The Fateful Hourby Tevish SzatAdrianna Moore ran her fingertips along the side of the long, silver blade, feeling the runes etched into the saber. It was a marvelous piece, perfectly suited for the dispatch of evil. However, it was also a point of sorrow for Adrianna, because the sword was at once a heavy burden, and the only thing of value that belonged to her.
Once, she had a home within the wooded fringe of Kessig, a place she shared with her mother where she seemed safe from the darkness of the world outside. But she had lost her illusions of safety, shattered by a blazing devil that had assailed her within her home. And in the end, Adrianna and her mother had lost their home and left the house behind when the vile corruption of the Skirsdag had been dug up at the heart of their town.
The road had not then been kind. There came cold rains and bitter winds, cold welcomes and bitter strangers, and all the while the world seemed to grow darker all around them. They came to rest in Nephalia, where the salt and fog could never be kept out of the small place they called their own. Soon enough, sickness followed and Adrianna was forced to see her mother buried far away from her native soil, with only the faint hope that the blessed sleep would not be interrupted.
What things they had owned, Adrianna sold. She had no life in that gloomy house, that gloomy town, though as far as she figured it she had no real life anywhere. She had tried her hands at a number of trades and found none of them to her liking: all had fought her at every turn, so at last she turned to the only thing she had done well, which was combating the evils of the world.
And so Adrianna had gotten her silver saber, and ventured out into the world, keeping to the roads and crossways. For over a year she had wandered until her feet nearly bled, the wind chapped her skin and the rains beat her down. She was not a cathar, not respected and honored. Very often the only reward for her deeds was a little food for the road, but as the world got worse Adrianna was often hungry.
But Adrianna had come into some money, and found her way to a tavern in the rotten, seaside town that just happened to be the next one along the road, polishing her saber and waiting for a hot meal and trying to think about where her life had gone so very wrong.
“Nice looking blade you’ve got there.” A gruff voice said, “Too bad I’ll bet you can’t really swing it.”
Adrianna looked up to see a large, strong man sitting across from her. He was a very rough sort: stubble covered his face, his hair was matted, and his green eyes were dim in the darkness: the smile he wore on his face did not reach them.
Adrianna did not dignify him with a response.
“Look, toots, a weapon like that belongs in a cathar’s hands, or if not in the hands of some respectable fighter. I know some people who’d probably like to buy it off you at a premium.”
“I may not look like much,” Adrianna said, “But I’m fine in a fight.”
“Really?” the swarthy man asked, “You ever fought as much as a ghoul? Just because you can handle yourself in a back alley doesn’t mean you can use a thing like that.”
“I’ve killed devils.” Adrianna replied. She had lost count of how many. At some point, they stopped mattering as individual horrors, just streaming together into a grotesque parade in her memory.
“That so?” The man asked. He seemed to consider her words very carefully. Adrianna locked eyes with him and found herself immediately in something of a contest. Whoever looked away first was weaker, and Adrianna had a burning need to prove she was strong, hopefully without running the grating stranger through.
He blinked.
“Look,” he said, “Maybe I misjudged you. You’re not with the church, and frankly if not for the sword I’d have thought you were a beggar, no offense.”
“None taken.” She had been offended more than enough by being called ‘toots.’
“So, how long are you planning to stay around these parts?”
“Depends on if there’s something to do.” Adrianna answered. A waitress brought her a plate with a heap of overcooked vegetables and a pair of tough mutton chops on it, the latter of which Adrianna tore into ravenously.
“Easy there.” The man said. Adrianna ignored him.
The man looked away. “You say you’ve killed devils.”
“And ghouls, and a skaab. Not sure about the werewolf.”
“Name’s Blake.” He offered, “Jonathan Blake. I’m something of a sellsword myself, though I’m more comfortable with a tank of geistflame than a blade.”
“Hmph.”
“Anyway,” he lowered his voice, “This town’s got plenty of worries, so if you want to make enough coin to put some meat on those bones of yours, you’re in the right place. I need a few good people for my outfit, and that weapon of yours alone would be worth half a man.”
“Still not selling it.” Adrianna said through a mouthful of dinner.
“I know that,” Jonathan said, “I’m offering you a chance to sign up.”
Adiranna thought about it for a moment. As far as she could tell, Jonathan Blake was a thoroughly odious man, one with whom she would not relish working. But as she choked down the last bite of mutton and her stomach rumbled for more, the offer of real coin became a good deal more tempting.
“Well?” he asked.
She looked at her reflection in the silvered steel for a moment, reaffirming just how far she had fallen, and that she had nothing else to lose except her life, which she was more likely to part with alone.
“All right.” She said, “I’m in.”
***
Adrianna had put the rest of what little coin she had towards a bath and a night in a real bed. Come morning, she looked at her reflection in the mirror of the vanity that furnished her room at the inn and frowned. Clean and well-rested, she probably looked better than she had the previous night, but it was easy enough to see how she’d been mistaken for a vagrant.
Adrianna gave a deep sigh after looking herself over. Her mother had always held she was beautiful and would find someone someday who would see it, outside and in, and then Adrianna would be able to make a good life far from beasts and demons.
“If only you could see me now.” She muttered, and steeled herself to face the world.
Outside, the world was grey and the sun dim, a misty morning like every other that ever led into a gloomy day. All the same, Adrianna made her way to the appointed spot, and waited for Jonathan Blake to arrive.
Her hand rested on the hilt of her sword – the spot was near a ‘tributary’ of the Erdwall, and in that noisome ditch, dark things always seemed to dwell. It was very possible that it was not an induction but a mugging that had been arranged, and told herself she would be ready for it.
She was not, however, prepared for a rather cheery “Hello!”
She turned to look where the voice came from. The man who then greeted her by removing his hat and making a small bow was a rather tall and lanky sort, the half-moon glasses on his nose and antiquated style of his ill-fitted coat, breeches, stockings, and shoes serving to hide somewhat the fact that he was likely little older than Adrianna: a year, or perhaps two, no more.
“You must be Adrianna.” He said.
“And you are?” she demanded. Adrianna did not particularly like surprises.
“Daniel Lehrer,” he said, offering one hand clumsily as the other struggled to find his head with his hat, “But please, call me Dan. Jon’s… well he’s not exactly fit for the public this morning, so he asked me to show you around and get all the paperwork filled out.”
Dan’s big smile and honest enthusiasm went a long way towards calming Adrianna’s nerves. He was awkward, but not so much that his occasional stumbling was a bother. Adrianna had met his like before, in her old village, but never really got to know anyone with that strange mix of shy and outgoing elements.
“Right this way,” he said, leading her towards one of the shacks on the edge of the ditch, mercifully one that was in better repair and of greater size than most. “We own this place. Wonderful, isn’t it?”
“We?”
“Jon didn’t explain?” Dan did not pause for an answer, “Well, I suppose I’d better. Most of us here, we were all friends going back years and years. A lot of us grew up to be mercenaries or the lot, going here and there, but we kept in touch.”
“Hm.”
“In any case, something more than a year ago, Jon and a few others got this idea to mine for mana…” He said, his voice and eagerness quickly dropping. “Didn’t turn out well. Locals quite unfriendly. Several casualties. We can never go back…” he looked away for a moment “Anyway, the point is we found that if we put our heads together and our backs into it, we could fight off a small pack of rabid werewolves as well as the cathars.”
“So where do I come in?” Adrianna asked.
“These are dark days,” Dan replied, “We really can use every extra hand to defend our home.”
The insides of the building didn’t feel too much like a home, more like a tavern in the middle of the day, with only a few louts there dying of boredom and booze. Daniel’s pained expression on entering proved he was not himself entirely comfortable about the state of affairs.
“I’m sorry,” he said, “If I’d known you were coming sooner, I would have cleaned up somewhat. It’s usually not quite so bad.”
“Is that what you do?” Adrianna asked. She was honestly curious and hoped he didn’t take offense, because while she did not take Daniel Lehrer for a warrior, she knew appearances could be deceiving.
“Only because no one else does.” Daniel said, “I’m an alchemist, so most of what I do for the company is servicing gear.”
Adrianna nodded. “It seems a noble line.”
“Not as much as actually being out on the front, I know.”
“No,” Adrianna said, “Really, it does.”
“You’re too kind.”
Daniel scanned the room, seemingly wondering what to say next. “Ah, yes, the rest of our little group. You’ll be rooming with Aimee if you need a place to stay, but she’s out at the moment. As I said Jon isn’t exactly fit to be seen at the moment, but you’ve met him before anyway. I guess we could check on Walther, since he’s the last of us who stays here.”
“We’re to defend the city with just four?” Adrianna asked.
“A dozen before you, actually, but the others all have their own homes, and I didn’t know if you did.”
“No,” she said, “Everything I own is with me.”
After that, Dan showed her to her room, a small space underneath a slanted ceiling with a bunk bed and an empty footlocker for her, in which she placed those few possessions she did not prefer to carry with her.
Thereafter, he took it upon himself to show her what else there was to be seen in the strange house: the pantry and kitchen on one end, a room set with training dummies through a crooked door on the opposite side. All in all, he was proving to be a charming, if easily flustered host, which was far better than Adrianna had expected when she had come to the meeting spot.
They were in Dan’s workspace, Adrianna examining the tools of his alchemical trade, when Jonathan Blake appeared.
He was very clearly drunk, staggering such as he was, the reek of crude alcohol soon filling the air after him. There were two other persons behind him, both of whom displayed more or less concern and were fixed upon Blake.
“So,” he said, slurring his words, “Is this… is this it?”
Daniel looked up, worry in his eyes. “Hello Jon.” He said with a heavy sigh.
“Don’t you ‘hello Jon’ me!” Blake spat, voice filled with venom. Was this truly the same man Adrianna had met the night before? He had been unsavory then, in his own way, but this was quite different. “What do you think you’re doing?!”
“I-“ Dan stammered, “I was showing our new companion-“
“Shut up!” Blake shouted, “Make me sick. I’d always hoped… If you’d had the guts we wouldn’t be here!”
“Please, Jon, calm down.” Dan said, backing slowly away, “This isn’t the time.”
“Like hell it isn’t!” he slammed his fist on the nearest table, rattling all the glassware that sat atop it and sending one empty flask crashing to the floor. At this, the man behind him caught Blake on the shoulder. At first, it looked like a simple reminder that he was not alone in the room, but when Blake tried to pull away the looming man’s grip held firm.
“Sleep it off.” The man said in a deep, gravely voice. “Better tomorrow.”
Blake, his anger seemingly fading from the delay of its action, grudgingly turned aside and stumbled away from the room.
The other who had entered with him, a pale and petit woman with black hair and amber eyes, spoke up. “My apologies for that,” she said, “We’d hoped he’d be better behaved. He will be, once he’s sobered up.”
“It’s not a problem.” Adrianna said. She then offered a hand to shake. “Adrianna Moore, at your service.”
The other woman shook her hand and introduced herself. “Aimee Voss, miss Moore. And this here is Walther Kaufmann. I expect we’ll be seeing a lot of each other.”
Adrianna smiled. “I should hope so.”
***
The days that followed were kind to Adrianna: she got along at least passably with all her new companions, both the four that lived under that same roof and those who came and went some days. Further, a string of nights spent in a moderately comfortable bed and days in which she had enough to eat that was unprecedented since she struck out on her own did wonders for her health and happiness. Though still leaner and weaker than she might have been, a fortnight of such acceptable treatment went a long way to filling out her figure, removing the blemishes of the long road from her visage, and improving her demeanor.
In that time, Adrianna did her best to observe what she could of her companions. Walther spoke very little, usually uttering only the absolute necessary words to communicate, but Adrianna did not think him a lackwit: it was quite the opposite, in fact, as she suspected he was far wiser than he wished to let on. Aimee, who she saw the most of owing to their sharing a private room, was a gregarious sort: well-spoken and proper most of the time, but not above engaging with the world on the same level as those around her.
And then there were Daniel Lehrer and Jonathan Blake. Individually, Adrianna could say that Blake by in large repulsed her – when he was not too drunk he was smug, irreverent, sometimes sarcastic and always the sort of person that got on her nerves, and there were a couple more outbursts somewhat like the one she had witnessed on her first day in the company’s house.
Dan, on the other hand, she regarded very fondly, and she had taken to finding some pretense to visit his little laboratory in the afternoons, inquiring after the latest research and soon talking about life as the two of them knew it.
The two of them together, though, were an interesting matter. At times, Jon seemed to lean upon Dan as a close friend and trusted advisor, while other times there seemed to be some bad blood between the two of them, which filled one with wrath and the other with sorrow.
“You know,” Adrianna said one late afternoon as she and Dan looked out over the tributary of the Erdwall that snaked through town from a tiny balcony, “It’s almost funny that Jon found me… he’s the only person here I don’t care for.”
Dan turned his head, gazing out towards up-town and the sea beyond the cliffs.
“Try not to be too hard on Jon.” He said, sorrow in his voice.
“I’d say you should be harder,” Adrianna replied. “The way he treats you isn’t fair and it isn’t right.”
“We used to be good friends.” Dan sighed.
“What happened?”
“About a year ago, while we out trying to mine for mana and learning to fight monsters, his sister was taken by a Skaberen.”
“And he blames you?” If it were true, it was a horrible thing to do.
“He blames himself.” Dan replied, “The job she was working when she was killed, he had suggested it, not knowing about the danger. I don’t think there’s been a day since we came home he hasn’t asked himself how he could have known. And me, he thinks if I had…”
“If you had what?”
“Well Laurie and I were… I should say I had… We knew each other since we were children and I, well… ah… It’s not important now, is it? I have to put the past behind me or I’ll be just like Jon soon enough, and as much as I may speak out for him we don’t need two of him under one roof.”
His words had a weight of sorrow to them, and Adrianna put together what he did not want to say.
“I’m so sorry.” She said.
“Don’t be,” Dan replied. “Just understand I have to believe there’s still a good man somewhere inside Jon.”
“As long as you remember there’s a good man standing here with me right now.” Adrianna said, “And that that’s got to count for something too.”
“You are too kind.”
“Before coming here,” Adrianna said, “I don’t know that anyone had thought that of me.”
“Surely you jest. A woman like yourself, you must have had many admirers touting all your virtues.”
“Just one.” Adrianna said, “And I had to stick a knife in his gut and leave him for dead.”
There was an uncomfortable silence.
“He was with the Skirsdag, you see.”
“Ah,” Dan said, “Of course. My apologies.”
Adrianna did her best to resist laughing. She had, after all, put it that way to get some reaction in that line.
“You know,” He said, “I’m glad you find the time to come up here. It’s been seasons since I’ve had much of anyone I could really talk to.”
A mad little voice whispered in the back of Adrianna’s mind, taunting her with her own worthlessness, goading her to some sort of action to prove she was or wasn’t nothing and nobody. Without thinking on the matter beforehand, she spoke.
“Is talking all you intend?”
As the words left her mouth, she regretted them immediately, A beat passed, then two, and Dan opened his mouth to respond only to be interrupted by the thunderous opening of the door to the rest of the house.
“Looks like the city’s not paying us to sit around.” Jonathan Blake said from the doorway. “Suit up, we’ve got a job tonight.”
***
It was night outside the walls of town, cold and clear like few nights in Nephalia, with the moon shining bright over the sea and the strand and the assembled dozen-and-one hired swords. Supposedly, there was a cave in the rocks to the north from which the unhallowed had issued.
The trek across the sand was dour and silent, but mercifully short, for soon enough the shambling forces came into sight in the pale moonlight. Two, perhaps three dozen unhallowed were shambling forth, presumably to exhume others from the nearby seagrafs and bring them back to their master.
The engagement was quick and horrible. The dead did not abide the living to pass by them unmolested, and the living had of course brought their own weapons. Blake and another man opened up first, streams of howling geistflame pouring across the beach. The stinks of rotting flesh, burning hair, and smoldering cloth and leather filled the air as black smoke rose towards the silvery moon.
But the unhallowed were not so slow as to be taken again, and Adrianna knew as much. Saber in hand, she prepared to fight for her life once again. The difference was that this time she was shoulder to shoulder with other fighters ready to aid her in the dispatch of evil.
One former fisherman cast a net over Adrianna’s head as he might a school of fish, and though she tried to dodge it caught her left side, and barbed hooks caught upon her bodice and her sleeve, here and there piercing the skin beneath.
Fearing not the net so much as being dragged to the ground, away from her comrades, Adrianna quickly twisted the net around her arm, driving the sharpened metal in deeper, but giving her the first chance to pull. Too dim to release its grip, the zombie fell forward, and Adrianna dropped to her knee to drive her blade into its head.
That first assault was the worst of it, and by the time the last moaning unhallowed was cut down, unable to understand that it was outnumbered and outmaneuvered, the minor scrapes from that were among the worse wounds in the group, perhaps the worst save for one man who, with a spear to his leg, was certainly out of the fight.
“Are you all right?” she heard Daniel, behind her, ask. She nodded, though she wasn’t entirely sure. She’d have to remove the net without tearing her arm to ribbons first.
That, however, could wait for later, for the party now approached the cave, uncertain what further horrors might wait inside. A man with a geistflame tank approached the opening, Blake just behind to support him.
“It’s dark.” The man declared, and then he toppled backwards, a massive bone protruding from his chest.
What happened next was, for Adrianna, far more shocking. Blake caught the man as he stumbled backwards and muttered something to him, but rather than pulling that doomed soul away. Blake shoved him forward, into the dark mouth of the cave, and followed that with a blast of geistflame.
There was a moment where the screams were fading, and then a terrible new roar of flame erupted from the cavern mouth, screaming and howling and dropping wreckage of leather, metal, and flesh on the sand.
Then, Blake stepped into smoking mouth of that terrible cave, motioning for the others to follow him. Adrianna was one of the last, for it took her some time to move again after the shock of that horrific deed.
The cave was little better: gore and ashes spattered its walls, an unidentifiable mass upon the floor where the rage thrower had presumably fallen. Against the back wall laid a youngish woman, her pale hair half seared off, head rolling back and forth as she no doubt reeled from the blast, alive but none could say for how long.
Blake marched up to her.
“All right,” he demanded, kicking the woman in the gut, “How many more like you are there?”
“More? More?” the woman repeated, as though she had heard but not understood the word.
“Where there’s a ghoulcaller,” Blake said, “There’s usually more.”
That was ‘wisdom’ Adrianna had not heard, and quite doubted.
The woman laughed. “Oh,” she said, “You’re going to have to arrest me.”
“Start talking and I might consider it.”
The woman giggled again, and Adrianna wondered why Blake was bothering. If they could drag her back to town, she could be interrogated there, and she seemed delirious all the same.
“Oh,” she said, “There’s the Lord of Rats, the Geiststitcher, the Dead King and his army of the holy damned.” She laughed, “So many of us. I was going to join their army, but you hacked my pretties to bits this evening, didn’t you?”
Blake swore.
“Somebody fast, get that back to town.” He said, “In case they strike tonight.”
“So,” the Ghoulcaller said with a smile, holding out her hands, wrists together. “Now’s the part where you arrest me, and when your little town is filled with the dead and dying my friends will free me. It’s a silly game but I’m playing all the same.”
“I said I’d consider it.” Blake replied.
“Well?”
There was a flash as Blake pulled the trigger of his device, and a stream of fire and angry ghosts engulfed the ghoulcaller’s head. She didn’t have time to scream, but the spirits did it for her.
“I decided against it.”
As he turned away from the spectacle and stomped back to the rest, Adrianna stepped forward.
“Is this how you treat your friends?” She demanded, “Did I sign up just to wait to be thrown away!”
Blake spat at her feet. “He was a good man.” Blake said, “With us from the start, but his tank was punctured. He was going to blow, in the cave or on top of us.”
Adrianna shrunk back a bit, and Blake shoved past her, stomping out into the night.
***
Two days later, Adrianna was standing on Daniel Lehrer’s balcony again, but availing herself of his company and his limited knowledge.
“I doubt you’ll scar.” He said, “None of the hooks got in very deep.”
“That’s good.” She said, “I’ll be able to fight tomorrow?”
“Tomorrow?” Dan asked.
“That’s when they say the bulk of the enemy arrives.”
“I hadn’t heard.” Dan said with a sad sigh.
“The news from the Erdwal is that it’s not just here. Hanweir is swarming with ghouls, for a start.”
“We should be there.” Dan sighed. “I love this town, but… I feel like even if we hold it, it’s not going to make a difference.”
“And Hanweir is?” Adrianna asked, “Whether humanity lives or dies… that will probably be decided in Thraben. Probably on the steps of the Cathedral or in the shadow of the Helvault. Whether we live or die, though… that probably gets decided tomorrow.”
Daniel looked at her, his eyes full of a weight they both bore, but neither should have had to. Adrianna was just a small-town girl from Kessig. Dan? A Nephalian schoolteacher if he had his way. Neither of them were made for battle, but the times they lived in, they were both going into it.
“I’m sorry.” She said. “It might not be tomorrow anyway.”
“You don’t have to apologize.” Dan replied, “You’re right… our lives are here, and that’s worthwhile, isn’t it?”
Again that terrible, mad impulse to say something dire and wrong struck Adrianna, and she opened her mouth before she could restrain it.
“Maybe yours, at least.”
Silence. Adrianna put a hand over her mouth, worried she had given offense.
“You’re just as important as I am.” Daniel said after that wait, “If only one of us makes it through, I rather hope it’s you.”
“Don’t say that!” Adrianna snapped, “You have a life, a future! I… I don’t have anything.”
“You have friends.” Dan replied, “People who care about you.”
“Forgive me if I have trouble believing that.”
“Aimee? You seem to get along well.”
“Oh, passing well.” Adrianna said, “That doesn’t mean, she’d notice if I were gone.”
“I care.”
Adrianna looked away. “Forgive me if I have a hard time believing anyone could.”
“Adrianna… I think… well, I…”
She looked up, and after a second’s further hesitation, Dan kissed her on the lips.
For a few precious moments, there was nothing but silence and each other in the world, but then reality intruded again, and Adrianna and Dan stepped away from one another.
“I’ll try to make it through tomorrow if you promise you will.” Adrianna said.
“It’s a deal.”
***
The eleven fighting-fit souls of the Company, Dan included, stood in ranks outside the walls of town, shoulder to shoulder with militia, cathars, and anyone who could pick up a pitchfork or a cleaver and fight for their own survival.
Adrianna was on the front line. Three days before or so, she would have relished it, but now she was afraid. The front line was among the last places she wanted to be, but if she did not stand and fight, no one would take her place. There was no other choice.
The enemy was coming. Ghouls, mostly, with some horrific, towering skaabs between them.
It was at dusk when the first arrows were loosed. By midnight, they had all been spent, but neither the dead nor the living had yielded. Exhaustion set in, but the dead were not relentless, falling back and regrouping at the commands of their masters, but in so doing allowing the living to do the same.
The sky, which had been darkening at the outset of battle, was growing pink again with oncoming dawn when the last push came. One of the largest skaabs collided with the line about a hundred yards to the north, but where Adrianna stood, it began with the rats.
Hundreds, thousands of them that had no doubt been held in reserve. They crawled into the trenches, swarmed from slain ghouls, scratching and biting and a dozen more squealing undead vermin swarming in where each one fell to the sweep of a blade.
They could hold them at the palisade, Adrianna realized, about five yards back where the spent archers and the likes of Blake waited.
“Fall back!” Adrianna shouted. She had no rank, but she knew she was right, and those around her knew as well, clambering up towards the hastily constructed barricade.
Adrianna herself fell back slowly, hacking at ghouls and kicking at rats, hoping she could cover the flight of those to the left and right. At the end, it was her and Aimee, their backs against the wall, next to the small gate that had been allowed for just this eventuality. Aimee ducked inside, but as Adrianna tried to do the same, a crawling torso grasped her ankle and pulled her to the ground.
Adrianna kicked at the hideous thing as it advanced towards her, flailed at the rats around her, and as she struggled to stand again. About as she got to her hands and knees, she heard it, Jonathan Blake’s mocking voice at the wall above.
“Sorry toots.”
There was a roar, a scream, and pain the likes of which Adrianna had only imagined – but only for an instant before her world went black, the last sight before her eyes the sun’s first rays clearing the horizon.
***
Adrianna wandered a desert on the edge of death. She didn’t know how long she had been there. Seconds? Years?
Perhaps this was where souls went when Flight Alabaster couldn’t find them, or perhaps it was just her dream as she lay in the mud at dawn, dying of burn wounds from terrible geistflame. She didn’t know, and in some ways, she didn’t care.
In her wanderings, whether a moment after she opened her eyes or a forever of loneliness later she found another soul in the void. It was very much like a dark-feathered bird, but it had some mannish shape to it’s torso, and was mannish in size. She had seen the figure before, though never so clearly.
“Hello, Mister Raven.” Adrianna said, “Have you been waiting for me?”
Mister Raven cawed, but like she always could when a child playing with her imaginary friend, Adrianna understood the shrill cry as clear words.
You must return.
“I don’t even know where I am.” Adrianna said, “How am I supposed to find my way back?”
Mister Raven cawed. You will see the way. You have to follow it.
“That’s vague.” Adrianna replied, “And you? I didn’t know imaginary friends had souls that could wind up… wherever here is.”
This is my home, Mister Raven cawed. You are welcome, but you should go back.
To what, Adrianna wondered silently? Perhaps Flight Alabaster could find her, or perhaps she would be a geist, to haunt her killers.
“All right.” Adrianna said, “No offense, Mister Raven, but I do think it would be moving up in the world to, well, be in the world.”
Mister Raven cawed again. Good luck Adrianna. It’s behind you.
Adrianna turned, and saw a flash of light frozen in place, She reached for it, and it came closer and closer, until…
***
Adrianna opened her eyes, a soft light surrounding her. Her hand, unblemished, grasped her sword. She looked down at herself. The burned tatters of her old clothes were about her, and she was clad in silver armor, shining like the moon. She looked up, and saw an angel, smiling down at her from the arc of the rising sun.
She was not the only one to be spared, nor was her angel the only angel that had taken the field. In the brightest light of the angel, the rats burned and the unhallowed fell like puppets with their strings cut.
But still, enemies stood. There were many more of the dead, and behind them their creators. Adrianna had been saved for a purpose, and now she set out to fulfill it.
Before her, ghouls crumpled. Where a hundred men had held the line at best, each of Avacyn’s soldiers, Adrianna included, now drove through it with heavenly fury. She did not, afterwards, remember much of the battle, but the sun was high in the sky when the last of the foe was defeated, the Geiststitcher unseamed from navel to mouth, and the self proclaimed “Lord of Rats” brought to his knees and taken to stand for all the lives he had stolen.
What Adrianna remembered was sitting on a hillside, looking over the silent devastation and herself. The divine light had left her, and now her armor was tarnished and heavy, her very bones aching and making it a struggle to even hold the sword she had been effortlessly waving about before.
That was when her friends caught up to her. Dan, of course. Aimee and Walther, and many of the others who had trained with her in days before, and stood by her side. A number of them were worse for the wear: Walther limped noticeably, and Dan sported a broken nose and black eye.
“Jon.” He said when she asked, “After he… Well, I lost my temper and it probably would have gone worse for me if the Angels hadn’t arrived in seconds after.”
“Would have been worse for me too,” Adrianna replied. She suspected that even the magic that had restored her had its limits. “What happened to him, anyway?”
“When the Host came, and you stood up, well… he ran. He’ll probably end up in Stensia if he keeps going”
Adrianna nodded. She had nothing more to say on the matter of that man
.
“In any case, miss Moore,” Aimee said, “I figure that even without him, it’s a new world out there, and we’ll probably be needed somewhere else in it than here. Are you up for it?”
Adrianna smiled.
“I think I’ve died one too many times already.” She looked to Dan, “I thought I might find a home.”
Dan moved to help her to her feet, then turned to Aimee, “I hope you’ll write,” he said, “Because I don’t think I’ll be traveling with you either.”
Adrianna looked over all she could see. There was still a long way to go. It was still a battlefield, a memory of horrors not long passed… but for one shining moment at least the dead lay still and the living stood tall and proud in the light of a miraculous dawn.
It was going to be a beautiful day.