Meet Melody

I’m doing something a little unusual. I’ve mentioned my new characters, Melody and Barnabus, the main characters of my latest story. I’m actually taking a break in their main story to write a short piece about Melody’s origin. I’m not quite finished with it yet, but I’ll post the first part anyway.

Melody MacTyre woke up alone in the snow, amid a ruin of fallen and broken trees. Her head was swimming and her throat ached horribly, as if she hadn’t had a drink in days. She stared at the sky in confusion, unaffected by the brightness of the sun as she looked past it into the countless stars.

“Move,” said a voice in her head, a voice not quite her own. “Get up!”

“I can’t,” she mumbled, her words feeling like fire in her neck. She looked down without moving her head, peering stupidly at the great limb pinning her legs to the ground. “I’m stuck….”

“Move the branch!” growled the voice.

Her leg moved, an involuntary jerk that sent the heavy branch tumbling away in a spray of powdery snow. Melody’s eyes widened and she stood up, looking down at her torn and dirty breeches in awe. The pain in her throat temporarily forgotten, she reached down to grab a length of broken oak that would have taken ten men to move. With barely a thought, she flicked her wrist and sent the log soaring away into the forest.

She swore softly, nearly falling back into the snow.

“Well done,” said the voice. “Told you!”

“What’s going on?” Melody asked as the burning in her throat returned. “Wh… what’s happening to me?”

“Us,” corrected the voice. “I’m you… at least your new memories.”

Melody’s head spun and she staggered away, her movements as quick as the wind. She came up hard against an unyielding outcrop of stone, shattering the rock with her shoulder.

“Watch it!” cried the voice. “Take it easy! Act a little more like a human or we’ll never blend in!”

Blink and You will Miss Her

Blink is a relatively recent creation. I touched on her origins in my blog about dreams a few days ago, and this should build on that theme just a little bit before I post the first part of her story. Last year I had a dream about a girl who came from another world. I don’t remember much, but the basic idea stuck with me and eventually became the character Blink. I remember two things from the dream, that she could teleport and that her name came from the phrase “Blink and you will miss her.”

Blink stared up at the sky in confusion. The city she knew was gone, replaced by a city of towering stone and thick smoke that blotted out thick swaths of nighttime stars. Strange rumbles filled the air, blending with the sound of people laughing and talking all around her. The windows were lit with a steady light, brighter than the torches and lanterns that the half-elven girl remembered. She was still wearing the strange garb of the reapers and could feel the dark chill of their hands. Her gear and weapons were gone, though one of their long, single edged blades rested on the stone beside her. The severed arm of its owner still dripped blood next to it. Her head ached abominably and she screwed her eyes shut, pressing her scraped palms to her temples as she pulled the leather and metal of the reaper hood low over her eyes. The headache faded and she lay still for several long minutes before she realized that she could still see, as clearly as day, in spite the eyeless mask and the growing night.

The girl noticed two things at nearly the same time. First, there was only one moon in the sky. Luna, the home of the celestials, was gone. Second, there was a window looking out on her ledge and a man was staring at her, his face frozen in shock. She started to rise, but the ill fitted mask slipped from her head and the headache returned with such force that she collapsed, falling away into comfortable darkness.

When she opened her eyes again, the mask was firmly over her eyes, blocking out the agonizing pain. She was in a small room on a wide, cushioned couch near a fireplace. The man she had seen watching from the window sat nearby, a strange look on his bearded face.

“I saw you in my dreams…” he said softly, his voice gentle and melodious. “You were being attacked… and then I woke up and you were outside.”

Blink tried to speak, but her voice was hoarse and raw. “Reapers… where are they?”

The man stood quickly, pressing her back down on the couch as she tried to rise. “Lie still,” he said gently. “I don’t know what reapers are, but there aren’t any here. Let me get you some water.”

He vanished and Blink lay still, looking blankly around the room as she tried to remember what had happened. The oddities in the room distracted her however, and the hazy memories continued to elude her. The fireplace held no wood, instead it was a simple metal grate with blue and orange flames rising from holes in a short metal tube. There were lamps on the walls spouting the same fire, though Blink couldn’t see the oil reservoirs. Candles, the only truly familiar light sources, lined a desk that was littered with parchment and scrolls. Leatherbound tomes filled shelves on either side of the desk and strange fireplace. She heard a lever crank, followed by the sound of running water. The stranger reappeared with a cup.

“Easy,” he said as he helped her to sip the cool liquid. “Easy… take it slow.”

“Where am I?” she asked. “Wh… who are you?”

In the War of Light and Shadow: Part 1

I know, I know, most of you have probably already seen this on Blogger. It’s a little bit of a mess, but I’m going to be moving most, if not all of my Blogspot content here to wordpress over the next few days. If you enjoy it, please comment and share. Thanks

Aravos had been a paladin once, a defender of good and a powerful champion of the light. The Bulwark had been his home and defending the Kingdom of Stone, his life’s work. Now he was imprisoned, trapped in the sunless depths of the king’s dungeons. The cell was small, barely wide enough for the elf to stretch out on the chilly floor. The only light came from the ghostly blue runes etched into his silvery, metallic skin. Hunger gnawed at his belly; he couldn’t remember the last time the prison wardens had brought him food. Not that it mattered much now, not with the dark magic that kept him alive. Well, sort of alive.

His keen ears caught a distant sound and he frowned. The tap tap of boots on stone grew closer and he stood wearily, the heavy chains that bound his limbs clanking loudly as he moved against the wall. Torchlight stung his eyes as the door slammed open.

“So you are still alive,” boomed a deep voice. A paladin in shining, golden armor stared at him with cold eyes, flanked by a pair of knights.

“Ser Halvor,” Aravos replied cooly. “It seems that death has not seen fit to claim me yet.” He narrowed his eyes. “To what do I owe the pleasure of your company?”

“The king requests your presence,” Halvor grunted. He stepped aside. “Though why he wants to have an audience with a traitor is beyond me.”

Aravos shuffled out into the hall, trying to ignore the knight’s drawn weapons. He was thin, little more than skin and bones and between the large soldiers and the massive paladin, he looked even smaller. He winced as one of the knights pushed his shoulder with a plated hand. His eyes flashed and he shot the man a dark glare. Less than a year ago he would have towered over the man, dressed in his own battle armor. Now, the man glared back and shook his sword.

“Move!”

Halvor hesitated by a heavy door. “It’s daylight. If you go out in the sun will you survive until we reach the palace?”

“I’m a Deathknight, not a vampire,” Aravos growled. “And I’m undying, not undead. There’s a difference. The sun’s no threat to me.”

“You fought for the damned king,” snapped the paladin. “You lead the undead against your own brothers, you commanded them… you are no different from the rest.”

“My will was not my own,” said the Deathknight, squinting his eyes against the blinding sunlight. “You know that as well as anyone. When Ser Zeffron freed my mind I turned myself in to the Church of Light. Does that sound like the undead to you?”

“Shut up,” rumbled the paladin. He started to continue but was cut off as screams and cries rose from the city below. He hefted his hammer and gestured at Aravos. “Get him out of here! Now!”

There was an explosion that shook the ground, knocking the weakened prisoner to his knees. The knights swore and grabbed him by the arms, hoisting him back to his feet as the paladin sprinted away. Aravos resisted feebly, helpless against their strength.

“What’s going on?” he asked. “What’s happening?”

“Don’t you already know?” snarled one of the soldiers. “You’re one of them!”

“Quiet!” cried the other. “Just help me get him to the palace!”

Aravos would have whitened if he hadn’t already been the color of pale silver. “The undead… they’ve breached the Bulwark.”

A second explosion rocked the ground and Aravos fell a second time. “They have throwers,” he panted. “That means it’s an invasion not a raid. You need to kill the commander, break their strength!”

One of the knights stopped and leveled his blade at Aravos’ throat. “You were their leader once! Why don’t we just kill you? How do we know that you aren’t causing this?”

“We take him to the king!” said the other, urgently laying a hand on his companion’s arm. “We have our orders!”

“Killing me won’t make a bit of difference,” Aravos said calmly. “You need to get these people to safety before the wall falls.”

The knight’s blade wavered. “They won’t make it through the wall… they can’t….”

Aravos bared his teeth in disgust. “You’ve never even been at the front lines have you? Do you even know what those throwers are casting? Didn’t you hear me say that the undead are already inside?”

Something slammed into the walkway ahead of them, throwing them to the ground and showering them with dust. The knights lurched to their feet, raising their weapons as a hideous shape emerged from the choking dust. Its flesh was putrid and discolored, crisscrossed with oozing scars, held together by sloppy stitchwork. Its hands were gone, replaced by rusted iron hooks. A single milky eye rolled in its socket, locking on the knights and the prisoner as they shifted nervously. Aravos could see the blood drain from their faces as the monster moaned.

“It’s a flesh golem,” he said quickly, wishing fervently for a blade of his own. “An abomination! Strong but slow! Don’t let it get you in a corner!”

The first knight swore and charged recklessly, driving his blade into the creature’s barrel-like chest. It roared, more in rage than pain, and swatted the knight with a heavy arm, catching him in the stomach with the hook and hurling him into the air. It pulled clumsily at the blade in its ribs, slashing its own flesh as it hooked the sword’s hilt and tugged it free. The weapon clattered to the floor covered in black ooze, forgotten.

“Take the legs!” Aravos yelled to the surviving knight as the undead thing shuffled forward. “Knock it down and take its head!”

The man yelled and darted forward, ducking a wild swing from the beast’s hook hand as he hacked at a monstrous leg. It growled and stumbled, crashing into a wall as it waved its arms, keeping the knight at bay. Aravos gathered his strength and ran forward, throwing himself at the fallen sword. The knight, too distracted by the undead thing’s deadly hooks to notice the elf, cried out in pain as a blow caught his shoulder.

Aravos swore and snatched up the dead knight’s blade, nicking his thumb with the keen edge. He traced a rune on the hilt, feeling the magic in his runic tattoos begin to awaken. The red symbol flashed and the Deathknight cried out as the magic flooded his body, swelling and healing his withered body and filling out his gaunt frame. The crude rune flashed a second time and icy chains spat from his outstretched hand, wrapping around the golem and pulling it to the ground. The knight yelled in triumph and brought his sword down in a sweeping arc, parting the beast’s head from its shoulders. It fell to the ground with a wet thump, still bound by chains of frost.

“Is it dead?” asked the knight, menacing the fallen golem with his gore spattered blade.

“Yes,” Aravos replied, examining the fallen knight. “But there are more of them. We need to get to the wall and kill the horde’s leader.”

“What about him?” asked the knight, gesturing at the fallen soldier. “Is he…?”

“Gone,” Aravos grunted, gently closing the dead man’s eyes. He stood and spread his manacled hands. “Come on. Let me out of these, we need to get to the gate.”

Moving Day

Most of you already know that I’ve been blogging almost every day for a couple of months now. I have been using Blogspot, and while it’s been a pretty good experience, I’ve been having a few small issues that have prompted me to move my work here to wordpress. My content and schedule should remain the same and I’ll me moving most or all of my past posts to this site over the next few days. I’ll still leave a link to my old blog just in case.

http://withinendlessskies.blogspot.com/