(cont'd)
And, now, here I was. Alone, lost, and having much more fun then I’d ever wanted to have.
My eyes blinked as I spotted a red light. I walked slowly towards it. It seemed to be in the center of the grassy plain. As I got nearer, I realized that the red orb was floating all by itself suspended in thin air for some reason. My hands were shivering from the sudden cold. The temperature seemed to drop the closer I got to the mysterious orb.
I reached the orb. It seemed to be a simple light floating in midair. I waved my hand above it. Nothing suspending it. I waved my hands below it. Nothing there either. Then, slowly, I reached for the orb, about to touch it when Adrianna appeared out of nowhere and scared the daylights out of me.
“Adrianna!” I yelled, staggering back in disbelief. “How…?”
She rolled her eyes. “I was getting bored at the temple, waiting for my sister to finish doing whatever she was doing. So I decided to follow you!”
“Adrianna, you scared me,” I said, a bit annoyed.
She smiled. “Why thank you!”
Then, I suddenly remembered something.
“That light in the sky…was it you?”
She shook her head. “No, it wasn’t.”
I blinked. “Then, did you happen to see who it was?” I asked.
She smiled again. “Nope!”
“You’re useless.”
She giggled. “Yep!”
“Then did you see any goblins or anything?”
She smiled. “Yes. About forty of them. You’ve got some traitors in your camp.”
I froze. Traitors? But who….oh no.
Kyle. It was him. I should’ve known. The whole time…after all that “wandering around,” pretending to be just a very curious and childish person. Kyle, who’d disappeared off all those times from our camp. It was him. I knew it. He was probably the one who led the goblins here.
But just to make sure…
“Is it Kyle?” I asked. “Is Kyle the traitor?”
Adrianna shook her head. “Not telling. Unless if…”
But I was already running back to the road.
“Well, would you look at that?” Matthias shouted. “Somebody forgot to pull our supplies up into the cave!”
“Don’t worry,” Philip said. “Julius and I’ll haul these things back into the cave. You guys go on ahead and look for the capt’n.”
“Alright,” Matthias said. “Then, let’s get a move on. Mason! What can you see over there?”
“Nothing yet!” Mason shouted back from the treetops. “Wait! Something’s-”
He never finished his sentence. Because, right then, Henry started to run downhill, towards the forest, shouting, “Treasure! Treasure!”
“Damn him!” Matthias muttered. “Stupid treasure hunter; he’ll get himself killed for sure. Let’s mosey!” Mason and Liam followed after him, as they chased Henry into the forest, who was waving his torch around like it was a glow-stone, leaving Philip and Julius to haul the supplies up into the cave.
“Alright,” Philip said. “Let’s get started.”
Julius nodded, and grabbed one end of the barrel. Together, they started to pull the food upwards. They were halfway down the tunnel when Philip stopped suddenly. He began to lower the barrel.
The two set in carefully on the ground. Julius blinked at Philip. “Is something wrong?” he asked.
Philip nodded. “Blast it! I’ve forgotten the keys to this damned thing! Where are they?”
“Oh, I have them!” Julius said, reaching into his back pocket and pulling out a key ring with the rusted iron keys latched onto it. “Here, take-”
He hardly finished his sentence when Philip drove his dagger deep into Julius’s chest. Julius staggered for a second, before collapsing on the ground, his eyes frozen in shock. The keys clattered on the ground. Philip placed his hand on Julius’s nose, to make sure he was dead, and then spat on him.
“Burn in hell,” he muttered, and turned to set the barrel on fire.
“Henry!” Matthias shouted. “Get back here!”
“I can still see his torch,” Mason muttered. “Looks like he’s slowing down.”
It was true. The torch had stopped waving around. But the group was now deep inside the forest. They could still see the cooking fires of the camp on the mountain, but their surroundings seemed to engulf the small light of their torches. The ground was changing as well; before it was dark brown and covered with leaves and grass and shrubs, and now it was covered with red vines and twigs. The trees also seemed to grow larger and more deformed and seemed to grow into one another to form bizarre contraptions.
The light from Henry’s torch had indeed stopped moving around. The men were reaching closer. Henry was just over the next bend.
They stepped into a clearing. Henry’s torch was there, lying on the ground. But Henry himself had disappeared.
Mason picked up his torch. “That’s odd,” he said. “Where could that little bugger have wandered off to?”
“I have no idea,” Matthias said. “But we’d better-”
“Matthias!” Henry shouted from just behind the bushes. “Come over here! Check this out!”
Mason ran through the bushes first. Liam followed, cutting aside the branches with his sword. Matthias hesitated, but stepped slowly through the bushes and into a large field of…
Dead bodies. At least forty of them. And all goblins, too. Their axes and swords lay scattered around them, shining in the moonlight. And sticking out of each one were arrows, made from pure bronze.
Mason was the first to speak. “But how…?”
Matthias picked up an arrow, and then dropped it suddenly. “Elves!” he shouted. “Elves are in the proximity!”
“I know,” said a voice. Matthias turned, wide-eyed, to face Rubin and the twins and Logan.
“Where’s Kyle?” Matthias asked. “And Jason…?”
“Back at the campsite,” Rubin sighed heavily. “We’ve got a traitor in our midst.”
When I saw Kyle at the campsite, I wanted to strangle him immediately. Luckily, Philip held me back.
“Wait, capt’n!” he shouted. “At least let him explain himself!”
I heard the sound of many footsteps behind me. Turning around, I saw Rubin and the others arrive, their expressions grim.
“Yes, keep him there,” Rubin said. “You’ve got a story to tell us, right Kyle?”
“You aren’t Kyle, are you?” I growled. “Who are you, really?”
Kyle hung his head. He nodded.
“It’s true,” he said. “I’m not Kyle.”
“Then who are you?” Matthias asked.
“I’m Salamandastra, former sehirian general.”
I took a step back. “Y-you can’t be Salamandastra!”
Kyle nodded again, looking up at me. “You said you wanted to hear a story right? Well, here’s mine…”
Kyle:
Centuries ago, one of the first deities was named Orion, the King of The Stars. Orion married Nora, the deity of the night, and, through her, had three daughters: Rosalie, Inira, and Adrianna. Rosalie was the goddess of beauty, and also the eldest of the three. Inira was born second, with a brother named Galen. Galen was the father of Oblivion, one of the Seven Kings of Klymaestra. It was Inira who supplied Galen with the wealth necessary to begat a king. Adrianna was born last, with the gift of happiness. The three symbols for the sisters were, respectively, rain, fire, and lightning.
During the battle of the giants, I was third in command to Zenith, one of the Seven Kings. My name was Plague, and, on the day of the battle, I was slain by Oblivion.
However, my conscience was so powerful that it wandered around the world for a while before disappearing into my body in the planes of Oblivion. There I dwelled for a long time, searching for a way to escape back to the land of the living. But it was very near impossible, even for a deity, to accomplish such a feat.
So I lay low. As the years passed, hell’s bonds weakened. Finally, one day, a portal broke from hell’s surface. I instantly threw myself through it, batting away the numerous demons that tried to stop me. And, then, I found myself in the old abandoned mines of Kruta.
Getting out was a difficult thing. I vaguely remember smashing apart numerous dwarven accessories trying to get to the surface. One of my claws was chipped, and a piece of it broke off and was lodged in a cleft in the rock. Of course, my claws were, at that time, made of pure rubies. So, I imagined they would be less durable then my older claws.
As soon as I saw the light of day, I made a vow to never again serve the forces of evil. I vowed to never again follow Zenith. And then, I stepped onto land.
I noticed a neighboring city, and decided to dwell there for a while. The king was a noble man of fine character, and so I decided to join his army. Of course, my combat skills outmatched those of swordsmen all around. And so, I was promoted to General rather quickly. I took on the name of Salamandastra, since; after all, the salamander was my bestial form.
It was only after the invasion of Klymaestra that I realized too late that the kingdom had been corrupted. The sehirians had become an antagonistic empire. I couldn’t serve any longer. When the kingdom of Aria fell, I offered to help the group of were-goblins who were determined not to let the royal line die out. And, so, Escobar was chosen to adopt you. I did all this in secret, using the information provided by my spies to sneak the refugees of Klymaestra and Aria to safety in the neighboring kingdom of Loradon, which was an elvish empire dedicated to the nature goddess Kien.
It was not long after the conquering of Aria that I resigned as General of the Army. They came to kill me, but I escaped to the little hamlet near Anderhall and settled there. And there is where you found me. Of course; the elves new of my exploits and offered to help me. They’d taken note of a large group of rogue goblins headed to ambush your small band. And, so, I asked them to attack the goblins.
“And that flare we saw in the night sky…” I began.
“Yes,” Kyle nodded. “That was the signal for the attack.”
“But I don’t understand,” Rubin said. “Why do the sehirians want to kill you?”
Kyle grimaced. “Eliameka, the sehirian king I was serving under, was the one who’d ordered the portal to be built. It is truly an ancient secret, but it can be done, as Eliameka figured out a way to do it. However, Eliameka was assassinated in his bedroom, and was succeeded by Hazael, who is now currently king of Sehira.”
“So Hazael thinks that you might talk against him and lead the people in revolt?”
Kyle shook his head. “Hazael wants more than that. He believes that if I can escape from hell, then maybe he can enter it.”
“Wait!” I said. “Then that means…”
“Hazael wants to revive Zenith.” Kyle said. “He wants to learn the secret to becoming one of the megabeasts. He wants to conquer the world.”
“But he won’t be able to.” Rubin cut in. “Zenith’s very arrogant. He won’t stand for being second best. He’ll just kill Hazael and take over the world himself.”
“Make no mistake,” Kyle said. “Hazael’s very powerful. He was the one who sent the necromancer and the goblins after you. He probably knows where we are right now...”
“…because someone betrayed us,” I finished. “Where’s Julius? And Philip?”
“Down here!” We heard a voice call. “They’re down here!”
We hurried down the tunnel, and found Mason standing next to a pile of charred wood and a dead body.
“Julius…” Mason trailed off.
I bent over to look at the body. It was Julius, and he had a dagger sticking out of his chest.
“Where’s Philip?” I growled.
“Gone.” Mason said. “He disappeared into the trees.”
“We’ve gotta go after him!” Matthias shouted. “That traitor; I’ll see his guts twisted out!”
“Hold one!” I said, holding him back. “It’s too dangerous. The night has already fallen. We should get some rest.”