Read The Record of the Saints Caliber Online

Authors: M. David White

Tags: #Fantasy, #Dark Fantasy, #Fiction

The Record of the Saints Caliber (34 page)

BOOK: The Record of the Saints Caliber
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The last remaining guard struck out at the demon, quickly maneuvering to disarm it and decapitate it in a single, fluid motion. The guard grabbed the Queen by the arm and threw her behind him. Before Brandrir knew it, he was back in his mother’s arms. Dagrir was at his side, and they huddled in the corner of the room.

The guard stood his ground before them as six more Kald filed into the room. These Kald were different though. Although they had the same cobalt blue scales, serpentine head and bat-like wings as the others, this foul lot wore scaled armor clumped with white ice, their heavy boots clanking on the stone floor, creating spreading webs of frost. But there was something else about them that Brandrir could detect. Something about them that radiated power and authority. Brandrir knew these were not the rank and file demons the guards had fought off. These were something else.

The guard flourished his blade, the silvery metal glinting in the torchlight of the room. Six Kald spread out, encircling him. The room filled with their frigid aura and the guard’s frantic breaths began to smoke. “Stay back!”

The demons all cracked a wicked smile and hissed an insidious laugh. The guard flourished his blade again, ready to attack, but then something echoed in the darkness of the hall beyond the room. It was heavy footfalls on the stone. They came slowly but very certainly, as if each clank upon the stone had its own will in the approach. The Kald gave pause and even the guard sensed what Brandrir could, that somebody of great power was approaching, but it was not a demon.

The heavy footfalls came nearer and Brandrir held Dagrir tightly in his arm as the Queen stood to her feet. Fameil, one of the Knights of the Dark Stars and Captain of the Royal Guard, strode in. He was a broad and powerful man made into a menacing figure by his heavy plate armor which was sculpted like the body of a marbled god. It was gleaming and lacquered black, with every edge rounded and gilded with gold. His footfalls were heavy upon the floor, his steel boots biting into the very stone. His golden hair was plastered to his forehead with sweat and his smokey eyes gleamed like sword steel in the torchlight.

As he came closer the blood from the fallen guards and Kald began to bead up and then float into the air. The bodies of the fallen slowly rising up, hovering just off the ground. Brandrir knew this man well. Fameil was his friend Etheil’s father. Fameil was aloof and reserved and rarely spoke to men other than the King. Brandrir always felt uneasy around him, but never so much as at this moment.

“Fameil!” The Queen rushed to his side, holding her tattered gown upon her body as she brushed past the demons. “Where have you been?”

The Kald hissed and seemed to shrink away from the man, but Brandrir saw something in their yellow eyes that belied their animosity toward the Captain of the Royal Guard. Even the Royal Guardsman took a step back and did not relax his grip on his sword.

“Milord?” the guard’s voice quavered.

Fameil shot him a steely glance.

“Dispatch these beasts at once!” demanded the Queen, eying the Kald with abhorrence. Brandrir tightened his arm around Dagrir, still fighting off the pain that engulfed him and the unconsciousness that loomed in his foggy mind.

“Right away,” said Fameil in his cold, hard voice. The Kald hissed and hunched their backs, tightening their grip on their swords.

The bloody droplets and fallen bodies lifted higher into the air and suddenly the remaining guard fell to his hands and knees. He struggled to stay up, as if some great force was pushing him down, driving him into the stone floor. He looked up, his eyes wide with fear. “Milord, why?!” he screamed, but he would never get an answer. His arms and legs crumpled beneath him. He screamed horrifically as his armor crushed in on itself. Brandrir could hear bones breaking, steel folding, and after a final, terrible squeal, the man’s life was ended and blood flowed out from his crushed armor.

Fameil scowled and turned to the Queen. He relaxed his powerful aura and the blood and bodies all fell back to the floor. The Queen looked up at Fameil, her eyes wide with horror. Then there was a tremulous thunder that shook the very foundations of the castle. The torch that blazed on the wall wavered and sprinkles of dust streamed down from the ceiling. Fameil’s eyes briefly looked up to the rafters before returning to the Queen. “I do think this castle is going to fall, my lady.”

The demons all looked at each other and chuckled with sinister knowing, their breath puffing clouds of frigid smoke.

“Fameil!” gasped the Queen, shrinking on the floor into the corner as the beasts gathered around the Captain of the Royal Guard. “What is the meaning of this?”

Brandrir looked at Dagrir. His brother was frantic, crying and wailing. The room seemed to tumble and roll as he fought off unconsciousness. He chanced a look down at his arm. It was on fire with pain. There was an horrific amount of blood. A strange thought floated in his mind that he ought to run over to one of the Kald and touch it to its body to freeze it and numb the pain, but he knew that was foolish. He knew at this point he could not even stand.

The hissing of steel now drew Brandrir’s attention. He looked up and saw that Fameil had unsheathed his sword. Dagrir began wailing more loudly. Fameil strode to Brandrir’s mother and knelt beside her, his armored knee clanking heavily upon the stone as he grabbed her by the chin.

The Queen looked at Fameil, her eyes frantic. “What is the meaning of this?”

“The meaning of this, lady Brandolyn, is to end the Thorodin bloodline.” said Fameil coldly. He put the tip of his sword to her neck.

“My sons!” she screamed. “Don’t hurt my sons!”

“I’m sorry,” said Fameil. “But this bloodline is going to have to end tonight.”

Brandrir remembered the sounds of his mother’s breath choking and sticking in her throat as the blade dug deeply and slowly. The blackness of unconsciousness overtook him just as the silver tip of the blade came through the back of her head.

“Do you remember that night?”
snarled Dagrir, snapping Brandrir back to present time. He looked at his younger brother whose eyes were red, welling with tears. Those pink stripes on his neck stood out more boldly now. “Do you remember how the Royal Guard kept repeating those words?
‘Only the first-born succeeds the King’
is what they said, brother! Over and over and over again I heard those words!”

Brandrir bit his lip and looked down at the stable floor. He felt his brother push him on his chest and he nearly stumbled backward into Stormwild.

“Do you remember them saying that?”
screamed Dagrir, and Brandrir was forced to look his brother in the eyes. “Do you?!”

Brandrir inhaled deeply and turned his eyes down.

Brandrir felt his brother grab him around the top of his breastplate and yank him down.
“Do you remember them saying that!”
he roared again, his eyes wide and spit flying from his mouth.

Brandrir nodded but could not look his brother in the eyes. Dagrir pushed him away as he released his grip.

“So let’s talk about who remembers what,” screamed Dagrir. “Because I remember standing there alone in that cold bedroom! You were there and mother and all the guards had come in, but I was standing there
alone!
The guards were there helping mother and rushing to your aid. I had to push the body of the Kald from my back as it lay bleeding ice out onto the bed! I remember mother wrapping your arm and then the guards ushering her out the door as I stood there screaming for her—
reaching for her
—and it was as if I wasn’t even there! And then I saw the guards carrying you off! I heard them say it, brother! I heard them say to leave me, because only
you
succeed the King!”

Brandrir looked at his brother, his lips pursed into a frown of their own accord and he felt a warm tear stream down his face.

“Tell me now, Brandrir!” yelled Dagrir. “Tell me now what I should remember! After that night, after father killed Fameil, you went out after Etheil to protect him! When father sentenced him to spend a long night in the Blue Wilds and he returned with that wolf of his, you went away with him to train and fight. All the while I was stuck at this castle! Stuck with father in Council meetings! Stuck learning the books of law and pouring over maps of Duroton and learning the names and titles of all the nobles so you could go off and be a knight or Captain of the Grimwatch or whatever else you fancied yourself!”

Dagrir looked away now, his eyes dark and his voice full of a venom Brandrir had never heard before. “And my whole life, while I sat in Council meeting after Council meeting, all I could think was that
you
, brother, were the one who got the crown.” He looked at Brandrir and spat out the words, “I was but a steward for you. And now, it is finally
my turn
to live my life but once again you’re going to run back to that landsforsaken Grimwatch and leave me to do
your
duty?”

Against his own will Brandrir felt his eyes flood with tears and stream down his face. He reached out to Dagrir and took him into his arms, squeezing him tight. Dagrir wept upon his shoulder. “I am so sorry, brother.” said Brandrir, holding him close. “I do remember them saying that. I do remember them trying to leave you. I am so sorry. I am sorry for everything.”

They held each other for a long moment until at last Dagrir pulled himself away and looked at Brandrir with red eyes, his face wet with tears. “I remember something else that night. I remember you coming back for me. I remember seeing everybody leaving the room. I remember seeing mother being taken away and then you being carried out. All I could think, as I stood there alone and crying, was that I was in my tomb. I remembered above all else not wanting to die there alone amongst the shattered glass of the window and the bodies of the Kald. And I remember you coming back for me. I saw you slide out of the knight’s arms and run toward me. I remember my hand slipping from yours in that long, dark hall and you coming back for me.”

Brandrir stood looking at his brother, his lips pursed and tears streaming as he nodded. “I told you I would never leave you behind. But that’s all I’ve done my whole life.”

“Take the crown tomorrow,” said Dagrir. “Or everything from that night is wasted.”

Brandrir nodded and stifled his tears. He looked upon his brother and steeled himself to speak of something he had never openly spoke of to anybody. He had heard the whispers. He had heard the rumors of the Jinn, that they foresaw a terrible omen in him. And he was ashamed of it. For how long had the Jinn seen this? The whispers around the castle had only begun a few years ago, but in Fameil’s betrayal he admitted to wanting to end the Thorodin bloodline. Brandrir had often wondered alone in dark, sleepless nights if they had known back then of the omen and sent Fameil to prevent him from ever taking the throne. Part of him wondered if that is why he did not want the crown. Brandrir looked at his brother. “There are whispers that my reign will bring Duroton to flames and ruin.”

Dagrir sniffed and looked Brandrir in the eyes. “Let Duroton decide that, not the Jinn. Let Duroton rise a phoenix for you tomorrow.”

“What if the Phoenix does not rise?” said Brandrir. “What if the omens are true and the Lands denounce me?”

“Duroton has never failed to rise a phoenix for a Thorodin.” assured Dagrir. “In my heart I know you are true to the Lands. A phoenix will rise for you tomorrow.”

Brandrir forced a little smile and placed his right hand on his brother’s shoulder. “The Council all hate me. Even if the phoenix rises and I am made King, the Council will do all they can to work against me.”

Dagrir smiled. “This time, it will be I who will be there for you. I shall not leave you alone in that shark tank. You are the rightful King of Duroton,” said Dagrir. “Not me. And the Council will have to deal with that fact.”

Brandrir looked at his brother and inhaled deeply.

“Don’t you dare leave me alone to the Council again,” said Dagrir, smiling.

Brandrir nodded his head and smiled. “I will not leave you again.” he said. “It is time I keep the promise I made to you that night.”

Dagrir wrapped his arms around Brandrir and hugged him tightly. “Brandrir Thorodin, you shall make a fine King.” he said.

— 9 —

ETHEIL

BOOK: The Record of the Saints Caliber
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