Knight Witch
Chapter 2
Soldiers of Darkness
Far out in the
distance, a crown at its apex that stretched over a mile in all
directions as it struck the thick clouds high above it,
stood an enormous swirling and twisting pillar of intense red and
yellow flames.
The
tower of fire burned so bright, it swept over the opaque darkness
that had fallen over the land, and people standing on the castle
wall, stone faces and pale, could at last gaze down at the village
below them.
Hundreds
of shadows, cast by the rose-colored light of the curling fire
suspended above, had taken over their village. Growing and shrinking
in pace with the swirling tower of fire, the shadows cast an eerie
image of uncanny, shapeless creatures wandering its streets.
Gwendolyn
recalls eyeing the people standing on the castle wall as they turned
their sights once more to the pillar of fire. The light from the
massive fire, flicking on and off their faces, formed a bleak
portrait of the fear gnawing away at what little spirit they had
left. Forced to flee their homes, they stood pressed against one
another with their children at their side, staring up at death.
Yet,
the biggest threat to the people of Mada came not from the
spiraling pillar of fire, but in the disastrous event taking place
below it.
Along the rim of
the massive chasm that gave life to the enigmatic flames, red-hot
fiery brimstone and melted rock, heaving out
like a dense clump of bubbling oil, gathered to form a fast moving
stream of searing molten rock.
Moving fast
across the forest the dense forest, the streams of molten rock
transform everything they touch into a mound of
smoldering black ashes and stripped vast areas of the forest
leading toward the castle of all its trees and shrubberies.
Houses and cabins
in the direct paths of these deadly currents of
fire, or even close to them, burned to the ground fast as their
dried-out wooden frames burst into flames from the extreme heat of
the inferno raging around them.
Trapped in a
storm of raging fire and smoke, the screams of people living in these
wooden shelters charged the night with the unforgettable haunting
sounds of their deaths as they underwent the horror of being burned
alive.
As people were
dying, the roaring blaze continued to move at high
pace toward the castle. The Sisters of Sorcery gave thoughts to
putting out the fire by calling on a spell that would bring about an
excessive rainfall, but with the sky on fire, such a
spell was impossible.
The only means
the Sorceresses could see to stop the fire was to place a spell on
the waters of the nearby rivers and streams.
Raising
the water high enough to shower down on the intense
fire, the Sisters extinguished most of the fire, but despite
their endeavor to prevent the fire from spreading, much of the forest
continued to burn.
Within mere seconds of arriving at the outskirts of the Village,
everything the savage fire touched burst into flames and turned to
ash.
After a time, no
one in the castle could see much of what was taking place. An
impenetrable veil of black and pale smoke had swallowed
up the Village, obscuring it. But the faint, hollow cries of
people still scrambling to escape the destructive flames--and those
trapped inside it--said much of what was transpiring behind the wall
of smoke and fire.
As the fire
continued to advance, many in the castle succumbed to despair, for
they saw no hope of stopping the massive fires from consuming all of
Mada.
Then, something
remarkable happened; as if snuffed out by the supreme hand of
a divine being, the hellish tower of flames vanished in a rush of
bright light.
Even the rivers
of hot, melted rock, flowing towards the castle came to an abrupt
stop four or five hundred yards into the Village. And as molten rock
cooled and solidified, they fracture and rupture
into a dark cloud of dust that faded into the blackness of the
scorched ground.
If not for the scores of smoldering scorched and brittle trees, the
hills of black cinder, and
the dense layer of smoke wrapped across the
land, the great fire having ever existed might have been
in doubt.
All at once, from
somewhere atop the castle walls, there arose a disturbing loud cry,
"Look, there!"
All eyes pivoted
towards the forest, and there, where once stood the mighty column of
flame, rising out like an enormous dome in the haze of all the dense
gray smoke, they caught sight of a pale, crimson
glow.
Disquieted over
the chance of what she feared the most had come to pass, the
Sorceress Queen, Amadora, called five of
her "Overseers of the Peace" to the throne room.
Task
with protecting the innocent, the Overseers--since the time of their
formation a half century or more ago,
had yet to come across an adversary they could not overcome. Their
weapons and fighting skills, along with their ability
to carry out small feats of magic, were legendary.
Gwendolyn's
father was once an Overseer himself until Queen Amadora
pulled him from their ranks to serve as the head of her army.
The Sorceress
Queen, suspecting the terror behind the attack on her Kingdom,
ordered the five Overseers to ride out and confirm her suspicion.
But before
sending them off, she informed them of the risks they take going out
on such a mission. The Queen also told them that, had it not been for
the dire urgency of the matter, she would never
think of sending them out to what may well be their deaths.
The ranking
Overseers--a tall, vigorous man with a fiery red bird on his chest
plate, pounded his fist against his chests, and with pride, pointed
out to the Queen of their pledge to carry out her every order, no
matter the danger or cost.
Amadora
bowed her head in gratitude, and then called
for the ranking Overseer to approach her, and stepping
forward, he stood arm's length away from
her.
The
Queen stared into the eyes of the Overseer for a for several seconds
before summing forth a young servant girl to her side.
The servant girl
approached Amadora with a small, silver box held in both hands.
Standing three
feet away and left of the Queen was Gwendolyn.
Her head lurched to the right, and her eyes
narrowed as the servant girl bowed and held out the box for the Queen
to open.
The box had
mystic writing engraved all around it in gold lettering and along
with incantation symbols. Gwendolyn did not recognize all the writing
or the symbols on the box, but the few she knew was enough to tell
her the spells were there to keep whatever was inside from getting
out.
The
Sorceress Queen open the box, gazed down
at its contain for a moment with a concerned
look in her eyes, then taking hold of it with both hands, pulled out
a long, silver necklace with a small, spherical-triangle shape,
silver amulet attached to its end.
Gwendolyn came
close to letting out a loud gasp as the Queen Amadora held up the
amulet for all to see, for at the center of the amulet
was a strange eye that moved about as if it was examining everyone
and thing in the room.
Gwendolyn knew
then why the needed to seal the box with so many spells; it contained
the eye of K'nosh, the evil Wizard who, almost
three centuries ago, used black magic to gain control of the Council
of Wizards.
Gwendolyn had
learned of K'nosh treachery during her one of
her studies. From what she remembered, K'nosh
plucked out his right eye, placed on the amulet, and after casting an
evil spell on it, used the eye to manipulate the
other Wizards into doing his bidding.
But the Council
discovered K'nosh's evil
plot and foiled the malicious Wizard plans.
K'nosh
was sentenced to die by the Council, but his
power proved to be so great, nothing they tried
would kill the evil wizard.
So the Council
imprisoned K'nosh somewhere deep inside a
mountain, where he could never hope to escape, and no one would ever
find him.
As for K'nosh's
amulet with the evil eye, the Wizards placed it inside the silver
box, which no one has seen ever again until that moment.
The Sorceress
Queen reached out, placed the necklace around the Overseer's neck,
and then held the amulet in her hand.
With
great sadness in her heart, Amadora
tells the Overseer, "Through this, I will
see all you see. But be warned! The eye in the
amulet is a thing of immense evil. It possesses the potential for
poisoning men's minds with perverse and deceitful thoughts that--if
brought out, will lead you to a fatal ending. Do not stare at
it for long, or it will take hold of your thoughts."
Queen
Amadora then let go of the amulet, stepped back, turned about,
and with her head sunk midway low, walked toward her throne.
She
climbed the six broad steps leading up to the chair, but stopped
short of sitting on it when she reached the top.
Her
face frozen in a state of bewilderment, Amadora
stood before the empty chair and gazed at it as if she
lacked the worthiness to place herself on it, then spun about.
An expression on
her face that could shatter a large stone; she
gazed at the Overseer who followed her every movement with extreme
interest.
Her head held
high, body straight and rigid; Queen Amadora
peered into the eyes of each of the men as she spoke. "You have
all served me well, and have never failed me in all I asked,"
she said with gratification for their services to
her. "That is why I selected each of you for this task."
Amadora held back
from speaking for an instant to reflect on the Overseers pass
deeds, but moreover, to give her time to clear
her throat.
"It grieves
me I cannot grant you a charm to aid you. But without knowing what we
are up against, other than my blessings for a swift and safe return,
I can offer you nothing."
An Overseer
called "Ur'zo, the strong,"
a two-hundred pound, red-bearded man with
several notches on the hilt of his sword for every evil troll and
monster he had killed, struck his fist against
his chest plate. He then proclaimed, in a hearty
voice, "It is more than adequate, My Queen."
His fellow
Overseers were quick to strike their fist
against their chest plates in solidarity that indeed it was enough.
The Queen nodded
several times. "Go then," she commanded in a
resilient voice, her head held high. "Find me the villain
behind this attack. But know I have called on the spirits of the
great First Lords of Magic, to watch over each of you and protect you
from harm."
The Overseers
bowed their heads, turned around, and then left
the Queen's throne room.
Soon after, Queen
Amadora return to her private chamber, and glaring out her
window, watched as the Overseers, undaunted by thoughts of death,
rode into the dark forest.
Standing quiet
behind Queen Amadora, looking sad and
distress, was Gwendolyn.
The look on the
Queen's face troubled Gwendolyn. The Queen
appeared dishearten, lost in thought, and would
not take her eyes off the Overseers even after they had
vanished behind the cover of the smoke-filled
night.
Gwendolyn
strolled over to Amadora and stood by her
side, but the Queen did not notice her.
She joined the
Queen for a while in peering into the dark, and then, turned her head
and gazed at Amadora.
The Queen's
chin hung low, near to her chest, her lips turned downward, and she
had a dim look in her eyes that brought forth
lines to brows folded at the center. Gwendolyn struggled to read the
Queen's thoughts by interpreting the look on her face, but she
could not.
"Is all well
with you, My Queen?"
Wiping
her hands in a circular motion, Amadora
looked toward the main chamber.
"I
should attend to our visitors. I must make them aware of the
situation."
Gwendolyn,
a grim expression on her face, drew nearer to the Sorceress Queen.
"They
already know, My Queen. All one has to do is look out any window to
see what is happening."
Queen
Amadora, half-dazed, turned and placed a
gentle hand on Gwendolyn's face, and with a fragmented smile and a
kind, earnest tone, she said, "I am... sorry,
my Darling."
"Regarding
what, My Queen?"
"Your
birthday celebration; it has been ruined."
Gwendolyn
stared into Amadora emerald-green
eyes. They once sparkle with the light of life, but no longer. All
Gwendolyn could detect in them at the moment was a blend of turmoil
and desolation that eclipsed the Queen's beauty. It broke
Gwendolyn's heart to see Queen Amadora
suffer the discomfort of self-doubt.
She
threw her arms around Amadora
and leaned her head against the Queen's shoulder.
"There
will be others," a downcast Gwendolyn whispered into the Queen's
ears. "There will always be others."
Some
time later, the Overseers approached an area closed to the
curious red glow. The darkness and billow of smoke from burnt trees
made it difficult for them to see much except a large,
hazy, bright red light some distance away that looked like a giant
dome.
The Overseers
looked at each other for a moment, and without saying a word,
descended from their horses.
Drawing their
long swords, and staying low, the Overseers,
moving in silence along a path of charred trees, and a
ground covered with a thick
coat of black ash, made their way toward the strange
light.
Turning often to
look back, it was easy for the lead Overseer to
judge his men's reluctance to move forward. Each man had a look of
uncertainty on his face. Yet without a word from him, they continued
to go on toward the red glow, which grew larger
as they came closer to it.
When
the Overseers arrived at the mysterious
light, sinking low and hiding behind a cluster of burnt trees, they
peered out at the red light in front of them.
The Overseers
grew pale to see the light came from a hole in
the ground half the size of the castle grounds. But what they saw
coming out of the hole was more disturbing and
horrifying and proved the Queen Amadora to
be correct in her suspicion.
Rising
out from the depths of the large pit were
thousands of demons and monstrous beasts of all
shapes and sizes.
It was a
remarkable, and yet, terrifying
sight to behold. The Overseers could just hold themselves from
running off in fear.
Green,
scaled bodies, with slanted and inflated eyes; broad snouts, and
large fangs projecting from the lower portion of their mouths, these
demons were the most formidable creatures the Overseers had ever laid
eyes on.
So they
thought, until they cast their eyes on the second wave of these
embodiments of evil.
Stepping
out from the abyss on their rear legs, they raised from the
pit by the hundreds, were huge, dark red demons.
Standing at some
eight to ten feet tall, these enormous creatures had ram-like horns
on the sides of their heads the sizes of an elephant's tusk, and
features that resembled both man and bull.
Their large
muscles, bulging from their colossal bodies,
stretched and swelled from their arms and chest as they used their
large hands to hoist themselves out from the pit. And their powerful
legs made a tremendous thump as their hoofed feet drop hard onto
the surface of a realm denied to them by the
gods ever to touch on.
It did not end
there; smaller, brownish demons, with warts all over their bodies,
soon followed them out of the pit. Most were four to five feet in
height, but they were just as hideous and
dangerous as the bigger ones.
Some had spike
horns the size of dagger raising from their forehead, and large
claws stretching over the tips of their fingers three inches long. A
few had shorter, cone-shaped horns extending
from their brows, with spikes running along their spines and limbs.
At first glance,
they appeared clumsy beast, their legs long and thighs short,
the brutes ran about with their knees buckled as if they were
grasshoppers. Yet, oddly enough, they moved about with incredible
haste.
Several dashed
into the woods with such speed, it was hard to believe they were ever
there.
One the most
deadly of these creatures had the greatest weapon of all, a tail long
enough to encircle their bodies twice over, with an arrowhead tip at
its end. Moving behind them as agile and tactful as a cobra rearing
up to strike, they use their serpentine tails like spears to attack
anyone or thing that dares come close to it.
Then,
just as the Overseers though they had seen it all, like water rising
above a swollen well, countless of putrid cadavers climbed out
from the depth of the pit.
Dressed in
various tattered armor, they slithered out from the pit
carrying bizarre weapons that could slice through a man with one
stroke.
The Overseers
watched with awe as the army of the undead made
their way to the other soulless creatures of darkness
and lined up alongside them. They turned and stared at each
other with raised brows as they puzzled over how it was conceivable
for these hideous creatures to move
about as they did, for they had no eyes, just deep,
black holes where their eyes should have been.
Most notable,
and burning, was the unbearable stench of
rotting flesh and withered
bones that followed them from the moment they left the pit, it was so
intolerable, it overwhelmed the Overseers, and the greater the
legions' number, the greater the stench.
The Overseers
covered their noses and mouths to stop the unpleasant smell from
overpowering their senses, but it was of no use. Their
eyes watered, their noses burn, and their lungs
expanded as they held back from taking in air reeking of
death. The situation grew so insufferable, no longer able to hold
back from gagging, one of the Overseers coughed.
He
muffled the noise by putting his hand over his mouth, but it was too
late. A small demon, alert by the sound, turned
its head fast toward the noise.
The Overseers,
quick to hide behind the remains of a large field of burnt brushes,
glanced at the creature.
Its head slanted
back, eyes roving from side to side in a cunning motion, it appeared
to be listening--with its large, bat-like ears--for signs of an
intrusion.
The
impish-looking demon moved its head about several times in a
twitching motion, but hearing nothing other than the trampling of its
fellow creatures moving about, it gave out a broad
hiss, exposing rows of sharp-edged teeth, and then moved on to join
the others.
Feeling free to
look again, the Overseers' eyes opened wide in
disbelief, as they saw hundreds of towering knights, dressed in black
armor, emerged from the pit.
Riding out from
the fiery pit on the backs of mammoth,
hideous-looking steeds that left a trail of fire
as their hooves struck the ground with the crash of thunder, these
armored giants moved fast to enter the ranks of the army of the dead.
The height of
terror among the Overseers continued to intensify as they beheld
twenty or better, winged beasts, with enormous
hooked claws and jagged teeth, fly away from the pit and station
themselves above the ghastly army.
But no scene was
more disturbing to the Overseers than seeing the macabre
army line up in battle formation along a path,
carved out by the river of molten rock, leading straight toward the
castle.
Back at the
Castle, standing over a large crystal orb at the center of one of the
many rooms in her mystic tower, the Sorceress Queen, with the aid of
the mysterious eye in the amulet, had witnessed
the entire event unfold.
Aware of the
impending invasion, Amadora rushed to her throne room where
Gwendolyn's father, the Lord Commander of her army, waited for
further orders.
Bursting wide
open the two large doors leading into the throne room, the Queen did
not hesitate to direct her Lord Commander to make ready his men to do
battle against the devastating army of
abominable creatures.
Then, drawing on
an enchantment, she called on her Overseers, in a voice only they
could hear, to return to the castle at once.
At first, the
Overseers believed themselves bewitched by the strange eye in the
amulet and were reluctant to obey, but with the situation
growing dire every second, they thought it best to heed the words of
the mysterious voice and leave.
Mounting their
horses, the Overseers made a hasty retreat to the castle, but midway
there they were attacked by a multitude of
creatures from the pit.
The Overseers
tried escaping the vile creatures, but
outnumbered by the army of monsters, the
creatures charged at the men with maximum
strength.
They crowded
around the Overseers horses, grabbed hold of the men, and threw them
to the ground.
Cut off from all
means out of the area, escape was now no longer possible, so the
Overseers fought back hard with all they had.
The clanging
and battering sounds of swords clashing against swords, body
armor, and shields travel as far off as to reach the castle walls.
The horrific
screams of the Overseers as they each met their faith
sparked fear in the hearts and minds of the
inhabitants of Mada. They were not the cries of men dying in battle,
but of men meeting a horrid death and calling
out from beyond their graves.
But what struck the most fear in the hearts of all, was the thought
of what would come to pass should the Overseers fail to stop the
impending threat from reaching the castle.
Meanwhile,
the Lord Commander giving out orders to his men in preparation for
the battle to come, and the sound of men racing about to take their
position, echoed throughout the castle.
As he moved from
wall to wall reassuring and encouraging his men to stand fast and
fight hard, he noticed the dim expression on his men's
faces, and it grieved him. It said much to him about
the fear and desperation they carried in their hearts for a battle
not yet fought.
Men, with such
thoughts in their mind, often falter
during combat. They panic, run off, and their
actions inspire others to do the same.
As Lord Commander
of the Queen's army, Gwendolyn's father could not stand for or allow
such a thing to occur during battle.
The knowledge he
could rely on his men to hold up against the invaders was
crucial to the fight ahead. Without that assurance, without
the absolute knowledge, he could depend on each
man to do his finest, the battle would be lost
before it even started.
Still,
he did not fault his men for feeling as
they did, for even he--knowing well the futility of it all,
hid behind the mask of false
hope.
Only a madman or
a drunken fool would allow himself to believe a small band of mortal
soldiers could bear up against such a formidable army of creatures,
and he was neither mad nor drunk.
In his despondency, he stopped to look down at
the hundreds of people flocking into the castle.
Reports of the
nefarious army of creatures gathering out beyond
the castle walls had spread fast throughout the Kingdom and people
from all over Mada, seeking protection from the infernal army, showed
up at the castle gates in droves.
As
the people made their way in, he stared down at
them. From their roving eyes and grim expression, he could see their
faith and hope for survival laid not in the cold steel blade of his
soldiers', but in the mystical powers of the Sorceress Queen and
those of the Sisters of Sorcery.
Time; however,
was running out for those who still had not reached the safety of the
castle.
The efficiency of
the fortress' defenses rested on the main gates being lockdown and
secured, and from the dark army's position, he
could tell the assault on the castle would take place at any moment.
If he does not give the order
to close the gates, the creatures will overrun
the castle, and everyone inside will perish.
Yet, if he gives
the order to close the gates, those left outside the castle walls
would have to fend for themselves against an army of hideous,
cutthroat creatures, and many of these people never wielded a sword.
Gwendolyn's
father thought hard on what to do, and after
some reflection, lost all love for himself, for there was only one
acceptable choice.
The safety and
lives of people already in the castle walls depended
on his tactical judgment, not his emotions. And so, knowing well that
in doing so he condemned those left outside the
fortress wall to their deaths, he ordered the gates closed.
As the gates were
bolted shut, those left outside to face the fearsome army of
the Netherworld on their own, struck their fist
hard against the castle gates, crying out in frantic
voices as they did, to open the gates.
But despite all
their begging and pleading, the gates remained closed.
Sheer
hopelessness overtook the crowd outside the castle as they began to
feel no one inside the castle had any regard toward the ill fate that
awaited those they left to die.
Soon, their pleas
for mercy turned to cries of outrage, and they damned all inside to
the worst possible fate.
But they were
wrong; their calls for compassion had an immense influence on those
inside the fortified walls of the castle. They
dominated every corridor and chamber in the palace and afflicted
many with the heavy burden of guilt and shame.
Some strive to
obtain solace from feelings of guilt in the coldness of outright
denial of having done anything wrong. Others placed their hands over
their ears to obscure the agonizing cries of those left outside to
die.
Even
Gwendolyn's father, a man all-too-familiar with
the ugliness of war and the undesirable choices one must arrive at to
achieve victory, he, as well, suffered the strain of guilt, but there
was nothing he could. The assault on the castle had begun,
just as he had predicted.
From that moment
on, the safety and lives of those inside the castle walls depend on
keeping the gates closed, and no matter how his need to help the
people left outside weighed down on him, he
could not, and would not, allow the gates to be open.
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