"You have failed, my love," said Salthor, a Demon Lord in the service of Baal, the dark god of Wrath, despair, and vengeance, calmly. He looked at her through her usurped eyes, and Jasmine felt a shudder run through her to the core of her being.
She backed away, for he was well aware of the punishments her patron could inflict on him when he was displeased. Instinctively, her fingers closed around the ruby hilt of her black warsword. She shook her head and her great mane of white-streaked black hair ruffled. She felt helpless. Even though she had a small army of beastmen at her service, she knew there was nothing they could do to help her. In the presence of her boss, no one could help her, no one. She was glad that the old beastman shaman, Grind, and his acolytes had withdrawn beyond the Altar when she finished the invocation, for she did not wish to have witnesses to her defeat.
"Everyone in the village is dead, as we both decided" she lied, knowing it was useless.
Her black armor was already beginning to tighten around her like a vise, and at the nerve endings she was beginning to feel slight pangs of pain. If the demon so wished, she knew that she would soon find herself submerged in an ocean of agony.
"The girl lives." The beautiful voice of the demon was still expressionless, indifferent, devoid of emotion.
Jasmine tried to avoid looking at her, as she knew the effects her sight would have on her. She knew that she would have already begun to change the body of the scapegoat into a form that more closely resembled her true one.
She looked around her. Overhead, the moon shone in an evil silvery glow. During that night and the next two, the power of darkness would be strong on earth, strong enough to summon the demon patron from her hellish home beyond reality; strong enough for her to possess the body of the man who had been offered to her on that altar deep in the woods.
Through the thick red cloud that surrounded the altar, she could see the campfires of her followers; the flames were blurred by the sweet red mists that tinged the night. They were but tiny stars compared to the bright sun of the demon aura. She heard her move and recognized the leathery rustle of wings emerging from the corpse's back. She focused her attention on the impaled heads surrounding the altar, and the pale countenances of Earl Klein and her son Hugo stared back at her, bringing to mind memories of the night before.
The old earl had behaved like a fighter; he had come out to meet her with a spiked mace, half clad in a mail shirt thrown hastily over his body. He had cursed her, calling her a 'damned hell-whelp of the dark', and Jasmine saw the fear written on her face as the horde of beastmen came rushing through the shattered castle gate behind her. She had almost felt sorry for the stupid mustachioed old man, because she had always liked him. He had been worthy of a warrior's death, and she had given it to him quickly.
The young man was standing behind her father, his face pale with terror, and had turned and run across the blood-soaked courtyard, where her followers were murdering half-sleeping soldiers. She had followed him easily, relentlessly, her black armor fused to his skin to grant him added strength and strength.
The place looked almost identical to the one she remembered. It was dominated by the same enormous bed; the same fine rugs covered the floor; the same deer heads and hunting trophies adorned the walls along with the same banners and weapons. Only Hugo had changed, for the boy with the fine passionate face had become a plump man. His sweat ran down his chubby cheeks, and his face had the look of a baby, even with his eyes crossed with terror. Yes, he had changed. Another might not have recognized him after the time passed, but Jasmine did. She would never forget her eyes, those glassy eyes that had followed her from the moment she entered the castle, more than seven years before.
With one stubby hand she clumsily clutched a longsword, which she raised feebly, and she brushed it aside effortlessly. The weapon spun through the air and landed in the far corner. She then placed the point of her sword against Hugo's chest and pressed lightly, forcing him to back away, until he stumbled at the foot of the bed and lay on the sheets. The smell of excrement filled the air, and the bloated pinkish worm licked her lips.
"You're going to die," she told him.
"Why?" she managed to gasp him.
Then she took off her helmet, and he uttered a loud groan as he finally recognized her face and her characteristic long hair.
“Because seven years ago I told you that you would die, do you remember? Then you started laughing. Why don't you laugh now?"
She pressed a little harder with the point of her sword, and her blood began to form a red flower on the white silk of his shirt, which she held out her hands in a pleading gesture.
For the first time in years, tears of passion welled in Jasmine's eyes, and she felt again the searing wave of anger and hate that raced through her veins, transforming her face into a mask. She thrust the weapon hard as she reveled in the shudder of penetration and the clean slide of hellish metal through flesh. She leaned over and pinned him to the bed he had forced her onto seven years before, and once again her sheets were stained with blood.
She had surprised herself. After long years of planning so many slow, deliberate, delicious tortures, she had dispatched him in one fell swoop. Somehow, revenge seemed less important. She had turned and left the bedroom to supervise the sacking of the town. She had ignored the pleas of the two men whom the beasts were putting on the gallows as they recounted one of her incomprehensibly ghoulish jokes. She had been down there, in the town, where she had met the girl. At that moment, he was fighting to forget her.
"You should not have spared the girl's life, my love." The demon allowed a trace of anger to creep into her voice, the promise of eternities of pain reinforced with each word spoken.
“I did not spare the girl's life; I left her for the beasts. It is not my responsibility to kill every sad urchin in a village."
Then she lashed out at her with a lash of words from the demon.
"Don't lie, my love. You spared his life because you're too soft. For an instant you allowed mere human weakness to stay your hand and turn you from your chosen path. I can't allow that, and neither can you, because if you change course now you will have lost everything. Believe me, if you let the girl continue to live, you will have reason to regret it.”
At that moment, Ella Jasmine looked up at the demon and, as always, was struck by the polished chitinous beauty of the being. She saw her black armored form, her brutally beautiful face looking up at her from beneath her rune-engraved helmet, and looking into her glowing red eyes she sensed her strength. He was a being who knew neither weakness nor compassion; he was perfect. One day, she could be like this. She pushed the thought from her mind and smiled with apparent pleasure.
“You understand, my love; you know the nature of our pact. The path of the Demonic Knight is nothing more than a test. Follow her to the end and you will find power and immortality. Deviate from the path and you will only find eternal damnation. The Great Baal rewards the strong, but hates the weak. The battles we fight, the wars we wage, are but tests, crucibles meant to consume our weakness and refine our strength. You must be strong, my love.”
She nodded, mesmerized by the beauty of that liquid voice and seduced by the promise to know neither pain nor weakness, to be perfect, to allow no chink in her armor to penetrate the horror of the world. The demon reached out a clawed hand, and she touched it.
“An age of destruction and darkness is coming, a time of terror and. Very soon, the armies of the seven Great Powers will advance from the poles, and the fate of this world will be decided by steel and sorcery. The winning side will remain in possession of this world, my beloved, which will be the eternal domain of the victors. This planet will be cleansed of filthy humanity, as we will have to reshape everything in our image. You can be on the winning side, my love, be one of their privileged champions. All you have to do is be strong and consecrate your strength to our Lord. Do you want that?”
In that moment, as she gazed into the creature's burning eyes and heard the silky persuasive quality of her voice, she felt she had no doubt.
"Do you want to join us, my love?"
"Yes," she gasped. "Yes."
"In that case, the girl must die."
Jasmine made her way through the throng of her followers to take her place on the carved wooden throne, and once on it she rested the bare sword across her on her legs and faced the mightiest of the ranks. horde. The sword was to all present a reminder of how she ruled, a naked symbol of her power. She had the favor of the Baal, the dark god of Wrath, despair and revenge; and the expression of that favor was the power she wielded. The beastmen might not like her, but they would have to put up with her until one of them, according to her early code, could best her in single combat. And none would challenge her if she had any sense, for they all knew of Salthor's prophecy, made when she was promoted to the ranks of the Demonic Knight. They all knew what the demon had said: that no warrior would ever defeat her in combat. They had all witnessed that truth, though they were beastmen anyway, and defying their leader was an instinctive purpose for them.That night she almost wished
“Wake up, Elysia! Something is coming!”Elysia came out of her doze, her mind still cluttered with remnants of haunting dreams, shaking her head to clear it, her neck and back aching from lying on the cold forest floor. The chill had broken through the insulation provided by the leaves of the trees and drained the strength from her body. She got slowly to her feet, rubbed her sleepy eyes, and, as quietly as she could, drew her sword and looked around her.Frey stood close to her, like a solid statue frozen in the dim light of the dying fire. The red glow of the embers reflected on the blade of the sword, and it seemed that the dark hero held a blood-painted weapon in his hands.Elysia looked up at the sky, and saw that the moon had almost set. Fortunately, dawn was not far off."What is it about?" she asked, but her voice caught in her throat and came out as a raspy whisper. She didn't need to see Frey's alert posture to know that something wa
Kat moved under the bushes. She didn't want to, but the fascination of horror made her look outside again. She knew that the beasts were coming, she could feel it, for the air carried the same sensation that she had felt the night before. She looked at her two benefactors of hers and felt sorry for them, because they were going to die. Although her appearance was frightening, they had tried to help her and they did not deserve the death that the beasts would give them.She looked at Elysia and saw that her beautiful features were torn between hopeless fear and savage exultation. She understood how that could happen, because she had felt the same way when Karl had driven his car too fast down the path full of sprouting roots; she was kind of itchy, excited, scared and happy at the same time. However, Elysia did not seem very happy, and that was the difference.The dark hero did look like it, as he laughed slightly in a psychotic way. Kat was sure that she had noticed hi
She was still alive. Elysia repeated that phrase to herself like a mantra.She had passed through the terror and out the other side, and her enemies, the monsters who had wanted to kill her, were dead. And she was still there to feel the sun, draw in her lungs, and watch Frey and Kat as they moved cautiously down the hill, putting their feet on the stones that protruded from the mud of the steep, slippery path.Her senses had been heightened and she felt more alive and energized than ever; it was as if she had leveled up. It was just a delight to be the sensation.Cobwebs glittered with drops of early morning dew, birds sang, and everywhere the bustle of life filled the forest. Small animals moved through the undergrowth, and Elysia paused to let a snake cross the path without making any attempt to kill it. That morning she had a clear notion of how precious and fragile life was.The fight with the beastmen had made him understand how precariously he clun
The arrow struck the trunk of the tree next to Elysia, and he stood there vibrating. The catgirl looked around with fierce eyes, sniffing the air and probing the tall grasses. Had the beasts come back to catch up with them? Why hadn't they just killed them?Elysia looked at the black feathers on the arrow's tail, and thought that the spear couldn't have belonged to a beastman, since it didn't look like the kind of weapon one of them would wield, and Kat hadn't mentioned seeing one armed with one. bow. Goosebumps rose at the threat of danger, and she strained her senses to see if she could hear anything; but all she heard was the wind in the branches of the trees, the song of the birds and the noise of the distant river."That was a warning shot," she yelled at them in a harsh, uneducated voice. "Don't come any closer."Upwind, Elysia thought. “The goalkeeper is upwind. Very professional." Her own thought had no doubt just occurred to Frey when he glared at
An old man sat cross-legged on a reed mat near the door of a log cabin, smoking a long curved pipe. He and a boy were playing checkers with pebbles on a board drawn in the dirt. He raised his eyes from the game and regarded Elysia with a woodsman's heightened suspicion of strangers, before blowing several columns of smoke rings into the air. Messner nodded to him, and the old man responded with an elaborate wave of his left hand. "Is he warding off the evil eye?" Elysia wondered. “or communicating something to the other through sign language?” He surveyed the small town with interest, paying special attention to the burly men carrying large two-handed axes. Their faces were covered in multicolored tattoos, and their eyes were narrow and watchful. They stomped through the muddy streets in their tall, fur-trimmed boots; they had the arrogant confidence of a champion of the Theocracy but without their distinguished chastity, for they sometimes stopped to gossip with the fat mer
Kat hurried toward the base of the watchtower because she felt the need to be alone. She had grown tired of sitting by the large central bonfire, and not even Frey's presence reassured her. She felt very alone in the midst of all those busy adults; in reality, there was no one with whom she could talk, and for the first time she realized that she no longer knew anyone in this world and that she had no place in it. Her flames reminded him too much of the Kleinsdorf fires. The ladder barely creaked under her bare feet as she climbed toward the trapdoor with the agility of a monkey.Elysia was sitting alone, and she was looking into the darkness. She had long since set the sun like a bloodstain on the horizon; the moon had risen through the sky, its silvery light bathing the surroundings. A gentle breeze cooled Kat's cheeks and made the forest whisper and murmur ominously. Elysia watched him mesmerized, lost in her own thoughts, and she hurried across the tower and sat down besi
Elysia looked up at the ornate golden hammer that gleamed in the early morning light streaming through the open door of the temple. The runes etched into the Hammer's head reminded him of the ones adorning the blade of her own sword, but that didn't surprise him too much. Her sword had been the most prized possession of an Order of paladins and it seemed only fitting that the sword be engraved with holy signs.There were few people present; only some old women who were sitting cross-legged on the floor and praying. The babies with their mothers were outside, getting the cool while they could, and Elysia guessed the air might be unbreathable in there with the doors closed.The temple was a simple sanctuary with a simple altar, except for the presence of the Hammer, which was used to bless marriages and contracts. The Father, The Mother and The Son were not very popular deities there, since most of the woodcutters looked to Belial, Lord of the Forests and God of the Eart