Ash. The Legends of the Nameless World. Progression Gamelit Story, Kirill Klevanski [great reads .TXT] 📗
- Author: Kirill Klevanski
Book online «Ash. The Legends of the Nameless World. Progression Gamelit Story, Kirill Klevanski [great reads .TXT] 📗». Author Kirill Klevanski
Gwel sighed when she realized that trying to climb into the wagon would make her old bones crack and ache.
Peeking in she saw that the attackers didn’t shy away from vandalizing everything that was on their way. And while the stagecoach still resembled a stagecoach from the outside, its interior was that of an oven ― char, and nothing but. Judging by the number of arrows that had lodged themselves into the coach, the attackers must’ve attacked from all sides. It was a tasteless and dishonorable tactic but an efficient one.
“I’m too old for this, my Queen,” Gwel whispered, observing the looted and destroyed chests and boxes.
Straightening her back, she hit the ground with her staff and moved her lips in silent prayer. She spoke in a language that only a few could understand and only if they had tamed the wildest of magics.
A moment later, the fallen beams inside the coach began to shake, the sooth from them crumbled and the broken wheels repaired themselves. Tatters rose from the ground and reunited in the air, forming beautiful tapestries and cloths. Shreds of glass rattled as they merged back into vials and a couple of vases.
“And who do we have here...?”
Gwel climbed up the creaky stairs and pushed aside the curtain that hid the now restored interior of the coach. It was well-equipped and quite cozy, suggesting that the owners of the caravan were planning on being away from home for quite a while. During their travels from one continent to another, they had managed to acquire enough goods to attract the attention of the heretics.
On the floor, in a pool of dried blood, lay a once beautiful woman, the one that the Fiery Fae had been guarding. At least now it was clear from where all that fire had come from.
Locks of raven hair were still smoldering. Pale, thin limbs were bent in unnatural angles, and her cheap, but beautiful dress was eaten away by the flames and reduced to ugly tatters.
“My dear, dear girl,” Gwel said, sitting down on a stool that rushed over to her from the other corner of the room. “Didn’t your mother tell you that you’d never come back home if you go with the Fae?”
Using the end of her staff, she removed the rags from the woman’s abdomen and groin. Closing her eyes and shaking her head, Gwel sighed.
“Couldn’t have left the woman to die with dignity, you vile beasts... To violate a pregnant woman... Oh my dear, dear child... What have they done to you?”
With her third eye, she saw a faint glow emanating from the woman’s womb. And although she had been dead for several hours now, the child... The child had miraculously survived. No, not by miracle, God’s didn’t like bestowing anyone with those. It had survived to spite them, and to avenge those who had murdered its mother.
Gwel pulled a curved dagger from the folds of her robe and kneeled by the woman. “You just might live a better life than your predecessor, little one... They were born dead.”
The blade slid across the swollen stomach, easily slicing through the bruised skin. Blood trickled onto the floor, filling the cracks between the planks and dripping onto the already red soil. Without even flinching, Gwel reached into the slit and pulled the baby out and into the light. The boy looked disgusting covered in slime and blood, but it was a life worth saving nonetheless.
After cutting the cord, Gwel removed the scarf from her head and wrapped it around the child. Her thick, silver hair fell over her shoulder, revealing a burn on her forehead ― the mark of a slave.
The child didn’t cry.
“Hm, seems to be dead...”
Gwel was about to abandon him and leave when she noticed a thin, clean trail on his cheeks. The boy wept and breathed, but he did not scream.
“Isn’t it funny, if not frightening, that the first emotion the newborn feels is pain?” Gwel asked no one in particular and got out of the wagon. Her staff, as if it had come to life, leaped after her as she cradled the child in her arms. “The world immediately warns it that it’s a cruel and dangerous place, but children never listen...”
Once again, she stopped by the young warrior in torn chainmail. The steel rings were biting into his chest and the crows that had gathered on the branches were looking greedily at his exposed ribs. They’d soon fly down and feast, but for the time being, they’d observe the priestess and listen to the sound of the approaching hooves.
Someone seemed to have noticed the smoke rising above the treetops and called the guards to go and investigate.
“What do you need, you blob of flesh?” Gwel asked, noticing that the child was trying to reach its hands toward her.
As it turned out, she had stopped right next to the body of a Fae. Its inhuman, black eyes were glassy and body drenched in scarlet. Most people still didn’t believe that they existed. Then again, people didn’t believe in a lot of things, but that didn’t prevent them from bowing to idols and touching the marble floors of the temples with their foreheads.
“A sign?”
She looked down at the child and saw in its eyes not only its fate but that of the whole world. Its barely opened eyes were of different colors ― one brown, almost black, and the other bright blue.
“Half-breed,” she hissed and nearly dropped the child in disgust. “Thank you, little princess... You’ve awarded me in my old age...”
The child continued reaching upward, making the priestess grimace and wave her cloak. The staff, frozen behind her, flew over to its mistress and the trio disappeared into a black haze, dispersed by the wind.
When a party of horsemen led by
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