly. I direct everyone to the left. Toward the hills. The Hell balls are coming in a staggered line. Some of them will fall ahead of us. I’m not going to lead our force into one of those effing things. The Bowflits are damn fast. Their wingbeats whip up a hurricane which blasts them skyward, then wump! wump! they shoot over the land. We streak out from beneath the Hell balls and cover about two miles in a goddamn minute. I have all the majestic beasts land on a rise. We watch the Plumacats and Mottles race away from destruction. They make it a little more than halfway to us when the Hell Balls land in a cluster. The explosion is fucking nuclear! Each fireball eats up an area that would easily cover two city blocks. Blast waves shoot out for almost a half mile from each explosion. Huge fountains of dirt and rock are hurled up and outward by the blasts. The Mottles and Plumacats just made it. Debris rains on the other side of the rise they sheltered behind. But they appear safe.

From my perch, I can see the lead force of Vortex riders coming in behind the Hell balls’ explosions. The main group of devils is just now nearing the bridge at Sunken Crag. Ponderous scorpions are gathering their Hell balls once more to fling at us. I look at the Bowflits. Maybe we have an answer for them.

“Zaya, tell me what these Hell dragons of yours can do,” I say to the little green faerie who’s again sheltering between my arms.

Zaya points back toward the tails. “Those spines. They can fling them for miles. When they hit, they explode in big balls of lightning and crystal shards.” She shifts her pointing finger to Faehorn’s head. “That horn can emit a cone of sound. For a couple hundred feet, it destroys pretty much anything. Further out, it messes up devil machines pretty bad.”

I nod. I like what I’m hearing. I really like what I’m hearing.

********

Dressler watches in disgust as Slevelth squirms on the ground. His clawed finger points to the enormous flood of white lightning filling the sky. The first bolts had stunned the Dark Psychic. He’d careened off his Vortex and landed with a loud plop onto the ground. His squibble vat shattered — its contents writhing and ruined. Now Dressler tries to lift him back onto his Vortex.

“Get hold of yourself!” He snaps.

Slevelth points a finger toward the lighting. “Blaspheemer!!” He shouts as spittle flies from his mouth. Some of it impacts on Dressler. The overseer pulls his clawed hand back and delivers a firm smack to Slevelth’s plump face. The impact sets off a series of jiggles but mercifully pulls the Dark Pyschic’s eyes away from the debacle ahead. “It is … HORROR!!” The Psychic wheezes.

“Yes. A catastrophe. It appears Regina was right after all,” Dressler says, the frog-like eyes of Slevelth with his to prevent him from looking away. Out of the corner of his eye, Dressler can already see the great tower of lightning beginning to flicker out. Vila’s lightning. A thrill of ancient terror crawls up his spine. He, who’d faced the forbidden forms so long ago, knew more than most devils what it meant. But he’d never seen a single source of Vila lightning grow to such immense size. And erupting from near the derelict scorpions and their hundreds of wisps! Could this Vila and mage have already doubled their force? Could they have done more?”

“No time!” He shouts to Slevelth as the Dark Psychic begins to descend into blithering once more. He bodily hauls the great, toadish bloat of a body back onto the Vortex, sets the Psychic’s feet in the stirrups, rights the machine. “I need you to drive! I need you to send to the scorpions to fire on that lightning! I need you to send to Regina! Tell her to make arrangements to flee if she hasn’t already!”

“Blaspheme… It is… It is gone…” The Dark Psychic is choking on his words. At least his pace of breathing is slowing down.

Dressler looks back over his shoulder and sees the lightning’s flickered out. “By Asmodeus, Slevelth! Send to the scorpions! Fire all devastation orbs!” It’s useless. Slevelth is still useless. Dressler leaps up onto his Vortex. He lifts his hand to the nearest scorpion crew. “Devastation orbs on that lightning! Now! Converging spread! All scorpions FIRE!!” His shout reaches the scorpion crew. A crew member loads a red flare into his gun and fires to signal the other crews. Then, in quick succession, each massive machine bends back its tail and hurls its enormous devastation orb into the sky.

Dressler doesn’t pause to watch. He spins back to Slevelth. The Dark Psychic, at last, is settled. Dressler grasps his arm, then turns to his Century. “To the bridge!” He shouts. His Century, along with the two flanking Centuries, resume their advance toward Sunken Crag. They’d halted in shock at the calamity in the sky. Now springing back into motion. Vortexes rev and fling bits of blasted ground as they advance at a scorpion’s pace.

“We… must… kill… her…,” Sleveth says in even tones. His fat lips form a snarl. His eyes glint with rage.

“You forget yourself, Slevelth,” Dressler replies. “The mage is Asmodeus’s prize now.” At least Slevelth is saying something half-sensible. Dressler was beginning to wonder if the Dark Psychic would ever recover from his shock.

“If we don’t kill her, we’re all dead,” Slevelth says.

“You always struck me as… more practical than your fellows,” Dressler says as their forward ranks roll toward the bridge. They run down the land-fall toward Sunken Crag. It gapes wide beneath them. Scrabber webs glitter in the morning light. Plumes of sulfur fume rise up from those dark recesses. Insectoid and reptilian eyes seem to stare up at them from the shadows. Probably an imagining. The Vila’s lightning had set him more on edge than he was willing to admit. “It is one reason I chose you for my Dark Psychic.” Dressler pauses, considering his next question. “Did you see something that led you to this conclusion?”

Slevelth’s eyes roll about as his head bobs back and forth. For a moment, Dressler thinks he’ll have to catch the Dark Psychic again. Then Slevelth rights himself. “I will send to Regina as you asked.” The toadish Psychic mutters.

“Excellent,” Dressler replies, biting back a retort. He is used to having his commands obeyed and his questions answered. But Slevelth is clearly struggling with his recent experience. Dressler, flicks his spear in frustration, looks up toward the devastation orbs. They’re beginning to fall toward their target. So many over such a wide spread! Slevelth may get his wish. Then, in the distance he sees large forms lift off the ground and fly toward the hills. Other smaller forms race away beneath. To his trained eyes, the flying forms are unmistakable.

“Bowflit!” The word expels from his mouth like a curse.

“Overseer Dressler,” Slevelth belches the word. He’s almost back to his usual disgusting self. “Regina has already prepared to flee and advises that we do the same.”

Regina. Fleeing. Advising him to flee. Dressler feels a sick shift in the pit of his stomach. “No. Regia does not flee. She merely withdraws. We do not flee. We conquer.” The words feel hollow in his mouth.

“Overseer. This is a catastrophe! It is… unlike anything a local Hell Lord has dealt with in hundreds of years! It requires the response of a regional council, perhaps of Asmodeus himself.” Slevelth drools.

Dressler’s shock turns to anger. No matter how many made forms that be-taken-by-Asmodeus mage has, it still can’t be enough to match the full might of his combined army. He had repelled Lanthver’s incursions for decades, had fought on the great battlefield of Avernum on countless occasions, had fought in the ancient struggles of Asmodeus’s ascent to Fortress Invicti. “No. We do not flee. Our Lady is merely concerned for… our well being. Tell her we shall capture this mage. At all costs.”

Dressler shudders. In the distance, the devastation orbs explode into blinding balls of fire then fling a great cloud of dirt, rock and smoke into the sky where minutes ago, white lightning defiled it. Though the explosion is large, Dressler doubts it has caught much of the mage’s force, if any. She’d survived barrages of devastation orbs before. She knew how to move fast when she needed to. Now, with the Bowflits, she had even more mobility.

His Vortex winds down the familiar path to Sunken Crag. Dressler turns to Slevelth. “We shall capture her,” he repeats the words like an incantation. “She shall be a prize for Asmodeus. Regina will not know disgrace. Now, send to my Centuries! Tell them we are to cross that bridge with haste! Once we enter the Wisp Fields, tell them to spread out!” Dressler points to the massive stone span sprouting fortifications and towers running five hundred feet across that great and gaping crag. He will not have his force mass only to be picked off by Bowflits.

********

I shout to Faehorn, point toward the huddled Plumacats just beyond the Hell balls’ explosive blast. My ears pop in acceleration. I grip tight to Faehorn’s feathers through the explosive burst of speed. In four great sweeps of his wings, we are above Featherstar. The other Bowflits whirl through the air to follow. Spirals of feather, crystal talons, great whirling horns. They are tornados of color and motion. Each wing flap — a goddamn sonic boom. They vibrate their horns in response to Faehorn as their leader. They respond quick. But for what I’m going to do next, I’ll need almost instant communication with them and with the Urdrake they carry.

“Mottle, touch Faehorn. Call three of your friends up from Featherstar.” Mottle quivers in response. He drops his tail onto the amazing flying behemoth beneath me. My bond with Mottle now extends to the Bowflit. Mottle vibrates, shouting out to his fellows. Three rise to the circling Bowflits. They attach, clinging to the broad backs with their hook-like claws. My thoughts whirl as my senses extend to them through my connection with Mottle. I signal to the other Bowflits through Mottle. Mottle transfers my thoughts to them. They’re close enough together for this near-telepathy to work out. We fly a racetrack circle around Featherstar. Massive wings kick up a roaring wind over everyone. Out on the Wisp Fields, the large group of Vortexes has merged with the fleeing group. They’re racing toward Featherstar. Though still two miles out, they’ll catch up to my Mottles and Plumacats in minutes. I drag my hand through omnis scientia.

“Zorfang! That lead group of Vortexes is closing in! Light em up!”

“Yes father!” Zorfang harooms. His response — oddly cheerful considering we’re still fighting for our lives. I suppose he has a lot to be happy about. He just survived an almost continuous barrage of those damn Hell balls.

“Mottle! Send to Zephyr. Have him tell Featherstar to run out and attack the Vortexes below. If they get close, the devils won’t be able to rain Hell balls without hitting their own!”

Mottle vibrates again, letting out a trill of what I guess is ultrasound Mottle talk. Featherstar and Grimjaw leap forward with a yowl. They eagerly fly down the rise and toward the hundred-odd devils racing in. Near the hills, Zorfang and his Urkdrake rain their white laser-lights down on the devils. Vortexes smoke and careen off from the main group as the first barrage lands — blinding devils, ruining Hell cycles.

“Last message for Zephyr!” I shout as we take a final turn. “Tell Featherstar we are going ahead to meet the enemy!”

Mottle vibrates as we swoop low. Zephyr transfer’s Mottle’s call directly to Featherstar.

“Now Faehorn, Bowflits!” I shout as I point forward. “To the bridge!”

Mottle vibrates to transfer my command again. As one, the four Bowflits turn. Together their wings BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! in the Hell-sky. We are a hurricane on wings. In moments we are racing above devils in the Wisp Fields.

“Mottle! The Urdrake! Have them fire as we pass!” Mottle vibrates, then slaps his tail on a nearby Urdrake. On each Bowflit, other Mottles do the same. They send my command to the Urdrake. These then haroom back to their companions. Shells pivot. Crystal-tipped heads point. More than fifty nine blasts of white light rain down on the Vortexes below. Zel and Theri add to the assault. Each launch a fireball round down onto the devils from their rifles. At least twenty Vortexes explode from the sudden barrage. Errant fireball rounds and bullets whiz past or bloom around us. Some shots land on the Bowflits. Those great feathers covering the beasts shed bullets as if they are no more than raindrops. The fireballs fall short. Too ponderous to reach the Bowflits in their raging flight. “Fucking A!” I shout in celebration. They’ve been seriously softened up for Featherstar now. Between her Mottles and Plumacats, she’s got those devils outnumbered by two to one. Zorfang is also beating the Hell out of them even as Featherstar rushes in.

I turn toward Sunken Crag. Our furious flight has brought us within five miles. The bridge is swarming with devils. About half the main devil force is on it now. The remainder gather behind the bridge or spill out onto the Wisp Fields. Twelve scorpions fling their Hell balls toward us. They fill huge sections of sky. But the ponderous things almost make me laugh. They are no match for the Bowflits’ insane speed. Their sinuous, feathered bodies flow through the air with surprising nimbleness. Like the very whirling winds their wings whip up. I’ve increased our elevation beyond the reach of the devils’ guns or fireball rounds. Upon the back of Faehorn, I stoop in the sky.

A point of red light blossoms up from the Bridge over Sunken Crag. It shoots directly at me. Devil magic! “Clypeus!” I shout. My energetic vessel explodes. Sparks fan into a shield large enough to cover Faehorn’s front. The red beam hits my shield, then splinters in all directions. I point down at the bridge, at the place where the red beam rose. Through omnis scientia, I see a tall, thin devil riding a frigging gilded Vortex. I’m reminded of Ivan’s stupid golden toilet. “There! I want all tail spines aimed at that point!”

Myra Strikes the Bridge at Sunken Crag

Mottle vibrates, Faehorn thrums. As one, the Bowflits lift into the sky. Their tails swing behind. From each sprouts a sheaf of four crystalline spines. They gleam like rainbows as they extend. The Bowflits fill with light. It starts at the tip of their horns and flows down into their heads. From the heads it runs through their spines. I can feel the force of it passing beneath me. By the time it reaches their tails, the light is intense, white. Brighter than that ugly Hell sun squatting behind us. Bolts of electricity leap from spine to spine as they ready. Then, the tails shoot forward and beneath the Bowflits’ bodies. The spines launch. Light spills from them as they separate. Bolts jump from one spine to the next as they fly. I’m reminded of a Tesla coil’s lightning watching the energy run from one spine to the next as all sixteen fall down in fury on that bridge above the black chasm. Upon that one devil lifting his glowing spear while riding his stupid golden Vortex.

The explosion covers the devil. It flings bodies and Vortexes high. It forms a wave of stone that ripples out from impact and across the bridge. Shattered stone flies in all directions. A tower near the explosion leans, groans, and then in a sound of ripping stone and rent metal falls into Sunken Crag. As the dust clears, I see a great crack opening in the bridge center. As it grows it devours devils by the score. More cracks radiate out. The bridge sways. It buckles. One side rises up, the other side lowers. This corkscrew is too much. A new series of cracks emerge. Rent into three pieces — the bridge falls. At least a hundred and fifty devils go with it. Falling down, down into that black pit. Some are caught in the webs beneath. Others simply fall and fall. Suddenly the pit swarms. Giant spider crab things the size of cars leap out to seize the falling devils. Great devil lizards, Stelo Mal like Bob from Mottle’s Grotto, lunge to return with more devils in their mouths. The monsters of the crag, awakened and finding their hunger, surge up from the pit. They take wounded and ready devil alike. The enmity between Stelo Mal and Scrabber — forgotten as they swarm together in a ravenous tide. They overwhelm the devils near Sunken Crag. The remaining devils flee — some back toward Overseer Tower, some out into the Wisp Fields where Featherstar is just now starting to pounce.

Elation swells within me. I hug Zaya. I raise my arm into the air. “Victory!!” I shout. “Victory!!” The Urdrake haroom. The Bowflits vibrate their horns. Our cries echo out over the battlefield. Then the Bowflits drop down upon the fleeing devils and join in the feasting on our foes among the Wisp Fields.

I can’t fucking believe it! We just kicked the shit out of Overseer Tower’s army!!

(New to the Helkey multiverse? Haven’t yet read the first chapter? You can find it here: Helkey 1 — The Memory Draught.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

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Helkey 33 — The Battle of Sunken Crag, Dark Web Revelations

My moment of blackout flickers away. Urgency fills my body like a thunderbolt. “Gotta move!” I groan, thinking of Overseer and the killer devils still left to fight. My eyes open, breaking through a cake of crud, sand, dried tears. Overhead, the Hell-sky is turning from green-black to puke-green. Weird crap the devils hurled up there forms its thin, black net above the sky of this baking hole of a world festering in its own stink and ruin. To my right, the horizon is a bruise over a red-eye sunrise. Featherstar’s tongue rasps over my belly. Each lick draws away some pain. Layers of healing spittle ooze into my wound. A mesh forms — knitting flesh, stopping the outward flow of blood. Mottle quivers as I fight back to consciousness. His fangs are in my neck — injecting restoring fluid through my veins. Another Mottle, Zephyr, drapes over my right arm. He’s also injecting his fluids — this time into my wrist. Zaya’s crouched beside me. She’s got her hand on my name curse. Her touch is warm, soft, electric. She must’ve flown back to me when she saw my fight with the devil leader. Keeps putting herself at too much risk. Like I’m one to effing talk.

I lever myself up. Glance around. Dead devils are strewn across the gully’s edge. Plumacats prowl among the bodies, devouring their chosen prey. Vortexes, their pained soul-warbles silent, lay derelict. Overhead, light streaks. Urdrake, still on the gully’s other side, fire their beams toward a handful of fleeing devils. Running away from them and toward me are Zel and Theri. Theri’s waving her arms. Zel’s shouting some words of concern. They’re both obviously freaked out by me laying on the ground. “I’m OK!” I try to shout toward them. My hoarse voice comes out like the croak of some giant effing frog. I’m pretty sure they can’t hear me. I turn my head, tracing the streaks of light emitting from the Urdrake’s fucking heads. Lumionous lances follow the running devils. An explosion blooms as a Vortex ruptures, hurling its devil rider about eighty feet as it careers across the Wisp Fields. I lever myself up to a sitting position. I look down, see a stain of black upon the ground beneath me. I’m sitting in a pool of my own fucking blood. “How long was I out?” I croak again.

Grimjaw, squatting on his haunches beside me, eyes scanning the destruction surrounding us, lets out a rumbling purr of assurance. “Only moments, father,” he says. “You took down the devil streak’s leader. But his treacherous spine nicked you.” He blinks his large eyes. It’s effing weird being reassured by the big predator. His tiger-like jaws drip with gore. His last devil kill. Maybe some of his last meal.

I shove myself off the ground. Zephyr releases, then flaps off to his Plumacat. The vibration he sends behind him — an exultation at my rising to my feet. I waver, grab for Perry-Fucin-A, take an orange-flavored chug of the fizzy water that keeps replenishing in my Jesus-curse bottle. I’m crazy-thirsty. The hot water isn’t as refreshing as it could be. But this is Hell. I’ll take what I can get. A moment before the flask empties, I pull it away from my lips, letting the fizzy water refill. My waist tinges with pain. I look down. My white fiery phoenix T-shirt is now covered in multi-colored crud — yellow sulfur crap, brown and purple dirt, black and red blood, the off-white mesh of Plumacat spittle. I guess I could’ve picked a color other than white for Hell. But what this fuck, this isn’t a fashion show. My wound is clearly visible through a hole in my shirt. The stuff Featherstar spat-licked over it covers and fills the broken skin and what must be a deep gash. I poke it. It’s rough on the outside, squishy and wet on the inside. It throbs with my heartbeat. As I look, I can kinda see it drawing my flesh together.

“Fucking gross! Cool!” I exclaim. I can’t help myself. Body stuff is always weird. But spit that can heal you is also pretty goddamn cool. I take a breath, drag a somewhat clean patch of my shirt across my eyes to clear them of crud, then look out across the battlefield. Five feet away from me is the devil leader’s dead body. His nasty axe is embedded in the ground ten feet away. His Vortex careened past us and now rests at the gully’s bottom. I draw my moonshadow blade from the air. It never went away. Even after I lost consciousness. My energetic vessel, continuously filling with a deluge of wisp energy, keeps it powered up. Slicing down, I rupture the devil leader’s worb. Wisps flood up the blade in a bright wash of light then shift into my name curse or shadow. A fucking hundred and forty four all come from this one devil’s worb. Sixty three bright wisps, eighty one dark. My shadow swarms. My name curse spits out a second roman candle. Three hundred and fucking nine wisps and I’m responsible for every frigging one. Eighty bright wisps, two hundred and twenty nine dark. I feel like I’m standing on a volcano of magical potential. My energetic vessel surges. I’m gonna need fucking all of it.

I turn. Dead devils are all around. This devil leader’s force of about fifty — destroyed. Its scattered remnants are falling to a nearby barrage of Urdrake light flashes. Further off, I can see more lights lancing through the dawn. Zorfang’s force is still raining his laser-like volleys on the scorpions. One is derelict, burning. The others are wandering, hurling their massive Hell balls in random directions. The small force of about ten Vortexes that surrounded these scorpions are further off, fleeing back toward Overseer Tower. I pump my fist in the air. “Fuckin A! Zorfang did it!”

My eyes follow the retreating Vortexes. In the new light of Hell’s dawn, I can see them making toward a bridge overwatched by wicked towers. The bridge crosses a wide and gaping chasm. Its dark inside — full of creeping shadows. Sunken Crag is what Theri and Zel called it. Looks crazy-nasty. On the bridge’s far side, the faint outlines of more lumbering scorpions waver through a pollution haze of Vortex exhaust. The rest of Overseer’s might on its way to crush us. Dropping my eyes, I shift focus back to my immediate surroundings. A few prone bodies of Plumacats and Mottles are scattered among the dead clusters of devils. My heart makes this jarring lurch as I absorb the losses. They call me father. I feel like a father. In a way I am. My magic and Zaya’s gave them this desperate new life.

I turn to Featherstar, lay a hand on her heavily-muscled shoulder. Her feathers rustle beneath my touch. They’re both tough and soft. A mix of down and armor. “Featherstar,” My voice chokes despite my efforts to keep it clear. “Gather the wounded and dead. Tell the wounded to shelter in this gully.” I point down and behind me. “Leave two Plumacats and a Mottle to help them. Have these three also set aside our dead. Separate from the devils. I also want them to collect the devils’ worbs. We’ll free those wisps and honor our lost when we win this.” I’m trying to convey confidence. I’m pretty fucking certain we’re unlikely to win. But there’s no way we’ll win if we don’t believe. Zephyr lands on Featherstar, they leap-fly off, gather with a cluster of joined Mottles and Plumacats, then disperse to get it done.

Positions of Resister and Devil forces during the Battle of Sunken Crag, Dark Web Revelations

By the time Featherstar’s returned, I’ve made a rough assessment of our present state. Looks like we have seven dead and six wounded. Minus the three I’m leaving to take care of our casualties, that leaves us with sixty three Mottles, Plumacats, and Urdrakes, including me, Zaya, Theri and Zel. Zorfang’s thirteen still seem to be going strong. So our total effective force is seventy six. Peering out beyond Sunken Crag, the movement I’m glimpsing hints as hundreds.

Zel and Theri clamber up the gully to me. “You all right?” Zel asks. “We saw you go down. Looked pretty bad.”

“I’ll live,” I reply with a half-smile. “For now.”

“That’s a relief,” Theri says, then reaches a hand out to pat my shoulder. She seems to be assuring herself I’m still live and in the flesh.

“Thanks for the worry.” I say, grabbing her hand and giving it a squeeze. I motion to the apparent horde of devils in the distance. “When we decided to start a rebellion against Overseer, I didn’t realize we’d be taking it all on in just one day.”

Zel laughs nervously and scratches a horn. Theri simply shrugs. “They’re pretty militarized. Plus they probably sensed your magic. That got them really riled. Then, well, we did this.” She motions around her at the carnage. “You linked up with a Vila and raised an army of forbidden forms. Not only is that incredible. It’s something that’s not happened in Minos for hundreds of years. Yeah. They’re riled.”

“Indeed they are,” I say.

“You got a plan?” Zel asks. “You gotta have a plan.”

“I’m pretty sure you asked me this before.”

“That was like minutes ago. Things change quick.”

This makes me laugh. “I always have a plan,” I say as I continue to scan the devil force. It’s mostly true. Mostly. What’s more true is I’m always coming up with hair brained ideas. But I gotta project confidence. I look down at the fucking Vortexes. I’m concocting another right about now. Yeah. We’re probably gonna need those awful things again. At least for a hot minute. “Speaking of… Do you know how many devils that fucking tower can throw at us?”

Theri turns back toward Overseer. “Maybe five hundred or so. Though I bet they’ll keep back a tower guard of about a hundred.”

“So you’re saying we’ve got like three hundred of those fuckers coming at us now? Complete with more scorpions and Vortex riders?”

Theri shrugs. “Probably. That’s the more or less of it.”

Holy Jesus fuck! I grit my teeth, biting back my curse. “Right. Well that makes my decision easy then. Featherstar!” I shout hoarsely to my Plumacat leader. She pads over. The other Plumacats have finished their victory feasting. The Mottles on their backs are quiet. My team of nine Urdrake scrabble up from the gully. “Good, I see I’ve got everyone’s attention.” I motion to the derelict Vortexes. “It looks like we’ve managed to capture about thirty five of these working nasties. I want everyone to grab one. Pair off. Mottle — I want you to share my learning about Vortex riding with the other Mottles. Then have them share that thinkum with everyone. Do it all in five minutes!” The Plumacats and Urdrake pad off to collect the bikes. I’m concerned about the Urdrake’s hulking forms, ungainly hands, and stubby legs. But with the Mottles helping, maybe my Urdrake can ride.

It takes them about three minutes to gather the thirty three working bikes. If we all pair off with a Mottle, that still leaves four behind. I turn to Grimjaw. “We don’t have quite enough. That’s OK. Your scouts are quick when teamed with Mottles. I want your six to follow us. But be fast!” I glance over to the scouts. They’d been fortunate and not suffered any losses.

“Yes father!” Grimjaw growls, then turns to his group of hunters. They line up. Ready. His response is pretty enthusiastic. Where he seemed to look down on me about an hour before, he now appears to have cemented his trust in my leadership. I’m guessing him watching me kill that devil leader in single combat might’ve clenched it.

I walk up to my chosen Vortex. It’s got devil’s blood splattered all over. My headache starts up again the moment I hear those poor souls wailing in the foul machine’s worb combustion chamber. I’m not happy about the damned stinking thing. But we need to move fast and this is all I can come up with. We’ll have to learn to do something else in future. I hate these machines fucking fierce. I jump on, turn to my company. “Mount up! We ride to those scorpions!” I shout, pointing to the machines careening back and forth about four miles away.

My company clambers onto the Vortexes. They’re awkward at first. The Urdrakes stumble. A few topple off, remount. Their Mottles stretch bodies wide to help them balance. If things weren’t so urgent, it’d be comical. Kinda like a bunch of mini Godzillas trying to ride a kid’s bike. At last, after about a minute of scuffling around, we’re off. The worb’s howls rip at my ears. I grit my teeth. We’re maybe six, seven minutes away at this pace. As I ride, I drag my hand through omnis scientia. Zorfang’s no longer huffing. He’s stationary just north of the Razor Hills and about five miles south of those scorps in the Wisp Fields. I guess he needed to take a breather. “Zorfang!” I shout through the sensor.

“Yes father!” He harooms.

“Stop shooting at those scorpions! Looks like you got ’em! More nasties are coming at us from Overseer! I want you to move northwest! Get back into some hills and keep an eye on the bridge crossing Sunken Crag! It’s that big bridge to the north crossing that massive canyon! I might send someone to help you in a bit! Now get going!”

“We move!” Zorfang shouts.

Four victories against the devils so far. But the big fight’s still ahead. I focus on keeping my motley crew together as we angle in toward the scorpions. Glancing over at the horde of devils boiling out of Overseer in the hot Hell dawn, I crack a half-grin. The bastards must be really freaking out about now. Let them.

********

New day falls hot on an Overseer Tower trembling with the force of Regina Rouge’s rage. The two Dark Psychics, one balled on the floor, flayed and burned by the lash of her scourge, the other quivering in fear, are useless. Too blinded by religious zeal to give her an accurate report on this impossible mage. The pair of doltish guards at the door, casting their emotionless stares out and past her, only annoy her further. A simpering Uktena — Trandix — whirls its red serpent body through the air about twenty feet off, too cowardly to face her. She wheels on Reiza, the second Dark Psychic. Her Holocaust Scourge roars with heat, withers the air, her worb crackles as it grinds down scores of souls to power it. She drinks in the wisps’ pain, revels in Reiza’s terror. Paltry balm.

“Now, Reiza…” she says as she caresses the Dark Psychic’s long, thin horn. It is delicate. Like an antenna. So easy to break. And yet sensitive, capable of channeling wisp energy, of projecting senses far, of seeing through the eyes of other Dark Psychics. “… Show me how this mage defeated my Lavross. Your vision will not flinch. You will supply better answers. Or…” she looks down at Orloxx.

On the ground, in a pool of his own blood, Orloxx whimpers. His pained convulsions cause scorched skin to crackle. The sweet smell of his half-cooked flesh rises to Reiza’s nostrils. He doesn’t dare look down at Orloxx. There’s no help for him. Whether Reiza shares his fate hangs on the whims of the enraged Regina. Reiza takes a breath, extends a hand to Regina. “As my Lady directs. Take my hand and embrace the Web’s darkness. Travel to see what Asmodeus’s threads have witnessed,” the ancient ritual provides comfort. Its words, spoken countless times throughout his order, provide a brief illusion of normal. His horns buzz as his worb grinds out the soul energy needed to power his diabolical magic.

Regina flicks her scourge at him. Flames tease over his skin. His worb’s innate defenses bend back. He lets out a whimper as pain shoots through him. He knows there’s nothing he can do to prevent Regina from lashing him down into a smoldering lump. His order will petition Asmodeus to punish her for mistreating Orloxx. But it will do him no good if she also turns her scourge on him. So he ignores the pain, then grinds down his captured wisps again. In their outcry, he begins to conjure the Asmodeus-blessed vision of the Web.

Regina, at last satisfied Reiza will try to act as commanded, accepts the vision. But instead of taking his hand, she tightens her grip around his frail horn. Reiza gasps at this personal violation, glances down at Orloxx, says nothing. “Now show me!” Regina commands.

The Dark Psychic’s worb wails. Cries of captive souls and a flood of devil-magic washes over them, casting their senses into the great Minosian Web. A filigree of connections spreading between thousands of Dark Psychics scattered over Minos, this Web carries the sight of Asmodeus and his Hell Lords out across Hell’s lands, over waters, through its skies, even crossing time. The strands of energy running between each Psychic drink up surrounding events like a world-spanning eye. The Web is also the heart of the Dark Psychics’ faith. In which their made-Web and its informant-devout grants Asmodeus god-like omniscience — placing them both as his priests and as arbiters of reality on Minos.

Regina, guided by such a Dark Psychic, allows her senses to be pulled back in time along the Web. Lets this fanatical devotee of Asmodeus bring her sight to the pre-dawn Wisp Fields. They stare down on a gully. Watch the flashes of magical sparks shooting out from the mage, glowing brightly, blinding Talith’s Lance.

“Closer,” Regina commands. “I want to see that mage up close and personal. I want to breathe his breath. Smell his air. See his magic flow! Now do it!” Orloxx had brought her back to this point. Then, for some reason, the fanatic turned into a blithering fool. Refusing her commands, he backed out. The punishment she gave for defying her orders was the least that he deserved. He’d cost her precious time as moments bled by. She turns her furious spectral gaze, cast out through the Web’s structure, onto Reiza.

The Dark Psychic feels the heavy force of her anger through the Web. He rushes to obey. Reiza begins to focus the Web to bring their view closer. Flinches as he sees the mage, then freezes. “It is not possible! This is Blasphemy!” He cries.

Regina tightens down on the Dark Psychic’s horn. “Stop your limp-brained bleating. Now, show me what Orloxx would not. Show me what he was too weak and fanatical to reveal, or so help me I will burn you to a cinder,” Regina commands.

The pain in Reiza’s horn as Regina grips and twists jars his connection with the Great Web. The spirit of Asmodeus flowing through its strands around him flickers. In front of him, the impossible stares him directly in the face. It spits at him — defiling everything he thinks he knows. Yet unlike Orloxx, Reiza isn’t willing to die for his dogma. He grits his teeth, lifts his hand, then allows the Web to carry Regina’s sight closer.

Regina gasps as she sees the little mage. A girl! Her mage energy not even yet fully formed. Sparks fly from a sigil on her arm. An impossibly large wave of magic bursts out. It washes through the Web. Leaving her stunned for a moment. Again, Regina cannot understand how the mage is displaying so much power. Again, she feels a great, gnawing hunger to possess this grand wisp. She focuses her sight on that wisp and… RECOILS. The girl’s wisp is certainly large and powerful. But it does not account for all the magical energy she’s emitting. Not even a fraction. As Regina pushes forward, she can see that wisp interlaced with a great internal structure running out from an illegible sigil in her arm. It creates, inside her, something like a full-body worb. But this worb is just a vessel. It contains none of the grinding structures devils use to milk wisp energy. Within this worb are numerous wisps. They are prey spirits from Earth. Regina’s eyes shift and she sees the girl’s shadow. Inside are various prey wisps and then she sees them — devils’ wisps! The girl has captured both prey wisps and devils’ wisps together. Their energy is feeding a massive vessel of energy shaped like a great chalice beneath the girl’s own larger wisp. From this, she flings the powerful explosions of magic Regina is now watching.

Regina doesn’t know how to process what she’s seeing. “That girl is a devil and a mage? She uses something like a worb?” She asks Reiza. “Is this what Orloxx couldn’t show me?”

Reiza foams at the mouth. His spectral body along the Web twitches. “It is not POSSIBLE,” Reiza proclaims, his eyes rolling in madness. “This sight is a blasphemy!”

Regina’s gut churns. She feels an unexpected tinge of sympathy for the Dark Psychic. All in Hell were devoted to Asmodeus, fanatical in the belief that devil-kind are exceptional due to their worbs. That worbs grant them the special privilege of preying on and profiting from the souls of lesser beings. Yet this mage — supposed to be the most desirable of devils’ prey — used something like a worb not for predation but for protection.

“Show me more!” Regina commands. The sight is gut-churning. Sets off a cascade of fear that runs through her in a novel jolt.

“You do not want to see. The wrongness!” Reiza is arching back, rebelling against what he senses further down the Web. Regina’s flick of her Holocaust Scourge in response is almost half-hearted. Reiza, propelled by another wave of pain, at last relents and pushes their Web-meshed senses forward in time. Regina watches the mad play of the girl’s wisp magic combine with the assault of forbidden forms — Plumacats, Mottles — and a pair of Blue Devils to slay Talith’s Lance. The display is brutal, stunning. Plumacats devouring dead devils on the lands they rule, the mage defiling worbs with her obscenly powered sword of light and shadow. An excess of wisps flooding back out, free. Then, Regina flinches as a Vila flies up to the mage, touches her hand in what looks like a lover’s caress, then draws deep from the mage’s housed wisp energy.

“That Vila is using wisps!!” Reiza rants as the sending from the Web freezes yet again.

“I can see that you moron! Now shut your mewling mouth and show me the rest!” Regina doesn’t have to flick her scourge again. Reiza’s flesh is already raw and pained from the first gentle lash. She can smell the fear rising off him. For once, she praises Asmodeus for the cowardice of her subject. With hands balled and eyes closed, Reiza pushes the vision forward. The Vila drinks deep from the mage’s magic. Thunderbolts rise around them as the Vila shapes more than forty forbidden forms from the wisps ripped out of the devils’ and Vortexes’ worbs. All in an instant! Some wisps still remain. Ten of these are from the dead devils themselves. With a shout and another flash of lightning, the Vila transfers these wisps into the worb-like structures within the mage’s shadow.

The vision continues, as devastation orbs from Regina’s scorpions begin to rain down and the mage gathers her force to flee.

“Enough!” Regina says. “I have seen enough!”

Reiza whimpers in relief as he backs them out from the Great Web. She lets go of him. He crumbles to the floor, simpering. “Thank you Lady. You are merciful.” He doesn’t sound at all sincere. Regina doesn’t care. Her thoughts are whirling.

“That mage. So young. Not even ripe for the plucking. Her wisp, still not full-grown. And yet she possesses a thing like a worb that lets her take wisps,” Regina whispers.

“Blasphemy! Great Asmodeus, it is Blasphemy!” Reiza shouts as his body lurches back and forth on the balcony floor. The guards’ gaze, which was set far off, now falls directly on Regina. Their faces display naked horror at her words.

Regina ignores them. To keep control of the situation, she must know the actual facts. Succumbing to the comforts of belief right now could be lethal. Letting her subjects steep in their shock and denial, she paces back toward the balcony as she speaks. “Some of these wisps are devils. So she even captures us.” The words sound so odd, so foreign, spilling from her mouth. But she can’t stop herself from talking. This discovery compels her with its awfulness to continue. “The mage holds wisps without hurting them. The wisps give energy freely to help her. A Vila uses the mage’s wisp energy to make forbidden forms — en masse.”

Those on the balcony with her are stunned into silence.

Regina looks out over the Wisp Fields. Beneath her, Dressler’s three Centuries have formed and are moving out toward Sunken Crag. Beyond, Lavross’s force lays ruined and defeated. A Lance of Vortexes fleeing back toward Dressler and four defunct scorpions — all that remains. “Now I know how she beat them.”

Trandix flies down to her cautiously. “My lady, if I may suggest, perhaps we should send word to Lanthver?”

Regina whirls on Trandix. “Why would we ask for aid from our chief rival? He’ll only exploit our weakness.”

“He is closest. The most likely to reach us should we…” The Uktena trails off. Surprisingly, his hint at a possible defeat doesn’t anger her. Regina considers.

“Ready my carriage,” she says at last. “If Dressler fails, we shall not throw ourselves on the mercy of Lanthver. We will instead retire to our estates in Mechanum where we will petition Asmodeus himself. This mage is…” She chooses her words carefully. “She represents a threat to all devil-kind. Hell’s High Lord must know of this. In the meantime, we shall ensure that we do not need to withdraw. That we…” she pauses again. “That we capture her and take her to Asmodeus ourselves for a gift. A prize.”

Those on the balcony continue to stare at her silence. The relinquishing of a mage wisp to another, even to Asmodeus, is a rare event. Yet Regina knew what they yet did not. This mage is too young to be taken. An unformed wisp like hers would not yield the same power in a worb. And the power she commanded was mostly not her own. The mage had stolen it from its rightful overseers — the devils.

“No. We shall cow this interloper. She shall bring her to heel. We shall present her to Asmodeus as our gift. When we do, we shall be celebrated as heroes across Minos!”

“It shall be so, great Lady,” Trandix hisses.

“Then go. Prepare my carriage.” Regina turns to Reiza. He’s finally standing again. Only lightly burned, he seems to have gathered himself well enough. “And you — send to Dressler. Tell him that our mage is a girl whose wisp is only aged seventeen years. Still unripe by its scent. Tell him to slay all her companions, then to bring her to me in chains. Tell him also that she has a Vila and the ability to rapidly increase her numbers. That she will assault him with a large group of forbidden forms. About eighty now. Possibly double that if she uses the wisps she finds.”

Reiza grits his teeth and closes his eyes against these uttered blasphemies. “And shall I tell him how the mage does this?”

“No. No need to disturb Dressler in his work. If he asks, just say that she uses a novel form of curse magic.”

“Thank you, Lady,” Reiza says in relief.

“Very well. Then do it.”

Reiza begins to close his eyes to access Asmodeus’s great web. It seems somehow defiled to him now after the horror it just bore witness to.

“Oh, and Reiza. Tell Dressler not to fail me.” She motions to the prone form of Orloxx, now still in death. “I will not take failure of any kind against this mage lightly.”

********

Dressler rides his gilded Vortex amidst the great gathering of Overseers forces. Its twin worbs wail with an excess of gathered power. His own worb swells with inky tendrils of dark power. In his hand, a spear of Hell glass. An obsidian colored metal mined directly from the heart of Infernian volcanoes.

Around him mass three Centuries. Each devil under his command torn from their frantic wisp harvesting efforts and shifted suddenly to an equally frantic response to a mage’s attack. The notion of a mage attacking a stronghold like Overseer Tower rankles. Mages are hunted. They are prey. Certainly strong prey capable of resisting. Yet they were unable to stand against the might of Hell. Made to flee when faced with the overwhelming force of Asmodeus’s power — his Curse Riders, his mighty millions upon millions of devils — each commanding the diabolical magic of multiple enslaved souls housed and bound within their worbs.

Not this mage. This mage. This girl, if the servile Dark Psychic, Slevelth, riding beside him were to be believed. Somehow, she’d gathered together a large force of forbidden forms. Somehow, she’d managed to use them in a coordinated series of attacks and ambushes to annihilate Lavross’s Century in a rampage through the Wisp Fields. Dressler knew well the dangers presented by forbidden forms. He was old enough to remember their attacks and the rebellions that spanned Minos for hundreds of years following Asmodeus’s first rise to Hell’s throne nearly three thousand years ago. Their attacks were brutal. Dressler blinks as he remembers the devils slain by the thousands. Consumed as Plumacats, Urdrake, Mottles, Vila, Bowflits and other, rarer forms lashed out against Asmodeus’s new dominion. Back then, there were no mages. Now, a mage had somehow taken command of these ancient enemies.

“Regina and Reiza touched the great Web,” Slevelth drawls. “They say the mage commands around eighty forbidden forms. They say she has a Vila and that somehow she can make more of them. Regina says to expect up to a hundred and sixty or more by the time we engage.”

Dressler scoffs. Slevelth has been blithering on like this for about five minutes. Half of what he says sounds like raving. “She says there is only one Vila?” He asks the cleric evenly.

Slevelth blinks his toad-like eyes, smacks his fat lips, seems incredulous. “Indeed. That’s what I’ve been telling you. It defies everything we know to be true.”

Dressler nods. “Perhaps our dear lady has taken some leave of her senses in the face of this unprecedented catastrophe.”

Slevelth extends a hoary finger covered in golden rings to his mouth as he considers. “Reiza wouldn’t intentionally misrepresent…”

“Yes. But this is battle. First reports are often confused.” Dressler snaps. He runs a hand through his blonde crop of hair sprouting up from glossy red-black skin, then tips his horns toward Slevelth indicating a deference to this cleric’s station that is lacking in any sincerity. “Your great Web may be perfectly accurate. But what others see through it is still subject to interpretation.” Dressler had been on the wrong end of the moronic clerics’ ‘interpretations’ numerous times in the past. He often found what the Dark Psychics saw and shared simply reflected their own biases.

“True,” Slevelth answers, scoops a bit of meat from between his teeth, considers it, then flicks it away. “Though I do not understand what would make Regina or Reiza give such reports. If inaccurate, they are vile blasphemies.”

Dressler pauses. “Yes. But fear of death in battle is often fodder for insane utterances. We shall work with what we know. If a scout can confirm these reports of sudden mass generation of forbidden forms, then we will act accordingly. Until then, let us not be paralyzed by fear of a phantom force that does not exist.”

Slevelth licks his lips, smacks them, draws a living squibble from the vat sloshing about on a chain hanging from his bulbous waist, shoves it into his mouth, bites down on the delicacy. “You are the battle commander…” CRUNCH, “…for a reason. I defer to your…” CRUNCH, “…illustrious experience.” Slevelth has made speaking with his mouth full a kind of grotesque performance art. Dressler had long-since grown used to averting his gaze from the spectacle of masticated bits of various creatures swirling around Slevelth’s words.

Dressler gives a stiff nod. “We shall take the Wisp Fields,” he says to Slevelth. “Send Gormak’s Century out ahead toward the rebels’ main group to the south. Only Vortexes. Keep his scorpions with the command base here. Tell Gormak to fix those rebels in place. Ready all our scorpions to destroy Lavross’s derelict scorpions once we get in range. Then have them hurl a suppression spread against the Urdrake near the Razor Hills. I want a flight of Uktena to ride ahead with Gormak. When he closes, I want them to jump in and use their poison bites to incapacitate the mage and her Vila. Then do the same with any others in the rebel command. Keep them alive for questioning. Kill the rest. Forward!” He says the last with a salute.

Slevelth rolls his bulbous eyes back into his toad head as he dutifully relays Dressler’s orders. Gormak’s Century roars off toward the bridge crossing at Sunken Crag. Dressler keeps his command center in the cluster of twelve scorpions. Around him swirl two Vortex Centuries held in reserve. Once they cross Sunken Crag, he’ll deploy these on the mage’s flanks. Dressler grudgingly admits this girl mage had surprised them so far. But now that her hand is revealed, her forces visible and counted, there is no escape for her. No way out.

“And Slevelth…”

“Yes, Overseer Dressler,” Slevelth hisses around the slobber in his mouth.

“If you will consult your Web to confirm the mage’s numbers. To make sure she doesn’t have any more hidden surprises, that would be most helpful.” Dressler doubted there was much truth to Regina and Reiza’s fearful ravings. But the mage had somehow concealed a sizeable force in the Wisp Fields and Razor Hills. Perhaps Slevelth could provide him with more reliable information instead of these rumors and ravings coming from Overseer. Not that he blamed Regina. Forbidden forms were well outside the context of such a young Hell Lord. Even the older devils, like him, retained only faded memories of those earlier, troubled years of Asmodeus’s first reign.

“Indeed, consider it done. All for the glory of Asmodeus.”

“For the glory of Asmodeus,” Dressler says evenly.

********

Corviss crawls, mostly blind, through the hot sands. Minutes before, he heard the loud Vortexes rush by. Saw Lavross out of the corner of one eye. Tried to jump. Landed in a nearby mound of scree. Now, with Lavross nowhere his Urdrake-ruptured senses can detect, he curses as he scrabbles toward the scorpions.

“Lavross!” He hisses despondently. At least the great machines are still lumbering toward him. He pops up onto a rise, spins his head to bring the great machines into his peripheral vision, then quivers in fear. No longer moving toward him, they lurch under a barrage of flashes coming from the Urdrake. The beasts must be closer now to effectively bring their heating and blinding rays down on the machines and their devil operators. Corviss can barely make out a smaller group of Vortexes beneath the scorpions. He’s gathering himself to scrabble toward them when they turn tail and flee.

“No!” Corviss hisses in despair. Then, in the distance, he hears the sound of approaching Vortexes. Glancing again at the scorpions, Corviss sees that Urdrake barrage has stopped. Did Lavross defeat the mage? Corviss spins toward the approaching Vortexes. They are loud. Numerous. It must be Lavross. Who else could it be?

********

I drive my stinking, wailing Vortex at the head of my motley formation. We shoot away from the gully and its carnage. The Wisp Fields surround us. Zaya, sitting in my lap, is drawing in what wisps we come across. They trail behind in a swarm of lights. About thirteen. But more join with each passing minute. My energetic vessel’s again past half full. I’ve got a big jolt coming in from all the extra wisps now huddled in the protective magic provided by my name curse from my battles along the gully. The three hundred and nine blaze like a liquid sun within me. There’s gonna be literal fucking Hell to pay for those devils at Overseer once I figure out what the fuck I’m gonna do with all this extra magic.

Our company of awful, wailing, headache producing, lung wrecking Vortexes steadily closes in on the scorpions. They stumble about like confused monsters who’ve suddenly lost whatever terrible will impelled them. One lays smoldering on the ground. I can see their crews now. They scramble back and forth, doing this weird, blind man’s bluff, series of movements as they fumble at controls or turn in disoriented circles. Some lay still, shot down by the Urdrake lights even at extreme range.

We’re running in toward the scorpions from about two miles off when I hear a yowl from a Plumacat as it angles off from our company.

“What the fuck?” I say to myself, then shouting louder after the Plumacat, I yell — “Stick together!”

The Plumacat ignores me. I recognize it as the ornery Rarhquick. Go figure. It’s a fucking cat… velociraptor… bird… thing… You get the picture. Shooting out to the left about three hundred yards, the errant Plumacat stops, leans down, then picks up something that looks like a flailing red ribbon. I don’t know what I’m looking at for a second and then I realize it’s the fucking flying red snake I had the Urdrakes shoot at earlier. It must be. It’s covered all over in scorch marks. With a giant, fang-filled, grin and what I imagine must be a gigantic purr, the Plumacat mounts back onto its Vortex, then races toward me with his prize held high.

“What’s going on?” Zaya says to me from where she’s crouched between my arms as she peers out to look at the Plumacat.

“Goddamn,” I reply. “I think we just captured our first effing prisoner.”

(New to the Helkey multiverse? Haven’t yet read the first chapter? You can find it here: Helkey 1 — The Memory Draught.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

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Helkey 32 — Battle of Sunken Crag, Thunderbolts Rise

The Vortex’s warbling quiets as I pull up to the scattering of Hell-bikes. Moonshadow blade in hand, I leap from the Vortex. “Good riddance! Nasty thing!” I shout as I kick it over, slashing its worb in half. Two handfuls of wisps flow out in a viscous gush of fossil fuel crap. The wisps lift. Finally liberated from the worb. It lays broken on the ground. A dark sphere whose insides remind me of razors, geodes and reaction chambers. The wisps rise up. Sluggish. Beleaguered. Relieved. I run to another Vortex, cut its wisps free, then pivot to smash a devil’s worb, move on to the next. In a half minute of flurried activity, all twenty-odd worbs are broken. About a hundred wisps drift around me. I’m swimming in a soup of souls.

Plumacats pause in their devouring rampage. Their raptor gaze tracks me. I’m doing my best to ignore their feast. It sickens. A fierce justice. What did Grimjaw say? Something about preying on predators. I turn to Zaya, she’s right behind me, a hopeful expression overlays the desperation on her face. Her eyes reflect fire blazing from the meteor-like orbs rising from the distant scorpions, arcing toward my poor Urdrakes. They’re running flat out again. I can hear Zorfang’s raspy breathing through omnis scientia. All as out on the Wisp Fields, the distant Vortex-wail from the main group of devils grows louder. Though it’s still faint, I figure they’ll be on top of us in less than ten minutes.

I reach my hand out to Zaya. “Are you ready?”

Zaya takes a breath, sings a brief note to draw the collection of wisps in closer. “Yes.” The word is soft. Like telling a secret. She grabs my hand. Hers is so tiny. Fragile as a flower. I fold it into mine, focus on my energetic vessel. It’s nearly doubled in size since I last focused my mage sight upon it. Despite my excessive use of magic, it’s still three quarters full. More energy than I know what to do with. Except for this — liberating souls from goddamn devils. Gifting them with a second life and the ability to fight back. I feel the spark run between myself and Zaya as our energies merge. Mottle quivers on my back. He senses the energy too.

“Ready. Let’s make it right.”

Zaya smiles, sings words like the wind, the rain. Words I cannot understand, but in my mind I see them as the vital songs of glaciers. Of deep fjords. Of cold, teeming oceans. Zaya’s is the song of a living world. Not this tortured place — choking on its own poisoned spew and vomit. The sparks between us lift. My energetic vessel forms a wave of magical force. It explodes outward in streaks of lightning rising into the green Hell sky. Painting the pre-dawn night in an instant of white. Wisps around us are taken in by the flashes. They elongate, forming translucent glowing sacks that bulge into flesh. Feathers sprout. Horns and shells elongate or harden. Bat-like tapestries spread. The light fades. I’m momentarily blind. When my eyes adjust, ten new Urdrake, fifteen Mottles and eighteen Plumacats stand, flop, or crouch before me. Our force of thirty-seven has now grown to eighty. I shift my magical sight back to my energetic vessel. It’s still about a quarter full.

Zaya’s song continues. She took more than last time. I now have far more to give. She’s not using any of her own reserves. She’s alert, her bright eyes lighting up with the sparks of our magical embrace. Her song shifts, swirling in the dark wisps passed over by her music. They bleed into my shadow in a flood. It bulges, spouts tendrils, forms wicked shapes that would make for great Halloween costume fodder back home. Here in Hell, it’s more than a little freaky. Like my shadow’s about to eat me up. Maybe it wants to. One hundred and forty eight dark wisps now lurk behind me. Seventeen bright wisps dance in my name curse. My energetic vessel, now nearly empty after Zaya’s final use of my magic, begins to rapidly fill. I sway in the heat. Magic’s outrush has left me light-headed. The in-rush — buzzing.

I scan the gradual land depression where we stand. We’re somewhat hidden. Though I don’t think the oncoming devils got a direct view of what Zaya and I just did, they sure as Hell saw that light show. Shit’s going to be coming at us fast and hard now. I look at the new-formed as they stare back at Zaya and me with eyes filled with love and wonder. We don’t have time to talk it all out with them. I’ve got maybe a minute before I need to get everyone moving again. Suddenly, the scorpions light up, flinging four more Hell balls. These rise along a new path. I don’t have to glance for more than a moment to see they’re heading directly toward us. Yeah. They saw our magical lights all right. I’d hoped Zorfang would get into position in time to start attacking the scorpions by now. But he’s still running flat out from under the second volley of Hell balls.

I touch Mottle as I lurch back from my magical embrace with Zaya. I need you to get the other Mottles. Tell them to fly over to the new-formed. Give them as much of what we know as they can in about a minute. Do it on the run!

Mottle hesitates. You are weak, he thinks in his matter-of-fact way.

“Yes,” I reply out loud. “No help for it. Now go so you can get back to me fast.”

Mottle flits off. His leaving sets me reeling. I didn’t realize how much he was supporting me physically. Now I feel like I weigh about a thousand pounds. I can barely stand without him. Mottle lands on Zephyr. They both vibrate, calling in the other Mottles. All from our thirty seven fly over. The new-formed Mottles hesitate a moment and then respond to the vibration. Soon there’s a huge pile of Mottles all sharing their thought-touch. I turn to the non-Mottles.

“We gotta run.” I point to the sky at the meteors gradually rising. “That is our destruction. Featherstar! You gather the new-formed Plumacats, run to the end of that gully.” I point to the crevice from which our ambushing scouts emerged. “Wait for the rest of us to catch up. It’ll provide enough cover.” I hope it’ll provide enough damn cover. The crevice’s deeper portion is about a quarter mile away. Featherstar doesn’t hesitate, she nods acknowledgement, meow-talks a few commands to her group, then pairs up to guide the newformed and wounded as they run off together. The new-formed lope out on shaky legs, slowing them down. The two wounded Plumacats, now off their bikes, limp but manage to keep pace as healthy cats help them along. Their movement is still faster than I could run flat out. They’re Plumacats after all.

I shoo Theri and Zel along after them. They don’t have their nasty Vortex bikes anymore. So they’re going to have to haul ass to keep up with the Plumacats. They seem to realize this. After a quick glance between them, they’re off — trailing behind the sleek, quick predators. Zaya hovers near me. She’s blinking in confusion. I can tell she’s afraid but wants to hang back with me.

“What are you looking at?” I ask her. “Why aren’t you gone yet?”

Zaya approaches, touches my head. “But…” she trails off. She can see I’m swaying on my feet. She’s clearly worried about me and is terrified at the same time as the giant Hell balls gradually close in.

I grab her hand, touched by her concern despite myself. “I’ll be OK, Zaya. I’m a tough girl. Now go on. I want you with those Plumacats!” I motion to the swiftly receding black-feathered forms of the velociraptor-tigers. Zaya at last relents. With a sigh, she flies off, her iridescent wings forming a rainbow blur around her in the growing orange glow.

“You’d better be there!” she shouts over her shoulder as she flies off.

I blow out a sigh. What’s it about Zaya that makes me feel so… here? She’s got this unique ability to connect. To show care and concern. I shake my head, forcing my thoughts back to the present emergency. The Mottles have all finished their thought-transfer thing. As one, they flap off like a swarm of bats from their roost at eventide. Mottle returns to me. I let out a breath I didn’t realize I was holding. Yeah. Hell is too goddamn hot without Mottle to keep me cool. I don’t even think I can breathe this foul air without him. I’ll need to work up some kind of magic to keep me standing at some point. I’m no friggin’ expert on healing magic like auntie Sadie, though. So I’ll be blundering around in the magical darkness. First things first. Don’t get burned up by the devils’ weaponized versions of soul meteors.

The Mottles are chasing around some fearful Urdrakes. I lift my hand. “It’s OK,” I shout to the Urdrakes. “They won’t hurt you!” The ten Urdrakes stop to blink at me. I’m not sure they’re cluing in on what I’m saying. But they slow down enough for the Mottles to land. The words cost me. My head swims again. I bend at the waist, grab my knees. My heart’s racing. I feel like I’m having some kind of heat-induced asthma attack. Goddamn, I’m so fucking lagging right now.

“Ouch! Wow! That feels so much better!” Mottle just landed on my back and bit-fed the effing daylights out of me. Headrush! Whew! Do I feel stronger! Mottle is like a goddamn flying medic and food source combined. His bite IV injections nourish, rejuvenate, stimulate. “Thanks,” I say to him. He says you’re welcome by quivering. In the time it’s taken me to absorb the nutrition and energy Mottle’s injecting into me, the other Mottles have filled the Urdrakes in enough on present events to have scared the living daylights out of them.

Three point toward the sky. One haroooms out the word “Death!”

“Yes! Good! We’re going to run like all get-out! Follow me!” I shout, then hop-glide about a hundred feet down into the gully. Its rough terrain blurs by below me. I land on a boulder. My breath’s still rasping, my heart’s still hammering. But Mottle’s taken the edge off. The other Mottles flap in beside me. They start to land. “Go! Go!” I shout to them, motioning to the Plumacats running away up ahead. The Mottles land, give me a vibrational quiver conveying reassurance and acknowledgement, then flap off fast toward the Plumacats. It takes about ten seconds for the Urdrake to catch up. When they do, I flap off about another hundred feet as Mottle turns me into the Myra version of a flying squirrel.

Overhead, the orange light of the Hell balls grows brighter. I look up and no longer see burnt up marshmallows. I’m now reminded of effing planet-bombs from that old anime Dad loves to watch — Starblazers. Yeah. The frigging devil “Gamilons” are raining down fucking planet bombs on my head. I shout at the Urdrake to move faster. They are running as flat-out as their stubby turtle legs will carry them. I’ve made about six of my flying squirrel jumps. We’re still about halfway from the gully’s end. I can feel the heat from the falling Hell balls on the back of my neck. I can feel it on Mottle too. He’s kind enough to share his heat feeling. I’m grateful-not-grateful. We’re not going to make it.

“Find cover!” I shout as the Urdrake rush up. The giant orange balls fall toward the broken wreckage of devil bodies and Vortexes some seven hundred feet away. I motion for them to jump behind rocks. They get it — flopping down behind boulders and into low spots. Doing the turtle thing, they draw their heads and legs into their shells. Cool. Wish I could do that. I jump down behind a rock. Mottle flops over me like a big, fleshy blanket. It makes me feel safe for a second. I push my senses out through omnis scientia. Hell if I’m gonna die, I might as well enjoy the show, right?

Four gigantic fireballs explode in the air about fifty feet above the wreckage from our last battle. A blast wave as a visible fucking wall of air and debris rips the place apart — flinging earth, bodies, the broken bikes in every frigging direction. A rapidly expanding ball of fire follows. I literally see rocks the size of cars disintegrate into bits as that fireball rips through them. With a roar that causes me to yell and grab my ears, the shockwave and fireball rushes toward us. It destroys every fracking thing in about the radius of a city block. Beyond that, it hurls a rain of debris. By the time the shockwave hits us, it’s slowed down to like category four hurricane force. Rocks the size and shape of knives fly over us. Sand and dirt blast around us. Mottle quivers from the force. It lasts a moment that seems like forever. Then a second blast wave hits us — sucking back toward the center of the goddamn explosion. Jesus fucking Christ! These things are goddamn nuclear! Once the second blast wave is gone, with my ears ringing in the tinnitus aftermath, I gather myself. I stand up. My limbs are all there. Mottle’s got some bad scratches. But he’s good too. We chose our boulder well. Its front face has literal shards of frigging red-hot rock embedded into it.

Positions of Myra’s Rebels and Devils of Overseer Tower during the Battle of Sunken Crag, Thunderbolts Rise

Now I know why Zorfang was so frigging distressed.

I motion to the Urdrake. “Better move!” I shout. My voice sounds quiet to me. Lucky if I didn’t get my eardrums blown clean out. Nine Urdrake stand, sprouting legs, arms, tails, head from out of shells. One doesn’t get up. Still laying face down on the ground. Too far out in the open, it got shredded by three large bits of shrapnel. Busted right through his shell and now he’s bleeding out. Oh fuck! I hop-glide over to the place where the turtle-monster lays. Arrive in time to hear his death rattle. My magical sight pierces his dying flesh, sees the wisp fading beneath. With a quick motion, I draw my moonshadow blade from the air. I’d never halted the magic feeding it. It leaps into my hand. I lay it flatwise across the Urdrake, extending its light and shadow to his wisp.

“Come on. Take it. There’s shelter here.” I lift my name-curse over him. It’s constantly shedding sparks now. Can’t be helped. Too much magical energy’s flowing through me to not be bleeding off major excess. Ignarus is mostly an after-thought. So pretty much everyone sees me for what I am. A mage blazing with magical energy.

The Urdrake’s wisp flickers, almost goes out, then lifts. Drawn by the moonshadow blade’s pull, it rides up the magic-formed sword and passes into my name curse. A bright wisp, if somewhat small and shrunken. The other bright wisps within my name curse cluster around it protectively, granting some of their energy to support it. I breathe out a sign. “I almost lost ya there. That’s good. Now take a rest. You’ve earned it.”

The other Urdrake are staring at me. Their mood is one of combined wonder and relief. I stand, dust some of the crud off. “Alright! We’re all safe or accounted for! Let’s move!” The Urdrake haroom acknowledgement. Then, together, we start running like Hell again. In about a minute, we’ve linked up with the Plumacats and Mottles. Our group of seventy-nine devil slayers is again mostly unscathed after the ambush and incoming fire. One loss — a new Urdrake, not five minutes alive, whose wisp I managed to make safe. It’s a loss I’m feeling pretty hard. And there are bound to be more. I blow out frustration. Despite my jangled feelings, I’m still having another “I’m alive!” wave of euphoria. It’s about the third tonight. No time for it. I’ve got to use this force before we’re all blown off the face of ever-hating-Minos. Hell. Minos is Hell. Yeah. That’s what devils call it. I’m a bit rattled and my emotions are all over the fracking place. That’s OK, it’s understandable. I got planet bombed and we just had our first death.

**********

Ranthvar drives in front of his Lance as it roars alongside four scorpions. Just minutes ago, the monstrous wisp harvesters had unleashed a barrage of devastation orbs. They were targeting Urdrakes along a ridge-line in the Razor Hills who’d given their position away by lighting up the sky. Ranthvar still doesn’t know what they were shooting at. Nor does he care. They’d been foolish enough to give themselves away. Now it’s their turn to feel the sting. The devastation orbs fall to impact. A series of explosions, impossibly bright and large even at this distance, blossoms over the ridge-line.

“If the Urdrakes are still on that ridge, they’re dead,” His second, Svelthre, speculates.

Ranthvar grunts affirmation, then shouts up to the scorpion crews. “Eyes front! Keep a watch for any of those tell-tale white lights. Ready another barrage!” The crews spring into action, pulling levers, they activate the wisp vats to harvest raw energy. Though not traditional worbs, the vats contain a fluid that sucks energy from the wisps. Hellish machinery attached to the vats transfers this power into a chamber in the massive scorpions’ tales. The orange globes of devastation orbs begin to form at the scorpion tail-tips. Growing as they fill with destructive force. Even from high up on the scorpion tails, Ranthvar can feel the orbs’ heat, hear the hum of their rising power.

They continue their steady advance. The distance between the scorpions and the ridge-line shrinks to seven miles. Lavross, is two miles ahead and moving swiftly now. Talith is already running up some of the smaller hills about six miles away. Ranthvar sees no sign of Amagash. No word’s come back from his Lance. He scratches his left horn-tip, wondering if the hot-head got himself into trouble. Won’t be the first time. The Urdrake on that ridge may number ten or more. If he engaged such a powerful group by himself, he might’ve suffered defeat. The longer contact with Amagash is broken, the more likely things went bad for him.

“Ol’ Amagash might be in trouble.” Ranthvar chuckles. The notion of Amagash defeated and sent limping back, humbled, triggers a warm glow of self-satisfaction in Ranthvar’s chest. Often, other devils thought of him as slow and plodding. He liked to think things through before acting. If others mis-interpreted his calculations for stupidity, so be it. Amagash had been one of those most ready to label Ranthvar ‘slow.’ Now who’s out there in the wind? Now who’s lost contact with the main Century as an unexpected large number of hostiles run rampant in the field. “Stupid hot-head,” Ranthvar mutters to himself in satisfaction. “Now maybe the glory will fall to Talith.”

Svelthre remains silent.

Then, up ahead, fire erupts. Talith has passed into a depression out of Ranthvar’s sight. Rifle reports loudly echo. Sparks rise, blossom into flares as bright as small suns, then fall down. Ranthvar’s breath catches. Even he, not yet an Overseer, can sense this magecraft. His nostrils flare as its saltpeter scent wafts out toward him. Strong. Very strong. Its presence calls to him. His inborn lust for power ignites. The wisp that produced such force is mighty, indeed. “Regina stands to gain much once she possess it,” Ranthvar mutters to himself. He can’t help but feel jealousy. “Such a soul…”

Then, from the hills and along a closer ridge, more white lights erupt. Urdrake are shooting their beams down on Talith! They’d moved, quick for Urdrake, to a new rise and are now firing their bright beams at Talith’s Lance. Ranthvar counts the lights before they fade. Thirteen! “Asmodeus’s Might!” Ranthvar curses despite himself. He points to the Urdrake’s new position. “See those lights!?” He shouts up to the scorpion commander.

The commander acknowledges with a thumbs up.

“Target and launch!”

In about ten heartbeats, the scorpion tails swing back, then lift in graceful arcs. Wom! Wom! Wom! Wom! The devastation orbs launch — growing in size even as they fly toward their targets. Closer now. The Urdrake will have less time to react. Ranthvar grins, reveling in the four blasts of outbound death and torment. This was battle. Not just some invigorating mage hunt. But a glorious fight against Asmodeus’s most ancient and hated foes. Ranthvar’s momentary elation is equal parts greed for the inevitable profit and glory of taking a mage wisp and religious zeal for the invincible might of Asmodeus.

“Ready!” He shouts up to the scorpion crew leader. The scorpions once more begin to hum as wisp vats churn out the energy needed to form devastation orbs. Ranthvar shifts his gaze back toward Talith. A second set of bright sparks shoots out, falls down. More rifle reports. Beneath that sound, Ranthvar guesses he hears a chorus of yowls — faint at this extreme distance. The Urdrake’s white lights blast through it all. His mind slowly churns through the incoming details. Thirteen Urdrake on the ridge. A mage and some other things fighting Talith in the depression. “How many of those bastards are out there?” He mutters to Svelthre.

“Enemies?” Svelthre asks with a sidelong glance to Ranthvar. “I’d guess at least twenty. Plus the mage.”

“I wonder if Amagash’s even still out there,” Ranthvar is careful to keep the relish out of his voice. But an unfamiliar feeling, a quiver of fearful uncertainty causes his horn tips to tingle. “I suppose there could be more.”

“No good information’s coming back,” Svelthre replies. “Regina’s freaking out. Sending in Dressler. Lavross is charging off to beat down a still unknown enemy.” Svelthre pauses. Tests her words. “This could be… challenging.”

Ranthvar grunts. In the back of his mind, a dark shadow begins to unfold. He imagines those hills swarming with Urdrake and other forbidden forms. Just waiting to pounce. He shakes his head. “You watch. Talith has them.” His assertion, though, belies his uncertainty.

In the depression, all is now quiet. He can’t see what’s happening over the land rise. It’s infuriating. Then, Asmodeus-be-damned white lightning shoots up into the sky. For an instant, all of the Wisp Fields are illuminated. Then, a second smaller flash silhouettes the depression’s rim.

“The fuck!?” Svelthre exclaims.

Ranthvar feels the same way. “That’s form maker-lightning.”

“We don’t have form makers,” Svelthre says.

“No way that mage has form makers. Unless…” Ranthvar’s slow-moving yet meticulous mind runs through the possibilities. Urdrakes on the ridge in large numbers. A mage. Form maker lightning. Forbidden forms come from… “It’s got to be a Vila. Asmodeus-damned Vila! And a mage! Fuck!”

Svelthre looks at him, aghast. Ranthvar is not known to descend into cursing or to fall prey to wild speculation. “A Vila? Isn’t that unlikely? Aren’t they all dead? Extinct?”

“Not all. Every now and then a Poacher finds one. There were rumors that a group of Poachers discovered a Vila out closer to the shore. They’d sent word to Regina, asking for quite the bounty. Regina demanded proof. They said they’d bring it along with other prizes. They were supposed to arrive at Overseer in a day or two.”

“Sounds dubious.”

“Listen. Look. Urdrake on the ridge. Talith now offers no resistance after getting hit by Urdrake, Plumacats and a mage. Then there is form-maker lightning. Forbidden forms!” Ranthvar tilts his head back to the scorpion crews. “All fire on Talith’s position in that depression!” Ranthvar points as he shouts.

The scorpion crew commander looks over his beast and down at Ranthvar. “Sir? Did I hear that right?”

“Do it!” Ranthvar shouts. “Don’t make me say it again!”

“But Talith!” Svelthre objects.

“Talith is dead!” Ranthvar exclaims, his words punctuated by the Wom! Wom! Wom! Wom! of scorpions releasing their devastation orbs.

**********

Lavross seethes with rage.

The firefight over Talith’s Lance was a fucking disaster. The mage conjured so much magic that it set half his force of Vortex riders to slavering at its delicious stench. Then, the mage hurled some kind of long-range accurate missile and blinding flare combined. The Urdrake blazed away at Talith’s Lance from the Razor Hills. The yowls of at least ten fucking Plumacats sounded through the cacophony. It was about that time when Lavross realized both Amagash’s and Talith’s Lances were both total losses. Then the fucking thunderbolts of form-making shot up into the sky amidst another wave of deliciously powerful magic. Lavross knew that probably meant only one thing. A Vila had linked up with the mage. They were turning wisps into fucking forbidden forms!

Lavross did not at all blame Ranthvar for hurling devastation orbs down on his prize. The mage thus-far had proven more wily and resourceful than anyone expected. The orbs would force the mage to scramble, would degrade his force of rebels. And this new form-making presented a serious threat. Mages could help Vila craft forbidden forms. Forms like Urdrake and Plumacats are deadly predators to devils if left to gather and hunt. But the process of making them is draining. By themselves, Vila could only shape one or two at a time. With a powerful mage to assist, they might shape ten, fifteen… Lavross considers the prodigious magical force he just witnessed… maybe twenty per day. Between the Urdrake and the Plumacats, Lavross is pretty certain they’re dealing with twenty-to-thirty. Plus whatever the mage just conjured up. So thirty-to-fifty.

“That’s a lot of fucking forbidden forms,” Lavross growls to himself, his toothy maw chomping out each word in vicious bites.

Lavross glances side-long at his five Lances. He has fifty Drivers on Vortexes here along with the support of Ranthvar and the scorpion crews. Against even fifty forbidden forms that still gives him the advantage of numbers and firepower. The Asmodeus-damned mage is the wild card. He must be running out of magic after such prodigious expenditures. What a prize! Lavross hasn’t heard of such a strong mage in Hell in centuries. Perhaps ever. He wonders if Asmodeus will step in to claim the wisp for himself. And the glory of this mage’s capture is his to take. Lavross is heady with all the possibilities. Yet, if this night had revealed one thing — it was that capturing this mage was a deadly gambit. Amagash, Talith and both their Lances — likely gone. This was war. Lavross needed to treat it as such.

“Vorthis!” Lavross shouts to the Lance leader on his immediate left.

“Overseer!” The clever devil says as he snaps a casual salute.

“I want to you take your Lance around to the left of that gully! Attack any hostiles you see there! Expect heavy resistance! Go now!” The ten Drivers break off, their Vortexes spewing dirt, rocks and pollution.

“Exantha!” Lavross pivots to the Lance leader on his right.

“Ready Overseer!” Exantha, a newly minted Lance leader, exclaims with her own stiff salute.

“Good! Now you run down and take the right flank! Heavy attack! Numerous hostiles in that gully!” Lavross points at the land-fall that’s now just four miles away and is closing fast. Exantha’s Lance roars off, taking an arching sweep toward the gully.

“Everyone spread out!” He shouts to his remaining three Lances. “Skirmish formation! Encirclement! Expect incoming fire! Urdrakes! Plumacats! A powerful mage! We shall take them! For the glory of Asmodeus!” His Lances let out a loud cheer. They brandish weapons — rifles, swords, axes — as they increase the spacing between each Vortex to about a hundred feet. They form an inverted bow a half mile across. The open end faces the gully. Exantha and Vorthis keep their own Lances in tight wedges. These shoot like spears toward the mage and his group of rebels. Lavross’s hand itches to lift his rifle, to swing his Night Axe. He taps his worb, froms his signature black shell of deadly spirit energy around his Vortex. This action of diabolical magic draws another cheer. Lavross lifts his fist — pumping the air in expectation of violence.

“Tonight! We conquer!” His shout echoes through the night.

**********

My force is huddled at low spot in a gully snaking out into the Wisp Fields. There are seventy-nine of us. We’re mostly Plumacats and Mottles. But now I’ve got this badass force of nine laser artillery Urdrakes. That means I can seriously reach out and touch someone. We’re just going to have to shoot and run like Hell. But first, I’ve got to make sure Zorfang’s ready. I drag my hand through omnis scientia. Tapping my link with Zorfang, I sense his position about three-quarters of a mile to my west.

“Zorfang! You still there!?” I shout through the sensor.

“Yes father!” He sounds even more out of breath than before. He’s had to out run two of those Hell ball volleys. Having just escaped one by the skin of my effing teeth, I don’t envy him.

“Are you ready?”

He harooms loudly. Omnis scientia jumps from his loud exclamation. Almost jolts my hand out. Yeah. I’d say he’s ready.

“Fucking great! Now I want you to light up those scorpions. The bastards have been hurling Hell balls down on us for long enough. Now it’s their turn to taste some pain!”

“They shall no longer see!” Zorfang shouts. “I swear it!”

“Fanfriggingtastic! Do it!” I pull my hand out of the link. Everyone’s staring at me again. They’re all huffing from exertion. But they’re ready.

“OK, everyone listen up! I’m going to make some changes so I need you to execute quick!” I turn to Featherstar, the scouts, and the veteran Mottles. “You old Mottles! I’m going to need nine of you to switch out with the new Mottles. Five for Grimjaw’s scouts. Grimjaw, you keep Shade.” Grimjaw and Shade made one Hell of a lethal team. I’d be a moron to break that up. “Four from your Plumacats, Featherstar. Do it now!”

There’s a rustling as the Mottles fly off. Featherstar starts to protest, but sees the Mottles already in motion. My Mottle’s got the rest of the Mottles pretty much toeing my line. Which is damn good. I don’t have fucking time to explain everything right now. These veteran Mottles gather to do their wall hanging thing beside me along the gully’s slope. “OK. I want you Mottles to team up with these Urdrake. I know you won’t be able to glide-fly with them. This is more for sharing knowledge. Ride with them and show them what the other Urdrake do. Because I’m going to need their beam crystals in about sixty seconds. Go! Do it now!”

The Mottles fly over to the Urdrake. Mottles have more trouble attaching to the Urdrake than a squishy hooman like me or the sleek Plumacats. But they manage. They look kinda comical — like rumpled bags hanging over the spikey and squat Urdrake.

“Now! You new Mottles — link up with the veteran Plumacats. I want you to share what you’ve learned so far with these Mottles. I expect you guys to be up to speed quick. Then pair up in buddy teams with the new Plumacats. So a vet Plumacat plus a new Mottle each to a new Plumacat. If there’s a odd cat out, send them to me. They’ll come with us.” I point to Zaya, Zel, Theri, Mottle, myself and the nine Urdrakes. The Mottles and Plumacats team up.

As they do this, I move to my next concern. “Wounded Plumacats! You’re with me as well. Slow for you is fast for us and the Urdrake. So hurt Plumas are with us.” In total, I end up with four Plumacats. One of the new Plumacats who didn’t have a buddy and three wounded. I somehow missed wounded number three. But this battle’s been fucking crazy. So it’s understandable I’d miss something. Battles usually are, I imagine. Like I’ve ever been in a fucking war like this before! Jesus H!

I look over my force. They’re as reorganized as they’re gonna get. It’s taken me about two minutes to do this. I loft omnis scientia to get a better view of what the fuck is going on. Up close and personal, about fifty devils on Vortexes are breathing down my neck from like two miles out. Four more Hell balls are flying toward Zorfang. But two of these are off-kilter — hurtling into frigging nowhere. I can tell why when I see the scorpions, now about six miles distant, lit up in white as the Urdrakes lay those awesome laser beams down. Looks like some of the devils operating those damned things are dazzled or otherwise fucked up. Fuckin A! That said, two Hell balls are heading straight toward Zorfang. He and the Urdrake are running over the Wisp Fields fast as their stubby legs can carry them even as they bombard the scorpions with white flashes. A plume of smoke begins to trail from one of the scorpions. I let out a cheer. Everyone on my side pauses to stare at me, puzzled over what I’m suddenly so happy about.

It’s all good. Time to get their attention anyway. “Now we’re going to do a little bait and switch! We’ve got fifty devils on Vortexes heading our way. What they don’t know is that we outnumber them. So we,” I point to my force of Urdrakes and crew, “are going to be the bait. And you,” I point to the rest of the Mottles and Plumacats, “are going to be the switch.”

“My bait group is going to run up out of the other side of this gully here. We’re going to shoot at those Vortexes with our Urdrake as we run like there’s no tomorrow. At this range, we should be able to get a decent number of them. The devils are already after us. So they’ll try to chase us down.

“That’s where the switch group comes in. I want you to spread out in a line along this gully. When those Vortexes chase us, when they get close enough, then you pounce!”

The Plumacats have really gotten into my description of them pouncing. This elicits a chorus of excited yowls.

“Just make sure you keep eyes on the devils so you can position yourself to attack them. They’ll have to come at us or get picked off by the Urdrake. So your positioning’s gonna be key.”

Grimjaw and Featherstar exchange a look. “We shall hunt them,” Featherstar says as she licks her jowls hungrily. The casual predatory gesture kinda freaks me out. But I don’t have time to pause.

“OK! We are off!” I gather my bait group and lead them to the other side of the gully. Featherstar and Grimjaw are already having their switch group spread out along the low ground. I pop up, springing into the air as Mottle does his flap, then glide thing. I allow myself to trail sparks, fly about fifty feet, then land on a boulder. I’m deliberately creating a spectacle. As I land, I see the Vortexes are less than a mile off and closing fast. We’re still of their weapons range.

The new-formed Urdrake are rushing up to me. “Mottle, I want you to transfer my orders to the Urdrake through the other Mottles.”

Mottle quivers his affirmative response.

As the Urdrakes cross my position, I shout “Turn! Target the Vortexes! Fire!”

Nine Urdrake ponderously spin their turtle bodies around. Nine Mottles balloon up like parachutes to reveal rows of crystals ridging along jagged shells beneath. Nine beams of white light streak out. In that flash, four Vortexes blow up. They spin and cartwheel — throwing riders through the air. Debris rains down. In response, the Vortexes increase speed. They’ve hit their damned red and golden buttons. I can hear the high-pitched wail of tortured wisps ground down in terrible worbs. Pollution and trails of dirt rain in nasty rooster tails behind.

“We run!” I shout, then do two fly-hops. Covering another hundred feet, I find a mound to stand on as I wait for the Urdrake to catch up. Those powerful flashes of light take about ten seconds to recharge. I’m guessing we’ve got two more shots before those devils get into rifle and fireball range. Then shit’s gonna get hot. I check my energetic vessel. It’s already about a quarter full again. I’m not sure I know how to burn it off fast enough to go negative. Good thing. I’m probably going to need it all.

The Urdrake arrive at my mound. “Fire!” I shout again. They spin, shoot. This time, three bikes are destroyed. The devils are weaving from side to side. Makes it tougher for the Urdrakes to zero in even though the range is shorter. Still, we’ve already more than decimated them. That’s gotta hurt! I jump down. I’m fracking so damn exhausted. But I run with them anyway. I slap hard shells. I slap fleshy Mottle bats. I shout words of encouragement. I’m fucking hoarse. I don’t even know if they really understand me. That’s OK. My tone of encouragement seems to be helping them along.

After another hundred feet, I call a stop. “Fire!” I shout again. Beams streak out toward bikes that are about half a mile off. Damn! They’re moving crazy-fast! I focus on the left group and unleash my own magical blasts. “Vexare Verberare! Una! Lux!Five intensely glowing missiles streak out, causing this group to slow down as they’re suddenly flash-blind. My volley rips through a front rider who takes two shots through the torso. My other three missiles fly off. The Urdrake down three more. Then the devils’ rifles are up. It’s long range. But I hear bullets start to snap through the air near my fucking head. The mass volume of fire making up for loss of accuracy.

“Get down!” I shout, slamming into ground. Rolling. Taking cover behind a rock. Well shit! I’d hoped to get another volley off. Then I see a mass of fireball rounds shoot out from the devils. Holy Hell! The whole of the Wisp Fields to my north flower in blossoms of fire like a Hell version of the Fourth of Frigging July. Again long range. But some of those balls will reach us. “Up again! Run!” We make it about fifty feet before the flames are on top of us. I spin, draw in about a third of my present magic, do a Mottle-jump into the air above my scrambling buddies. Confractus! I incant as I hurl an arc of incandescent blue magic into the onrushing inferno. Five fireball rounds made it to our position. Confractus unravels four. The last, though weakened, explodes around us. Praesidia! Clypeus! Protective magic envelops me, then forms a dome above my allies. I draw hard from my energetic vessel, desperate to save my friends.

The gouts of flame push clypeus into my chest, blast holes through praesidia. I breathe in sulfur stench and extreme heat. But the bubble holds. I fall back, landing in my blue protective bubble with a loud ‘thunk!’ When the flames clear, I see the smoldering forms of my company rise. Praesdia absorbed the brunt of the explosion. Most of us are still standing. Though my gut drops as an Urdrake and a Plumacat lay still. Spinning, I see the first devils are almost to the gully. Ten of them led by this nasty big guy riding his Vortex in a jagged field of darkness. He’s brandishing a wicked axe that slings spines from his dark aura as he swings it about.

“Shoot what you can from here!” I shout. “I’m going back in!” Time to pivot. I lift my hand. “Vexare! Verbarare!” The missiles of magical force streak toward the big guy with the axe. He’s clearly the leader. With my other hand, I draw my moonshadow blade from the air. My exhaustion forgotten, battle elation threading fire through my veins, I charge.

As I fly forward, as my missiles converge on the hulking devil surrounded by his field of darkness, Featherstar, Grimjaw and the Plumacats pounce. The ones paired with Mottles leap into the air. They take a single enormous flying bound. In a moment, twelve Plumacats and twelve Mottles are ripping through this leading force. My missiles impact on the big devil’s black aura. Four are snuffed out in darkness. One streaks through, blasting his shoulder in a spray of blood. Though his arm falls limp. He seems unrelenting. He lifts his dark axe and cleaves clean through a Mottle-Plumacat pair. They fall to the ground. Instantly dead.

“No!” I shout as I see two of my companions — two creatures I had a part in making — instantly reduced to dead material by the devil’s vicious strike. I land on the gully’s lip opposite the fight. I’m still about a hundred and fifty feet off. My eyes are only on this devil now. Mottle and I glide-fly over the gully. From behind me, the lights of Urdrake flash. Up ahead, there are explosions as Vortex are shorn by the laser-like blasts. More devils are converging. Some shoot up as I descend toward the fray. My shout of clypeus! to deflect their rounds is an afterthought. Though wounded, the lead devil fights like a titan. He makes a gesture with his axe, three spikes of darkness shoot out from his aura. One of the spikes fells another Plumacat.

At last, I land beside this terror. My shell of clypeus sparks as it contacts his own dark field. “Finished!” I shout as I hurl my moonshadow blade. It slams through the black shell, but is deflected. Its trailing edge catches the Vortex wheel — sheering a chunk of it off. The devil is hurled toward me. He tumbles through the air, axe spinning.

“I see you mage!” The devil howls in Minosian. “A mere girl! Surrender to Asmodeus!”

I snap my fingers, conjuring my moonshadow blade back. The dark axe falls. Spikes of darkness claw at my protective bubble of clypeus. Parrying with my blade of light and shadow, I spin beneath the axe, tumble past a spine of darkness that pierces my shield. Pushing beneath his arm I thrust the moonshadow blade upward. It buries deep in devil’s flesh.

The devil howls in pain, opens his maw — filled with teeth the size of my thumb — then lunges down to bite me. “Amplio! Macto!” I shout, channeling my massive flood of magical energy into my sword in the form of a devil-smiting curse. White-blue energy blasts through the devil, shoots out the other side. His form splits in half. Topples. Mouth still agape.

I feel wet on my belly. Look down. There’s a deep cut where one of the dark shards from his weird devil magic shell got me. I put my hand over it to stop the bleeding. Spinning, I look around. The last devils are trying to run away. Getting blasted to pieces by Urdrake fire. Ripped apart by Plumacats. The predators are feasting. Their Vortexes — destroyed or on the ground idle. Off to my left about a half mile off, two massive Hell balls explode. I sit down. A touch to omnis scientia tells me Zorfang’s not there. He’s OK. He’s still shooting and moving.

“Good!” I say. Then more weakly. “Gooooood…” Whew. Why do I feel so light-headed? I look down. There’s a big pool of blood. “Woah. That’s a lot of red,” I say. Mottle quivers in upset. Does his bite thing. It revives me a little. But I’m getting weak quick. He’s freaking out. Calling for help. Shouldn’t I be the one freaking out? Why does everything seem so distant? Then Featherstar is standing over me. With one giant paw she pushes me back.

“Hey! I didn’t say you could do that…”

“Shush,” She says, then begins licking my belly with her big raspy tongue. I musta just passed out. Because everything just went black there for a second.

(New to the Helkey multiverse? Haven’t yet read the first chapter? You can find it here: Helkey 1 — The Memory Draught.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

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Helkey 31 — Battle of Sunken Crag, Desperate Moves

My little ragtag army of Mottles, Urdrakes, and Plumacats is ready to go. Sure, they’re scared witless. Who wouldn’t be facing down the worst Hell has to offer in the form of scores of heavily armed devils?? Fiendish Drivers who want to nothing more than to kill your corpus, rip out your wisp, then force it to serve as a slave in a torturous worb. All led by terrible Overseers profiting from the horrible wisp trade. But our little force is fresh from two big victories against the devils of Overseer Tower. They’re also serious badasses. It’s starting to dawn on me that the Urdrakes and Plumacats are both some kind of uber predator. The Urdrakes are mini godzillas as giant snapping turtles — with the ability to shoot beams of killing light out of their frigging heads. Plumacats remind me of some tiger-velociraptor hybrid. Mottles, though not carnivorous, are like a badass mash-up of a giant bat with a cloaker from D&D. Yeah, after all the fighting, I’ve got D&D on my mind today. Deal.

I ride the nasty Vortex up to the canyon wall, my company of uber predators and other misfits following along in the Hell machine’s stinking wake. Its banshee-wail engine rips at my ears. Poor, tortured wisps churning inside a ring of spiritual teeth — spitting out soul-juice to spike the fossil-fuel crud devils burn in their engines. Clouds of noxious smoke rise around me.

I climb over the canyon’s lip, stare out across hills spilling into the Wisp Fields. Mists from earlier are now clear. Lights and shadows play together beneath a fractured night sky. At first, it’s tough to make out what I’m seeing. Though I’m pretty sure most of the lights are wisps, there’s a huge group of devils tooling about down there.

Grimjaw pads up beside me, points with a clawed hand into the lands below. “See them,” he growls. I follow the tip of his claw to a large force of devils churning across stinking lands. They’re still many miles away. A plume of back-lit smoke rises from their Vortexes which swarm around hulking scorpions — tail tips blazing in red-orange orbs from stolen wisp energy. They’re tough to miss once I know where to look. Still far off, so it’s understandable I overlooked them in omnis scientia. Grimjaw shifts his claw lower. “There too,” he says again in more of a whisper. I have to focus. After a few seconds, I catch a smoke plume against the night. Following it down, I see a cluster of flickering worbs. They’re close enough for me to hear the faint sound of Vortex engines wailing now that I’ve briefly throttled down my own nasty machine.

“I see them,” I reply. Mottle quivers as he shares in my senses. He’s excited, afraid, anticipating what’s to come.

Grimjaw shifts his hand a final time. He points above the wisps fields. I focus my sight. I can’t see shit. Closing my eyes, I shift to omnis scientia, then use its enhanced sight to follow Grimjaw’s claw to the point he’s indicating. At last I see the Uktena — its red-ribbon form threading through the night sky.

“Fuck!” I say as I recognize the devil-snake. I’d heard Grimjaw’s earlier report of the sighting. But I hoped the big Plumacat was somehow mistaken. The Uktena’s flying right for that big force of devils. It’s a rather slow flyer. But judging from its path and speed, it’ll meet with the larger devil force in about a half hour. I stare as Plumacats and Urdrake climb up onto the ridge beside me. Mottles glide overhead. Our scouts are already on the next ridge about a half mile away.

Theri and Zel pull up beside me on their own stinking Vortexes. Zaya’s flying overhead. The two wounded Plumacats wail in on their Vortexes behind us. “I want all of you to stay close to me,” I say to them. “Zaya, I’m going to need you again soon. Do you think you’ll be ready to change more wisps in about an hour?”

The Hell faerie hovers close, she has to shout over the wail of the stupid Vortexes. “I’ll have to rely on you more! But yes!”

“Fanfriggingtastic!” I turn to Zel and Theri. “What can you tell me about the scorpions? We took that one out really quick. But I don’t think I got a chance to see what it was fully capable of.”

Zel looks at Theri who replies. “The scorps are great machine monsters. Close in, they can shred about anything with their burning claws. The tails, are the bigger threat, though. They can steal raw wisp energy to throw glowing balls of destruction. Much larger than the fireball rounds. But slow. You’ll see them coming if they do. Better get out of the way.”

Fucking great. I was worried about something like this. Zel took out the tail of the first scorp we ambushed quick. So I didn’t get to see it in action. “How far can it throw its hell balls?”

“About ten miles. But like I said, they’re slow. You can see them coming. If you move, you can get out of their path.” This creates a new complication. The scorps are about eight miles out. Within range if the devils spot us. That’ll probably happen soon. Although one thing’s certain. I don’t intent to sit still.

“Frigging Great! Now follow me!” I gun my Vortex over to Zorfang. He’s got a cluster of Urdrakes near him. They’re walking in a shambling line along the ridge. Their pace is slow but steady. The measured movement is something I’ve thought about as we climb up to the ridge line. Soon, the larger devil force will see us. I’m going to need to move quick. But I’ve got to make sure I employ these Urdrake effectively or we’re all pretty much effed.

“I need to know what you’ve got, Zorfang,” I say to the massive godzilla turtle thing.

He tilts his giant reptile head down toward me giving a quizzical expression. It’s cute, even on a beast I know could bite my friggin arm off with one great snap of his serrated beak.

I point to the crystal formation at the top of his head. “How far do those shoot? Can you run out?”

Zorfang scratches at the crystal formation with a large claw. “Shoots as far as I see. But gets weak with distance. Up close, it cuts. Further, it heats. Further still, it will blind.”

I point down to the large group of devils in the Wisp Fields’ center. “What can you do to that?”

“If some look this way, we can blind them, perhaps.”

I point to the Uktena. “That?” I ask. I’m using omnis scientia to see it. I can’t fracking see it with my own eyes. I’m wondering if Zorfang can.

Zorfang looks in the direction I’m pointing. He casts about for a moment. Then, he closes his eyes. He tilts the crystal structure a little, then a small beam shoots out. In omnis scientia, I see the Uktena momentarily light up. Neat trick.

“Ahhh…” Zorfang hums. “Though closer, it is small and bobs around.” He seems to consider a moment more before replying. “Blind it. Three, maybe four of us can heat it.”

This is new information. “You can combine your beams?”

Zorfang nods.

I’m impressed. This is a hell of a capability. The Urdrakes may be slow, but they could lay down the literal heat over long distances. I felt like a commander of a laser artillery battery. Last of all, I point at the scouts closing in on their Vortexes. “And those?”

Zorfang doesn’t even hesitate. “Small cuts. We can heat the machines to explode.”

Amazing. “OK, Zorfang. That’s really helpful. So I’m going to take these Vortexes, the Mottles and the Plumacats out into the wisp fields. We’re going to be moving crazy fast. I want you to get your Urdrakes to hit that Uktena now. If you can, get him out of the air. But try not to make too much light, if you can.” I point to the next ridge line. “Then I want you to run to that ridge as fast as you can. You might have some fire hurled your way from those giant scorps.” I motion down to the larger force of devils. “So I want you guys to shoot, then move, shoot again, then move again. Keep ’em guessing. Get all the Urdrakes up there and be ready.”

Zorfang nods. “Yes father,” he says in his deep, musical tones, then begins to shuffle off.

“Wait a sec. I’m not quite finished.”

Zorfang pauses. I reach out a hand to touch his forehead. Casting my curse magic out, I connect him to omnis scientia. “Una!” I incant. Now he can see and hear through the sensor. I direct it to hover down next to me. “This is omnis scientia. It’s a sensor I’ve crafted out of magic. I’m taking it with me. I’ve just set it up so you can see me through it when you concentrate on me. Close your eyes. Try it out.”

Zorfang closes his eyes. “I can see Myra,” he says. “It is clearer than crystal sight.”

“Fantastic! Now, when I touch the sensor, you will also be able to hear me.” I reach out, drag my hand through the sensor’s curse-shaped body. “Like this,” I say as I touch it.

Zorfang shuffles in surprise as my voice is transmitted to him twice — once through regular sound and once through the sensor. “Yes! I hear!”

“OK. So you know what your first mission is, right?”

“The red snake in the sky. We try to heat or blind it. Then, on to that rise! Shoot, then move!” He sings the last bit loudly. He seems to be getting riled up.

“Excellent! After that, we’ll be in touch.” I tap my ear. I pause, look behind me at Rookfang. For a moment, I muse about their names. Neither actually has any real fangs. Just serrated beaks. I shake off my moment of bemusement. Grabbing Rookfang’s, arm, I slide him gently off the bike. Takes a lot of effort. The guy is huge. Weighs hundreds of pounds. He plunks down to the ground beside Zorfang. “One more thing. I’ll need you to take him with you. Get two of your stronger Urdrakes to carry him.”

Positions of Forces and Recent Events During the Battle of Sunken Crag

Zorfang looks down at Rookfang, then harrooms and affirmation. With a smile and a thumbs up, I ride off in the direction of Featherstar. She’s got ten Plumacats lined up. Eight of them have finally teamed with the remaining Mottles. Grimjaw, Shade, and his scout team flow into them. Theri, Zel, and the two wounded Plumacats on Vortexes ride up. Zaya hovers overhead. My stomach tightens as I take in this motley assortment. Together we number a mere thirty-seven. Including the scouts running out ahead, that’s forty-nine. Pretty thin. But I’m counting on the twenty-three frigging laser artillery Urdrakes I’m leaving behind to give us some heavy support. As I look over my force, I feel like I’m about to take a big drop on a huge roller coaster. But this rollercoaster is diving me straight into heavy combat. Stuff is about to get real brutal.

“The chips are down. It’s time for some desperate moves,” I say to them. “We’re heading out together. Our first objective is to take out that scout company.” I point in the direction of the ten devils on Vortexes heading toward us fast. “Next, we circle back to eliminate their main force. I’m counting on you to be swift and fierce. We’re going to punch ’em in the nose, then draw them into a fight they won’t make it out of.” I sound a lot more confident than I feel. But I’ve got to make them believe it’s possible. Otherwise, it won’t be. “The Urdrakes will set up in these hills to rain barrages of blinding and heating lights down on them. Don’t look back toward the hills.” I point to my eyes, then point back at them. “Eyes to the enemy.”

I ride to the downslope, summon my moonshadow blade, then point it at the leading force of devils. “Now charge!”

***********

Corviss flies through the air as swift as he can. It’s infuriatingly slow.

He’s not a fast flier — more a swimmer of air currents. While near the Vortexes, he can catch a slipstream and glide along. Carried forward by the bike’s motion.

His teleports are crazy-quick, but short distance. At most, his jumps cover about five hundred feet. Making such swift jumps is highly exerting. He’d panicked when the fireball blossomed around him above the canyon. The sudden expense of energy needed to escape its blast drained him. He might be able to jump once or twice more before succumbing to exhaustion. So he’s stuck coiling slowly through the air toward Lavross’s lumbering force. It’s frustrating. Lavross must know about the mage’s large and deadly gathering of Plumacats, Mottles, and Urdrakes.

“Lavross, Lavross… See me Lavross!” He laments, hoping the Overseer will spot him and send out his Vortex riders to scoop him up.

He rides toward a current of falling air he hopes will carry him to Lavross when his skin suddenly becomes blazing hot. He shrieks, JUMPS!, then spins to see where the fireball round came from. There is no fireball round! Just a painful burning sensation all over his body that lets him know the heat he felt was real. He spins in a spiral. His teleport brought him lower, but he still has the advantage of height for perspective. He looks toward the Razor Hills. It takes him a moment to make out the distant forms of Urdrakes in a line along a ridge. Then, a barrage of brilliant flashes shoots out from the Urdrakes. He feels another searing pain — this time over his face, his eyes. Darkness and burning swallow him. He JUMPS! again. Falls through a well of black. Slams into the ground.

All goes dark.

When Corviss wakes, he finds he’s lost all sight except his peripheral vision. A great black hole eats up his gaze. He tries to fly, but can’t gain perspective and slams into the ground again. Popping up, he tips his head to try to see the land around. There’s a nearby rise. He scrabbles atop it, tilts his head. The rim of sight is maddening in its illusiveness. He coils and spins as he tries to see. At last, he makes out the blurry form of a scorpion lumbering about five miles away in the corner of his gaze. Hissing in pain, frustration, and not a little fear, he begins to slither across the Wisp Fields, hoping some land predator doesn’t spot him in his damaged state. Now exhausted, his body aching, battered, stinging all over from burns, he wants nothing more than to sleep. To heal from the terrible damage done to him by the Urdrakes. Each twist of his body feels like it’s doing more damage. Regina did value him enough to grant him a healing infusion of wisp energy. Should he survive. A tickle of fear runs up his spine. Did she? Corviss crawls faster.

**********

Lavross snarls at the stupid psychic. “What the fuck are you telling me, then??” He yells. His fanged mouth bites off each word. He imagines they are chunks of this spineless wretch’s flesh.

The psychic, its long horns more like antennae than regular devils’ horns, wilts — its flesh turning from red to a light pink shade. Myzlic the psychic rides behind a hoary, burly Driver atop a Vortex. Though the machine’s wailing is enough to make Myzlic’s ears ring, somehow Lavross’s yelling seems even louder. “It’s a sending from one of Dressler’s psychics! Nymkat!” Myzlic shouts back. “She says the mage has Urdrake! You need to be careful! Regina’s sending a second group to reinforce yours!’

“I know about the fucking Urdrake! I saw their fucking lights! You think I’m a lemure? I’ve been an Overseer in these parts for a fucking hundred and twenty years!” Lavross shouts back. Stupid psychics and that bitch Regina pointing out the fucking obvious. And she’s sending a damned follow-on-force… That means one thing. Regina’s lost confidence in his ability to take down the mage. “Reinforce?? Felldust!! Who the fuck are they sending?”

“Nymkat says it’s Dressler himself!” Myzlic replies, trying to keep his voice neutral. He knew all too well what it meant, sometimes, to be the bearer of bad news. And Lavross looks furious.

“Look! You tell Regina and Dressler to sit fucking tight. A couple of Urdrake aren’t going to change that damned mage’s fate one notch. His wisp is good as taken!”

“I’ll tell them you received their message!” Myzlic says evenly, then thumps his Driver, motioning for him to slow down. The Dark Psychic drops back, but is treated to a parting barrage of curses coming from Lavross.

Lavross turns away from the cowardly Myzlic. Damned psychic. One of Asmodeus’s supposed all-knowing faithful. Worthless and weak! He should’ve sent him forward with Amagash or Talith. Now he has to suffer Regina’s insistent mewlings. He blows out a frustrated breath from between his jagged teeth. “Fucking Dressler.” Regina’s favorite Overseer is a tall devil with skin so dark red it borders on black. He has a snide, self-assured air that Lavross finds both insulting and effete. Yet Regina had chosen Dressler as her high commander for military situations just like this one. If she’s moving Dressler onto the field, that meant this wouldn’t be his shit-show for very much longer. Lavross looks at the lumbering scorpions in frustration one more time. If he plays a strong hand now, maybe he can keep ahead of Dressler’s meddling and still take credit for taking the mage’s wisp.

He just needed an opportunity.

Then, a ridge-line to his right erupts in bright flashes of light. Lines of white streak out from the Razor Hills and illuminate a region of sky to his front-right. There’s a second flash. The light allows him to zero in on its source. Then he sees them! A row of Urdrake on a hillside about eight miles away. At least five of them are emitting light. He looks for a moment toward Talith. But her Vortexes are well below the beams. He scans the sky. “What in blazes are they aiming at?” He shakes his head. No matter. They’d just given away their position. And none-too-soon with Dressler and Regina breathing down his neck.

“Ranthvar!” he shouts back to his fourth in command.

“Overseer!” Ranthvar shouts as he drives up beside Lavross and gives a sharp salute.

“Take your Lance and stick with the scorpion crews. Make for those hills! There are Urdrake atop that ridge. Put some fire on them now!” Lavross points toward where he glimpsed the Urdrakes’ light beams.

“Yes Overseer!”

Lavross always appreciated Ranthvar’s ease with taking orders. A bit thick. But intelligence is often over-rated. “I’m taking the remaining five Lances! We’re going ahead to charge those hills! If you see any more targets. Don’t hesitate to bring devastation down on them with our scorpions.”

“Very good, Overseer!”

“For the glory of Asmodeus!” Lavross says, giving the customary send off.

“For the victory of Minos!” Ranthvar replies.

Lavross spins off to shout to his other Lances. It takes only a minute for the command to run through the ranks. With a shout of “Forward!” Lavross presses the red and golden button on his Vortex. The worb-engine wails as wisps are ground down — injecting their spirit juice into fiery combustion within the engines. The vehicle leaps forward — shooting out and away from the collection of towering scorpions. The five Lances line up on Lavross, forming a great sweeping V with him at the center. His hand itches to reach for his weapon. His rifle. His Night Axe. “Soon now,” he growls to his axe. “Soon you will taste blood. Soon.”

As he speaks these words of violence-intended, behind him the Scorpions each fling an enormous ball of black and orange into the Hell-night. Casting a dark and fiery light, they rise ponderously toward the hills where he sighted the Urdrakes.

**********

The stupid Vortex is rattling my brain with its banshee wail. I shoot down the slope. On either side of me stretched out in a line are my thirty seven — Mottles, Plumacats, Theri, Zel, Zaya, my Mottle and last of all me. The Plumacats eat up ground in long bounds. The ones teamed up with Mottles can lope as fast as my Vortex so long as I don’t press the evil, spikey red-gold button. They can also frigging fly for short bursts. I’m counting on that mobility to save our bacon. We’re going to run out toward the enemy scouts fast and make ourselves a frigging target. If being a target doesn’t sound bacon-saving, wait around a while, clue? I’ve got tricks. Speaking of targets, I look up at Zaya. The luminous, green-skinned Hell-faerie’s born aloft on translucent wings like those of a giant dragonfly. Illuminated by lux, they become iridescent — casting little rainbows around her. As we reach the valley and start up toward the next ridge, I extend a hand to Zaya.

“I want you to ride with me!” I shout up to her. “Sit here!” I pat a spot on the Vortex’s seat in front of me.

Zaya looks with distaste down at the Vortex. “Must I?”

The Vortex bounces over some rocks, then shoots up the slope. It spits rocks and spews out more of its foul smoke. “Yes! If those devils see you, it might give away my plan! Worse, they could try to snipe you! Then we’d all be screwed!”

Zaya keeps flying near me but makes no move to land. She turns her face forward. I know she’s still listening, though.

“Look! You’re going to like what I’ve got planned! Just hang in there with me for an hour! Maybe less!”

“What’ve you got planned?” Zaya asks, drifting a bit closer.

I grin despite myself. Yeah, she’s hooked. “‘Keep your plans dark and impenetrable as night! And when you move — strike like a thunderbolt!'” I’m quoting Tsu Su here. It’s something Mori — Dad — used to say all the time. He’s fucking right.

“Oh, the secret thunderbolt plan!” Zaya replies. “OK, I’m in.” With one last disgusted look at the Vortex, the Hell Faerie flits down to enfold herself between my arms and behind the Vortex’s handlebars. Mottle quivers pleasantly at the faerie’s arrival. Yeah, Mottle, I like her too.

With Zaya safe, I focus on the slope. The Vortex pounds up toward the second ridge line. Atop it are my scouts. They see us coming, then leap forward, ghosting out ahead of our larger group. I keep the Vortex throttled back a bit to allow all the Plumacats to stay with me. It’s still a pretty stiff pace. I don’t have time to spare.

Before we hit the rise, I see the sky light up with the Urdrake’s frigging white laser beams. There’s a red flying snake with horns on the other end of those beams whose day just got a Hell of a lot worse. I grin wickedly. I shouldn’t be happy. But this is war after all. And that bastard is part of team ‘I’m going to kill you and enslave your effing soul.’ Yeah, count me happy the little bastard’s taking some serious heat right about now. I draw up short of the rise, allow all the Plumacats and Mottles to catch up. I look back to the Urdrakes, pushing my senses to omnis scientia. Through it, I clearly hear his deep, song-like commands. They’ve finished their barrage. Zorfang is moving them down the hill now. Good. They’ll take about two minutes to reach this ridge. Should work out just fine.

Then the night lights up as huge black-orange balls loft toward us from the Wisp Fields. They remind me of giant charred and flaming marshmallows tumbling through the sky. What a weird time to start thinking about smores. They move lazily. They’ll cover the distance to us in about two minutes. I don’t intend for him to be there when they effing land.

I reach out to omnis scientia. “OK, Zorfang, can you hear me?”

“Yes, father, we are moving as you asked. Shoot them move.” His voice is labored, huffing with exertion. Around him, I hear similar noises along with the sound of scrabbling. From what I’m hearing, those Urdrake are seriously halling ass for things so large and typically slow.

“Good. Get the Hell out of there. You’ve got effing meteors heading your way. Did you get the Uktena?”

“It fell from sky. Burned. Probably blind.”

“Perfect! Now, I have another instruction. When you reach the ridge where I am now, I want you to focus all your fire on the group of scouts heading toward us. It’s the small group of about ten devils on Vortexes. By the time you do, we should be engaged with them. Hurry! We’re going to need you!”

“I shall do this!” Zorfang roar-sings.

“Fantastic!” I say, then I shift my senses back to myself and the thirty-six other souls with me. Without another pause, I shout “Forward!” In a great spray of dirt, noxious smoke, flapping of Mottles and scrabble of claws we are shooting up over the rise. I glance at my horologium watch. It’s 4:41 AM, Hell time.

Above me, the giant blazing marshmallows begin to fall toward the ridge Zorfang just vacated. Below, the flat expanse of Wisp Fields opens up, illuminated by deadly lights passing overhead. About a mile and a half off, I can clearly see the ten devils on their Vortexes. They’re coming straight for us. Must’ve seen the Urdrake’s laser beams. They’re following the giant orange balls in toward us. Noise of their screaming engines mixes with my own. Yeah, they’re fucking close and coming in hot.

I turn toward the second, larger group of devils. What I see makes me grin despite the tormented screams of souls being ground up by devils’ engines for fuel tearing out my ever-loving ears. It’s a massive group of about fifty devils riding their Vortexes in my direction at full speed. They’re about seven miles away and running flat out. Must’ve pushed the evil spikey red and golden button. Time to put some heavy fire on these bastards. It’s also time to test the power of all the scores and scores of wisps filling up my energetic vessel.

I point my Vortex toward the scouts and gun the engine. They’re opposite the larger group. If I head toward the scouts, I buy myself a little time. So I race toward them. Plumacats teamed with Mottles fly down the slope beside me. The remaining Plumacats race behind. They lag a bit. But that’s OK. I want a follow-on force. My own scouts are up ahead. I see they found a gully to run and fly through on their way toward the ten devils on Vortexes. If I’m lucky, they’ll come at the bads from the left at about the same time I’m ready to hit them from the front.

My immediate worry is the fact that the goddamn devils have me outgunned. Only Theri, Zel, and I have firearms that can be used with any real skill. Sure, there are two Plumacats with rifles that got about five minutes of training. Enough to give away their positions, but little else. The ten devils rushing toward me are all armed with rifles. I can see them lifting their weapons from saddle holsters on their Vortexes, aiming toward us as our groups converge. These rifles probably have a maximum range of about a quarter mile. Fireball rounds — about the same. Given our closing speed, they’ll be coming into range really damn quick. I don’t want to give them a chance to use those weapons effectively.

I’m lifting my hand when all Hell breaks loose behind me. The giant burning marshmallows are finally landing. WHUP! WHUP! WHUP! WHUP! Four massive explosions tear the air. I don’t see any strike points. I’m blocked by the ridge. But burning material flies high and shrieking rocks rain down hundreds of yards away. I hope Zorfang’s long gone. I can’t afford any delay despite the frigging cataclysm practically coming down on my effing head. “Vexare! Verberare!” I incant, bleeding a crap-ton of energy from my rapidly refilling vessel to increase my missiles’ range. Five bright sparks shoot toward my enemies. As they rocket out, I shout “Una! Lux!” and bleed another excessive plug of energy into my incantation. The missiles swell with brilliant light. Each blazing like a sun, five five huge lights converge on the devil scouts. Range is excessive. Three miss altogether. But two strike a Vortex — causing its spiked tire to unfold like a ripped soda can. Its rider is flung about fifty feet before landing with a thump I can hear a mile off. Lux continues to spill out brilliant light. The devils hold up hands to shield their eyes as they skid to a halt.

They’re shouting in confusion. One is pointing at the larger force of Vortexes closing fast. The others recover as the blinding lights fade. They rev their engines. In a spray of dirt and rocks they rush forward again. More cautious, this time. I’ve bought us about thirty seconds. Pushing my focus back toward omnis scientia, I shout to Zorfang — “How soon ’til you get in place?”

For a moment, I don’t hear anything from Zorfang. Oh fuck! What if the giant marshmallows took him out!? Then, I hear the reassuring rasp of his labored breathing. “Thirty heartbeats!” he shouts through omnis scientia.

“Good!” I pour on speed and hurl another volley of over-juiced and lux-enhanced “Vexare Verberare!” at the scouts. This time, I intentionally aim short, lighting up the land to the riders’ front. One missile strikes a lead devil who’d broken away from the pack — blasting off an arm. He slams into the ground and is swallowed by churning spikes from a following Vortex. The nasty machine grinds the devil into hamburger before it skids to a halt in front of my blinding displays of lux.

“We are here, father!” Zorfang sings to me through omnis scientia. As the lights from my barrages fade, Urdrake lasers begin to rain down on the scouts. We’re still rushing them. By now we are in rifle range. Theri and Zel lift their weapons.

“No fireballs!” I shout.

Zel drops his weapon, exchanges the fireball round he was about to use. Theri shoots with her weapon, misses. Then I see shadows flying up from the crevice to my left. Six Mottles and six Plumacats crash into the devil’s flank. They tear two devils from their Vortexes. I don’t see everything that happens. But I hear the sounds of screaming, of chaotic rifle reports, of bones crunching, of flesh ripping. A Plumacat falls to the side, bleeding from a bullet wound. Its Mottle flaps off to engulf yet another devil. By now, lights from the Urdrake are raining down on the devils. One manages to get off a fireball round. It streaks toward us. I lift my hand. Sparks shoot out of my name curse as I shout — Confractus! The fireball round dissolves in mid-formation. Ten Plumacats and Mottles pounce on the remaining devils — many of which are now blind or surrounded by glows of raging air as they burn.

In a moment, all is silent. We’ve crushed another scout force. This time head-on. But with fifty more devils breathing down my neck, I’ve got zero time to celebrate. Out in the wisp fields, four more massive balls blossom from the scorpions’ tails. Four more burning marshmallows rise up. I reach out to omnis scientia. “Zorfang! Get the Hell out of there! Down the rise this time!”

“Shoot and move!” I hear Zorfang sing out again.

“Good! Stay alive! And when you get to the bottom, I want you to shoot at those scorpions. Try to blind those fuckers. We can’t continue to have this crap raining down on us.”

“Yes Myra!” Zorfang sings out. His voice is strained, his breathing labored. But there is no complaint in his tone. I plow on toward the downed devils. I see some Plumacats actually devouring their frigging corpses. I can’t take time to deal with that now. Besides, Plumacats gotta eat. Pulling up to a cluster of idle Vortexes, I shout “Lunen! Svert Umbra!” My moonshadow blade leaps out. A darkness in my hand. Soft light spreads all around. I turn to Zaya. “Are you ready?” I ask.

Her eyes twinkle. Her iridescent wings flutter. I think she’s guessed what I have planned next. “Oh yes! Very much yes! It’s thunderbolt time!”

(New to the Helkey multiverse? Haven’t yet read the first chapter? You can find it here: Helkey 1 — The Memory Draught.)

(Looking for another chapter? Find it in the Helkey Table of Contents.)

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