《The Many Gifts of Malia》Chapter 95: The Birds
Advertisement
Inkashi didn’t kick nearly as much as I expected her to, and she handled the transition a lot better than Lazuli had. After the initial shock of being in the astral plane, she clutched my arm and huddled next to me as I led her through the vastness. She ignored Tamiyat, who was getting closer and growing more detailed, but she did see her. What she thought of the primordial, she didn’t say.
I found egress near the crest of the mountain pass and pulled Inkashi out after me. Although I’d thought she had handled herself well, when we exited she started shivering and gave the sky a harried glance.
“What was that place?” she whispered.
“The astral realm.” I gripped her shoulder to keep her from pitching over. She looked really unstable on her feet.
Shaking her head, she slid to the ground. “And Marudak goes through that every time he traverses a portal? Gods help us.”
“He likely doesn’t.” I tugged at the mountain magic, questing to see if I could open a portal now that I was in mostly uncontested territory. The ley of the land resisted like sticky syrup, but at least it wasn’t combative. I ripped open a rend with some effort. “You’ve never traveled through a portal before?”
“Marudak has his own,” she said, eyeing mine with distrust. “When the gods need to move, he opens the common way and carries us through. But we rarely leave the divine land, unless he grants us leave to perform our duties throughout Paedea.”
I scowled. If Marudak had private pathways that weren’t in the astral plane, he may have discovered, or built, a separate transcendent realm. More complications we didn’t need.
Inkashi waved a limp hand towards the sparking opening. “Is that where I go to die?”
“What? No.” I wiped my face, taking the scowl with the wet sheen that had built from the natural rain. “This is my maas. Inside is a fountain with healing waters, so feel free to clean yourself up. I’ll be back.”
She stayed seated on the ground. “It’s a prison.”
“It’s a temporary shelter to keep you safe.” I frowned down at her. “If you can’t walk, I can carry you in there. Or you can sit here and hope the derketo don’t find you. Either way, I’m leaving.”
Advertisement
Lips pursed, she looked at our surroundings, eyes boring into the trees. Finally, she said, “Carry me. But I can’t look like I’m going willingly.”
I tried to be as gentle as I could but, when she said she couldn’t look cooperative, she meant she was going to kick and thrash worse than a hooked fish. By the time I got her through the portal, I was pretty sure I’d added another half-dozen bruises to her limbs. As soon as the portal snapped shut, she went limp in my arms.
“Sorry,” she gasped around ragged breaths. “I didn’t know if Marudak’s birds were in the trees.”
I grunted and set her down next to the fountain. “Wash up. It should help you feel better.”
“It’s not poisoned?”
Rolling my eyes, I scooped up a handful and downed the water. “It hasn’t killed me yet.”
With a relieved sigh, Inkashi dunked her head in the fountain and let her face soak. Her hair, fanned out like a painter’s brush, stained the water wine red. She stayed under long enough that I started to question if she could still breath, but with a gasp she pulled out and collapsed against the bricks. Although her lips and eye were still puffy, they were less swollen than before, and her bruises had lightened considerably.
“I need to get one of these.” Eyes closed, she rested her head against the masonry and rapped the stone with her knuckles. “Where did you get it?”
“I found it here, a long time ago. It’s why I built my maas around it.” Shaking my arms, I prepped to reopen the portal. “Wait here. I’ll be back after this mess is cleaned up.”
She cracked her good eye open. “Is ‘she’ really back?”
I paused. “You saw her in the astral plane, right?”
“Yes, but…” Frowning, she waved a hand. “That could have been an illusion, or a dream, or a vision.”
I grunted. “How many illusions have you seen conjuring armies of eldritch monsters?”
“Fair.” She dropped her gaze, running a finger along the flagstones. “That…mortal of yours. You care about him?”
“Of course.”
“Keep him away from Marudak.” Her face was hard. “If he finds out you’ve raised a new god-killer, he will tear the heavens apart trying to destroy him. Our lord is”—she rolled her hand, looking for the right word—“very strong. Titanic? You call your old ones titans, yes?”
Advertisement
I nodded. That made sense, based on the abilities other Paedens had attributed to him and how absolutely he ruled his pantheon. For him to hold complete control over the celestial pathways and beat gods into submission, he’d have to be. And it also tracked with the difficulty he’d given Malia.
“He was there when they bound our old ones.” She looked off into the distance, one hand gripping her shoulder. “I think he could bind them again by himself, if they broke free.”
Grunting, I tugged open a portal. “So can Malia.”
I stepped through and left her alone in my maas. She’d be fine, for a little while at least. We, on the other hand, would probably incur a few more bumps and bruises before the day ended. The Sea Mother was approaching fast, her derketo ever increasing, and we still hadn’t driven Marudak away.
When I came out on the mountainside, Seppo and the Heavenly Bull wrestled in the stormy heavens. Seppo had assumed his astral form, augmented by a celestially-enhanced exoskeleton whose pipes glittered and hissed with compressed galaxies. Even taller than the mountains, he was still shorter than Marudak, who might not have been using any projection at all.
The massive minotaur bristled with corded muscle. Bulky shoulders bashed the clouds aside, biceps as broad as seas bulged with the strain of wrangling Seppo. His legs, coated with tight-knit brindle brown fur, shook the ground with each hoofed step, the tallest trees barely tickling his ankles. Long ivory horns curved away from his head, gold caps gilding their points.
And his aura. I shivered, partly because of the rain, but mostly because Marudak radiated raw, unadulterated strength. No wonder he was able to rule his pantheon through sheer force. If he hadn’t transcended the realm of godhood, he was on the cusp. He was a dense nucleus of power, one which not even Seppo could turn. As I watched, several pistons on Seppo’s exoskeleton snapped, leaking gas and stars.
I sensed movement from the trees. Jade and Hasda appeared, this time with Hasda in the lead. Face pale, Jade ran behind him. Although Hasda’s armor glistened in the stormy semi-darkness, it was almost dull without the djinn’s ethereal fire coating it. Perhaps the djinn already knew how serious a threat Marudak was to them and had hidden himself, but whatever the reason, I was glad to see it withdrawn.
They weren’t out of the woods yet, though. While Seppo had repaired the damages to his frame and reengaged Marudak, it was only a matter of time before the Paeden god overwhelmed him. And Jade and Hasda had to pass through a wide, open patch of land to reach the mountain trail, since I couldn’t open a portal down in the contested territory. So I had to hope that Marudak remained distracted enough to get them across, up the mountain, and into Nebesa.
Malia was missing, so she’d likely missed them in her search or stumbled upon another threat. Given how chaotic the land had become, it wouldn’t have surprised me if one of Tamiyat’s cults, like she had in Aenea, had found its way here. Vetor was gone as well, although I had no idea if he was still chasing Paedens through the forest or if he’d been reclaimed.
An explosion in the woods.
That might have been Vetor’s demise. A spirit with that much power wouldn’t go out without a bang. Jade, however, thought it was the perfect distraction to dash out into the open, dragging Hasda behind her.
Unfortunately, Marudak was paying attention. As soon as they cleared the edge of the forest, he turned. Trees crumpled beneath his hooves. Not even Seppo’s straining slowed him.
I tugged on my bond as I raced down the trail. Much as I didn’t want to, I pulled on my astral form. Seppo was still in his, and Malia graced the heavens with hers as she darted above the forest. As soon as we all assumed our avatars, the deluge renewed in earnest, half-formed derketo sprouting underfoot.
We collided with Marudak in a flurry of limbs and wings, Malia hitting his lower back as I hit his shoulders. Seppo had him around the waist, and together we tried to leverage him to the ground away from Jade and Hasda.
Tried. He was one strong son of a bitch.
Huffing, Marudak glared at me and snorted in my face. “So, you finally sent the real gods out to play.”
Advertisement
- In Serial50 Chapters
Heir of the Dragon
Mel was a boy living in a mountain village. His relationship with the old man who lived in the ruined house outside the village would make him heir to the world's greatest secret. 5 Chapter/week
8 198 - In Serial16 Chapters
Alpha
Elaine Chernoble has spent years traveling from place to place, training her pack to be the best, pushing aside her demons by busying herself with helping others overcome theirs. Her hardwork finally pays off when her pack becomes the strongest pack in America. Traveling around and helping other packs train and become stronger became her lifetime goal, striving not to let what happened to her own pack, happen to other.Nameless, that's what they called her pack."The Raven Deity", they called her.But, even a deity has her troublesome past that is the catalyst for her seemingly perfect present.It isn't until she gets a call from the pack called Moon Stone, does her world turn upside-down, inside out and runs in circles that make her dizzy."My name is Scinece Evans and that's my twin, Lincoln."Coming from a disturbing past that would make even a grown man shiver, Scinece and Lincoln Evans, have yet to find the person that will understand them better than they understand themselves; someone that will care for them; someone who looks past their past and appearances. Sure, they had their father, but even he walked on eggshells after the incident. And that someone stumbles into their borders, all bloody, skin hanging off by a thread.Follow Elaine and the twins' journey as they stumble along the path of stitching each other back together good as new. But then again, a book isn't complete without a few bumps in the road.
8 216 - In Serial11 Chapters
Dreaming of adventure, I ran away
Dex is a young college graduate. After enduring years of longing for adventure and becoming a hero, he runs away from home to the island nation of Arasia. There he is taken under the care of Ernesto and Miki who run a bar in the city. After spending some time with them, an incident within his "foster" family occurs that will bring him closer to the adventure he longed for. As he progresses down the rabbit hole, he discovers the darkness of the island and what really brought him there.
8 201 - In Serial24 Chapters
The Heart of Alastair
Icara, the princess turned escaped slave and wanted criminal, returns to her homeland after being away for ten years. Upon her return, she soon finds the crestfallen knight from a foreign kingdom, Gwindon. Both of them have come to Alastair's Heart to struggle against something from their past. They work together to achieve their goals, finding Gwindon's missing wife and leader of a mercenary crew, and to kill the man that sent Icara away and framed her in the first place. Unfortunately for them, that man has become king of her homeland, and has plans of his own to deal with her.
8 92 - In Serial46 Chapters
His Trophy | Jerome Valeska
"Oh and Jim, Jim Gordon?" Jerome peered into the camera as if to yell out to an audience: "I have Rory here," he turned the camera towards Jim's daughter and revealed to the audience a girl that had been beaten and tormented, she was gaged and her eyes didn't look at the camera but above the lens; at Jerome who was holding the camera."Say hi to Daddy, doll face," he jeered from behind the camera. She looked down the lens and shook her head as if to tell Jim not to try. The camera went back to Jerome."She's a beauty isn't she, Jimbo," Jerome smirked into the camera, his laughter becoming harsh and wild: "and she's all mine, you try anything, and I mean anything, I kill her. She's my prisoner, my reward, and you're not taking her away from me Jimmy boy, on no, not this time" his words were spoken through waves of laughter.***Rory Gordan is the stepdaughter of Jim Gordon. Her mother moved a lot so Rory was born in Gotham City but raised in England and from the age of 10 she had been bouncing from one country to another with her mother. However, when she turned 17 she had grown tired of the constant change of moving and decided to move to America. It was when she was visiting her long term boyfriend when her life got flipped upside down, not only did she meet one of the craziest boys on the planet, but she discovered that she had a gift that would curse her forever. This story is a collection of scenes rather than a flowing plot, so its chronological but it skips scenes and jumps back and forth between different perspectives. The story is under editing, so it'll get more cohesive over time.••• I do not own any characters or plot lines from the tv show. However, all original characters like Rory do belong to me.Total Word Count [33,674]
8 203 - In Serial21 Chapters
Vegaspete peace & Love
Vegaspete
8 133

