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17kNovel > The Wandering Inn > Book 9: Chapter 51: Z

Book 9: Chapter 51: Z

    Book 9: Chapter 51: Z


    <em>Ancestors, it was all ever for me. I did it all for none but I.</em>


    <em>Lift me not upon your wings. If you raise your tails, be it only to your back.</em>


    <em>My sins were always only mine. Ancestors, look down on all the grief Ive ever brought, the fire I breathed.</em>


    <em>It was always mine, ande from none but I. My foes,y your grudges down ere I die</em>


    The rest, he forgot. He had forgotten the words and perhaps the way you sang them. He forgot the name of the song.


    But Zail Gemscale could still remember singing those words as a young man across the bars and battlefields and cities of Izril.


    He remembered the song as he looked down at his son. And he realized hed never known what the song meant until he was older.


    Wall Lord Zail Gemscale of Szsar was old. Not as old as Chaldion, but he often envied the Grand Strategists boundless energy. Chaldion had never left his post. Zail? Zail had retired decades ago due to his injuries.


    He had a divot in his skull, scars down his back, and hed lost enough blood to kill a dozen Drakes. He knew he looked worse than that. Sometimes he caught a view of himself in the mirror and wondered who the decrepit Drake was. That was, if he recalled who he met in the looking ss at all.


    He was not the face of the Gemscale family these years. If people remembered him at all, in his city, he was the old patriarch of his family, father of Ilvriss, the controversial, changed Wall Lord. And they would say, he knew


    <em>Zail? I thought he was dead. Hes still alive then?</em>


    Someday he would pass, and they would hold a minute of silence for him in some parts of the Walled Cities. [Miners] below would pause for a brief moment, then get back to work.


    He would be mourned by those who knew him. And the problem was, they were vanishingly few. Zail knew this because he had done it. He had sat down hard, put a w to his chest as he heard a name of a friend or foe ghen looked at his minders, at people around them, and realized they had no idea nor care who had left.


    Why did he think of this? Well, Zail was old, and he had thought of his end like any reasonable man would, especially in his condition. But he thought of it now, because the man of the hour, the Drake whose futurey bright and open and waiting for him, Wall Lord Ilvriss


    Zails son was dying in front of him. The old Wall Lord looked down at the blood, and it ran from purple scales. Torn holes in Ilvriss flesh.


    <em>Crossbow wounds. </em>Drake weapons. It was harder to hold a bow with ws, so they tended to crossbows. He counted seven wounds. Mana was burning the air, making his eyes water, and Ilvriss was lying on a shield.


    He hade back like a thousand thousand Drakes in Zails lifetime. Dragged in by Captain Asrira Shieldscale, on a shield, into a room with shouting Drakes.


    <em>Move aside! Move!</em>


    The Healer Me, the finest [Healer] in Szsar, was bending over Ilvriss. She was applying a healing potion carefully, cursing, as Ilvriss people shoved onlookers past. Zail staggered slightly as she worked.


    Theyre enchanted boltheads


    Asrira, the bright-blue scaled Drake, was trying to warn her. Me just snapped back.


    I know. Give me light and room. What spell struck him?


    [Valmiras Comet].


    The answer came out of Zails memories, flitting together like a dream as he listened to that song. He saw Mes head rise and nce at him. Captain Asrira hesitatedthen nodded.


    Yes, [Valmiras Comet]. They hit our position with it.


    I understand. Someone cast [Dispel Magic]. Its making even my [Enhanced Potions] fail. I need someone to clear the mana away. Now!


    Someone called for a [Mage]. Zail could taste the mana in the air, hot and painful, the sting of it. It was familiar to him. As Me worked, agitated Drakes talked in the background.


    How did they overwhelm him? Damn Fissivalhes a Wall Lord.


    That wasWall Lord Brilm, one of Ilvriss friends. He had been pacing around when Zail arrived. He was no warrior, but Ilvriss used to run with him.


    Its war, fool.


    Me herself snapped back. Zail almost nodded. Comet to flush out amand post, then a hail of crossbow bolts.


    <em>Hed been too close to the fighting, then. </em>You stayed out of range of their Skills such that even if they hit you with a long-range spell and then used [Covering Fire] or [Long-Range Volley], you were safe.


    Where are the rest of the forces?


    Someone, Tasilt, that radical brat whod married a Gnoll, was asking the only sensible questions in the room. Zail heard more horns sounding offSzsar was filled with rms.


    Full retreat. General Greex was unwilling to advance into their bombardments. Fissivals advanced past Sserys Line, and theyre blockading the trade roads.


    Sserys Line. The renamed pass where hed once broken the Antinium armies. It connected Szsar via the trade roads to the entire west and center of Izril. With it blocked, theyd only be able to move southwards.


    Fissivald advanced far across the north, then. Zail didnt understand. He must have lost trackhe recalled talking with Ilvriss about the war, but he stood there, looking down at his son.


    <em>Why are we fighting this time? I cannot remember.</em>


    Logic told him that the war must have been going on a while if Fissival had pushed all the way across Szsars left nk. He recalled Ilvriss sortieing, iming he was needed. Thentoday.


    The blood flow was slowly stopping. A good sign, not a bad one. Ilvriss wounds were mending; if they had refused to close and the blood flow had slowed, he would be dying. Even soso many wounds would tax even a healthy body. You could die with a healing potion in your veins. And magic made it worse.


    We must strike back at them!


    Brilm was shouting, and Tasilt snapped back.


    This is not the time, Brilm! Convene the Walled Families if you want to make a stand, but


    Has the City of Magic issued any demands?


    Zail turned his head, voice low and quiet, and he saw the other Drakes in the room looking at him. He was oldest by far; this was a room full of young, busy people trying not to jostle him. And they gave him a look of such


    Wall Lord Zail? Ahah, they havent made any demands.


    Nothing? Theyre not after the magicore? Or Adamantium?


    Theyd dug up a new vein recently. Fissival loved rare materials, and it always needed more magicore. Zail was <em>sure</em> that had happened. He grew worriedand saw Tasilt look at Brilm. And he felt it.


    <em>Ive forgotten something.</em>


    Theyhavent demanded any reparations, Sir Zail. Not yet. They may demand them now. But I think its mostly outrage keeping them advancing.


    Over what?


    Thethe Meeting of Tribes, sir?


    Zail stared nkly at Tasilt, and he <em>did not remember. </em>Somethingstirred in the back of his head, and he put a w up. He touched at his skull, and the ce where he had once been struck, a dented portion of his mind, felt <em>missing</em>, even now. Tasilts eyes flickered, and Brilm smiled too hugely.


    Your son attacked Fissivals armies. We sent them packing andthats what happened, Sir Zail. Dont you worryIlvriss will make it. Hes had worse falls in the city! Why dont I get you a seat


    Im fine.


    But Brilm was already calling for a chair, and Zail was being led away. He resisted a second, looking down.


    <em>Ilvriss.</em>


    The Drakes eyes were closed, and his face was a grimace as hey there, Me tending to his wounds. Zail thought of the Meeting of Tribes, of the state of the Walled Cities. Hispany, House Gemscale.


    Therey a Wall Lord of Szsar. Businessman, politician, and generalbined.


    It hade crashing down on him, and his blood was running down the edge of the shield.


    It should have been Zail, in battle first. If he was capablehe realized he was humming as Brilm sat him down. No wonder they thought he was mad. But he wasnt. He was just remembering a song.


    <em>Ancestors, it was all ever for me. I did it all for none but I.</em>


    <em>Two weeks prior.</em>


    In the winter of the 14th month of the year, Mouring, Izril was changing. Moving fast despite the snow that fell everywhere.


    Old figures were on the move, like Klbkch the yer. Nations were engulfed in strife, internal and external.


    In distant Chandrar, the Strongest of Pomle was leading a war into the heart of Nerrhavias Fallen. And the former Strongest, Orjin, was training with the greatest [Warrior] of Chandrar, Torreb the Undefeated.


    But this wasnt about Orjin. Someone more important was about his own great journey. Wall Lord Ilvriss had a calling. It came from far outside his City of Gems, which he had known so well.


    Once more, he was making ns to leave the City of Gems. In truth, he would have left earlier but for the difficulty of travelling in the snow, the New Landsand the war.


    <em>asinine. </em>Completely, utterly. If you <em>want</em> to scold me, dont do it while taking credit for being one of the Walled Cities that fought with the Gnolls! You dont get both.


    Wall Lord Zail had been napping when he heard his sons voice. He sat up in the living room of the Gemscale familys apartments. That was a multi-level suite on top of their tower, one of the many spires that rose from the City of Gems digging into the mountain beneath.


    In Szsar, wealth was altitude. The smallest spaces, the tops of the towers, were held by the oldest families, whilemonfolk lived closest to the mines, the ever-expanding lower floors of Szsar that fed the city with magicore, gems, coal, metals, and more.


    These were ancestral suites, and while each generation added more, some of the paintings dated back thousands or tens of thousands of years. There was an old family sword hanging on the wall that had been wielded when Dragons still flew the world.


    It was broken, cracked at the hilt, and every generation of the Gemscale family would climb up over the enchanted firece and slyly try to remove it from where it hung on the que.


    Then the young Drake would <em>snap</em> the hilt of the ancient sword out of ce, stare in horror at the Staregic metal de theyd broken, and panic.


    Zail remembered doing that. Hed run to a [cksmith] and begged for help. His father had caught him and a sweating Drake trying to forge a new de onto the back, and Zails father, Vekoal, hadughed so hard hed told the story across half of Szsar by nightfall.


    Ilvriss and Navine, his sister, had been different. Which one of the two had done it was unclear. But Zail distinctly recalleding back and noticing the empty que on the wall that a [Thief] had, apparently, <em>stolen.</em>


    The two Drake children had kept up the lie and even added a stolen bracelet and cups to the count. Zail had not been amused and gone along with the charade by calling the Watch Captain till they confessed. Then hed punished them for a month


    He was less proud of that. Why had he shouted about duty and honesty at his son when his own father hadughed? One memory was good. The otherwas of him staring at a scared boys face, trying not to cry.


    Wall Lord?


    Zail blinked. He realized he was standing, leaning on his cane, and his helpers, a Gnoll and Drake, were staring at him with slight worry.


    Familiarity, but worry. Hed paused, frozen in ce, as his eyes lingered on the sword on the wall.


    Its nothing. My son is back.


    Yes, Wall Lord. Shall we guide you to him?


    I know where he is. Send forsend for something to eat.


    It waste. Hed been napping. He should have been abed, but he wanted to know what the Walled Families had decided. Zail had almost gone himself, but Ilvriss had told him hed sort it out.


    He knew every Drake over fifty who regrly attended. Most were peers, or hed known <em>them</em> as children growing up. Zail had wanted to say, I could pull support for you, but Ilvriss was the leader of House Gemscale. And Zail had been tired.


    its ssic Drakeism, Nephew. We want to look good, but not suffer for it. Of course well brag about being on the Gnolls side. We always need new [Miners]. But the censuring vote on you is because you led us into a war. Now, if youd both supported the tribes <em>and</em> kept us out of a war, theyd be mad you didnt credit all of them. Chaldion did it rightin a twisted sense of the word. A hundred dead soldiersand not all of them got mincedand he gets to im Pass put in an effort. We study him in school, that bastard.


    Nerulplease stop talking sense. We have an aversion to the consequences. I am theheh.


    Zail hesitated as he made his way to the parlor. That other voice was familiar and disliked. Nerul, the foremost [Diplomat] of Szsar, was also a member of House Gemscale. But he didnt reside with the main family, and Zail disliked him.


    Neruls tone was a good example of why he was so unpleasant for Zail. He had said the part about [Miners] with enough derision to make Zails scales prickle. He was insubordinate, a drunk, and not a warrior.


    <em>No true son of the walls. </em>But Ilvriss had begun associating with his uncle more and more, and Zail didnt understand why.


    It was after he had gone to Liscor and fought the Tidebreaker. Afterhed lost Periss.


    Hed changed. That happened to someone when they lost a friend in war. Zail just wondered if Ilvriss would snap out of it.


    Well, Fissival doesnt have the sense to back down. Well have to engage them after all if theyre really after Sserys Line. Ancestors. The <em>waste.</em>


    And just when youre trying to head north, eh? Its almost like they noticed you were making ns and decided to put a thumbw in your eye.


    Theyre not going to blockade an entire trade route just to spite me, Nerul.


    The doors opened, and a burly Drake was pouring Ilvriss and himself a drink. Nerul lifted his cup with augh as a [Soldier], Asrira Shieldscale, stood to brisk attention with the two. She noticed Zail and bowed, but Nerul wasughing.


    You think they wont? They me <em>you</em> for losing the Meeting of Tribes. As if Khelt, those damn Gnoll ghosts, and Sserys reborn, werent about to kick their teeth in! Ioh. Zail.


    Father.


    Ilvriss turned instantly, and his annoyed look andshing tail turned to chagrin.


    You didnt have to stay up. Its past midnight.


    I was napping. What did the Walled Families decide? <em>Censuring</em> House Gemscale? Ridiculous.


    Its just a p on the wrists. Nothing actionable. Theyll charge us tripled fees for ess to the mines. Thats nothing.


    Especially to someone who started a war between Walled Cities.


    Nerul chimed in unhelpfully. Zail nced at him, then eyed Asrira. Ilvriss new bodyguard and second-inmand. He had thought she was a recement for Periss in more ways than one, but she seemed like she was just a soldier.


    Did you have a word withCalistoca? Shes a family friend.


    I talked with her. But it was fine. Were mustering an army to repel their advance in the north, and a second force has to stop their raids along our allied cities. Fissivals been bombarding the area with [Mage] squads, and theyve got a proper one. An <em>army.</em> Now, of all times! Well have to engage them.


    Zails mind lit up. He strode over, wishing he was faster of limb. He could still move fastsometimesbut his days of holding a sword were behind him. His son was taller when Zail remembered being taller most of his life.


    It was often said that Ilvriss resembled a younger Zail, except in scale-color. Zail didnt see it. Ilvriss had gotten a lot from his mother, Helessia, and Zail had used to be taller and thickerset. Ilvriss sometimes looked frankly thin, and he would sit in his office with Alrric, the <em>Gnoll</em> [Administrator], and work with only those weak lunches.


    The Gemscale Company had changed from the one Zail had inherited and kept up as a boy, filled with huge board meetings where you started in the conference room and ended in the bar, drinking and eating with all the administrators. It was slim now, in both costs and direct administrators.


    Apparently it was more profitable, but Zail remembered all the old friendsining to him about losing their positions or the new jobs. True, Ilvriss had rescued them when the books were in the red for three years straight by hiring Alrric and cleaning house, but it had been one of the things the two had warred on.


    Regarding the wardid the families not vote for enough forces? Theyve been stingy before.


    Zail could talk about that all day, but Ilvriss was disinterested in talking about the war with his father, it seemed. He tried to brush it off.


    Its just one actual army, Father. The south is just Fissival throwing spells and running off.


    Howrge is the northern army? Whats theirposition?


    Ilvriss sighed and red at Asrira as she answered for him.


    Forty thousand regrs, Wall Lord. We believe theyre carrying six Mage-Throwers and at least two elite [Mage]-divisions.


    Zail was impressed. It wasnt high in numbers, but you couldnt march a huge force around like that. Besides, Fissival was most dangerous in quality over quantity.


    They must be furious. Thats a blockading force. They want to hold the trade road. What kind of [General]s leading them?


    Asrira was trying to ignore Nerul and Ilvriss ring at her, trying to get her to <em>shut up. </em>Zail noticed it, but she was addressing him and replied.


    A[General] Rodissc. I believe hes a [Mage-General] like most. If I recall right, hes normally stationed along the coast.


    Oh. Then hes one of their coastal guards against [Pirates]. Defensive. What are we sending back at?


    Father, its managed. General Greex is going to take charge, and if need be, Ill join the offensive. If it ends this damn fightingits just inter-city war. Dont concern yourself with it. Itste. Why dont we all get some sleep?


    By we, he meant you, and by inter-city war, he was referring to the style of war that Drakes practiced against each other. Like Terandria, they would surrender rather than fight to the death, so it was not umon to see entire battalions surrender and be ransomed rather than ughter each other.


    War with Humans or Gnolls was bloodier and often had no quarter. Zail hesitated.


    Greex is solid, but no genius. He needs you or another sumander to function properly. Youre taking the Erchirite Spears? The Topaz Shields and some of the Rubirel Guard would be standard against that kind of thing


    Ilvriss pained expression grew more pronounced.


    We have the Erchirite Spears on retainer, Father. And yes, the Rubirel Guard are with me. SixteenI dont know if well engage the Topaz Shields directly. General Greex has it well in hand.


    And once more, the older Drake hesitated, but he had talked strategy before and he didnt know the map, but


    Right. Of course. Nerul. Will you be staying here?


    Ill head off to bed in a moment, sir. Thank youIm sorry for troubling you.


    Not at all.


    Zail lied as Nerul gave him a fake smile. The two disliked each other. Ilvriss smiled as he nced at Nerul and his father.


    Why dont we all get some sleep? Ill tell Alrric to dy our ns. Again. Actually, he might be staying up. Asrira, can you?


    Ill send a Street Runner.


    She strode off, and Ilvriss and Nerul nodded to Zail. The Wall Lord bade the two goodnight, then paused at the door as he pretended to walk slowly to his rooms.


    Xesci will meet us in fifteen. Do you think one of us should go ahead?


    Im minded to send you, Uncle. But frankly, if anyone has to broker peace


    Theyll just throw me in jail if I go now. Why dont we?


    They were heading off. Clearly, <em>not</em> to sleep, but to meet withZails brows furrowed more. Xesci, the <em>[Prostitute] </em>that Ilvriss had added to his personal group of advisors.


    What was going on with him?


    Wall Lord Zail had a routine. Every morning, he would rise and check on Helessia. She was his wife and lived her life in an enchanted, floating bed. She would greet him, and hed nod if she was busy talking to Navine, their daughter, or exchange a few words.


    Often, these days, Zail would then retire to breakfast served to him and read one of the new papers or check the scrying orb over breakfast. It was all newhe was used to written reports from [Spies] or [Informants] summarizing worldwide events, but the scrying orb was engaging.


    After that, Zail would see if Ilvriss was about and have a word. And after thathis day lost structure.


    The evenings were when Ilvriss would return, and Zail would greet him, Navine, say goodnight to Helessia if she wasnt asleep, and sometimes stay up reading a book. He grew tired earlier, so he didnt have a huge nightlife.


    But the middle of his day was when he wasnt sure what to do. Not that Zail couldnt do anything.


    Yes, he forgot things, and yes, he moved slower. He was well aware of that, but his minders, the care-giving staff, were often an inhibiting factor.


    They had orders not to let him wander Szsar in case he got into idents, and while theyd apany him where he wanted to go, they were very mindful of his physical condition and would insist, politely, that he return if they noticed him gging.


    Perhaps he needed it, but he resented their presence. Ilvriss <em>and</em> Navine had both insisted Zail keep them, and he could neither fire the helpers nor escape them that easily these days.


    So he abided. They were critical if he did get injured orconfused. He just wished their presence was also part and parcel to him doing something necessary.


    Like, say, leading the Gemscale Company. Which he did, these days. So he would make the trek along one of the high bridges to the office where Alrric worked and engage himself mindfully in noting events in the mines, issuing orders.


    The problem was that Ilvriss had returned to the office, and he was vocally unhappy when he found his father doing his and Alrrics jobs.


    <em>Father, you dont need to handle it. Alrric is a fine [Administrator], and I cant have you going behind his back.</em>


    <em>We have an arrangement, Ilvriss</em>


    <em>Yes, Alrric said, but how is it going to look if you give him an order that he has to either obey or challenge you on? Its putting him in a tough positionI have a meeting in five. Why dont we discuss thister?</em>


    So, Zail had less work with Ilvriss returned, and it annoyed him greatly because part of his time had been happily engaged in something productive while Ilvriss had been marching towards the Meeting of Tribes.


    The Gemscale Company was not an infallible ship. Theyd actually struggled when they sold part of the Adamantium mine stake, and Ilvriss costly ouys to buy that Potion of Regeneration had affected their bottom line.


    Tens of thousands of [Miners] and all kinds of jobs rested on them. <em>Zail</em> had helped bring thepany back around by telling Alrric about an old gem-shaft that theyd been able to revitalize. It was churning out rare materials, and theyd been doing fascinating things with mining teams.


    Newfangled ideas. Not just Gnolls taking charge. That had been another change in Ilvriss time. Hed hired a lot more high-ranking Gnolls under Alrric. Zail disagreed with the practice, and still partly did even with having thepetent Alrric in charge. This was a Drakepany. It employed Drakes. It wasnt <em>hostility</em> towards Gnolls, but supporting the people that Szsar belonged to.


    But since hed had to work with Alrric, Zail had okayed a number of initiatives, including letting the mining teamspete. They had chosen six shafts and given each [Foreman] or [Forewoman] free rein. The most profitable team got bonuses, butand this had been Alrrics notionany severe injury or death instantly got the team dissolved if it wasnt a pure ident.


    Young Drakes and Gnolls racing against experienced, high-level [Miners] provoked healthypetition.


    Zail had been actually going down and inspecting the work and the techniques, which revolved around everything from old hand-carting of stone and ore out to-spells that continuously dragged rubble out of the area; all the [Miners] had to do was excavate.


    Then Ilvriss had returned, and Zail was left aimless. Not just bored, but devoid of purpose. And that


    That was the hard part. The other hard part was being treated as if you were old. Even if you wereZail resented it.


    His son had changed. All his old friends and hobbies seemed to have been reced. These days, he wasnt concerned with Gemscale profits and the safety and pride of Szsar, but more with the New Lands.


    To be fair, everyone was. But Ilvriss was also looking north, speaking with Tasilt, the Drake whod married a <em>Gnoll</em> and made her a Wall Lady, and he was keepingpany with Nernother radicalAsrira Shieldscale, and Xesci.


    All objectionable choices. Nerul was Nerul, but Xesci was literally a Drake of the night. Why would Ilvriss sully Gemscales name? He refused to talk about it with Zail. And Asrira was respectful, a soldierbut she was also Passian.


    Not that Ilvriss required or sought Zails approval. Zail had thought Ilvriss was on the right path. Now, he worried, and he talked about it with the only people he could.


    Hes not a traitor. Ilvriss would never be, but heschanged. His focus has shifted.


    Loyalty?


    No, <em>focus.</em> Ive asked him on truth spells whether he still loves Szsar and hes not in Pass bed. But he talks differently, Eschowar. Hes always talking about Liscor.


    That mudhole? Are yousurehe didnt marry that Human girl? The one everyone was talking about? He gave his ring to her. Lyte du Marquin. If he marries a Terandrian [Princess]


    It wasnt to that one. And he said it was a gesture of esteem.


    Eschowar Erchirite, one of the members of the famous Erchirite Walled Family that produced the spears used in one of the Gem-Battalions, stopped eating lunch and looked up. His eyes were rheumy, and his ws shook even when holding a spoon.


    But his <em>mind</em> was clear, as it ever had been when he was a Wall Lord at the same time as Zail. He was another former soldierwell, most Wall Lords and a good number of Wall Ladies had seen war.


    Unlike other Walled Cities, Szsar had Walled Families who were like [Lords] and [Ladies]able to do many things at once. Zail had always been good at war. He had fought for Szsar until he took the blow that had ended his career.


    In Eschowars case, age had taken him out. The trembling, like Zails memory and like old age, was just not something modern magic and potions could undo. You could [Restore] the bodybut if the body was at this state naturally, restoring it didnt do much.


    Well, perhaps if everyone had Chaldions ess to his grandsons alchemy, theyd be in a bit better shape. But Eschowar was eighty-seven years old. He was sitting in a sanctuary of sorts, though he might have called it a jail.


    It was likea nursery, but for age instead of youth. There were plenty of staff like Zails minders who helped members of the Walled Families get around, from bed to food to everything else.


    One of the towers near to the Gemscale Familys had long been used in service of the oldest Drakes in the city. Zail was an exception in that he lived with his family, as did Helessia. Sometimes circumstances meant that Drakes like Eschowar ended up here, and even if he wasnt a resident, Zail visited at least three times a week.


    The old Wall Lord understood Zail. He was trying to think, and water sloshed in a cup designed not to spill as he lifted it up andwith effortdrank.


    It bothered younger Drakes like Brilm, who saw the effort it took and felt bad or poorly for Zail and his elders. What Zail and Brilms elders didnt say was that he could take his sympathies and shove them up his tail.


    No one liked it, but it wasnt as if they feltold. Zail felt like a young man still. He just happened to have an old body. He just happened to have more memories.


    In the same way, Eschowars eyes were keen.


    If hes smittenyou dont think its a possibility?


    Zail paused for a long time.


    I cant imagine this is all the product of infatuation, Eschowar. He just had Periss. They were as close to engagement as I could have bet. I dont think my son would change this much forlove? He hasnt even been in thepany of that Human.


    <em>Erin Solstice.</em> But then, shed been dead. Zail felt very uncertain, and Eschowar put down his cup.


    Maybe its not love. But you change like a [Lightning Bolt], Zail. You know that.


    This much?


    For answer, the other Drake looked at him.


    S-spoken to Itreus recently, have you? Hes the talk ofwell, everyone wanted a word with him. And Linvios.


    Zails neck scales rose a second, and then he exhaled slowly. Eschowar had a point. Some things could change very fast indeed. A wedding had changed Zails life in marked ways.


    Itreus Torimine was in better condition than Zail, and he didnt stay here, still running House Torimine instead. Well, jointly.


    Things were troubled, and Zail might envy Itreus work and purpose, but even his rtionship with Helessia, cool and sometimes icy as it might be, was better than the giant rift that had formed between Itreus and his wife.


    It waplicated. Life was. The two had divorced, but Calistoca and Itreus had both inherited theirpany, which they both made decisions on.


    Zail didnt bring that up when he found Itreus. The older Drake was sitting and talking with another mutual acquaintance.


    Zail. Good to see you.


    One of Szsars powerful Wall Lords sat there, looking grey, but fit. <em>Sharp.</em> For his age. Sharp as a razor. Calistoca was much the same. Maybe it was why they were together, but the two had split just as hard for reasonswell.


    Zail didnt know all of it. He gave Itreus a very polite nod, as hed done for four decades since the marriage.


    Am I disturbing you?


    Itreus was often at work, but he hade to visit another old friend, a Drake who was staring around and shading his eyes, despite sitting in the ss atrium as snow fell, illuminated by [Light] spells. It was pleasantbut the Drake was terrified.


    I see it. I see it everywhere, Itreus. Its on Zails shoulder and mine


    He tried to edge back in his seat and almost fell out of it. Itreus steadied him and waved a few helpers away. He indicated a seat.


    Not at all. Khorpe, its just Zail.


    I know its him. But hes bringing death with him. I see it on his shoulders. Dont let it touch me.


    Khorpe was no Wall Lord, but a former soldier whod risen to a high rank. A [Reconnaissance Major]well, that was his official ss. His real one might have been higher, but even now he didnt talk about it. Every Walled City had a spy-corps, and Khorpe was retired.


    He hadfears. He leaned away from something only he could see, and he avoided shadows and danger. He imed he could see death.


    It was bad today. Zail didnt try to touch Khorpe if death was clinging to him. But he did nod again, at Itreus, who gave him a tight smile.


    They were old enemies. Nemeses, really. There was a time when if Zail had spotted Itreus across the floor, he would have drawn his sword and gone for the other mans head. But a single event had changed that.


    Itreus had invited Zail to his wedding. No, that wasnt it. It was the fact that Zail had been invited, ording to oldest Drake traditions, as the nemesis along with the best man to honor Itreus.


    It was often used just for formality or no longer employed, but Zail had taken the honor seriously, and he and Itreus had quashed every grudge between them. They might never be boon friendsbut that peace had held for over forty years.


    Zail was just a bit proud of it. The two and theirpanies had never quarreled since then. They hade to moments where the two were bidding against each other or might get embroiled in a dispute, and Zail had thought of his pledge and gone to Itreus to have a quiet word, or Itreus hade to him. And they honored it.


    Despite the divorce.


    At any rate, Itreus could have probably taken Zail, Khorpe, and Eschowar down with one w tied behind his back these days. He looked good.


    But tired. And but for his mutual respect for Zailhe looked bitter. His enduring power and authority hung about him like adornments on a deeply unhappy Drake. Every time he smiled, Zail got the impression he was having to remember more and more how it was done. He looked sharp, in his suit, and dressed to impress, but he was reclusive and visited this ce because he had few boonpanions and his wife and children were greatly estranged from him.


    As was his otherold friend.


    How is Ilvriss?


    Itreus sat with Zail, and the Drake shrugged.


    Ive beenining about him nonstop. But if he leaves, Illin more. Hes associating withwell, I told you.


    Shes the most high-level [Courtesan] in the city, if it helps.


    Zail grunted.


    I dont understand what he sees in her. Or Nerul. I used to talk to him, and hed listen. I was going to ask him about the war with Fissival, and he just didnt want to hear it. Not that, nor business nor anything else, it seems.


    Itreus paused and nced sideways at Zail.


    Uncharitable of him. You were the war-leader of Szsar in more wars than hes seen in his life. And better with a sword.


    He doesnt need me to lecture him.


    Maybe talk with him another time. You could talk war, at least, if the minings no good. I cant lecture my offspring about battle, and thats the thing you <em>are</em> qualified to talk about. Hes not seen many wars between Walled Cities.


    This was true, and Zail felt a bit hopeful this would be the case. He nodded at Itreus.


    And how arethings in your business?


    Well.


    Itreus lie was t as his smile. Zail nodded and didnt press. <em>What an unhappy man.</em>


    If onlywell, Zail was no good mediator, and the rift between Itreus and those closest to him was deep. Better people had tried to bridge it. Itreus seemed to sense Zails thoughts and muttered.


    Id retire, but I think Calistoca would just seize control. Id let her if it meant an end to ring at herbut not this. I dont think Idst, Zail.


    Eschowar ims its not the worst.


    The two Drakes looked across the floor where the older Drakes, their peers, were going about their day, and Itreus face was bleak.


    I cant stop working, Zail. If my son was about like yours, perhaps. Ill die in my office.


    It was a statement that was heavy, but Zail just nodded. He looked across the floor and thoughthe would have rather done the same.


    Szsar had a tradition for older Drakes to rest and retire. Not all Walled Cities did. Oteslia was far, far different, Zail understood, in that they had institutions like this where Drakes and Gnolls formedmunes and tended to gardens or helped care for animals all day.


    That would benice. It was ssic Oteslian softness, but the two cities were the only ones with any formal institutions at all. Szsar had managed the amodations for its most important clients; Zail couldnt speak to ones lower down in the city. It had a [Chef] who made food that wasnt hard and could be digested, custom drinking apparel, enchanted beds, but it was still unpleasant.


    Khorpe was staring out the window, looking for the death sneaking up on him as Zail and Itreus talked. Someone noticed, and a Drake woman came over with a big smile.


    Major Khorpe, we have a gathering for everyone to y a game. Come on, lets get you into it. You had such funst time.


    She pointed, and Zail and Itreus noticed a spirited Gnoll woman pping her hands and getting a bunch of the residents to join in. Songs and limited games, like tossing [Lightball] spells around.


    <em>Like were children after all. </em>Zail imagined what Ilvriss would say if Zail told him they were going to y with the glowing light orb and sing, rather than have him at a meeting. Khorpe just stared over and shuddered.


    He sometimes refused to talk, and the Drake woman sounded exasperated. Maybe she was tired, but Zail stiffened as she raised her voice.


    Major, were going to have fun now. Are you going to participate in my event?


    Khorpe stared at her, and Zail resisted the urge to tell the Drake woman to hop off the balcony of the tower. She spoke to the same [Soldier] who had given [Generals] orders and intelligence like she was speaking to a child.


    Illparticipate.


    Good! This way. The Majors joining in, Torers!


    He walked off, and Itreus muttered to Zail out of the corner of his mouth.


    If someone said that to me in a meeting, in that tone, I would fire them.


    Mm.


    Zail paused and, after a moment, brought up a name he had heard whispered in this ce months back.


    Haveyou heard of Mavi El? The one who led House El?


    That firebrand? I heard she died.


    Zail nodded slowly.


    As a young woman. Riding across Izril. I heard Hectval killed her. You saw the part where the Assassins Guild?


    Yes. Yes, I remember hearing Linvios givingmentary here while it was going on.


    Hed actually mentioned the other Drakes name. That showed you how pivotal the moment had been. Zail stared out the window at the sunlight cutting through snow, turning it golden for a second.


    What an end. Even for an enemy. What a spectacr one.


    The other Drakes eyes were faraway with envy.


    Yes.


    Presently, Wall Lord Itreus left, and Zail reckoned that his visit had taken up a good portion of his day. He stillcked the ability to fill the rest of it to his satisfaction and wondered if he should go for a walk to see the mines after all.


    Then again, Ilvriss would be wroth if he found out. Zail was just about to stand, with effort, when a second figure appeared, striding into the nursing home.


    Itreus had just reached the door, and when he came face-to-face with the tall, intensely <em>strong</em> Drake with sapphire grey scales and a suit befitting a conductor, a Maestro, he halted.


    Itreus.


    <em>Linvios.</em>


    Linvios Reiscale and Itreus exchanged a nce that had more between it than any ind sea, and Itreus voice had such intensity that you could have bottled it and turned it into a Tier 7 spell.


    Linvios stepped smartly to the side. His deep sapphire scales and silverine eyes flicked to Itreus, who walked past him stiffly without a word.


    Now here was someone else who would rather die at work than here. Linvios stepped into the homeand caught someone gently as she almost fell over.


    A Drake woman had tried to get to the door, but she couldnt walk without help. She was trying to get out.


    Let me out.


    Laudire, whats wrong?


    I want to leave. I want to <em>leave.</em> Please, get me out of here.


    She tried to get the door, but the Maestro knew she wasnt allowed out, and Linvios carefully held the Drake upright. Instantly, some of the staff noticed the attempt to break out and strode over.


    Lady Laudire, you know youre not allowed out. Please, dont make us escort you back to your rooms.


    <em>Let me out. I want to leave</em>


    She raised her voice as loudly as she could, trying to get out, but the door was too heavy and


    No one else here even nced up as Zails stomach tightened. Presently, the Drake woman was led back, but she was still crying and demanding to go.


    <em>Could anyone me her? What could you say? </em>She was unable to go out without help, and unlike Zail, she didnt have dedicated carers. But she wanted to


    Linvios gently walked with her, talking quietly until her voice subsided, and then he appeared back in the home. He looked tired, but so damn young Zail glowered despite himself.


    That was a high-level [Warrior]well, [Assassin] for you. Linvios led Symphony, and like other Named-ranks, you were either still quick or you were dead. The Maestro nced around, and he knew many people here. He stopped by Eschowars table, then said something to Khorpe, and then he saw Zail.


    Good evening, Zail.


    Like Itreus, their old rivalry was behind them. Zail nodded.


    Were you intending to catch Itreus?


    Just to see if hes well. But no, I thought he was gone. Youre looking well.


    Zail grinned at the stupid remark. He was the same as ever. The two sat and made smalltalk, and Ilvriss came up again.


    Youve never had children like us. Did it ever ur to you?


    The Maestros smile became a distant look. He stared at Zail and then shook his head.


    Never. N


    He hesitated.


    No.


    Then he seemed tired, and Zail regretted asking, in part, but what was the point to not asking questions now? The old Wall Lord shrugged apologetically.


    Perhaps life would have been easier. I just dont know what to do for him.


    <em>Does he need help at all? </em>That wasnt really the question. Zail sat there, frustrated, envying Itreus and Linvios, and the Maestro rubbed at his head slowly. He seemed recovered from the Trial of des.


    He had crossed swords with a legend. He had always been here, Zail knew. Symphonydoing what Szsar needed, sometimes acting to further private goals, but often to defend Szsars interests. He was as part of the City of Gems as Zail. If anyone deserved a ce in this homeit was he, as well as Zail.


    Symphony feels like children at times. Theye to me, talented children who y and dance well, but dont understand anything else.


    And you train them to be the best.


    Linvios looked surprised by thement.


    In part. But I also train them to work together. And if they y with my Symphonywhat do you think they do after theyre done? Part of my job is finding a future. Few reach it, and few want it. I do not. But without anyone to help, they would y and dance forever without any future. The Assassins Guild in the norththey run like that.


    Huh. Zail had never known that Linvios even thought beyond the contracts. Then again, he had never asked. He had never respected Linvios profession for most of his life, even if hed needed to make use of them.


    What do you think I should do about Ilvriss, Linvios?


    The Maestro gave it some thought as he sat there, and he nced up at Zail, in the end, with a slight, bitter smile.


    Talk to him. Thats all you can do. And if things dont work outat least youll have a memory.


    Zail thought of Itreus and Linvios, the best of friends. Wall Lady Calistoca, dignified and cold as ice towards the duo. The gap between all three that had appeared for no reason he had seen.


    Wellhe had never asked. Some things you let lie quiet. That was respect. Even now, Zail refused to ask.


    He wondered, suddenly, whether Linvios would have respected that or told Zail he would have liked to <em>tell</em>. But if sono. Everyone had their faults.


    Zail let it lie, and presently he stood up. He could no longer hear Laudire crying. Perhaps theyd used a calming tonic or [Sleep] spell. Linvios sat there for a moment, then got up as well.


    Cards, anyone?


    It was a good stand-to that everyone could y, even if they couldnt always hold the cards. In this case, even Eschowar did well enough if someone yed him in.


    Trade card four. Ante two more silver in, and has anyone read thetest Lightning Thief book?


    Zail obediently pushed a card in and held the recement up to Eschowar. He grunted, and the card went face-down in front of him as Linvios upped the ante. Zail sneered.


    That trash? I read the book Krsysl Wordsmith wrote out of solidarity, but its so predictable. Rising action, minor conflict usually with whatever paramour he meets, major conflict for the treasure of the day, end. It only got interesting when the Eyes of Baleros were involved.


    Khorpe stared at his cards, muttering.


    I remember that. I had to follow him about all over the sea one time. Miserable. It was like


    He flinched as he ducked away from a bird flying past the outdoor room where they sat, and he nudged into someone sitting at the table. Linvios, Zail, Eschowar, Khorpe, and Nmorie, who loved cards.


    Linvios patted Khorpe on the shoulder reassuringly. Khorpe trailed off, then brightened.


    Do they talk about his ship? He had custom-rigging on his sails. Not just wind-powered, but two masts, and he ced the wind spells at odd angles. So youd see them heading left, but you could never tell if they were <em>actually</em> heading left, whether he was tacking into the wind, or whether it was the wrong sail.


    One imagines you could just stare at the ship and see which way it was going, Khorpe.


    The [Reconnaissance Major] happily upped the ante to six silver.


    Then youre following an illusion, Zail. Thats the beauty of it. Even the illusions looked like they were moving ording to the wind. Three Archmages.


    You stole that.


    Eschowar cracked one eye open, and Khorpe paused, about to sweep the pot.


    No I didnt.


    Linvios suspiciously checked his card, but Nmorie red at Khorpe.


    Why are there six Archmages in our deck, then?


    Both she and Eschowar began demanding the deck be counted, and it turned out, once Khorpe was disqualified, that Eschowar had the winning hand. He didnt look at his cards as they were turned over. He just remembered them the moment you showed them to him and yed blind. Zail cheered up as he saw a glint emerge into Nmories eyes; she was a consummate [Gambler] in her side ss.


    The former Mistress of Spellcraft in Szsars academy scoffed.


    I never liked Krsysl. Hes pretentious. There was a time when his writing was respected and sought-after. These days, hes constantly writing <em>to</em> a goal, rather than for it.


    Zail raised his brows as Eschowar muttered agreement.


    I have no idea what that means.


    The Drakedy raised her ws to adjust spectacles she no longer wore as she recited.


    Dont you remember any of his lines? Oh, sovereignless, twice-exiled kindred met in brief rpense under Qualvekkaras shade. There Harpy Queen and Wind Dragon folded wing, trading scale for feather as Chandrars final sun rose on thest pact of the skies. Forgotten, unreported to every nation; remembered in the twilight of both races. Would that the cities had given scarce credence to the subtlety of that moment, they would have steered a clearer course through the ichor of war thereafter and broken pacts when they called for aid and heard only the silence ofpsed promises and goodwill tarnished beyond repute.


    She wasnt using a Skill. The table paused a long moment, then Khorpe muttered.


    Too fancy for me.


    You cretin. Its not <em>bad. </em>L-Linvios, throw something at him.


    I prefer Barelles work.


    The Maestro muttered, and everyone red at him. He sighed.


    So no ones even given a passing thought to the Singer of Terandrias songs?


    Drivel.


    Zail dered, and in response, Linvios hummed a bar that made the Wall Lord pause.


    No, wait, whats that?


    The Maestro clicked his ws.


    I cant do it justice, and the song crystal wears out after ten thousand ys. I shall summon some of my people.


    He tapped a hanging gemstone on his wrist and spoke into it.


    First Violinistno, just one voice. If you have a moment, I would appreciate the full strings. You know where I am. Vi, violin, cello at minimum. <em>I Stayed Too Long At The Fair</em>yes. A discerning audience would like to hear it.


    His audience sat up. And soon, a bunch of respectful young musicians were rushing up the stairs, setting up, and Zail blinked and listened to a song that wasnt as garish or purely <em>loud</em> and fast as he had disliked. This one had nuance.


    It didnt end with one song. So taken was she that even sad Laudire came out and began to sing, dueting with some of the younger Drakes, and then they yed some ssic songs, and Zail found time passing by in good stead and stopped counting it.


    He yed a chess game with Eschowar, reminisced with Khorpe and Linvios about Fissivilian foibles, and everyone watched a broadcast on the scrying orb.


    And by the evening, Zail had a chat with his son.


    Wall Lord Ilvriss did not not enjoy conversations with his father. And yes, that was perhaps the best way to word it.


    It was just that they were father and son. And also Wall Lords. And also sometimes it was <em>father and son</em>, and it made it hard to live together, much less talk about the direction of thepany or anything else.


    When it worked, it worked. Ilvriss had just gotten something from a Courier, and he was inspecting it in a very good mood as he talked ns and Zail talked about his day.


    Iwell, I knew she had one, but I didnt think Id get one from her. Made by Archmage Valeterisa in conjunction with the Ullsinoi Faction of Wistram. Well, that fits.


    He was holdinga chessboard as the two had a very fine steak dinner together. Ilvriss and Zail got on like Navine and Helessiathey were used to this kind of dining.


    A chessboard. Enchanted, is it?


    Zail gave Ilvriss a long look as he thought about his conversations regarding his sons definitely-not-wedding ring gift with his friends and the Drake himself. Ilvriss nced up.


    The Titan of Baleros has three with her, I think. And Earl Altestiel is getting one, ording to the note. She doesnt expect me to y much, it seems.


    Youre a good chess yer. Why not?


    Ilvriss coughed and chuckled around his drink.


    Aha. Father, recall the broadcast? Shes the <em>best</em> yer in the world bar none. Ive made the error of trying to y her seriously. Well, its a gift thats thoughtful, and apparently this Archmage is a guest of hers and making the product, so she sent me a copy. FranklyI might see her soon enough, but Ill thank her for the gift nheless. Ohlook. Someones already moving a piece.


    A pawn moved up on the white side, and Zail raised his brows.


    Ive dabbled at chess. Its more like, oh, old Rubrix Square puzzles. I was always good at them and gem-matching.


    Ilvriss prodded a chess piece forwards and then nced at his father.


    Rubrix what? Oh


    Nothing would do but Zail get one of the old, <em>old</em>, beautiful cubes made of over a thousand little gemstones in multiple colors. They were tiny, and youd move each facet, yellow topaz, green emerald, and more, to form patterns or form one color.


    Pattern-matching. You used to y with it, but you never took to it.


    Ilvriss was greatly distracted by the device.


    Rubrix. You know, I never thought ofwhere does thise from?


    Our history. One of the Dragons invented it, you know. Theyre an old toy we kept around. Its good training for little Drakesthough as I recall, you mostly chewed on it.


    Zail sighed as he clicked it around absently. Within moments, hed turned part of the cube red, and Ilvriss raised his brows.


    Dragons invented that?


    So they im. Frankly, they probably stole it from someone else. Many things the Ancestors inventedter came from other species, or so I heard. Ive heard rumors the Titan didnt create chess. A [Historian] used him of taking credit for it, but it was all hushed up. Or how else would a Dragon have known the game?


    Thatis a very good point.


    Ilvriss seemed to know more than he was letting on, which made Zail curious. But the other Wall Lord moved a few more chess pieces, then was checkmated within a dozen moves and closed his eyes. The white pieces began dancing around in triumph as Ilvriss covered his face.


    I think Ill avoid her [Message] spells for an hour. Erin Solstice never gloats that Ive observed; shes too professional. But I worry that I lost to Mrsha or someone else. Anyways, how was your day, Father?


    I tried to smuggle in a bottle of wine to my peers and was reprimanded.


    Theyd all still gotten a good drink in, and Zail was smug about it. Ilvriss gave him an exasperated look.


    Really? <em>Father</em>


    We are not children, Ilvriss. If we want to drink, well do it. Youre lucky we dont dig out our old rings and raid a distillery by force.


    Dead gods save me from the ideayou know, some of them are literally dangerous with their Skills and sses? Drinking makes it worse.


    Zail scowled, and that was where the harmonious, good-natured talk broke down.


    I know, but what are they supposed to do? Do without?


    <em>Yes.</em> That was what Ilvriss wisely did <em>not</em> say. Zail trailed off, and Ilvriss cleared his throat after a second.


    Ill have to bring them something in return. Somethingwhats a good gift from Szsar, Father?


    Youre leaving? Already? What about the war?


    Zail grew rmed. And Ilvriss grewdefensive. He was normally open about ventures in the broad strokes, even if he refused to discuss how it should be done with Zail. But he was evasive.


    <em>Ever since the Meeting of Tribes, hed been making ns.</em>


    Ihave a few mining projects Ive dug up. Its not in areas Szsar controls, but the ventures are highly important, and Im going to try negotiating my way into some work. Theres also the New Lands, but this is going to bewell, Im passing through Liscor. The door is handy, and I will be back, but its essential.


    <em>Mining ventures? </em>Zail didnt believe that for a second. It was true, sometimes you found Adamantium or valuable ore elsewhere, but Szsar was literally a mountain of gems. More importantly, it had the industry and talent to perform mining operations.


    You didnt just pack up and resettle somewhere without a lot of work. If Ilvriss was preparing an expedition, the costs would make it inherently risky.


    And youre taking Nerul, your other associates, with you?


    And [Soldiers]. True, you did that on any expedition, but this was a lot of ouys when the New Lands were sapping everyones talent. Ilvriss avoided Zails gaze.


    Well, its pressing, and I want to hurry.


    Who told you about the mining spots? Was itthe ghosts?


    Ilvriss <em>twitched,</em> and Zail got an answer, though the conclusion he came to was slightly wrong. He sat back. Ilvriss avoided Zails gaze as he fiddled with his utensils.


    Hasanyone else been visited by ghosts?


    No one wants to say anything if they have. You did. Why not just lead with that?


    Ilvriss groaned.


    Fatherits highly secret. Please, swear youll say nothing to <em>anyone.</em>


    Of course not.


    If Ilvriss had been <em>chosen</em>Zail grew excited, then serious. He leaned over the table and remembered Itreus advice.


    But this war with Fissival ising at the wrong time, isnt it? If theyre moving to blockade the trade road, youll need to break their advance before you can go.


    Ilvriss gave him a long look.


    You have my quandary in an uncracked geode, Father. Yes. I think the army can handle it, but they are hopping mad. At least Ill be out of range of themI feel worse that our cities have gone to war.


    Bah. Its the local cities who have to worry. Neither city wille under direct siege. Fissivals just looking for a victory after losing their Archmage. Those fools. But lets talk about the army. If you go, bring the Gemstone Regiments. Fighting Fissival is inherently obnoxious.


    On that, Ilvriss and Zail could agree. [Mages]. Szsar had a fairly strong martial tradition. Not as much as Manus, but Ilvriss had a distaste for magical, ranged battles.


    We beat their grand army once, Father.


    Yesabout that. Why did you charge them?


    Zail had been curious this entire time, but aside from talking about the Meeting of Tribes fallout, they had never gone into the military action because that had been the least important part of the discussion. Ilvriss paused, cutting at his steak.


    Well, it was an impromptu thing. Spur of the moment. It worked.


    The older Wall Lord rubbed at his head.


    Szsar isnt known for charging, though. When you fight Fissival, charging the [Mages] is like charging into an exploding porcupine. Zeres is the sweeping advance. Manus charges. Even Oteslian strategy likes charges more. I remember thinking that it would have been more proper to rotate into a pincer maneuver and press them. Send your riders in, but not <em>yourself.</em>


    Ilvriss sighed. His father was a good war leader, which meant that when he chose to, he could and did critique Ilvriss strategy in everything from the battle with Zel Shivertail to other engagements.


    Father, there was no time, and it was a surprise attack.


    A crossbow to the head is a surprise attack. You gave them minutes to watch you charge at them. You did the same thing against the Tidebreaker, if I recall. You charged the <em>Tidebreaker,</em> the most defensive [General] of Izril.


    Ilvriss turned red as the staff politely changed courses.


    It almost worked. I separated him from hismand, and I had him


    Until you didnt. You lured him into a forest, and since he survived, his army ate yours while you both were separated. Why are you charging all the time? Thats Sserys strategy, and hes a [Mercenary]. Were a Walled City, Ilvriss. Sserys organized his tactics around Liscorian ss-stacking and the fact that he had to work with a bunch of irregrs and other armies. We have discipline.


    Wellhow would <em>you</em> do it?


    The younger Wall Lord made the mistake of challenging Zail to do better, and the Drake gave him a long stare.


    You hit Fissival with Gemstone Regiments. When they bring Mage-Throwers, you bring ballistae. Thats easy. We have armaments, they have magic. Forty thousand regrs of Fissival might be tough, but theyrecking in numbers. They should have that many <em>core</em> soldiers, but three times as many auxiliaries from the other cities. I would pin down one [Mage] division with the Rubirel Guards, and once they get minced a bit, [Mages] always surrender or run.


    He was talking broad strategy, having no maps, but Zail began to describe the Scintition Counter to his son, a Szsarian strategy. The younger Drake put his head in his hands.


    Father, Father. No one uses that anymore. Theres no Skill based around it.


    Its just math.


    Its math and timing, and one wrong move and you lose an entire battalion! New warfare is <em>fast.</em> Sitting formations are a dangerous idea. Just look at the Archmage of Memory. He could bombard your entire wing if they pause. The Titan? Hell throw a hundred counters at you and hit you from every side. The King of Destructionall peerless advances.


    The Titan is contemporaneous of me, Ilvriss. He designed gigantic towers to sit still and push areas. The King of Destruction only knows how to charge. At least, with his armies. Fissivals forgotten their own tactics. Maybe losing that Wall Lord did it.


    And how would they do it?


    Grumpily, Ilvriss tasted some of the strawberry gto that hed taught his [Chefs] how to make. Zail chewed down happily, thinking privately that he could tell Ilvriss in detail how to pull off the old Scintition Counter and a dozen strategies. He did know them all


    In the old days, Fissival would run small core armies like that. But instead of <em>just</em> their [Mage]-troops, they had huge auxiliaries from the other cities. Weve fought with them as many times as against. How you do it, you see, is that you run a screening force ahead of your magic troops. If they dont have us or another Walled City to back them up, the front ranks arent Fissivilian. You screen with thousands of Gnolls on the front. And then


    Zail was so engaged with his memories he failed to see Ilvriss face change. His son looked up, and Zail only broke off after a second.


    What?


    We didnt do that, did we?


    Do what? Use auxiliaries?


    No, I meanI heard the Hectval Alliance was employing those tactics, but <em>we</em> didnt use Gnolls as our expendable frontline. Did we?


    Zail paused, and he was thrown by the question, then tried to back up.


    Thats just one example of a strategy, Ilvriss. Its like throwing [Miners] into pockets to hack apart armored groups. Sometimes you need to supplement your forces


    Miners used to be more predominantly Gnoll-heavy back in the day. Ilvriss put down his spoon and nced at Zail, then swiftly changed subject.


    Oh, right. Speaking of minersthat Adamantium really is being bid on by everyone north of Liscor. Dwarves, Passwe had too few buyers because no one could really work the stuff; now everyone wants it. The Empire of Sands, the King of Destruction, Derthal-Velthe Duhans, always. What do you think we should do regarding investments?


    He tossed that one at Zail, and the old Drake saw it. He stared at Ilvriss, and his son avoided his gaze. Zail sat there a second. He hadnt meant


    He left the topic there, in silence, and that was his mistake. Sometimes, he and Ilvriss talked like this. Other times, Ilvriss told Zail not to worry about it. As if having a life free from worries was one you wanted.


    That was all two weeks ago. In hindsightZail would have insisted Ilvriss listen if he could have seen the future. He should have crushed Fissival in prior wars.


    He should have left Ilvriss with more.


    <em>Now.</em>


    I didnt charge, Father. They just kept raining down magic on us. Damnimpossible advance.


    Ilvriss wasid up in bed, and Szsar was hushed, somber, the day thereafter. Zail sat by him, and he knew that their army had retreated and thousands of soldiers surrendered.


    It was hardly a critical defeat, but it always felt like this when you heard about a loss during a war. He was just d Ilvriss was alive.


    Dont speak. Youre an idiot for going out there, and youre going to rest. Let a [General] handle the fighting.


    Navine was worried, upset, and taking it out on both of them. Zail nced up as Ilvriss groaned.


    Theyve got their own experts in the field, Navine. If its one [General] versus their [General] and several [Mage Lords]we tried to encircle them, but they just blew everything into pieces. I dont want to know how many mana potions they wasted.


    Dont attack yourself. Just rest.


    Zail patted Ilvriss w, wanting him to be quiet for once. Ilvriss stared up, breathing slowly. Even with healing, he was weak as a feather. Magic was hard to heal, so hey there with several tonics and poultices to rebuild his strength.


    Can someonecheck on Osthia? Dont let her get hurt. Nerul will


    Navine was nodding, but she frowned and raised a finger for rification.


    I will. Whos Osthia?


    Ilvriss froze a second.


    Asrira. Thats her other name.


    Navines eyes flickered, and Zail paused a second, but Ilvriss head fell back and the two left him to the [Healers]. And Zail had a lot of thinking to do.


    My son. Zail sat in the nursing home, frustrated, unable to sit still, but so tired that after pacing around the room three times he had to sit.


    His body was old. His wounds held him back, and he knew he forgot. Hed had to be reminded of the Meeting of Tribes war, and then it hade back to him


    <em>But Im still in here. </em>Zail, the real Zail, felt like he was staring out of Wall Lord Zails face, and when he thought of himself, he didnt have the dent in his forehead.


    He wanted to rage against the idiots who had harmed Ilvriss. Shake the foundations of his foes, drag the City of Gems up, and he had the will and emotion to do it. But there was lead in his bones. Lead in his soul, weighing him down.


    <em>An exhaustion that was so unfair. </em>That was age. That was one part of age.


    Another part was looking at Ilvriss face and seeing the first grey scales on <em>him.</em> Realizing that Ilvriss was getting olderthat was what made Zail truly feel it.


    Everyone was considerate of him and came to ask how Ilvriss was doing. From Eschowar to KhorpeItreus wasnt present as he was figuring out how to respond to Fissivals blockade.


    <em>Did Szsar want to try attacking them again, or was it better to try and iste their army or wait out the siege and attack from another direction? </em>Zail could conceivably head out to the meeting and be heard.


    But he didnt want to be heard. He had never felt more useless than when he stood with his son bleeding to death in front of him.


    He made a mistake, Eschowar. He did. You dont have to lie. Fissival saturating the air with spells. ssic. Theyre holed up in the pass itself. Lobbing spells everywhere. The Mage Throwers were tossing [Valmiras Comets], and he was trying to get around the pass and hit them from above.


    The old Wall Lord, the [Fulminous Lord of Cabochon], was closing his eyes, and the shaking stopped. He cracked one lid open.


    They ran into mine spells.


    Yes.


    Trap spells, littered all over the advance. When Ilvriss had tried to head down the valley center, they had filled the air with magical firepower.


    ssic Fissivilian tactics. Khorpe muttered.


    Should havehe should have seen it. Death in the mountains. They love fighting in mountains. More than <em>us.</em>


    Nothing made a Fissival [General] happier than seeing someone climbing over rough terrain as he sat on his tail and ordered mage-strikes. Zail stared at Khorpe.


    When they talked about what they knew, everyone fell silent. Even the staff. When they talked about thisKhorpe stopped shuddering at shadows.


    Perhaps because he knew death was in war, he didnt fear her searching for him. When Eschowar spoke about the same battles that had led to famous [Generals] apprenticing themselves under himlike Wall Lord Aldonssit didnt matter that he couldnt lift a cup.


    <em>We have lived so long. Too long? No. I dont want to die. But the world is changing, and here I sit, unable to do the only thing I know how to do.</em>


    That was the heart of Wall Lord Zails frustration. It was a burning feeling in him.


    Use me. Make use of me. Give me one


    Onest time. She was right, that damn [Lady] who burned us at the Bloodfields year after year. She was right.


    They thought he was losing focus. One of his minders bent over.


    Wall Lord Zail? Is everything alright? Whats my name? Where are you? Maybe we should get you back. Its been a long day


    She reached for him, but halted and yelped as she snatched her ws back. The air around Zail wasprickly. It was charged.


    The old Wall Lord sat there as several people edged awaybut Eschowar didnt. Khorpe didnt. And now, Zail was looking around the room, counting faces.


    <em>Theres Illidrem. Hes barely able to get out of bed, but hes looking up. Theres AscadeniaI saw her use a spoon the other day to open the door they locked on her. Didnt Nmorie teach magic until she forgot?</em>


    An idea was dawning on him like a second sun. It was so natural that he was surprised he hadnt thought of it before. But thenthere had never been a cause.


    Szsar was so safe. But he had seen it during many wars himself. It was the foundation of the King of Destructions strength and why the world still trembled at his name.


    He looked up as Eschowar met his gaze, and then Zail stood up.


    Eschowarare you thinking what Im thinking?


    Are you sure youve thought it out, Zail?


    The old Wall Lord was cautioning him. But Zail turned, and he felt lighter. He looked around the room filled with old men and women, and one of the staff was bright enough to ring a bell for help.


    But it was toote. Zail turned to Eschowar.


    If we were useless, I wouldnt think it at all. Are we useless, Eschowar? Are you thinking what <em>Im</em> thinking?


    The old Wall Lord raised his brows. Khorpe was slowly, slowly pulling something out from under his chair. One of the staff tried to sneak up on Zailthen froze.


    <em>Why did Khorpe have a hand-crossbow?</em> It was loaded with a Phoenixfire Bolt. Both Zail and Eschowar turned to Khorpe, and the Drake shrugged.


    I was going to shoot death when she found me.


    <em>That would have been the end of this entire floor. Probably everything fifty feet above and below as well. </em>They were doing a service to general safety, clearly.


    <em>Are you thinking what Im thinking?</em> A final time, Zail met Eschowars eyes, and atst, the other Drake sighed.


    Maybe, Zail. But how are we going to smuggle eight Gemstone Regiments out of the city without anyone noticing?


    His eyes twinkled as Zail stared at him. Then Zailughed, and he felthe thought he felt lighter. He turned and called out.


    Someone call Linvios. Tell him I have a job.


    Then he was heading for the door, and they tried to stop him, of course. They really did. But they were kindly idiots who knew nothing of what was in his heart.


    Or what was on his fingers. Zail Gemscale was rather like Khorpe after all. Someone sealed the doors with a locking spell.


    Zail raised his ringed hand. One of the rings contained [Detect Truth]. Hed have to get rid of that one. His old armorhis old gear was right where he had left it, or so he hoped.


    Meanwhile, he twisted the middle ring on his w, then pointed it at the door.


    Ears. [Thunderss Spray].


    He did <em>what?</em>


    Wall Lord Ilvriss got word of what was going on toote. He tried to get out of bed, but he was too weak. And worse


    Stop him! Stop them!


    Nerul was trying to do just that, but the problem wasOsthia ckwing hissed at him as Navine tore at her neck-spines.


    Were trying! But theyre pulling rank on us!


    They cant do that. Theyre <em>retired.</em>


    <em>Tell them that! </em>They just shout they outrank us, and theyre <em>armed</em>. Plus, they have all their old sses, so their Skills actually <em>work. </em>Curse that blue-scaled idiot from Liscor!


    Ilvriss tried to get out of bed, but he was immobilized. Even if he couldthings were moving so fast that Zail only deigned to visit him once. When he did, Ilvriss shouted and tried to do something, but he couldnt move and couldnt change his fathers mind.


    That, as Zail pointed out, was ironic turnabout. And perhaps it made Ilvriss think. But hey there and worried and demanded to be carried on a pnquin, and <em>no one would listen to him,</em> and they just humored him at best.


    All he could do was worry and watch. Ilvriss tried toe up with schemes, and he was so desperate that he actually called on a harried young woman, who appeared by his bed.


    <em>I didnt do it! I swear! Whatever it was, I</em>whoa. Ilvriss, what happened to you?


    Erin? What did you do?


    The young woman hesitated.


    N-nothing. Ilvriss! I thought you were mad about me because you heard about something else. Whatwhat happened?


    He had to tell her about the war with Fissival, and her brows darkened with rm the instant she realized what was going on.


    A <em>war?</em> I havent been checking the news with the beach.


    Ilvriss coughed painfully.


    It wasnt a bigengagement. I think Pass ys down the war between cities when it can. But listen. My father


    <em>Why didnt you tell me you were hurt? </em>I couldve baked something for you that might have helped! At leastyou didnt have to let me think you were well! Here I was, ying chess every night with you and thinking you were on your way!


    She was outraged. Ilvriss raised one w.


    Erin. I didnt want to worry you. I dont even think they were trying to kill me. Its damn Drake pettiness all thewait a second, what games with you? I thought that was Mrsha. I havent been ying any games.


    Erin gave Ilvriss a side-eye.


    No, that was only Mrsha the first time. She only knows how to do the Fools Mate, and she keeps trying to humiliate everyone with it. Whaddya mean you havent been ying? Then whos been ying <em>me?</em> Theyre good games, too. Very good. I put you up against Niersor so I thoughtand he nearly lost.


    Ilvriss stared at Erin. Then he demanded someone find where his chessboard was. He found it right where it had been leftnext to Wall Lord Zails breakfast table where he would rx in the mornings and evenings and kill time, next to the Rubrix Square that made Erins eyes nearly pop out of her head.


    Three dayster, the army of Fissival met Szsars in battle.


    They wereing. Fissival was entrenched in the mountain pass that was called Sserys Line, and they actuallyughed when they saw Szsars armying back for a rematch.


    I think they dont have enough [Soldiers]. They came at us with 80,000, and now theyve got barely 50,000. Maybe theyre afraid of taking as many casualties asst time!


    Either way, they sneered at the City of Gems army. Szsar was arraying far below the cliffs where Fissival had established magical fortifications.


    If they wanted to get at them, theyd have to cross trappednd up through a hail of magic. In fact, the Mage-Throwers were already calibrating, getting ready to fire.


    General Rodissc was reporting back to the City of Magic, and he was unconcerned with the opposition. The only person unhappy with the enemy force was Mage Lord Ascoden.


    <em>I see a bunch of siege weapons down there. Make sure you have those Mage Throwers under heavy guard.</em>


    Barrier spells are engaged, Wall Lord. Dont worry; if they want a shooting war, we have more magic than they can dream of. Im not counting a huge [Mage] presence.


    Szsar knew better than to try to out-mage a city where every citizen was capable of casting Tier 1-2 magic. Ascoden acknowledged that Rodissc had prepared properly, but he scowled.


    He was a vocal detractor against the war, but he was still a son of Fissival. So he was watching Szsar approach with great concern.


    <em>Im sensing a lot of magical signals for an army running without [Mages], General. What am I looking at? Gemstone Regiments?</em>


    Rodissc nced down at the colorful forces below. His eyes picked up the sparking spears carried bypanies of Drakes, marching in their painted armor like a ssh of yellow. He nodded, tuning his sight spell on a group of Drakes carrying oval, pale-white shields.


    Thats the Erchirite Spears, the Topaz ShieldsIm counting a lot of magical regiments, but nothing more than what they broughtst time. Theyre dispersed through the army. Probably to avoid us blowing a group to pieces.


    <em>Watch the Rubirel Guard. Theyll advance through most magic.</em>


    We are prepared to intercept and surround them. Dont worry, they fold without reinforcements, Mage Lord. If youll excuse me


    They were getting into range. The General of Fissival saw Szsar arraying in an odd formation below as the Magic Throwers began to calibrate for shots on their lines.


    He didnt see amand tent likest time, or an obvious [General]. Not that he was intending to murder a [General] or Wall Lordthere was punishing Szsar until they capitted, and then there was esction.


    Wounding that damn Ilvriss that badly was actually the ideal oue. But Rodissc had to ownhed been surprised that Szsar hade back for round two.


    Either their [General] was <em>very</em> confident they could win or they really needed the pass open. He was bothered because he hadnt heard that their top [General] wasing out.


    In fact, Rodissc didnt know who the hell was leading the army. Hed asked for information, but Szsar was in chaos, and none of the ndestine agents had managed a report.


    Rodissc got his answer sooner than hed thought. The army was deploying along the approach up to Fissival. But it looked like they were digging <em>in.</em> The huge slope leading up to Fissival had a few chokepoints, and Szsard taken one with the fewest openings. There were three, leading past huge boulders that would stymie an advance.


    <em>But why in the name of the Ancestors did it look like they expected Fissival toe to them? </em>They were out of range of all but siege-weapons, but Fissival was only too happy toe down a few hundred feet.


    Theyd trapped the entire approaching up, and Szsar would literally be buried in spells and avnches if they came running up the slope. The enemymander clearly knew this, but


    General. Do we begin bombarding them? Their ballistae arending establishing shots.


    A few <em>thuds</em>and copsing earth and stone. The ballistae were ranging, establishing the right angle to hit the Magic Throwers.


    <em>Well, we cant have that. </em>General Rodissc lifted a hand, and his army lifted wands. [Mages] began linking.


    Fissival fought with spells, and they knew how to link and hurl a bolt of [Grand Lightning] down, or a [Siege Fireball]. They didnt usually need more than that, but they were more than capable of casting [Acid Storm].


    Since that was against most codes of war because their enemies would retaliate in kind, it was Tier 4-5 spells at this range.


    Szsars ballistae opened up first, though. The expensive, Drake-made armaments roared, and the General flinched as one hit the magical barrier over one of the Magic-Throwers near him.


    <em>Impact! Barriers at 61%!</em>


    <em>Theyre using magicore-tipped bolts!</em>


    He swore. One shot had taken down the magic barriers way more than it should. Someone had armed the ballistae properlybut Szsar didnt have barrier spells. He counted <em>twelve</em> ballistae to his eight.


    But theirs would be rubble soon. He regretted wasting so many resourcesbut Szsar was rich.


    <em>Open casting! Give them a taste of Fissivals revenge!</em>


    Fissivals army began to cast, and spells began raining down on the Drakes and Gnolls below. [Fireballs] grew and roared downhill while [Grand Lighting] shed downwards. Slower than actual lightning, but so quick it was a flicker before it struck. And that was followed by [Valmiras Comet], hurled by magic-throwers.


    Enchanted crossbows were ready to fire at anyone charging up. But for now, it was long-ranged magic, and Rodissc sat back. He expected to have to batter Szsar before they found the nerve toe uphill, but he was sending [Scouts] left and right.


    <em>Hed heard Symphony had left the City of Gems, and if they were gambling purely on the [Assassins]a single ambush was not going to work.</em>


    Rodissc was doing everything right for a [General] of Fissival. He had made no obvious mistakes, and he kept his advantageous spot without ceding any ground to the enemy.


    In qualitative terms, he was really pulling off a Thelican-quality battle. Which was all you needed, really.


    Only one thing bothered Rodissc. It was under the roar of spells and the howl of magic in the air


    <em>Why did it sound like they were singing?</em>


    There were eight of them. Eightold men.


    Well, they werent all men, but the point was not lost on the [Soldiers]. They had given orders, and they were in <em>charge</em>, so no one was deserting. If anythingthey were beginning to tell old stories.


    If you feared being led by an old man who couldnt hold a sword properly, what about the [Fulminous Lord] who could breathe lightning and had once sted an army off the side of a mountain in a storm?


    And they were singing. A [Soldier]s drinking song. Zail was humming as he stared up at the glowing spellsing down towards him. That terrified regr [Soldiers].


    <em>Ancestors, it was all ever for me. I did it all for none but I.</em>


    Wall Lord! Theyre


    I see it. Gemstone Regiments, prepare for the Scintition Counter. Mark.


    Wall Lord Zail gently pulled something out and knew Eschowar was holding a copy of it. It looked likea Rubrix Square.


    But less of a square. It was really more of a series of speaking stones glued together. And they didnt speak so much as light up. When he pressed down on oneanother lit up in the w of the [Squad Leader] of the Erchirite Spears, Division 2, Company 1.


    They were arrayed neatly with the Topaz Shields, Rubirel Guard, and other Gemstone Regiments throughout the army. Each group was standing ready, and as the magic came downthe Erchirite Spears did what they had been ordered to do:


    They nted their spears in the ground, aiming them straight up. The Erchirite-tips <em>crackled</em> with enough lightning to throw their own magic in the enemys faces.


    <em>Terrifying, though, to advance on [Mages] with the high ground. </em>What kind of idiot would charge up a slope at a bunch of [Longbow Archers] or Fissivals forces?


    Not Zail. He kept humming as the Topaz Shields lifted their enchanted shields overhead. Each Gemstone Regiment had a special weapon, shield, or piece of armor mined from the magical crystals of the City of Gems.


    Each one had a different power. You couldbine them and send a huge [Chain Lightning] attack if a bunch of Erchirite Spears used their spears in tandem.


    But that was such a basic version of their strength. Old Drakes knew how to use the spears. Zail had fought Fissival more times than he could count.


    <em>His body hurt from riding and camping, even in the expensive tents theyd sequestered. </em>He was tired already, and his heart hurt from beating so fast.


    But he saw it. Zail feared he might lose track of himself, forget. But somehow, he didnt think he would. Even if he was sleepinghis ws began to dance.


    <em>[Grand Lightning]ing down. </em>His ws flicked a gemstone like someone else ying a musical instrument.


    It was just like a Rubrix Square, which was why [Enchanters] had designed the system like that.


    The stone lit up, and a [Squad Leader] saw it and shouted.


    <em>Now! [Ground Electricity]!</em>


    Forty Drakes drove the tips of their spears down hard. They shoutedand the [Grand Lightning] <em>twisted</em> as it arced down. The [Soldiers] screaming in fear looked up as the bolt twistedand touched the spears.


    <em>Lightning rod. </em>The sh illuminated Zails world. The killing magic turned, lured by the Erchirite Spearsand dispersed into the earth. Zail smiled as [Soldiers] gasped and abovethe [Mages] paused.


    <em>They hadnt fought us for an age. </em>Nothe Erchirite Spears had done thatst time. But this time, it wasnt one battalion warding off a few lightning spells. Zail nced up, and his ws began to dance.


    <em>[Siege Fireball], [Grand Lightning], [Ice Lances]</em>his ws moved, touching different points on themand-stones. Each one was tuned to a squad nearest to the spell. When it lit up, they reacted, absorbing the spell. Ordeflecting it.


    [Shield of Mana]!


    The Topaz Shields lifted their glowing shields and <em>blocked</em> a [Siege Fireball]. Their shields drained of magic and began to recharge, and they fell back. The Rubirel Guard, four of them, strode into ce.


    [Spell Attractor]! Br


    <em>Thwoom.</em> The sound of their armor meeting a shower of huge [Light Arrows] rang, but Zail was partly deaf. He was just staring up, and his ws were moving faster.


    <em>He didnt look at the army below. </em>He just trusted they were in position. And his mind was staring at


    <em>Colors.</em>


    Yellow to yellow. Erchirite Spears were capturing lightning. Viridian Axes against light spells. Shite Maces, cold against cold.


    <em>But there was more to it. </em>The spells began to shift, and he saw the [Mages] pausethen start throwing different magic.


    They were no fools. Here came


    [Burning Lightning]. Zails fingers almost missed, but he skipped two stones at once.


    <em>Now! [meguard]!</em>


    <em>[Ground Lightning]!</em>


    The Rubirel Guard and Erchirite Spearsbined powers. Burning electricity ran down the spears, threatening to cook the Drakes holding them alivebut the armored Drakes in their red armor were engulfing them in an aura of crimson, nullifying the heat.


    It was just colors andbinations. Like someone twisting a Rubrix Square and knowing how the patterns lined up. Like a [Lady] choosing flowers that matched. Like someone ying on an instrument.


    It was the music Zail knew. Even with the Scintition Counter, he heard screams as not all of a spell was captured, as people were injured. But he looked up as a hundred spells shot down and only a single one passed by the glowing strength of Szsar: a hundred thousand shining gems.


    Howhow are they doing that?


    General Rodissc knew, intellectually, what they were doing. It had taken him minutes to realize this was the Scintition Counter of Szsar.


    It was justhed never seen anyone crazy enough to <em>use</em> it on a battlefield. The nerves you had to have to trust your troops to <em>counter</em> a spell that fast?


    It was not a Skill. To pull the counter off, you had to be able to see each spell, guess whichbination of your troops armaments would ward it off, then signal to your troops to activate their powers.


    True, there was some leewaya [Mana Shield] could block a lot of spells, but it was like ying arrow-scroll-sword at high speed and with a hundred permutations.


    Someone was doing it. He finally heard who his opponent was.


    Wall Lord <em>Zail?</em> Wall Lord Eschowar? Theyre retired. Theyre <em>dead,</em> I thoughtis he trying to avenge his son?


    He had a moment of panic that hed kill some old Wall Lord and escte the war. Then the Generals worries mounted.


    <em>Magic Thrower down! General, theyre firing on us!</em>


    A panicked voiceRodissc turned in disbelief, just in time to see a <em>second</em> magic thrower implode.


    A bolt from a ballista <em>mmed</em> into the magical arms of the enchanted device, and ming magicore spread across the device as [Enchanters] hurled themselves away. The magic warpedand it detonated in a shower of corrosive magic.


    <em>Barriers!</em>


    Were trying, but the ballistae


    They were cranking out shot after shot, and a catapult was hurling greedy magicore, which sucked up the barrier spells.


    Fissival had failed to destroy Szsars ranged weapons, and now the City of Gems was wracking up a terrible bill.


    Worsearrows werending amidst the unshielded forces. They came uphill, at great range, but one of the Wall Lords was using a Skill.


    <em>Shields up! Shields</em>


    One of the [Magic Captains] had to remind his troops to raise their shields. The barrier-spells had gone down, and physical arrows were showering [Soldiers]. Rodissc shouted.


    [Battlemages]! Vary your spells!


    <em>Were trying, General! Theyre blocking tri-element spells! Do we have permission to use cloud spells?</em>


    Noget me a Tier 5 [Serpent of the Five Elements]!


    The [Mages] stopped their onught and began preparing a <em>big</em> spell. But as they did, Szsar began hurling bolts at the [Mages]. Trying to disrupt the linked casting, and the arrow fire got worse


    <em>[High Mage] Itelln down! Restore the link! Restore the</em>


    Cast the spell! Cast the


    A hundred-foot serpent of magic came roaring out of Fissivals army, a glowing body of light and huge maw made of ice, whiskers of lightning trailing behind scales of fire. Clouds of darkness smog trailed from ithad someone added <em>darkness </em>magic? Who had authorized that? Was Mage Lord Ascodens darkness-project gaining ground? Either waythe serpent howled as it descended.


    <em>[Serpent of the Five Elements]. </em>General Rodissc saw it roar down, and even Szsars army couldnt stop it.


    It went ploughing into the Drakes ranks, biting, burning and freezing and shocking as the Gemstone Regiments tried to slow it.


    Erchirite Spears siphoning off lightning, Rubirel Guardhe saw a squad of Topaz Shields fall over and crowed.


    <em>Got them! </em>Got<em>damn.</em>


    The spell vanished after half a minute of tearing into Szsars forces as it was finally nullified. Hundreds of wounded Drakes and Gnolls retreated, unable to heal with potions so conveniently.


    <em>That worked. </em>Get me another [Serpent]! <em>[Scouts], find me the Wall Lord.</em>


    General Rodissc felt in control again. He turned, and a voice crackled through his [Communication] spell.


    Again? <em>Generalwere being torn to pieces.</em>


    Then he looked behind him and realized something that jarred with his understanding of the battlefield. General Rodissc stared at lines of Drakes screaming and taking cover behind any obstacle they could find as arrowsnded around them. Ballista bolts were <em>hammering</em> the ground as three magic throwers desperately maneuvered, trying to dodge and return fire.


    Three out of eight. Five were splintered ruins, and all <em>twelve</em> of Szsars siege weapons were still hammering the ground. Then Rodissc took a look down at Szsars army.


    <em>Of all their visible damage, only the Tier 5 spell had even left a big mark. </em>And they were already reforming, rotating Gemstone Regiments into ce.


    Waitare we losing?


    Impossible. Fissival was losing a ranged war? <em>Fissival was losing the</em>


    Major Khorpe stared up as Zail and Eschowar conducted the Scintition Counter. Fissival was losing.


    How long was it since they were reminded no one got a superiority in anything? One of the [Strategists] in hismand was agog.


    Major! Theyre going to be torn to pieces! I had no idea the Scintition Counter was so effective!


    Theyreing. Fixed defenses be a trap. Theyreing. Get ready.


    He was shaking, staring at the sky. But he made himself <em>hold.</em> Zail was right. This was what they knew. The old [Major] could barely lift a swordbut a wand would do.


    These young Drakes and Gnolls didnt know how to fight.


    Pass can do the same thing. A thousand exploding potions versus a hundred spells. Oteslia just summons swarms of insects. Now theyreing. Get ready.


    He was in charge of one of the three passes. Zail held the center; Eschowar was on the right. The old Drake was waiting. <em>Waiting for the charge.</em>


    Fissival on the charge?


    Someoneughed, and Khorpe looked at them for a moment.


    Have you ever seen a charging [Battlemage], boy? Be silent.


    There were few things more terrifying than someone with nothing to loseing towards you. The Drakes fell silent, and they were listening to him. <em>Listening</em>because they sensed what he said mattered.


    Zail. Eschowar. The others had to be sensing it. ThisKhorpe looked up, and someone screamed.


    <em>Iing! Watch o</em>


    The Scintition Counter didnt block everything. A twisting bolt of ck darkness magic got past Eschowar. It came down in a spiral, and Major Khorpe looked up and sighed.


    <em>This was also what he had waited for. What he expected. Let it be us. </em>Khorpe saw the magic reaching out, a twisting hand. He stepped sideways, and it dug a gash in the earth three dozen feet deep, slicing into the earth and leaving ck tar.


    Four Drakes around him had gone down, shed by the unpredictable arc of the spell. Khorpe looked down, and a gash cut a v around his feet. It had trimmed his boot heels.


    The [Strategist] whod been talking so excitedly picked herself up, then felt at her tail. She stared upand the ck line was right where shed been standing until Khorpe had pushed her forwards.


    Major? How did you?


    The old [Reconnaissance Major] stared up at the sky. His eyes gazed up into the firestorm of spells meeting the Gem Regiments magic.


    I saw deathing. <em>Form up.</em>


    <em>Yes, indeed. Let it be us. We learned how to dodge. </em>His head bent down as he heard the roaring down the hills.


    Fissival was charging.


    Now, Fissival knew what was down there, and they had received the orders to charge. There was only one good order that General Rodissc could make. Well, that and surrender.


    They were backed into a corner. The same terrain that had sheltered them from being nked was now a trap. Fissival had toe down, and Szsar had the choke points. They were ready.


    <em>But the City of Magic was ready to take them like a storm. </em>Had you ever seen a charging [Battlemage]? General Rodissc had ordered a full onught.


    The younger [Soldiers] saw this as an opportunity to correct the insult at the Meeting of Tribes. Theyd take down Szsar like the City of Gems had done to them.


    But the regr infantry? The veterans? They listened to the word filtering up to them.


    Wall Lord Zail? Wall Lord Eschowar?


    And they had a moment of fear, the same fear that Nerrhavias Fallen had learned at Reim. The fear young men learned.


    Old men in war. Old men and women with levels and nothing left to lose.


    The Rubirel Guards holding the right nk with Lord Eschowar. <em>Retired Rubirel Guard.</em>


    Ancestors.


    One of the [Veteran Magic Soldiers] whispered. He was grateful they were heading down the center, now. He had seen the two dozen Drakes wearing heirloom armor. Regr Szsar [Soldiers] would rout or surrender. They would not.


    <em>Fifteen seconds!</em>


    They were marching downhill as the [Mages] tried to soften the advance. Coming downhill on treacherous terrainbut they were staring at the three passes. <em>Like thunder. They just had toe down like thunder. The Drakes tensed</em>


    <em>Five, four, three, twofor the City of Magic!</em>


    Zail had put aside themand stones. He was walking forwards, ignoring his bodyguards and the [Soldiers].


    He had to do it. They didnt want to die, none of them.


    It was funny. Being in a war reminded him he <em>didnt</em> want to die, even now. Yes, he was doing it so Ilvriss would be safe.


    <em>But he didnt want to die. </em>He just wanted to be alive. And this


    Helessia had told him he was an idiot, but she had looked at him with that familiar exasperation and half sat up in her bed. The effort that tookthey had walked back in time, and she had been the exasperated one seeing him off for another war.


    Once again, he went. Ever again, one more time with the same feeling in his veins. Now, the [Soldiers] were cheering his name as he passed, staring at him. Half in disbelief, as if they feared he might fall over. But in this moment, as the foe poured down, they followed his back as he passed and their voices rose.


    <em>Wall Lord! Wall Lord Zail! Zail, Zail</em>


    As if he was the one hero of this battlefield. As if they hadnt been here before.


    Well, maybe they hadnt. Maybe they didnt know how it was done. So hed show them.


    He was not, like his son, confident enough to charge into battle and let his strength of arms and levels sort out the rest.


    <em>But there was a way to do it.</em>


    Fissival came down the slopes, into the passes, howling so loud that even the loudest braggart of Szsar went silent. They thundered towards the Drakes, holding the line. It was so <em>easy</em> to charge. That was why Ilvriss and young [Generals] did it all the time.


    Your heart in your throat, screaming your soul out at the enemya boy could fall on them like a lion. How did you <em>hold the line</em> with the same spirit?


    Not with a speech. Nor with any glorious line of shields cutting down the savage hordes. You did it like this.


    <em>A single Drake, scales grey with age, a purple helm of Orichalcum on his head, walked out of the line of [Soldiers] and spears. A thousand Drakes were pouring down at him, feet pounding the ground, des raised.</em>


    <em>Their eyes fixed on him as he walked out in front of his troops. Just past the tips of the spears. Not far, but so they all saw him.</em>


    <em>There was no time for speeches. Arrows werending, and spells lit up the world.</em>


    <em>The Wall Lord of Szsar held something out. It was a sword in a scabbard. The horizontal hilt of the de hung in the air, and his weary, wed hand grasped the hilt of the sword.</em>


    <em>He drew a bright de, glowing with lightning, and traced a salute of Szsar into the air. Then he held the de at his side.</em>


    <em>There he stood. A lone figure standing before his army, waiting for them toe to him. Across the breach, a line of warriors wearing crimson armor held their ground behind a Wall Lord, eyes sparking with lightning.</em>


    <em>Voice like thunder. des dancing in the air as an army cheered their backs.</em>


    Come challenge me. I have been here before and triumphed.


    <em>Zail looked at the Drakes charging at him, and youth quailed and their steps faltered. A Swordmaster of Szsar held his ground as the Army of Gems roaredand then the two sides met.</em>


    Like someone ringing the gong of war a thousand times out of screams, cries, the sh of arms. Magic thundered in the air, and Fissival tried to chant a spell of victory.


    But they were just the City of Magic. They poured into the gaps andslowed


    <em>Stopped.</em>


    The charge ran into the Drakes and Gnolls around the old Wall Lords and halted. The army of Fissival tried to fight forwards, [Mages] attempting to cast at point-nk range. <em>They just had to pierce Szsars lines. Thenthen!</em>


    The screaming General Rodissc, like Zail, was no idiot whomitted himself into the center of the fray. He was at the rear, demanding his [Mages] attack. They were just about ready to begin casting support spells when the First Violin yed the first note.


    Symphony stood to the rear of Fissival. It had taken them a long time to get in position, but they had strict orders not to intervene until the charge, anyways.


    Scaling a mountain was hard at the Maestros age. But Linvios Reiscale, love him or hate his group of [Assassins]? He was a function of Szsar.


    [Concerto: ss Rain Upon Issrysils ins]. Encore, encore. First Violinist, take the left. Theyre faltering. The rest of you, to Wall Lord Zails aid. <em>Now. Fortissimo!</em>


    He drew the spectral rapier out of the air as dozens of elegant musician-assassins drew des. Fissivalsmand and rear lines looked back and heard Symphony as they descended on their rear.


    <em>That was what Szsar had that Fissival did not. Gems, color, and music. </em>The Maestro dove towards the [General] of Fissival, sword drawn, golden bell chiming purely for the sweet sound of it. So they remembered it was there.


    Every battle needed a nking force. Every hero needed the consummate viin to look good and y his part well.


    Heughed as he came down towards the Drake holding wand and sword, turning with the whites of his eyes showing. The Maestro spoke:


    <em>[Sword Art: Mourning Doves Lament].</em>


    Three minutester, Fissivals army began to surrender en-masse.


    Wall Lord Zail oversaw the capture and ransoming of the City of Magics army. Like most inter-city battles, it was not as bloody as it could be.


    But it was still war. Not as bloody just meant one army hadnt been executed to thest. The Wall Lord felttired.


    Victorious? Perhaps. Perhaps, when he looked around and realized neither Khorpe nor Eschowar nor Linvios were dead.


    Khorpe had a new scar on his face, but aside from that and Eschowar losing a bit of his tail, theyd lived.


    None of them were upset about that. Next time, theyd see. They were not invincible; it was just that they were damn tough to kill, and they intended to keep that reputation up as long as they could.


    <em>Next time?</em>


    Nerul stood there, having been chosen to oversee the ransom negotiations. Zail was massaging his back.


    Of course. If Ilvriss leavessomeone has to go to war, and the current generation does it wrong. Do you think our counterparts in Fissival will just sit there?


    Are you suggesting we <em>escte?</em> They send their old men, we send ours?


    Nerul looked mildly horrified at the suggestion. Zail just red at him.


    We dont want to. We dont need to kill each other. Not thissomething else, Nerul.


    He was trying to exin. It was like Zail could sense abination in the Rubrix Square or smell thunder in the air. <em>Soon, he would be needed.</em>


    He felt younger. And indeed, people were listening and taking note, including his son. Or perhaps it was because they had no choice.


    The Last Defenders of the Wall. A fanciful title. Are you going to be giving orders?


    Nerul eyed the coalition of Drakes who had certainly subsumed a lot of political powerin addition to the power they had reminded people they had. Zail just stood there and looked back towards his beloved City of Gems, rising from the mountain.


    Onest time. Onest time, and again, Nerul. Onest time until the end. Until I am no longer actually useful.


    He stood there, and Nerul could not remember Zail looking younger or older. The Drake [Diplomat] threw up his ws.


    When is it our turn to lead our cities and this world forwards if old men like you kick around?


    When you deserve it. When you wrest it from us. But well hold on until you break our fingers.


    Zail pointed his sword at Nerul, and the [Diplomat] didnt dignify that with an answer. But the old Drake smiledand listened to the world agreeing.


    [Wall Lord of a Thousand Exchanges, Coin and Sword Level 44!]


    [Skill  My Strength, Regained (Ten Minutes) obtained!]


    [Fame  Remember My Name obtained!]


    He awoke, groggy sometimes, not knowing where he was or what was going on. But the voice, at least, reminded him. Zaily in bed and stared up, thinking.


    He had heard Lord Eschowar had gained a more powerful Skill reiming his sublimity or something. But this would do.


    Zail closed his eyes and felt young again for ten minutes.


    <strong>Authors Note:</strong>


    This chapter was written in one day, and edited the day thereafter. I worked Sundayfor quite some time, actually, but on the business-end of things and I wont get into details.


    But this is an example of how the writing may go in the future. Its still probably longer than I would prefer to write in one day, but the chapter is also paced faster, and re-learning how to do that wouldnt be the worst.


    Anyways, I hope you enjoy your poll chapteror the first part of it. As I said, whatever wins is an arc, so I knew this was the first chapter going into Ilvriss point-of-viewironically not from his point of view.


    Each character deserves their hour or longer, and sometimes it feels like you pencil in the world but hint and leave enough room for a character to get their development. Movies and shorter-form stories have to rely on what we call stereotypes and cliches because they dont have the room to flesh out every character, and sometimes thats okay, but the luxury of a web serial is also a necessity if you keep running into the same characters. Theyd better have more depth than a thimble or the world is shallow.


    Thats my brief writing notes and analogy towards drawing. Which I am not good at. No more gaming news for you. I re-beat Cassette Beasts, which I was drawn to, again, because its just rxing to y. Also, I may be concerned my old graphics card will explode if I try anything more high-quality on it. Nothings failed dramatically since thenthings are good?


    What a boring authors note. Despite the busyness, I am feeling like Im starting to establish a workflow that doesnt kill me. Im getting tired and plotting the chem chapter and this Ilvriss arc, but nothings critical aside from the heat and me waking up with sunlight, an objectionable phenomena. Hope you enjoyed and see you next chapter!


    <strong>Jar by /anito</strong>


    <strong></strong>


    <strong><strong>Mrsha Note, Ivolethe, and Nte Reading by Bobo /boboplushie</strong></strong>


    <strong><strong></strong></strong>


    <strong><strong></strong></strong>


    <strong><strong></strong></strong>


    <strong><strong><strong>Old men and Consent by /brack</strong></strong></strong>


    <strong><strong><strong><strong>Twitter: /Brack_Giraffe</strong></strong></strong></strong>


    <strong><strong><strong></strong></strong></strong>


    <strong><strong><strong></strong></strong></strong>


    <strong><strong><strong><strong>Silvenia by Maxwell and butts,misioned by Linu! And yes, an artist is named butts on Discord who does all this amazing art and yes, I vaguely respect their name even though it forces me to write butts Twitter as a serious part of my job.</strong></strong></strong></strong><strong><strong>


    <strong>Maxwells site: </strong>https://max-art.carrd.co/


    <strong>butts Twitter:</strong>https://twitter/buttscord


    <strong>butts Ko-Fi:</strong>https://ko-fi/buttsarts


    </strong></strong>
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