Prologue
Captain Denzel Cole, the Sternly Disheartened
The chill in the crisp air hung over Captain Denzel Cole like an icicle about to fall.
The utter silence unfitting of the rocky mountains, all high enough for snow to cap their tops. Their bare gray slopes full of boulders and cracks big enough to hide two grown men, one standing on the other’s shoulders.
More than enough cover for a small platoon of enemies to try to sneak up on the solid, fifty-foot ridge that formed the best natural barricade against an enemy army’s passage across the Storm Mountains.
And called the Storm Killer.
With a pair of the most experienced archers – protected by a trio of a highly trained privates with shields, swords, and spears – all stationed every several feet along the ridge.
All three hundred yards.
Their three quivers, only one worn, each filled with two dozen arrows. One arrow now ready to string to their longbows. All of them wore thick dark leather armor – only strong enough to deflect the weakest of their enemy’s blows.
But better than nothing.
Covering themselves with pelts of grey fur – some striped black, others blended with brown and black. The pelts of lycan. Vicious wolf men and cat women beasts of the darkness that few men could hunt down except in groups.
Sometimes.
Those who dared, who succeeded earned more good coin selling the pelts than an honest captain ever could. Normally the Princes of the Realms would never spend so heavily on their enlisted troops. Especially the commoners.
But here at the ridge things were different.
Here the pelts made clear these men didn’t fear retaliation from lycan or any other darklings that dared try crossing into the Four Realms.
Until now.
The wind still refused to blow. To howl those eerie sounds that usually spooked the fresh meat.
No.
It stagnated with the smell of rancid actual meat. Of decaying human flesh.
Somehow thinned enough to be a vile peppery spice that burned all the men's tongues sour.
More than forty human skulls – each pierced high through the cap by a crude spike – formed a gruesome fence over four hundred yards away. A hundred too many yards from the ridge to knock down. Bits of bloody flesh still clung to the newest victims.
Champions sent to kill the Beast.
Champions all killed by the Beast.
Eaten by it.
Champions like Sir Torren Welsh. Once a mountain of highly trained muscles packed into the finest steel armor forged by request of Prince Wallace himself. The warrior ruler of the Eastern Realm.
And Captain Denzel Cole’s highest liege.
Sir Torren Welsh, unlike so many of the champion warriors summoned by the princes, shared his drink and food with the troops on the wall. The most crisp, bitter ales. The fattest, juiciest, slabs of beef. Spoke to the troops of the Storm Killer as comrades in arms. His legendary generosity only matched by the legendary prowess he demonstrated in their friendly sparing bouts. Clearly intended to help train men beyond the limited training yet vast experience of the ridge’s troops.
Till Sir Torren Welsh rode out to meet the Beast’s challenge.
And lost his head only moments after the bout began.
His brain gorged out and eaten in front of everyone.
The chill that zapped the captain spine never left it since that day a month ago.
Only more champions, all just as highly trained and legendary, met the same fate. One a day. To meet a challenge by that Beast.
A daily sacrifice that kept the Beast from leading its horde of fellow monsters against the ridge.
Yet a sliver of twisted good had come into this is gut-wrenching mess. For the first time in years, Captain Denzel Cole finally understood his son’s agony. His first and only son Ash. A black-haired wiry boy of fifteen three years ago. Blue eyes bright and gleaming.
Like a young Captain Denzel Cole himself.
Except softened too much by his mother. Unknowingly following the original dream of his beautiful social butterfly of a mother – to become the greatest playwright and actor in the Four Realms. His romantic shenanigans couldn’t cause the captain more grief. That witty humor, striking the wrong topics too hard, would have gotten the boy jailed under a less tolerant Duke.
But that carefree youth vanished soon after the lycan raided their city. When they stole his beloved Amber – another beautiful social butterfly with the same dream as Ash. Torturing her in front of him.
While he could only watch from the top of some sturdy tall stage prop.
A flimsy wooden stick in his hand.
But throwing away his silly dreams, training like a mad-man under his father, Ash vanished the moment Captain Denzel Cole insisted his son use some sense. That hunting down the lycan raiders, that somehow locating, then raiding the hidden dark village Amber no doubt was enslaved in, that whole scheme was utter insanity. Amber, if she lived by then, was a broken empty shell obedient to her lycan masters.
But no.
Ash vanished.
Gone so suddenly like the captain’s wife of three decades.
Both now dead from vengeance gone horribly wrong.
And a soldier’s death the only thing he was now fit for.
* * *
A crackle erupted a few feet from the captain’s side.
Loud enough for anyone on the ridge to hear. For the army of silent, unseen monsters camped out several thousand yards beyond the ridge, behind the curve in the wide passageway and hidden by one of the many snowcapped mountains, to hear.
And no wind to muddle the sound. Including when the darkling army arrived and roared in a single horrible cry.
Then fell silent.
But Captain Denzel Cole didn’t need to look closely to know the source.
A private.
Hard leather boots mere inches from the deep drop of the ridge’s edge. The kind of position that made most men suck in a gulp of chilled air too quickly. The cold stabbing their teeth hard. Tasting that rancid meat aftertaste strongly enough to turn their stomach nauseous.
The captain forced himself not to though.
The private stood a few feet away from his proper position. He should be beside his archer, not so far in front of him. In normal times he would have no excuse. Within the width of the walkway a solid ten feet, there was plenty of room for each small group of men. If the private was thinking clearly, coaxing the archer a couple feet forward shouldn’t have been too hard.
Except the private’s legs trembled visibly.
Despite the robe of gray pelts around his body. Including his brawny legs.
His chiseled face couldn’t be more than twenty-five or so. What some women might find handsome. Especially with the straggly short blonde hair.
But the strain on his brow, the glassy look in his eyes – it told the captain everything he needed to know.
The captain walked over.
Let the private hear his approach.
The taste of rancid meat still too strong for him to forget the horror that would soon come.
“Seems the Beast is late,” said the captain. Gruff yet gentle.
The private gulped.
Loud and wet.
And exactly what the Beast wanted.
“If the gods have any mercy at all, they won’t let it come today,” the private said. His voice trembling as much as his legs.
But hopefully not carrying too far.
“A wish we all have,” said the captain.
Gave the private a solid pat on his upper arm.
Reminded the captain of the other troops who said something similar. How a little sympathy, some words of encouragement, did far more than the strictest discipline to get them through these moments of weakness.
Especially in such dark times.
“Then Sir Isaac won’t have to fight it,” said the private, his voice becoming a bit too breathless, too high-pitched, “Won’t have to die like all the others.”
The captain knew exactly the horror the young private feared.
His childhood hero, the one that inspired the private to enlist, to spend his best years of his life protecting the Four Realms, that very man was about to meet a gruesome, pointless doom. One that proved his strength was no better than a slug against a soldier’s boot.
A sight a number of the troops here had seen since the Beast arrived two months ago.
A champion a day.
So many dreams broken.
Destroyed.
The will to fight, to protect crumbling each day.
Till everyone here accepted their pointless doom.
“Stand firm and pray,” said the captain. His tone as gentle as he could manage. His men needed hope. Real hope. Not words.
Yet he would fail them just like he failed his wife.
Failed his son.
And cost more than his own worthless life. His soldiers' lives.
“That’s all we can do now,” said Captain Denzel Cole, “And it’s best you don’t let Sir Isaac hear –”
An inhuman roar broke out before the ridge.
The source a rat man so big, so tall, its height was twice the tallest of men. Its brawn so massive it could easily lift a struggling stallion – wearing the most sturdy, heaviest armor of the Four Realms– and crush it like a fragile egg. Curved claws like short daggers. Capable of stabbing through the hardest steel.
Yet its black fur was groomed neatly in spikes. Fangs larger than most trolls yet trimmed sharp and pristine white.
It’s even blacker pants clean and unwrinkled. Not a speck of filth on its crimson vest with golden spirals.
Not a sign of the blood and flesh it gorged itself on the prior days.
Not even on its colossal battle axe. The wilted yellow skull engraved into the blue steel, double-sided blade. The red glowing eye sockets. Or the thick handle planted into the dirt beside him. Or the spiked tip pointing straight up toward the cloudless sky.
“Bring forth today's challenger!” exclaimed the Beast, “Do that and I grant you one more day for your menfolk to quiver in fear. For you woman to wail at their future fate as our slaves. And mourn your children before my kind roast and feast on them all!”
Captain Denzel Cole bared his teeth. The urge to the hazardous stairs carved into an exposed indent of the ridge. Throw himself at the Beast. Throw himself at the mercy of the heartless gods.
And pray for a miracle.
“Dear Gods,” said the private, his voice now cracking, “Can’t we try feathering it again?”
The captain bite down his foolhardy urge.
His troops needed a leader to keep their spirit from breaking. He stood even less chance against that rat monster than any of the champions. Than men taken from the fittest bloodlines. Men trained for battle since they could walk.
“Didn’t do any good last time,” said the captain, knowing the very same question was going through many of his troop’s minds.
Despite the fact the Beast positioned itself far out of reach of their arrows.
“Won’t do any good this time,” said the captain.
“Ho!” shouted a burly voice.
One belonging to a giant of a man. Covered head to toe in thick plate armor. The rich golden emblems of birds engraved into the steel, combined with the precious gemstones carved into colorful flowers, marked the champion as Sir Isaac.
And striding toward the villainous Beast. Broadsword out. The blade as thick as a brawny arm and as long as a young man.
A weapon only someone as massive and strong as Sir Isaac could wield.
“I accept your challenge, foul Beast,” said Sir Isaac.
The echo of his words punched the rock mountains. As if only Sir Isaac himself could smash the icicle that seemed to hang over all the troops of Storm Killer.
The champion marched straight up to the Beast.
Who merely smirked back at the human.
And waited.
Till Sir Isaac reached the last dozen feet.
And the champion charged.
His boots pounding the rocky dirt.
His armor clanking as loud as a small cavalry.
Broadsword arced out.
Ready for one critical swing.
Ready to crush the black heart of the rat monster.
The captain held his breath. His insides knotted ice. The taste of rancid meat in the air a stark reminder of failure.
Sir Isaac crossed the reach of Beast’s weapon.
Continued on.
No turning back. His arm heaving his broadsword. Arching toward the rat monster’s neck.
When the Beast grabbed Sir Isaac’s head.
Slashed it off with its claws.
Blood gushing everywhere.
“Sir Isaac …” whimpered the young private. Voice barely a whisper.
Yet cracking all the same.
The champion’s body collapsed a moment later. The loud clang followed by utter silence.
And the Beast held up Sir Isaac’s head.
Another trophy to feast on in front of the ridge’s troops.
To place on a spike and taunt them with.
Until the Beast crushed it.
A mush of gore spurting out of the golden helm.
“So many champions,” yelled the Beast, “Yet all so pathetic none lasted more than a moment!”
The Beast bared its giant fangs in a snarl.
“Listen up, humans!” shouted the Beast, “You get one last chance. Your next champion to fall to my claws will spell the end of your kind. The day before the next fat moon. That is the deadline.”
Only three days. An impossible deadline.
Captain Denzel Cole nearly fell to his knees.
Nearly plugged his dagger into his heart.
But no.
Humanity had to go down fighting.
Just like his wife. Stabbed to death by a jealous rival over some social butterfly nonsense.
Yet she managed to fatally wound the bitch.
Just like his son Ash. Committed to die fighting the lycan bastards that destroyed the love of his life.
Just like the captain did so long ago, rescuing his future wife when a vicious rat man abducted her, ravaged and salvaged her, all because that darkling heard a rumor that she contained a seed of magic leftover from a mysterious, long forgotten lover.
Any decent soldier knew what they had to do.
And it kept the captain standing firm.