《The Princess of Malik'Dar (Warriors of Sword & Sorcery)》Chapter 5: Clash of Steel and Blood
Advertisement
Chapter 5: Clash of Steel and Blood
Heart pounding, Falinor rushed forward over the beach.
Explosions cracked all around him and plumes of sand went up along with the disconnected limbs of his comrades.
In the sand-soaked blood that rained down, he peered on at the giants coming over the dunes. The black and brown-clad figures lumbered in their leather battle raiments studded with iron, their helmets bucket-like in design with holes punched into the metal so they could breathe, their eyes hidden.
The horns protruding from their tops were not just an aesthetic design meant to inspire fear, as one giant before him ducked down and gored the swordsman attempting to charge him.
Another explosion rocked nearby and Falinor’s balance waned. As he slowed, he narrowed his eyes amidst the falling sand as he glanced about for Joros. He was there, crying out as he slung his blade at the giant before him.
The giant came down with his two-handed sword, slicing a deep gash in the sand beside the large man, who arched in to cut the giant from the side, but his opponent put up his big arm and stopped the blade in mid-strike.
Falinor cried out and ran forward.
The giant turned, his horned helmet staring him down as he thrust in with the point of his blade. With a snarl and a reaction quicker than Falinor expected, the giant brought up his sword and parried his thrust.
He shouted, a shout not devoid of fear. Falinor brought his blade back and ran to his left, arching around the giant as Joros grunted while he did battle.
While the giant defended himself, Falinor’s intention was to get around him, but as he moved to do so, another giant crested the hill and paused as he glanced down at Falinor. He raised the javelin in his hand and threw it at him
Falinor jumped, landed in the sand and rolled, his eyes barely catching the poll-sized weapon sticking in the sand like a thin post.
“Falinor!” cried Joros.
The swordsman and partial mage turned his body and cried out, summoning a hot ball of magic that coalesced in the palm of his hand. The magic shook and he released the fireball. It connected, exploding into the giant’s back.
The large warrior cried out, stunned momentarily as the leather on his back was completely seared off, a large burnt rent in his flesh.
Joros screamed furiously, his sword flashing and clanging as the giant before him attempted to continue defending even after sustaining a fireball in his back, but the general line of battle had connected, and dozens of swordsmen rushed in and hacked the giant to pieces.
Curling in on himself, Falinor covered his head with his hands as the thunder of boots rushing forward to meet the line of giants passed him.
Advertisement
“Falinor!”
Joros came running and was almost bowled over by the army, but he managed to make his way to him where he offered a thick vambraced forearm. Falnor took it and the other man hauled him to his feet.
“You didn’t tell me you were a godsdamned mage, Falinor!” he shouted through a smile.
“That’s because I’m not.”
“Tell me more after the battle, my friend! Come! More giants await our blades! We’re winning this battle!”
Falinor ran to catch his friend who sprinted to the next giant defending himself against six blades. As Falinor glanced about the battle below the dunes, he saw that it was going well.
An explosion rocked the sand nearby. He flinched and raised the cross guard of his blade in front of his face. When he opened his eyes, what was left of two men smoked near the hole in the sand.
Farther up the beach, the mages pressed forward in their cowled cloaks. They moved their hands in complex ways and magic cracked forth in arching paths, fireballs were hurled and explosions rocked the lines of the giants.
Behind them, their crossbow teams scurried—three men compliments, each with an expert crossbow, a man to hold the shield and another to crank crossbow.
Falinor whirled around, back in the direction of the dunes. He rushed after Joros, kicking his burning legs. When he made it to the top, a giant had just done the same. He howled, coming in with a spiked cudgel. He swung the weapon as Falinor jumped back out of his long reach.
While he could manage the odd fireball, Falinor was no slouch with a sword. He grunted, arching his wrists, his footwork, though hampered by the soft sand, was excellent. His blade flashed and his attacks knocked against the thick hide armor of the giant’s vambraces, but that did not stop the swordsman.
He pressed the giant, flicking the taper of his blade in quick slashes while intermittently changing his approach and arching in with more powerful attacks that, while not very dangerous to the giant, still posed a physical threat.
As the giant backed away, Falinor pressed forward, lunged and jumped, his boots landing directly into the giant’s chest.
With a grunt, his opponent fell back and rolled down the hill in a flail of limbs and kicked up sand.
Dozens more giants thunder past him. These carried rattling chains with morning stars.
Falan’s eyes widened.
“Look out!” he called among his fellow swordsmen on the dunes.
The giant in the lead dropped his morning star and began to swing the chain over his head, the deadly spiked ball arching around in a wide trajectory as he trudged up the hill with his fellow.
“Back away!” Falirnor said, and did just that while ten men at his sides did the same, their swords held high.
Advertisement
The morning star ball arching in, taking one of the men in the face. His head exploded in a spray of blood and teeth, his brain matter like crushed fruit on the sand.
Once the giants were atop the dune with them on more stable terrain, they pivoted on their heels. The chains whipped and snapped, cutting the air in deadly swaths of spiked fury.
This fighting technique by the giants was no lumbering and awkward attack. It was trained, it was practiced.
Two more swordsmen were caught in that whirling chain and the giant jerked the morning stars past him. They flung across the bodies of the men, the spikes taking them across their bodies, ripping through their armor as if they wore straw raiments.
Blood sprayed into the sand and the men fell. The one that did not fall dead, cried out in anguish as his ruined body spurted in red gouts.
Falinor took a hand off his sword hilt to hurl a fireball at the giant in front of him when another threw his morning star in his direction without warning. The swordsman lunged for the sand and fell, rolled as the first giant struck at him with heavy chains.
The metal whipped metallically as he rolled, and grunted. Something grazed his upper arm—the chain no doubt. He cursed loudly and whirled across the sand on his knees. The landed blow felt as though Falinor had been hit by a horse-drawn wagon thundering down a road. He grunted heavily and continued scrabbling over the sand to get away.
Making it to his knees feet again, he grasped his sword and winced, his left hand unable to take the weapon properly.
He backed away as more men fell to those morning stars, the sand flecked with blood in almost every area as men continued dying under that oppressive onslaught, an onslaught they had no idea how to counter.
“We need pikes!” someone called. “We need pikes!”
“Falinor!” Joros cried.
He glanced to his friend, saw the man tumble backwards twenty or so paced to his right. “Joros!” he bellowed, and trudged after him, ducking passed a small line of swords attempting to defend themselves against those morning stars.
A shield bearer took the brunt of one of those spiked ball. It pierced the shield and the man died under his defense without a sound as he crumbled to the sand.
The swordsman and minor mage, moved to assist him, reached out with his good hand. Men howled and died all around them as Joros kicked at the sand, trying to get away as he held his arm close to his chest.
Falinor reached out with his hand. “Joros!”
The giant struck out with his chains and morning stars.
“Falinor!”
“Joros!”
When the spiked ball landed upon Joros, it stuck into his chest, the sound of snapping bones and wet blood filling Falinor’s ears as he flinched away.
Blinking as he took back steps, Falinor saw the ruin that was Joros, a mass of caved in flesh that was his chest, the sand around his body soaked in blood.
A giant on his left swung his chains, feeling the last of the soldiers before them in a fury of bloody screams and high-pitched cries.
The giant moved forward toward Falinar and uttered something, his voice deep and alien, the words unhurried.
They filled Falinor with terror.
The giant leaned forward and reached out with his hand.
With a panicked cry, Falinor brought his sword down as hard as he could, the blade connecting with the crook of the giant’s arm. As the dismembered hand fell, the giant cried out furiously as he grasped the stump of his wound. Blood spurted across the sand and onto the swordsman who had taken that arm off.
The giant lunged forward with his horned helmet, the only weapon left to him in the moment.
Falinor was fortunate to be so close to the giant, as the horns missed piercing his body, but the iron helmet still thumped into his chest with a blow that felt like he had fallen against a tree at a dead run down a hill. His feet came off the sand and he heard himself grunt as the ground flipped, revealing the sky.
When he landed upon the soft sand at the bottom of the dune, all of the air was forced out of him.
Moaning, he moved and buried his face in the sand, unaware of anything but the need for air and the physical reaction of his body from such a painful blow in his back.
Lifting his head, Falinor’s vision swayed and blurred. All the sounds around him, the dying men, the giants screaming, the explosions from the tipped javelines, all sounded as though they came through a set of wooden walls. If he fell unconscious now, he might still survive if the giants were defeated.
He tried to glance at the field.
Saw the men of king Kindrin’s army in dispersed knots. Many of them were retreating.
A horn was blown.
Was that the sound of a general retreat?
Were they reforming their lines?
Who was winning the battle?
A javelin landed in the sand next to Falinor. He glanced at it, at the tipped head. It hadn’t exploded.
He flinched, jerked to his and scurried away.
And then the javelin exploded.
The world shook, the ground left him, and then it came back up into his face in a rush.
Advertisement
- In Serial31 Chapters
The Forbidden Class
Hatred. Lust. Power. There are many reasons why the Forbidden Classes are chosen. For Katai, a young village Guard, the reason was simple. Vengeance. Schedule I’ve not been able to write for quite some time now, so while I’m getting back into things the schedule will be nonexistent. Story details LitRPG - expect classes and skills and magic. Not a lot of stats/number-crunching though. There is slavery featured in this story, which a lot of people have been upset about. So here’s your fair warning. Skill levels and progression inspired by Azarinth Healer. Let me know what you think, and feel free to give me some constructive criticism. Please be nice about it though!
8 101 - In Serial198 Chapters
Spectral Regalia
(On Hiatus For a while due to real life obligations, also working on a Comic/Manga Adaption, update on Twitter) Can you feel it? That tugging feeling on your heart? That falling sensation as you are forced into a deep well by the people you trusted most? In your heart you decide to accept it, to bear it, to die with it, yet, even as you continue falling your decision haunts you. A general in your prime, millions of innocents lie dead in your wake. Feeling the end of your life pulling you in, the wall of water ever beckoning as you hit it full on. All feeling has been lost. Finding yourself devoid of sound. Nothing visible in this darkness. No strength in your limbs. This has become your end. But the endless has seen your life in His presence you feel the minute speck that you are, become more than what was, he gifts you with a new body with limitless potential imparted with its own endless strength. He puts you in a place where powers run rampant. The God of all has decided this. Your new life has the promise of excitement, adventure, love, Tragedy. Walking with purpose you pave the path for your race. Regardless of the dangers you will face you will live on for the end goal ---- -Synopsis Credit's to FlameRaptor. My Twitter for News and early spoilers of artwork and chapter titles https://twitter.com/SpectralRegalia
8 244 - In Serial28 Chapters
The Queen's Rogue
Magic Control Regiment Official Magician's Laws 1. Magic/mana may only be manipulated in a controlled or private setting, and only with the license of an official MCR magician. 2. Magic/mana may not be used for insidious purposes or murderous intent. This includes threatening, torture, and practical jokes. 3. Any user of magic/mana must be attending or have attended an MCR affiliated University. 4. Any user of magic/mana that does not adhere to the above rules shall be deemed a rogue. Rogues will be hung. Beau's a rogue. Let's find out why. "I would reread this at a later date: favorited." - LordRavensNest "I'm intrigued." - scorched100 "I quite enjoy this web novel, and I would like to see more" - selexie
8 217 - In Serial26 Chapters
A Curious Bird
One person awaking in body that is not his own. In order to survive he has to get stronger. For this bird will survive and evolve. He will also find out where he is and why he is here. But along the way his thirst for knowledge begin to grow.
8 147 - In Serial10 Chapters
Sacrifice
Mages are known for their fury and evil. When one comes to the Prince's court, Princess Bree sacrifices herself and goes with the wizard in exchange for her family's safety. But common knowledge may not be rooted in truth. There may be more to the mages, and the other magical races then meets the eye. And maybe even more to Bree herself.
8 275 - In Serial14 Chapters
Ars Nova
Lotte tried to be the best daughter she could possibly be. Excelling in Sports, Academics, and Demeanour; everything for her parents. Her life was meant to be a good one, but she was far from happy. With societal expectations and traditional oppressions lingering in every corner, she wished for nothing more than a different life. Beyond that was Kiur, a young scribe in a world of sand and magic. Confronted by the shadow of a young woman he knew all too well, he’s forced to keep himself together against the dark emotions of his delusions. Now with the sudden invasion of his homeland, he’s spirited away through the vast desert. Kiur, more than ever, must face the deep abyss of his mind and fight for his life. Find out what happens when the shaken mind is put to test, met by The Gods of the Great Below and linked to a past better left forgotten. *CoverArt by https://www.deviantart.com/trashochistFont for Cover by https://twitter.com/Tokiko220
8 62

