My gaze rested once more on Gal’s body, where it lingered. Before breathing his last, he had managed to bring his hands up to his chest as if hoping his pendants might magically appear and save him. The man’s mismatched eyes seemed to stare back at me in a way that said “I told you so.”
That bothered me. I knew those charms wouldn’t have stopped the sword that took him in the chest, but he had believed they would. Maybe not having his charms had distracted him enough that it led to his death. One more decision I’d question until the end of my days.
“Not even hell could be this bad,” I heard Ira mutter, using the expression as originally intended.
A shiver ran down my back, punctuating the remark.
“You all right, Tyrus? You look like you’re about to throw up again,” said Hamath as he walked up. He had wrapped a makeshift bandage around his left hand. Blood seeped through where his pinky finger had once been. Sweat matted his red hair to his forehead.
“I might. But if I do, it won’t be from the head injury.”
“Huh?”
“Nothing. We can talk about it later. Did you see anything with that spyglass you found?”
Hamath had climbed up the last thirty yards of the rise and tried to assess the mess of a battlefield from a better vantage.
“I saw a lot. None of it made sense. Lines from both sides are all over the place. Flags are being waved. I can’t tell if troops are being redistributed or if one side is surrendering to the other.” He paused. “Did Ava have any luck reaching anyone?”
I shook my head. Ava lay on her back, asleep on the thin, yellow grass. Burn marks adorned her arms. Her chest rose slowly with each breath. “She passed out. She needs more rest before she can try to communicate at this distance. Someone will have to contact her first.”
“So, we’re in the dark?”
“For now.”
Ava sat up, open palms going to her temples. “By the gods,” she whimpered.
I moved toward her and nearly fell as my vision spun. Hamath caught my arm and helped me over.
“Are you all right?” I asked.
She nodded violently while holding her breath and squeezing her eyes shut. Someone was communicating with her. I knelt at her side and waited. A few moments later, she let out a long breath and took several more while blinking rapidly.
“What was that?” I asked.
She swore. “Some idiot not used to communicating that way. Rather than asking me what he wanted, he bullied his way through my mind to get it. If I wasn’t so tired, I could have cut him off, but I didn’t have the energy.”
“What did he tell you?”
“I’m getting there. How’d you like it if someone was inside your head unwanted?”
I waited.
She took one last deep breath, anger fading as she processed what she had been told. “I can barely believe it.”
“Believe what?”
She looked up, face twisting in emotion. Shock. Relief. Confusion.
“The Geneshans laid down arms. All of their major sorcerers are dead or incapacitated. Their generals are already on their way to Balak’s tent to sign the king’s terms.”
I blinked. “What? That fast?”
Ava chuckled. “Yes. We won, big brother. Apparently the Master Sorcerer we killed sent a distress call to the others on the front lines. When he did, it distracted those in the field long enough for our High Mages to gain the upper hand. Also, Balak’s precautions along the western front with the seventh, eighth, and ninth regiments stopped the Geneshan counter. They say his strategy was genius.”
Hamath snorted and gave me an elbow. “That’s cause he didn’t think of it.”
Ava gave him a confused look. “What?”
“Nothing,” I said. Let Balak have the credit. “What else?”
“They’re sending a company to come retrieve us and the artifact.” She paused. “We’re going home.”
A few gasps came from the others at the news.
My mouth dropped as I sat back. The image of a beautiful woman with dark hair and chestnut skin grabbed me. She stood in the doorway of our farm crying. A young girl and a little boy tugged at her legs as she faded from sight. The sound of rolling wagon wheels filled my ears.
A tear ran down my cheek.
“You all right, big brother?” asked Ava.
I smiled. “Never better.”
I was finally going home to Lasha.
CHAPTER 3
The infirmary stank in ways no man should ever know. Blood mingled with bodily fluids it was never meant to