Heart of the King

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Book: Heart of the King by Bruce Blake Read Free Book Online
Authors: Bruce Blake
removed his tunic and was searching his tattoos for the words he needed.
    Hurry, Athryn.
    Steel rang against steel, the power of the dead man’s blows vibrating up Khirro’s arms. Dimly, he thought he heard the sound of Athryn chanting between the clang of weapons, but couldn’t be sure it wasn’t hopeful imagination tricking him. The fight settled into a back and forth rhythm until Khirro’s arms began to tire. The same couldn’t be said of his adversary. Khirro wanted to ask Athryn for help or beg him to hurry, but he worried that, if he did, it would interrupt the magician in the midst of his spell and doom them.
    I can do this. The enemy doesn’t even draw breath.
    A growl rumbled in Khirro’s throat. He pressed forward, turned his thoughts away from the magician and toward the boy hidden in the covered wagon and what the poor child must have been through. The thought steeled him, forced the fatigue out of his arms.
    The undead soldier parried and blocked; Khirro’s blade caught flesh and separated an ear that looked more like a rotted leaf than an instrument for hearing. The contact threw the soldier off balance and Khirro followed the ear severing with a slash across the thing’s throat. It staggered him but didn’t stop it. A second slash and its head toppled. The body lurched on unsteady legs, sword swinging wildly in the thing’s blind hands, before slumping to the ground.
    Khirro watched it fall and a short-lived wave of relief washed through him. He looked up from the rotted, lifeless body to see the other three Kanosee soldiers standing before him, two of them with weapons drawn, the third holding a boy in front of him, arm around his neck. The boy’s expression looked equal parts fear and disgust.
    “Infidels,” the one holding the boy grated, his voice like a stiff wind rattling dried reeds. “I’ll kill the boy before you take him.”
    No one moved for several seconds. Khirro heard the mutter of Athryn’s chant but it would be ineffective without blood to power it. He peeked over his shoulder, not wanting to take his gaze off his adversaries for more than a fraction of a second, and saw Athryn kneeling a few yards behind him. His mask lay on the ground with his tunic. When he looked back, the two Kanosee with their weapons drawn had taken a step forward.
    “Athryn?”
    The magician continued chanting. The undead holding the boy smiled, his wizened lips opening to show rotten teeth.
    “Get him.”
    The two men advanced. Khirro raised his sword defensively, the muscles in his arms screaming as fatigue rushed back into them.
    “Now, Khirro,” Athryn called.
    Khirro clenched his teeth and swiped his arm across the sword’s edge. The steel bit deep and he sucked a hissing breath between his teeth as blood trickled down his forearm, dripped on the ground. The two threatening men sank to the ground like half-full sacks of potatoes, armor and weapons clattering on loose stones. Khirro looked up at the last man, the boy held in front of him, its grip tight around his throat. Despite the holes in his gray-fleshed cheeks, the thin lips and non-existent eyelids, the soldier’s face registered surprise. It quickly changed to an emotion more akin to rage.
    “The boy dies.”
    Khirro saw the rotting muscle in the thing’s arm flex in preparation to slit the boy’s throat. Panic blossomed in Khirro’s gut. Elyea had told him to rescue the boy; what would happen if he failed? Without time for thought, he heaved the sword he’d taken from the fallen Kanosee at the undead warrior. It spun end-over-end through the air and Khirro watched in disbelief.
    Why did I do that?
    For Khirro, the world narrowed to the sword, its path, the soldier it was directed at and the boy in his grasp. End-over-end, end-over-end, point, hilt, point. The expression of fear on the boy’s face increased to horror and he squeezed his eyes closed, bracing for the impact. The soldier’s ruined face looked surprised again.
    Until

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