Chapter 4: Ancient Horrors
"We're approaching Serafew, at the border of Renais
and Grado. Once we cross, we'll be in Grado... Renvall won't be much farther,"
Seth told me two days later.
"That is, assuming we can cross the border without
mishap..." I answered dryly. We moved onward without speaking for a moment,
following a path through grey woods. It was a bit misty, and not so bright
as it had been.
Something moved in the trees. I would have thought
nothing of it, but more movement appeared. Unhealthy looking... things
ducked behind bushes and clumsily kept to cover.
I moved closer to Seth, pointing at one zombie-like
creature stumbling from behind a trunk. "Those strange figures... What...
what are they?" I asked, appalled. "Are they... human?"
"I've never seen anything like them," Seth responded
warily, his hand on his sword hilt. "What could they be?"
I had no answer for him. Seth called the rest of
the group and told them to keep their weapons handy.
A young man with orangish brown curly hair ran up
to us on the path. He wore white and aqua monk robes unsuited for hurrying,
and he was very out of breath. "Travelers, you must listen to me! The ancient
forest of Za'ha is dangerous. Head south and pass through this place before
the fiends surround you!"
"Who are you?" I asked cautiously.
"My name is Artur. The temple has assigned me the
task of cleansing the forest of these... things." I saw on his face what
he was thinking: There are too many for me to handle alone. "So
if you would, please flee now while you have the chance."
"I'm not scared," Ross shouted from somewhere in
the back of the group. "I'm the son of the great Garcia! Monsters, taste
my axe!"
A word Artur had mentioned earlier clicked in my
head. "Fiends? You're not talking about the same fiends that served the
ancient Demon King?" My eyes widened. "That can't be right... They're
nothing but legends and fairy tales..."
Artur nodded sympathetically. "Yes, I felt the same
when I heard. And yet -" he gestured "-here they are. This place is filled
with them." He shivered. "I wonder how far they've spread... Surely they're
not in Renais alone."
"But... why are they here? How?"
"Beware, Your Highness!" Seth warned me, shielding
me from an attack. I gasped. A huge, hovering eyeball was propelling itself
towards us with tentacles.
"Please allow me to deal with this," Artur said,
bowing. The monk turned to the monster. "Evil shade! May the blessed light
drive you from this land!" Brandishing a book of light magic, he blasted
the eyeball.
"We ought to help," Seth urged me. "He can't fight
them all alone. What are your orders?"
"One of my companions is in the village to the south,"
Artur added. "If any of you can get there swiftly, I pray that you watch
over her."
I nodded. I had a vague map of Za'ha. Two rivers
met to the south, and to the northeast, there was a high cliff, at the
top of which there was a plateau. I split my group into roughly two forces.
The zombies - revenants, I learnt to call them - found they were discovered
and moved to attack. Their claws were sharp, but they had two vast disadvantages.
One was that their claws served nothing against the heavily armoured knights
such as Gilliam and Seth, and the second was that we were all too quick
for them.
Several more appeared behind us, giving me the impression
of a very weak and flimsy trap. I directed Vanessa to the southern village,
and she brought back on her pegasus a violet-haired girl with a dark green
velvet dress named Lute. She seemed... very confident - which is to say,
she bragged openly of her magic power. After I saw her cast a fire spell
on a zombie, however, I decided that the ego was natural and even permissable.
I decided to say nothing.
All was going well. I felt sick as I saw horrid,
stinking corpses staggering around, swiping at us with their claws. The
most damage they did, however, was a few chips of paint off of Gilliam's
substantial armour. The worst creatures were probably the eyeballs, which
popped when I stabbed them and splattered me in... goop. I wasn't sure how
well that would clean off. The eyeballs were also more accurate, and hit
me with some sort of dark magic spell like invisible knives. All it really
did was hurt - the skin was not broken.
Still, the bonewalkers and the sick entombed - skeletons
and chief zombie - were more than enough to turn my stomach. I screamed
twice during the battle. I think I cannot be blamed.
On the name entombed, I often wondered afterwards,
when fighting others, whether it would not have been wiser to name them
the untombed.
"We've killed all the monsters," Seth informed me
a while later. "Still, we'd best burn the bones to ash to be sure they don't
return."
"I still can't believe what we've been fighting here,"
I said, knowing my face was deathly pale with horror. "I'd thought those
fiends nothing more than myth and legend."
"Those revenants are said to be the least of the
dark creatures," Seth said, his hand hovering unobtrusively near my elbow
in case I took it into my head to faint. I wasn't planning to, but it was
a distinct possibility. "So we cannot take this enemy lightly."
"Then we'll just have to be better than they are,"
Franz mumbled to himself, thinking no one could hear him.
"Oh, yes, there are much worse than those revenants
and the entombed..." Lute explained cheerfully. "Let's see, there's the
bonewalkers, mauthe doogs, gargoyles, baels..." She shivered in relish, the
rest of us in horror and amazement. "Why, I'll bet you just about any creature
of lore could be walking again. Yes, we're in for some trouble. Even my
fabulous power may not be enough."
"O divine light, show me... Is this a sign of dark
days to come?" Artur muttured uncomfortably.
I stepped away from the group, shuddering. "By all
that's holy, what is happening?" I cried. "Is it not enough that my brother
faces death at the hands of humans that all humans must face death at the
claws of these fiends?" I continued in a whisper.
"Princess Eirika, perhaps it would be wise to return
to Frelia and regroup," Seth said softly behind me. "Pressing forward seems
foolish in light of recent events. We cannot face both Grado's forces and
more of these terrible things."
"Seth, I see what you mean, and nothing would please
me more than running for safety." I wanted nothing more than a good hug,
but I wasn't allowed to hug Seth, so I wrapped my arms around a tree. "But
my brother... He and his men are surely trapped in the same situation we
are." I looked at him sorrowfully. "I know full well that I may be leading
us into even greater danger, but... Please understand."
My loyal general bowed. "I do, my princess, and I
vow to see you through this safely."
A troubadour - a horse-mounted woman wielding a staff
- came galloping through the forest at an oblique angle to the path. It
seemed she was aiming for the spot where we were. I wondered why.
"Aha! Foul creatures, beware!" she cried theatrically.
She had honey blonde hair, and her eyes were the same golden brown colour.
"I, L'Arachel, bestow upon you the honour of banishment at my blessed hands!"
I looked at the 'dead' zombies and skeletons littering
the ground. "Oh..." said the troubadour, seeming to notice for the first
time that nothing moved but us. "Where are the monsters?"
"Well, we just finished..." I said, gesturing.
"Ah, glad tidings indeed!" squealed L'Arachel, a
bit crestfallen. "The heavens must be rejoicing! I am... a tad disappointed,
however. After all, I did rush all the way here to show you the splendour
of my might."
A knight in red armour with her, a huge-chested short
man with a thick bushy green beard and moustache, laughed uproariously.
"Yes, it's a real shame, innit, Lady L'Arachel!"
A slim man with a purple tunic, brown hair, a sharp
face, and quick flashing eyes joined in. "What's shameful is the way you
drag us around the countryside."
"Pardon me, but what is your name?" I asked curiously.
"Me?" answered the lady. "Since you ask, please allow
me to introduce myself." I fought the urge to roll my eyes. "It is I, the
true light and glory of the sacred realm of Rausten..."
"Stop!" interrupted the red-clad knight. "Lady L'Arachel,
you mustn't reveal yourself!"
L'Arachel shrugged, disappointed again, but then
brightened. "Yes, you're right. Oh, I do get so careless sometimes! Now,
I must ride off in anonymity. Oh, how beautifully romantic!" She clasped
her hands to her heart and swooned a bit.
"Uh... Right," I said, unable to think of anything
else. Romantics were fine with me, mostly, seeing as I was a bit of one
myself. Only, when my brother said...
"Fare thee well, strangers," the lady called, breaking
in on my thoughts. She waved and turned her horse about. "Perhaps our paths
will cross again. Come, Dozla! Rennac! We ride!"
The knight, Dozla, guffawed again. "Let's go, Rennac!"
The other man sighed and grinned wearily at me. "All
right, all right." He stumped off after the other two, muttering something
about "You want us to ride and you buy me a horse, lady..."
I stared at them. "What was that about?" I turned
back to my company and found them frozen in astonishment. "Huh?"
Chapter 3: The Bandits of Borgo Contents Chapter 5: The Emperor's Reach