The Scrivener s Tale - By Fiona McIntosh Page 0,227

me who hunts you, demon. I'm merely the one who will deliver your death blow,' Cassien said, through halting breaths.

'Really? Who hunts me?' Cyricus asked, sounding genuinely intrigued.

'Fynch, Keeper of the Wild, will rejoice in your destruction.'

'The keeper,' Cyricus repeated and his voice had taken on a dead tone.

Cassien. It was Gabe. Ham is panicked. Florentyna is weeping. Please, brother, come back now. Leave it. We will watch him in the Void. He can't escape us. Whatever he's doing to you there is happening to your body in our plane. I didn't know that would occur. He is killing you. Maybe I should change you back to the spirit.

No! Then I can't hold this sword. Let me be, Gabe. I let you be at the cathedral when you knew it was the right decision. I'm going to finish this, Cassien sent back over the link. I can make it.

He heard the hesitation.

Ham's voice came into his mind. He sounded as though he too was weeping. Please, Cassien. Please.

Be strong, little brother. My turn to be the hero.

Cassien snapped off the link, realising that Cyricus had him again and there was nothing gentle about the way the troll was handling him, rolling his body between his fingers as though he were preparing fingen weed to smoke. He grimaced with the agony, but let out no sound.

'Impressive, Cassien. How do you bear it as I shatter your tiny skeleton?'

He could hardly speak and knew time was short. His body would let him down, but not before he finished what his father had charged him to do, what in his life of loneliness - albeit in ignorance - he had been raised for.

He pretended to whisper.

'I can't hear you,' Cyricus teased. 'The fun's gone out of you, Cassien. You're dying. That's the sad thing about mortals. You die. But you see, we demons, we live on. I found my way out of this forsaken place once before, I'll do so again. I hope the forest remains for eternity.'

'It will be gone the moment I am,' Cassien choked out.

'What are you saying? I didn't quite catch that?' Cyricus taunted, holding Cassien's limp, broken body in a curled fist close to his ear.

It was his one chance. Cassien summoned every ounce of his remaining strength and more, from reserves he didn't know he possessed. In a fearless, killing arc he swung himself up and forward, using the motion to swing Wevyr's sword around over his head and plunge it into the cheek of Cyricus, where it stuck like a needle embedded in the face of the giant, demonic creature.

Cyricus flinched angrily and flung his attacker down, this time succeeding in breaking Cassien's back as easily as if he'd snapped a twig.

Gabe, Cassien struggled to whisper, ignoring the pain that passed quickly into a numb sensation; he was sure that life was nevertheless draining from him. It is done. Release me, I beg you ... let me go. Let me float free and painless. His brother heard and in a blink he was free of his body and mortal sensation. Thank you ... I'm sorry I did not know you. He rose helplessly, invisible, cast weightlessly adrift. He would have one more pleasure before all that he knew winked out of existence.

'Cassien ... oh, mortal,' he could hear Cyricus saying in between his laughter. 'Your "death blow" is like a pinprick!'

Cassien hovered close to the ear of Cyricus. 'That's the dragon sword, Cyricus.' The demon swung around, swatted at the mist he alone could see.

'Dragon sword?'

'Forged in magic, demon. Magic more ancient and powerful than you.'

Cyricus frowned. The words were having their effect and so was the wound. Cassien could see the telltale path of the poison creeping across the demon's ugly face. If he could have smiled in his ethereal form he would have.

'The sword was made with the ancient blood of a dragon and the ancient blood of a king. That blood is in you now, Cyricus. It is the blood of Fynch, Keeper of the Wild, and his magic will do the killing. I merely brought the death blow as I promised.'

Cyricus began to scream. There was no doubt he understood what the blood of the dragon king and especially the magic of the Wild meant.

'I hope you die very painfully, Cyricus. This time the Wild has rid every world of you.'

The poison was working swiftly now. Cyricus was making gasping, choking noises, leaning against a tree. Cassien smiled as the demon creature slumped to his knees.

'As well you might bow your head to the power of the dragon and the Wild,' he whispered for the last time into the ear of Cyricus, and then Cassien of the forest, son of Fynch, let go of everything that mattered except a final whisper to his elder brother.

Kiss Ham for me ... and go visit that woman I told you about, Gabe. Her name is Vivienne. You will like her. I'm going to look at the forest light one more time and then I want you to tear down your creation. I want Cyricus to take his last breath looking into the Void.

Cassien lifted his spirit's gaze and in that last sweep revelled in the light filtering through leaves, the shadows and the colour green against the rough bark of the trees, and the soft browns and greys of leaf litter.

Farewell, Romaine. I have known the love of a mother through you ... and I thank you.

The Void absorbed Cassien as he died, while Cyricus wheezed his last breath, poisoned with the proud blood of the dragon king, and the demon winked out of existence.

Ham. He's gone. He said it is done. And that he loves you, Gabe said across the link to his younger brother.

At Rittylworth Monastery, the small frame of Hamelyn shuddered in the arms of Florentyna, who wept with him, while Tamas cradled Cassien's previously convulsing body against his chest. Now it lay slumped and lifeless against the king, who glanced at Florentyna and shook his head.

'The demon is destroyed,' Ham said, sounding choked.

She sniffed, gathered her emotions up. 'Ham, he's peaceful now.'

The boy gulped. 'That's because he's dead, your majesty.'

'I know,' she soothed. 'He was heroic.'

'He shouldn't have stayed there.'

'I wish I understood everything that has happened this day and where Cassien had to go,' Tamas admitted. 'All I know is that his name will never be forgotten by the Morgravians ... or the Cipreans.'

'He saved our world,' Hamelyn sobbed.

'The three of you did,' Florentyna said. She hugged the boy closer and kissed his soft sandy-coloured hair.

'I'm taking his body to the Great Forest. It is where he would want to remain.'

'We will help you,' Tamas said. 'Come. We shall take him today and honour him.' He stood, offered his hand to Florentyna and then helped Ham to rise.

The boy wiped his eyes, sniffing. 'We need Gabe to be there too.'

'I agree,' said Florentyna. Can you reach him, Ham?' The boy nodded. 'Then I will help Brother Hoolyn prepare Cassien for his journey. Would that be all right?'

'You, your majesty?'

She smiled sorrowfully at him. 'It would be a true honour. He is a proud son of Morgravia. And I have lost too many of those in too short a time. The empire is in mourning.'

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