Read Master of Swords Online

Authors: Angela Knight

Master of Swords (22 page)

BOOK: Master of Swords
13.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Traitor!” Bors swung at Edge's gut, but missed when the creature leaped aside. “I'm glad your mother didn't live to see what you've become!”

“I'm exactly what you made me, Dad.” Edge dropped to one knee, grabbed Bors's sword hand, and jerked him forward, right onto those waiting horns. Twisting his head like a bull, he threw the knight across the clearing with a splatter of blood. He hit the ground and didn't move.

“Bors!” Gawain stepped in with a hard, flat sword stroke, only to be deflected by another teeth-rattling parry. Before he could sweep in again, Edge reversed his stroke and caught him hard across the ribs.

With a strangled cry of agony, he staggered, fighting to keep his feet.

The killer bared his teeth in a grin. “Bet that stings.”

And it did. Cold fire burned along his side, so vicious he barely managed to duck Edge's next swing.

Excalibur flashed as Arthur moved in, hacking at Edge with the sword in his left hand. His right arm hung, blood rolling down it to drip on the grass. The killer parried with no apparent effort.

Spotting an opening, Gawain struck out at Edge's thigh, forcing him to leap back. Daring a quick look, he saw that Bors still wasn't moving.

Is he dead?

No, but Edge gored him badly. And he's bloodied you, too,
the dragon told him.
He cut right through your cuirass.

Kel was right. Something hot rolled down his side from the source of the cold pain.

Grimly, he parried three teeth-rattling sword blows, aware of Arthur circling, limping on his wounded leg as he looked for an opening. The blood was flowing faster now, pouring from his injured arm.

Realization hit Gawain, cold and sickening: they were losing. Retreat was their only chance. They'd have to gather reinforcements and come back for the bastard.
Can you cast a gate?

I've tried. The same shield that's keeping me from calling out is blocking that, too.

The two knights engaged Edge grimly, trying to break through his guard. He parried every attack almost casually. The creature was fast—much faster than either of them. And worse, he was even stronger; it was all Gawain could do to block his attacks.

Then, abruptly, Edge lowered his weapon and straightened from his fighting crouch. “I think it's time to wrap this up. I've got a busy night planned.”

Gawain opened his mouth to sneer a retort, but before he could speak, Edge lashed out, hitting Arthur in the helm with a blurring backhand that sent him flying.

With a roar of rage, Gawain charged in, bringing his blade up and around in a scything blow intended to decapitate.

Edge parried, stepped inside his guard, and buried his hand in Gawain's gut so hard, it lifted him off his feet.

Hot agony stabbed into him, and he lost his grip on Kel. The dragon's wings slipped from around his hand and the sword tumbled to the ground. Gagging, Gawain clawed at the hand that held him off the ground.

With a sense of horror, he saw blood dripping from around the creature's fingers. Edge had impaled him on those knife-like claws, punching right through his armor.

From the corner of his eye, he saw that huge sword lift over his head. The bastard was going to decapitate him as he hung there helpless.

Before Edge could strike, an energy blast boiled upward from his feet—Kel, launching a desperate attack. The monster staggered back, losing his grip. Gawain screamed as his own weight tore him free from those claws. He hit the ground in a rattle of armor, paralyzed by the tearing agony in his gut.

As if from a great distance, he heard Arthur roar. Sword clashed on sword, and light exploded over his head. Arthur bellowed in pain.

“Enough of that,” Edge snapped. “You and I have business, Pendragon. We're going to finish what Geirolf started.”

“Fuck you!” Arthur rasped, his voice weak.

Blood filled Gawain's mouth, but he struggled to lift his head and push himself to his hands and knees. Magic foamed to his left with the telltale tingle of an opening dimensional gate.

Edge had picked Arthur up and thrown him over one shoulder like a sack of meal. He held Excalibur in the other hand.

Gawain tried to lunge at them, but his treacherous legs gave, dumping him on the grass. Clutching his bleeding gut, he watched the gate wink out behind Edge and Arthur. “No.”

A swarm of black fireflies descended on him and carried him away.

 

Irritated with herself,
Lark stalked down the cobblestone street, looking for Gawain.

She'd been about to climb the steps of her brownstone when she realized he was right. She was being a coward.

They needed to talk.

Assuming, that is, she could find him. He wasn't at his house; she'd checked there first. And Kel wasn't answering her calls.

If Gawain was already off getting laid, she swore to Merlin she'd…

Something was lying in the illumination of a street lamp. It looked like a body.

Frowning, Lark broke into a run, then skidded to a halt as she stared down at the still, familiar form. Cold horror rolled over her. “Guinevere?”

And if Guinevere was here, where was Arthur?

Heart pounding in sickly beats, Lark dropped to one knee and laid two fingers against the unconscious woman's throat. There wasn't a mark on her, and her pulse was steady and strong.

But she stank.

Oh, shit. Lark recoiled, her sense of sick dread increasing. She knew that smell. Death magic.

But all the sorcerers were dead….

Apparently not all of them, idiot.
Grimly, Lark sent a spell rolling across the unconscious woman's still form, trying to break the enchantment that held her. Nothing happened.

Don't panic, just call Morgana. She'll know what to do.
Summoning her magic, Lark reached for the Maja's mind.

And slammed right into yet another magical barrier that was obviously designed to prevent communication from anyone in the area.

What the hell was going on?

Frowning, she sat back on her heels, and conjured a pillow and blanket to cover the unconscious witch.

It was apparently all she could do. Damn it to hell.

In the distance, someone groaned.

Lark looked around spotted something shining in the moonlight between the trees of the park next door. Armor?

“Good God!” She leaped to her feet, conjured her own armor and sword, and ran.

There, in the middle of a circle of trampled, bloody grass, lay two men, both bleeding and still. One was wearing armor that was all too familiar. There was no sign of their attacker, though the soft earth was churned with tracks.

Hoofprints?

“Gawain!” Her heart in her throat, Lark dropped to her knees beside him. He lay facedown. She started to turn him over, then hesitated, not sure how badly he was hurt.

“Help him.” Kel's voice sounded from the grass a few feet away. “I can't heal him. Hell, I can't even get him to come around. He's too badly wounded. There was something nasty on that bastard's claws.”

Claws? “What about Bors?”

“Here.” The knight groaned again, and she realized his was the voice she'd heard. “I think…I think I can change.”

Magic flared around him. When it faded, a black wolf lay sprawled on the bloody ground. He rose to his feet and shook himself, whole again, before trotting toward her.

Gawain, however, wasn't even conscious, so changing was out of the question for him. And since he was the source of Kel's major magic, if he was too badly hurt, Kel had nothing to draw on. She threw a look at the sword. “Drop his armor. Let me touch him.”

Even as she reached for him, the enchanted scale and plate melted away. Lark rested a hand on the small of his bare back—and winced at what she sensed.

He'd been all but gutted. A human would already be dead of such wounds.

Closing her eyes, Lark let the Mageverse pour through her hands and into him, healing his horrific injuries, forcing his body to regenerate the blood he'd lost.

“Arthur…” The word was so faint, at first she wasn't sure he'd spoken at all. “He's got Arthur.”

Lark went cold. “Who?”

“Richard,” Bors said. He'd returned to human form while she'd been distracted. “He attacked us.”

Gawain lifted his head. His hair was matted with blood, his eyes wide. “He took Arthur.”

Lark stared at him in horror. “Edge is dead. He must be—the last grail was destroyed!”

“He survived,” Kel said, sounding stronger now that Gawain had recovered. “My uncle helped him.”

“What? How?”

Gawain pushed himself onto his hands and knees. Magic rolled over him as Kel clothed him in his usual jeans and shirt. “He said he and Arthur were going to finish what Geirolf started. Then he took Arthur with him.”

“Why would he…?” Lark's eyes widened. “The sacrifice! Oh, God, the spell that would have destroyed the Magekind! But I thought he needed a Magekind couple for that?”

“Arthur would be even better,” Kel said. “Magically speaking, he's the heart of the Magekind.”

Lark bunched her fists, fighting panic. “Where did he go, Kel?”

“Where else?” Kel asked bitterly. “The Dragon Lands. He knows he'll be safe there.”

Bors stood. “We've got to gather our forces and attack before…”

“There's no time,” Gawain interrupted, sitting up. “We'd all be dead before we finished. There's only one thing we
can
do in time.”

“No,” Kel gasped in horror. “Oh, fuck no. Forget it, Gawain!”

His partner's expression was cold with determination. “In dragon form, you'd have the power to get through those shields and save Arthur.”

Lark stared at him in sick horror. “Only if he killed you! Gawain…”

“If we don't get Arthur back, I'm dead anyway.” He rose to his feet and handed the sword to Bors. “You'll have to take my head.”

“Oh, for Cachamwri's sake, Gawain!” There was panic in Kel's voice. “Don't do this to me.”

“No!” Lark leaped to her feet and grabbed his forearm. Her heart was hammering, and it was all she could do not to throw up. Gawain dead, his head cleaved from his shoulders. Like Antonio. “You can't seriously…”

“We don't have time to argue about this, Lark.” Gawain's expression was emotionless, but his eyes burned in his pale face. “Kel could penetrate Dragon Lands' wards and rescue Arthur, but only in dragon form. He's the only one with a prayer of saving the Magekind. It's better to lose me than all of us.”

“What if I can't, Gawain?” Kel demanded, sounding as frantic as she felt. “This all would be for nothing!”

Lark's panicked mind worked desperately. “Wait—what about a strike through the heart? What if I could heal you—”

“We tried that a thousand years ago,” Gawain interrupted impatiently. “Morgana couldn't leave me dead long enough. It didn't work.” He looked at Bors. “Bors.”

“Shit, Gawain.” The knight shook his head and lifted the dragon sword. “I wish to God you weren't right.”

“Truebond with me!” Lark reached out and grabbed him. Tears spilled down her cheeks, but she didn't care. “He could run you through the heart instead. It would be enough to kill you, but I can hold your soul here and heal you once Kel is free.”

He looked at her, sadness in his eyes. “It won't work, Lark. You'd only die with me. Just like Diera and Antonio.”

SEVENTEEN

Tegid growled under
his breath, pouring more power into the wards around his cavern, but the pressure built as the ape fought him, forcing his way through.

Abruptly the spell imploded, and the ape's gate burst wide in the cavern's main chamber. Cloven hooves clicked as the creature stepped through, another mammal draped limply over one crimson shoulder. Its prisoner was tightly bound in shimmering bands of magical force.

The ape's eyes glowed yellow, and its black lips peeled back from its fangs. “You tried to block my gate, reptile. I don't like that.” Malevolent power boiled around it like lava. Cachamwri's eggs, the thing was powerful.

Nothing to do now but try to bluff. Tegid drew himself up, fanning his spines as he stalked toward the ape, smoke drifting from his nostrils. “I've decided I don't want you here, ape. Work your death magic somewhere else.”

The ape lifted its horned head, glowing eyes narrowed. “We've been through this, Tegid. That is your name, isn't it? Tegid?”

Tegid's spines flatten in alarm. “How did you know that?”

The ape bared its teeth. “Your nephew sends his regards. I think he recognized your handwriting.”

His heart began to pound, a thick, slow beat. “I trust you told him he was wrong.”

“Would he have believed me if I had?”

“Ungrateful ape!” Tegid lashed his tail in a rage that grew even hotter when the creature only looked amused. “If Kel tells Soren…”

“Kel isn't going to be telling anybody anything,” the ape said dismissively. “When I'm finished with this spell, Gawain will be dead, and Kel will be well on his way to turning into a very large razor blade.”

And Tegid's problems would be over. He blew out a puff of smoke and reluctantly yielded. “Very well, ape. Work your magic and get out.”

The creature lifted one shoulder. “I'm afraid it's not that simple. This particular spell will require considerable preparation.” He looked toward the entrance of Tegid's chambers. “And I'd better get to work. I don't care to be caught by the sunrise.”

Tegid hissed a dragon curse and turned. Catching a stalagmite between his claws, he climbed up to his sleeping chamber and settled down to watch.

However quickly the ape worked his magic, it wouldn't be fast enough. The sooner the Magekind was dead, the safer Tegid would be.

 


I will save
you,” Lark insisted, her eyes locked on his, willing Gawain to agree. “Just give me the chance.”

He only shook his head. “Lark, you don't have the power to hold me here that long. It would kill you.”

“I won't let it,” she said through her teeth. “I will
not
allow you to die like this.”

“No,” he snapped. “Look, we don't have time to stand here arguing. Bors…”

She stepped against him, grabbed his face in both hands, and dragged him down for a hard, desperate kiss that tasted of tears. “He might as well kill me, too, Gawain,” she said against his mouth. “Let me do this. Please.”

“Dammit!” Bors growled. “Kel, this is ridiculous!”

They looked around. The sword had gone limp, hanging in Bors's hands like a piece of wet spaghetti. “Let her try, Gawain! I didn't endure sixteen hundred years of hell only to kill you.”

Bors gave a snort and waved the blade, which flopped in his hands in silent demonstration of Kel's refusal to cooperate. “Gawain, we don't have time for this argument. Truebond with the girl before my son kills Arthur and we
all
die.”

Gawain spat a vile curse, helpless anger in his eyes as he realized they had him outmaneuvered. “Dammit, Lark, I love you! I don't want to kill you.”

In her frenzy, his confession barely even registered. She rested her forehead against his and stared into his face. “Neither of us is going to die.”

He took a deep breath. “Then do it.”

“God, thank you.” Ignoring the tiny, panicked voice that told her she didn't know what the hell she was doing, Lark opened herself to the Mageverse and drew its power deep, inhaling it, letting its warm, foaming energies fill her until her mind seemed to burn. She'd need every last erg of magic she could absorb to heal Gawain's injuries.

Once she had as much as she could hold, Lark sent a gentle spell rolling through her fingertips and into the warm, bearded skin between her palms. Without protest, Gawain opened himself to her. And for the first time, she made contact with his mind.

Power. Deep, ancient, profoundly masculine, yet incredibly compassionate. He had a craving for justice, a need to protect those weaker than he was, which had been born from his centuries of seeing the best and worst mankind was capable of.

And he loved her.
She felt the warm purity of it shining through his consciousness like sunlight. Her willingness to risk herself for him had brought that love to the surface in all its sweet devotion. Though they'd known each other so little time, the depths of Gawain's love stunned and humbled her.

I haven't been around all these centuries without learning to recognize someone worthy of love
.

God, Gawain, I love you!
The thought burst from the core of her consciousness, almost vibrating with its intensity.

She sensed his male satisfaction.
Good.

Despite the circumstances, Lark found herself laughing.

Another voice spoke in their joined consciousness. Kel.
I've got to end our bond, Gawain. We won't be able to break the spell if we're linked.

Lark blinked in awe. Now that she'd become aware of him, she realized the dragon was an astonishingly massive presence in Gawain's mind. Touching Kel's consciousness, she glimpsed a kaleidoscope of alien memories: flying into the aching blue of the sky, the feeling of wings biting the air. Scaly, reptilian faces, dragon voices hissing and roaring.

You're right,
Gawain said in their link.
Warm winds, my friend.
It was the traditional Draconian farewell.

Warm winds, Gawain.

Even through as he started to draw away, they could feel Kel's regret, his fear that he'd end up killing them both. Worse, that their sacrifice would be for nothing.

I won't fail you, Gawain,
he told them silently, thrusting the fear away.
That I swear.

I know, Kel. You've never failed me.

Then the dragon was gone.

They were alone together, floating in warm delight of their nascent link.
Closer,
Gawain said, reaching for her with his mind.
We need to be closer. We're not completely bonded yet. You're still holding back.

And he was right, she realized. Some part of her was afraid. What if he saw her as she really was and turned away? What if he….

I love you.
His soul wrapped itself around hers like warm silk.
I love your strength. I love your intelligence and will and humor. And now that I've touched you, I know you can do this. You can save us.

And he did. His certainty felt like sunlight cutting through the cold of her fear, like warm, fragrant water, like music, deep and low. Feeling that certainty, she couldn't help but believe it, too. Releasing the last of her fear, Lark opened herself completely.

And with a psychic click, their bond became complete. She could feel him in all his fierce courage, the love and loyalty, his devotion to the cause of saving humanity from itself.

What could she do but love him?

What could I do but love you?
he whispered.

“Are you ready?” Bors's voice, breaking through the moment of peace, bringing them back to awareness.

Gawain's hands caught her shoulders and pushed Lark gently back. “We've got to do it now, Lark,” he said softly. “There's no more time.”

For just a moment, she felt fear stir again. Then she saw a memory in his mind: herself, stepping from the boy's home after the fight with Clayton Roth, blazing like a torch. Gawain believed her.

Her mouth firmed as she drew herself upright. She rose on her toes and kissed him just once, a brush of the lips that more promise of the future, then stepped away.

Looking over at Bors, Lark nodded tightly. “We're ready.”

The knight moved and took her place in front of Gawain, Kel gleaming long and solid in his hand. The little dragon's ruby eyes were very wide. Bors himself looked pale, his jaw tight. He lifted the sword and hesitated. “Gawain…”

Gawain gave him a bracing smile. “I know.”

“Dammit.” He took a deep breath and closed his eyes a moment, gathering himself.

Lark watched as Kel dissolved Gawain's armor away, leaving him standing bare-chested, wearing only his jeans. He squared his broad shoulders and met her gaze.

I love you,
he told her in the Truebond.

She licked her lips and fought the rise of terror.
And I love you.

 

Bands of magic
bound Arthur so tightly, he could barely breathe. He was intensely aware of the icy stone floor he lay on, and the click of Edge's cloven hooves as he paced around the huge, echoing chamber. The sorcerer's voice rose and fell in a rythmic, alien chant that made every hair stand up on his body.

Arthur closed his eyes and concentrated again, trying to reach out to Gwen's mind. He touched only utter blackness. The bastard had her in a coma so deep, even Arthur couldn't wake her.

God, he missed her. And unless he did something now, he'd never touch her bright, lovely soul again.

His mind worked furiously as his thoughts went back to Gawain and Bors. Both men had been seriously injured, but Arthur didn't think it was anything a healer couldn't fix. As long as they were found in time, anyway.

But even if they were, what about the wards around the Dragon Lands? They hadn't been able to break through them before…but maybe Soren could help. If they could get to him in time.

Fuck. Arthur eyed Edge's broad crimson back with its seared magical scars. Somehow, he had to buy some time. If he could only distract the bastard….

“Just for curiosity's sake, what exactly are you doing, Richard?” With an effort, he made his voice sound level and politely interested rather than furious and pissed off.

The chanting fell silent. Hooves clicked slowly closer, giving Arthur time to wonder if he'd just made a tactical error. “Preparing to work the spell Geirolf should have worked to begin with. I told him from the start he should have sacrificed you in that spell—I even suggested using Excalibur as the sacrificial knife. But Geirolf thought you'd be too closely guarded. He decided he could use a Magekind couple as a substitute. If he'd listened to me, he wouldn't be dead.” Edge smiled in a chilling expanse of razored teeth. “But hey, looks like it's all going to work out in the end.” He leaned over Arthur, his breath smelling of death. “I'm going to wrap this spell around that sword of yours, Artie. And then I'm going to drop it right through your heart.”

 

Gawain watched Bors
draw back the sword. This was going to hurt. He clenched his fists and braced himself.

With a grunt of effort, Bors thrust the sword with his full weight behind it. Gawain sucked in a gasp at the pain of ribs cracking under the impact. The point of the sword shot through his heart.

Fire exploded in Gawain's chest. Lark's scream echoed his. Bors jerked the blade free as Gawain fell to one knee, cold racing over his body as his dying heart struggled to beat. Lark grabbed for him as he toppled to the grass on his back. The pain bled rapidly away as his body began to go numb and distant. Staring up at the spinning stars, he struggled to draw breath.

Gawain!
Lark flooded his consciousness, so warm with life she almost burned.
I've got you! Hang on…

But above them, the stars were exploding, spilling down a river of light that poured over his cold, bleeding body. He felt himself start to float…

No!
Fiercely, Lark wrapped herself around him, anchoring him in place, holding him inside his body.
No! You have to stay. We have to save Arthur! Gawain, please!

He wanted to. God, he wanted to. Yet the pull of the light was so gentle—and so incredibly powerful, dragging him from her desperate arms as it sung sweetly of peace….

No!
Lark would die if he died.
He jolted, trying to fight the light, trying to fight the pull that threatened to kill the woman he loved.

 

Lark tightened her
grip, holding on with everything she had against the seductive pull of the shining warmth.

The strong, bright warmth that breathed offers of an end to battle, an end to the fight that never ended…Despite herself, she looked up into the light.

Gawain's eyes flared open.
No.
His voice rang in her mind, and he was fully with her again, his consciousness locking onto hers.
You're not going to die.

He was back! Quickly, she reached for the Mageverse, trying to call the magic, restart his stopped heart.

Nothing happened.

Oh, God.
She'd waited too long. She'd gone too far. She couldn't reach her power….

I said you're not dying!
His iron will poured into hers, extending her reach, strengthening her until the power flooded in again, sweet and life-giving. Desperately, she dragged it deep and sent it spinning into his body, repairing his damaged heart, forcing it to beat.

Thud.

Silence.

Grimly, she dragged in more power, sent more magic into his healing heart.

Thud. Thud. Thud.

And the singing light winked out.

Gawain sucked in an agonized breath as Lark did the same, her body instinctively echoing his. His heart began beating hard now, uneven thuds that settled quickly into strong rhythmic thumps.

BOOK: Master of Swords
13.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Hindenburg Murders by Max Allan Collins
Ransom at Sea by Fred Hunter
Ode to a Fish Sandwich by Rebecca M. Hale
Bone Deep by Webb, Debra
Mistress of Redemption by Joey W. Hill