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An hour before they left, Zane and Avery had a final training session.

It happened like this—

Reina had just briefed him on the plan. He stood there waiting for her to gather the rest of the army. Then Avery came out of nowhere and punched him on the shoulder.

"Yo yo yo.”

"Hello."

"I've been napping. What’ve you been up to?"

"Studying Laws."

"You make any progress?"

Zane shrugged. "I have two more than I did at the start of the day."

"You have what now?”

Zane repeated himself.

"Wait," said Avery, frowning. "So you have eight Laws?"

"That's right."

"What the fuck. That's how many I have!" She made a face. “Levels are one thing, but how are you getting Laws faster than me? Aren't you meant to be like... Rawrr..."

She did a flex, and he winced. "You said you wouldn't do that."

"... Sorry," she said, grinning sheepishly. "Well, guess what, buddy. I've got some new tricks up my sleeve too. Want to see ‘em? Fight me, you won't."

“…Sure."

***

Avery brought him out into the middle of a wide, empty field. They had to go quite a long ways to get out of the way of drilling troops.

When they did, Avery snapped her fingers. The world went black. They stood on nothing, an empty void swirled around them, dotted with stars.

"Looks like a pocket mirage, right?" said Avery. "Think again! This one's a field mirage—brand-spanking-new, Level III. I had to condense a Major Law of Light to get this bad boy. Turns out some Skill Levels have Law prerequisites. Who knew?"

"What's the difference?" said Zane.

"I can make them much bigger," she said. She snapped her fingers, and they stood in a desert. Pyramids popped up in the distance. Hot winds gusted over them, swirling with sand. He saw a sphinx, shaggy-maned, rippling with gold feathers, swoop overhead. It roared. "We could drop an army here, and all they'd see is desert.”

Zane blinked. "Neat."

"And you can't break out of this by hitting it either. Can't touch it directly. It's superimposed on reality," said Avery. "The only way to get out of it is by running out of its range. And I could set this bad boy to go for a square mile."

She puffed out a cheek. "Granted—I could probably only hold that for like… ten minutes? But still! Pretty cool, right?"

Zane nodded. "Mind if I try something?"

"Sure."

He got out an Axe and coated his new Law of Ethereal Slicing on the edge.

Then, carefully, he set it against the mirage. It was made of little modes of light essence so subtle, so small, there was no way you could catch it unless you were really looking for it, up close.

"Hey, I told you,” said Avery. “You can't break through it by just—"

Zane let the Axe loose. It drew a wide arc from sand dune to the sky. After it passed, it left a gaping crack. The rolling hills of the outside world poured in. Through the crack, you could hear Warriors drilling in the distance, the flick-flick-flicking of bow shots.

Avery stared at him. Her cheek twitched a little.

"Well," she said. "You weren't supposed to be able to break through it like that. What the fuck."

"It's my new Law," said Zane. "Ethereal Slicing. Cuts through essence." It was his first field test. He was pleased to see it worked.

Avery dropped the illusion, looking put out.

"You suck, you know that?"

"Thanks."

***

Reina called everyone back from all the nearby Safe Zones. She'd been rotating as many units as she could through Mount Saint Helens's essence geysers—she'd gotten a good chunk of them up to the 30s. Some were even in the 40s, including her.

Before they left, she came up to him. "How are you?"

"I'll get the job done," he told her. The plan Reina had pitched him was a good one. She had an eye for strategy.

But it all rested on him—it was built around him. If he screwed up at three or four separate points, they were done. Thousands were counting on him. Including her. It invigorated him.

"I know you will," she said, and she meant it—he could tell by the look on her face. He was always a little surprised how much faith she had in him. "You never let me down. I meant—how are you feeling?"

“Ready."

She nodded, letting out a tight breath. "Okay. Then... let's do this."

***

Before the hour was up the Highland Plains were spilling over with Warriors, just a sea of bobbing heads, mostly in the 20s and 30s, a few in the 40s. Thousands of people of dozens of sub-Factions.

And Reina and Zane stood at the head of them all.

Mostly, the faces he saw were determined, resolute. Some buzzed with either nervousness or excitement, he couldn’t tell. A few seemed straight-up frightened. Zane figured that was to be expected.

With as little time as she had, Reina had done a miracle with this ragtag army. There was no time to drill any sophisticated tactics into them. But they got most of the basics down, which was all you could ask for in three days.

Reina cleared her throat.

“Most of you had only just found your new homes when Marcus Blackwell drove you from them. So you marched here, to us. You came to us tired and bedraggled and lost. But here you found people willing to fight for you. To fight with you. People like you—people who weren’t ready to just lie down and take it. People who’d take the fight to the asshole who did this to you! Tonight is about revenge. Tonight's about showing that bastard he got a lot more than he bargained for when he messed with us. Let's give him hell!”

Short and to the point—very like Reina, but it still drew enthusiastic roars. An electric energy rolled over the army. They were raring to go. Zane cleared his throat. "Forward march!"

With the help of the Harbourmasters and a few scouts they'd set along the sides of Puget Sound, they had a pretty good estimate for where Marcus planned to land. It was the same place he landed Stroud's army when they first invaded. A strand of beaches near Olympia.

They marched for it.

***

Hours later, they arrived. And there they waited, standing on the sands, watching the moonlight rippling off the inky waters.

Zane stood there silently, watching the blank horizon, waiting…

And soon, he saw what he was looking for. Five spots of white drifting closer, growing quickly. One for each general left, plus the Soldier himself. Soon, they were huge, pale prows slicing out of the murk. It seemed impossible that ships so huge could glide so silently in the night.

They drew closer. Close enough to inspect.

Bone Galleon (C)

Crewed by ghosts from the Nether Kingdom, Bone Galleons are fearsome weapons of war. Their cannonballs, made of spectral energies, can bypass the physical and suck life-force from the soul. They turn invisible on nights with no moon.

The Bone Galleons could have been made only of the rib bones of some giant extinct dinosaur. Every inch of them was smooth, bleached white. White cannons hung out from their hulls.

And their giant decks were swarming with warriors, packed to the brim. Maybe they couldn’t fit all of Marcus’s army on board, but this had to be a huge chunk of his strength. There must’ve been thousands.

Soon, they were close enough for them to see the army waiting for them on shore. Shouts came up from the decks.

Zane calmly got out his Chains.

The cannons swiveled to face them, ghostly white light burning inside. They flared bright, aimed straight at where Zane and the bulk of his army stood, and blasted.

Zane threw.

Precision Slicing guided the arc. Ethereal Slicing let his Axes touch those ghostly blasts. And his Fire Laws brought the power.

A string of explosions rocked the air—dozens of feet from where they stood, clumps of red light shining over white. They faded, and the air was clear again.

Gasps burst out from the Galleons. Zane heard shouts of— “It’s him!”

“The Savage Sage!”

More shouting. Silver uniforms, hundreds of them, burst out onto the massive decks. Their weapons were at the ready. They seemed ready to leap over and charge them. They were bristling, just waiting to dock. Then, the sea of uniforms on the deck of the biggest of the Galleons—the Galleon closest to Zane—parted way.

A man at least two heads taller than all the rest, and twice as thick too, was fording his way through.

Flowing locks of blonde hair, a great shining white smile, and Zane could feel the intensity of his expression even from out here.

In his hands, he wielded a great sword that shone pure white, like a block of otherworldly marble. Its edge shone cruelly in the moonlight.

They locked eyes.

Marcus Blackwell (Creature)

Signature Title: Soldier of God

Essence Level: 77

Class: Divine Paladin

Key Laws:

Major Law of Holy Cleansing (Elemental Law of the Sacred)

Minor Law of Fortification (Elemental Laws of Steel)

Minor Law of Tempering (Elemental Laws of Steel)

Key Skills:

Wrath of the Heavens (Active) [Rare]: First draws immense power from the Heavens, charging the strike. Then unleashes that energy in a devastating slash, inflicting divine judgment on the Paladin’s enemies.

Blessed Guard (Passive) [Uncommon]: An aura of divine protection, granting great resistance to dark essence and physical damage. Allies near him receive a minor protective blessing.

Light of Redemption (Active) [Rare]: The greatsword pours out a holy light, healing allies and purifying negative effects within a certain radius.

Light of Purification (Active) [Uncommon]: The greatsword pours out a holy light, blinding and wounding enemies within a certain radius.

For the most part his weaknesses were like any man’s, except his broad chest lit up unusually red. Good to know.

Marcus seemed surprised to find him there. For all of a second. Then—

“Savage Sage. At long last!” He roared, grinning broadly. He thrust his sword straight out at Zane's head. “You’re MINE!”

The Galleons drew nearer. They were just a few hundred feet out from docking—

Phase one. Zane threw his Chains straight up, exactly as he’d done with the Mad Dogs.

A few cries went up—until they saw the Chains’ trajectories. He’d thrown them far too late. The Galleons were sailing too fast. They’d miss each other. Marcus laughed.

Then, almost all at once, a strained grinding sound flowed out from under them.

They teetered and bucked. A few dozen soldiers lurched overboard. Shocked cries filled the air.

The Galleons were thrown forward by their own momentum but they slowed fast. The grinding grew louder; sparks showered the air down by their hulls. It was like they weren't sailing on sea anymore.

Because they weren’t.

They lurched to shuddering halts. The men on board, the ones still on their feet, clutching to railings and ropes, looked baffled.

Then the illusion of a sea melted away, showing five Bone Galleons stranded on rocky stretches of beach.

Beside him, Avery gasped, pale-faced and sweating. But she still grinned. “Gotcha.”

There was a moment of panic. The fighters on deck looked up.

They had all of three seconds to get out of the way before his Chains, loaded with six Laws—one of them, an extremely explosive Major Law—touched down.

Skills shot up to intercept. The Soldier of God roared in defiance, and swept an immense line of light through the sky.

It connected with the Chains… and passed right through.

The illusion dropped to show the real Chains dropping in parallel, just a few feet away.

And by then it was too late.

Five enormous explosions rocked the world.

Level up!

Essence Level 68 -> 69

When the smoke cleared, five ships were split in two, listing on their sides. Burning. The survivors scrambled out like ants fleeing a flooded nest. He’d only taken out a good chunk of them—most still survived.

By sheer numbers they might still be ahead.

Most were still ready for war, especially the Lieutenants, who looked furious. Then they saw who waited on either side of them.

Rows upon rows of Warriors and Rogues and Healers.

And behind them were rows and rows and rows of Rangers, Bows notched tight. Just a second before, they'd been hidden under fake waves.

The Luminous Faction had the Galleons stranded. Surrounded.

Nobody had time to react before the first wave of arrows struck them. The Warriors rushed the Galleons, roaring battle cries; the Rogues followed, the Healers did too.

Zane had weakened them all he could. All around them, his fighters pincered the enemy. Avery dashed off to join them. He’d have to trust them to deal with the rest—he could only hope it'd be enough. He couldn't afford to think on it.

He had his own battle to fight.

One man rose above the mess—the Soldier of God had leapt on the prow of his broken ship, eyes red streaks and bulging. “ZANE WALKER!” He screamed. The veins on his neck stuck out purple.

And Zane made sure to twirl his Axes high above, flaming, shrieking in the air. A clear challenge.

Their eyes met.

The Soldier of God barreled toward him. And smiling, Zane ran to meet him.

Comments

Daniel Bessette

Nice to see Avery learned her lesson from that archer, lol.

Paradox

Thanks for the chapter. "Avery snapped their fingers. " -> Actually... why am I posting this here, I know some people don't like their gender assumed now days, does seem a little inconsistent though, haha.