| Guardian
Heart
Cendorly
Spellweever
Tholuxe Paells
Story
by
Phaedrus
istress,"
Jobaner whispered, his ghostly figure barely visible in
the night.
"Speak,"
a woman's voice, thick and sweet like honey, poured into
the air. It spilled from lips that gave the impression they
once knew how to smile, but had long since forgotten the
art.
"Seven
score Knights of Katta stand ready," Jobaner spoke quickly
but distinctly, "opposing them are fourfold their number
of Coterie."
"Wizards?"
"None
of any power among the Coterie, only several faint flickers
of the gift, trained but untalented. One glimmer from a
Kattaen, though inexperienced," he spoke as if he were
an odds maker, sizing up the midday race, or the stable
master selecting a new mount.
Cendorly
Spellweever gazed down upon the forming battlefield. The
knights were lost. A fair fight between equal numbers would
have been their victory for the taking. Even outnumbered
two to one against the Coterie they would have seen only
light casualties. This would be a massacre.
"I
must work," she said plainly.
"Mistress,"
Jobaner whispered again softly, as he faded into the night.
Cendorly
closed her eyes and mind to the world around outside and
let the magic flow through her. Power from far beyond the
borders of Norrath now churned in her veins, the same power
that the gods themselves draw for their purposes, good or
evil.
Cendorly
turned to face the Coterie army and began to chant.
sma-tir'e
tuscolac huoy
ming-a'di'e myng a'sarc huoy
smy-la a'benc huoy
She
spoke softly, slowly. Her tongue's tip pushing against the
roof of her mouth firmly. Her breath came in through her
nose, deep into the center of her body and slowly out of
her lips. Her body went limp, but she remained upright.
Her arms hung limply in front of her thighs. Her jade-like
eyes stared at the Coterie, but did not appear to see them.
As
she chanted, her arms, hair, and garments began to lift
slowly as if floating on an ever-quickening river that flowed
around her body from behind, out over the field below. Her
tempo and volume kept pace with the unseen current, and
as her voice grew louder and faster she was surrounded by
a haze of brightening light.
On
the field below, the Coterie paid no heed to the dark mass
of clouds gathering to the east. They did not notice the
sudden drop in temperature or air pressure. They did feel
a bit frustrated at the slow pace the ever softening earth
forced upon them, but thought it nothing unusual.
It
wasn't until hailstones the size of small pigs vaporized
half the rear ranks that anyone thought something might
be amiss.
The
Kattaen Knights paused in wonder at the spectacle. They
watched as their enemies were pummeled into the earth which
swallowed their corpses and the hailstones as the sea does
a handful of pebbles thrown by a child's hand. Had armor
allowed, all hundred and forty Knights would have been scratching
their heads in furious bewilderment.
Not
all the Coterie were slaughtered; Cendorly allowed two hundred
to escape completely unscathed, directly into the path of
the waiting knights. The battle was quickly finished, all
Coterie were dead, and fifty-five unskilled knights proved
they would have been a burden.
As
the knights began to collect their fallen comrades, Jobaner
materialized before them.
"Stop,"
Jobaner spoke as if to himself, but one hundred and seventy
ears heard him clearly, and eighty-five heads turned simultaneously
towards his voice, "the dead have no need of your services,
but there is one who does. Silence. The mistress approaches."
A
cloud descended behind him and started moving slowly towards
the group of knights, leaving a trail of soft grey smoke
in its wake. As the cloud passed the ghost a face was revealed
slowly, eyes of jade fire framed by hair of dragons breath.
So terrible was her beauty that every one of the company
became instantly enthralled. As she reached the front ranks
and entered the assembly the last of her coat of clouds
fell off and trailed away on the breeze. The men parted,
widening into an broad semicircle as she passed. She continued
on until she stood face to face with their commander.
She
silently studied him for a moment, this was the glimmer
Jobaner had spoken of. He would do nicely.
"Captain,"
she said, "you should have died here today, along with
all of your men. I have chosen you and spared you from your
fate. Your lives now belong to me, and are only of use if
they serve me."
He
dropped to one knee and laid forehead to the other. Burying
the tip of his sword in the earth before him he rested his
hands on its upright pommel.
"My
heart, my life, mistress, forever. What would you have of
me?"
"Justice,"
she replied in a whisper, "only justice."
As
she spoke, eighty-five men mimicked the motion and message
of their former leader, and pledged themselves eternally
to the service of their new mistress.
She
had work to do.
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