Episode Five: End of the New World
Manifest: A Shattered Future
Episode
Five: End of the New World
“Don’t
know if I like this. I can’t help but feel like I’m running away,” Romulo
muttered.
Elena
nodded, but she did not immediately reply; she instead fought to catch her
breath as they slowly jogged through the interlocking streets. Her pegleg
squealed with every step, and her leg bled slightly in the place where it
bonded to her prosthetic. Romulo recognized her struggle and slowed his pace,
but Elena pushed herself forward with all her strength. A faint drizzle fell
from the overcast sky and shimmered in the daylight. Distant thunder rumbled
beneath dark clouds, and the wind swept dust and debris from the streets.
Whenever they approached another intersection, Romulo sped ahead and stealthily
searched for enemy soldiers. It seemed that the citizens had hidden themselves
indoors.
“They’re
targeting you. It’s a bad move to walk right into their trap! You’re a good
strategist; you’re a great strategist! You know it’s a bad idea. They have no
reason to hurt people if they just want you,” Elena reasoned.
Romulo
shook his head and answered, “That didn’t stop them from hurting people before,
and it won’t stop them now. The only thing that changed is I’m not there to
protect them.”
Elena
nodded somberly as she said, “You couldn’t protect them anyway. Our monoliths
need to recharge, don’t they? If you just stayed by the infirmary back there,
you couldn’t fight anyone. You had just used them to fight someone else.
You’d be defenseless!”
As the
drizzle slowly transformed into a rainstorm, Romulo sighed and slowed to a
stop. He explained, “You’re half-right. I recalled my red sorcerer and hadn’t
used my black monolith, so I could at least still fight with those. Besides,
our monoliths are like little parasites. When we expend energy, it flows into
them. All this running has probably replenished their power. If I couldn’t
fight them then, maybe I could at least fight back now.”
A low
rumble of thunder coursed through the sky and forced the street to tremble. The
pouring rain flattened Romulo’s hair, and his soaked clothes became plastered
to his skin. Even Elena’s curly hair turned wavy from the weight of water. Her
light brown eyes studied Romulo as he seemed to contemplate his next move, but
the conundrum had confounded him. Instead of continuing to jog, he set his back
upon the brick wall of a building. He stood just steps away from an awning, but
he chose to stand in the pouring rain.
“Do you
think we should go back to the infirmary?” Elena sheepishly asked. The rain had
soaked the wood which made her pegleg, and it seemed to struggle beneath her
weight. She leaned against the brick wall and lifted her prosthetic leg off the
ground.
Romulo
sighed and answered, “I don’t think we could make it in time. I don’t know if
there’s anyone still there. Or maybe our real mistake was stopping in the first
place. I think someone’s coming.”
Elena
swerved her head and saw a silhouette approaching through the pouring rain.
Without determining whether this silhouette represented a tangible threat,
Romulo pushed himself into motion and offered his arm to Elena. She sensed his
urgency and kicked off the brick wall, leaning her weight on Romulo’s strong
arm as she struggled to stabilize herself. The two friends quickly jogged away
from the silhouette, racing through the downpour even though Elena could hardly
keep herself upright. She nearly tripped every time her pegleg struck the edge
of a cobblestone, but she always caught herself at the last moment. Romulo led
her down a narrow alley, and before long, they found their way into the quiet
courtyard of a large church.
“They’re
not the monks, but maybe they can help,” Romulo reasoned.
“I
heard you mention them before. Who exactly are the monks?” Elena asked as they
scurried toward the church doors.
“The
monks are powerful conjurors who serve to defend those who come to them for
protection. They do not align themselves with Aegea or any other city-state,
but they consider themselves protectors of human life. They’re basically the
last place for people to run and hide. Especially now when Adriatic soldiers
are invading the city,” Romulo explained.
When
Romulo reached the large front door of the church, he firmly pushed to force it
open, but the locked door would not budge. He then banged forcefully upon it,
hoping the echoes of his knock could drown out the patter of pouring rain. But
after half a minute of waiting and intermittent knocking, Romulo and Elena
accepted that no one would let them inside; they wondered if anyone was even
inside in the first place. But when they turned their attention back toward the
courtyard, Romulo saw a human-sized silhouette beneath the pouring rain. He
groaned, swept Elena into his arms, and then dashed across the courtyard as
quickly as he could. She protested at first, but she could see the
determination in his eyes; he would not let an enemy soldier catch them in a
dead-end.
The
silhouette moved closer when Romulo approached an alleyway at the courtyard’s
entrance, but Romulo outran him and executed a swift swerve. With Elena in his
arms, Romulo splashed through puddles and jumped over fallen branches. He
ducked beneath trees and felt Elena’s wet hair slap across his skin, but she
clenched his strong body tightly. A web of lightning raced across the sky and
illuminated the city for an instant. But when it disappeared, Romulo tripped in
a puddle before his eyes could readjust. As he fell to the ground, he swerved
and cradled Elena in his arms; he landed on his back with a skid. Elena gasped
as she fell out of his arms and rolled across the street, but Romulo worked to
quickly pull himself back onto his feet.
“Don’t
embarrass yourself by trying to run. You had to know that this was a foregone
conclusion,” said the silhouette in the rain from a short distance away.
Romulo
faced the dark shape and whispered, “Get out of here, Elena. I don’t think that
he is an ordinary enemy. You aren’t safe here.”
“Fuck
that! I’m not running. I’ll fight with you; I’ll fight by you! Who cares if
he’s not ordinary? He can’t take on both of us!” Elena shouted, practically
pleading as she tried to climb upright.
“The
choice isn’t yours. You’ll stay out of this whether you want to or not,”
retorted the enemy as he unleashed the power of the Adriatic Emblem.
After
forcing his green monolith to reverberate with a gentle smack, the rain-cloaked
enemy forced a white ellipse to appear around his feet. The glow illuminated
every falling raindrop with a haunting light, and then it rapidly expanded like
an inescapable fire. Romulo glared at the approaching ellipse, but instead of
running, he helped Elena climb to her feet. The edge of the luminous ellipse
pushed Elena aside, and then it locked her away from Romulo. It stopped
expanding after it enclosed Romulo, and then the Adriatic Emblem created a
translucent curtain to separate the two friends. Elena could see Romulo through
the white wall and the pouring rain, but he could hardly see her. She slammed
her fists upon the wall, but she could not break through; Romulo was now locked
in battle with their surreptitious enemy.
“You
should be proud of yourself. I’ve heard stories of your skill! Some of my
strongest conjurors couldn’t defeat you. Even when I let my strongest sorcerer
loose, you managed to defeat it. Hell, you even caught it! That’s impressive.
But let’s see if there’s anything you can do to stop me now,” the cloaked
soldier said through the pouring rain.
“Typhoon
Paladin was yours? That is… interesting. Your name wouldn’t happen to be
Neonia, would it?” asked Romulo.
A
shiver shot down Elena’s spine; Romulo could practically sense it from inside
the Adriatic Emblem. She glared at her enemy through the white walls, sensing a
familiarity about the enemy even though she could not see him. She repeated the
name several times quietly, feeling that her lips had whispered that name many
times in the distant past.
“That
is correct. I am Adder Neonia—the captain of
the conjurors sent to overthrow your fragile city. Consider this an honor. You
made such a splash that I came out to fight you on my own! Prepare yourself to
face my first sorcerer, my Faithful Forger of Fountains,” Adder taunted.
Adder Neonia unleashed a vortex of green energy from his monolith. The beautiful light illuminated every falling raindrop and then converged to create a luminous silhouette. When the Faithful Forger of Fountains finally took form, she stepped away from her monolith and glared through the pouring rain. Romulo watched as she enchanted the rain-soaked ground, transforming it into an ethereal fountain. When the Forger then marched through the fountain and emerged at the other side, an unusual glow illuminated Adder. Adder grinned, passed three cards to his Sorcerer, and then compelled it to quickly approach the center of the battlefield. Though the Forger had left the vicinity of her glowing fountain, Adder Neonia remained luminous.
“Cast
your Waterfall’s Divination. Let’s make this happen,” said the ominous enemy.
The
Faithful Forger of Fountains unleashed the magic of a spell card it carried.
Streams of magic descended from Adder’s grimoire, but he maintained his
confidence as the glow which surrounded him grew brighter. Romulo grimaced when
he saw this, but Elena watched with confusion; she had never seen a conjuror
glow like this in the past.
Determined
to fight back quickly and decisively, Romulo manifested his Ice Crystal
Barricade and compelled it to advance. The massive wall of ice barreled across
the battlefield with enough power to scrape rocks from the ground. Every
falling raindrop struck the sorcerer and froze. Fog slowly lifted from its
surface. Romulo then passed his Barricade a pair of cards, one of which it cast
immediately.
By
harnessing the power of Stratospheric Transcendence, Romulo’s sorcerer summoned
a powerful gust of wind to tear across the storm. Elena watched with a
conflicted stare as the Ice Crystal Barricade managed to push itself forward,
sailing with the wind and sliding its massive body across the empty street.
Elena could feel the forceful vibration on the other side of the luminous wall,
but she watched with concern. While Romulo had successfully blocked off the
battlefield, he had also left himself exposed by being so aggressive.
“Ice Crystal Barricade! Go now and
attack his Forger,” Romulo yelled out.
“You
know what to do! Cast your Spiritual Shield,” Adder shouted to his sorceress.
The Ice
Crystal Barricade swiped its tremendous arm of ice at its enemy, but the Faithful
Forger of Fountains defended herself with a sudden shield. The Spiritual Shield
deflected the attack and practically devoured the energy behind it. Streams of
ethereal energy then poured from the Forger into Adder Neonia as he stood
safely behind his monolith. Romulo and Elena both watched as their glowing
enemy became even more luminous than before; they could both sense that he had
acquired an energy that they did not understand.
“When a
conjuror becomes powerful enough, he can force the fabric of the universe to
resonate in his favor. Streams of energy cross from darkness to light and
manifest the Seraph of the Aether,” announced Adder Neonia as he held his left
hand to the sky.
Romulo
watched with wide eyes as energetic streams spiraled across his enemy’s arm and
converged to create a colorless monolith. Adder’s new monolith had already
entered a state of resonance, so he set it on the ground and conjured a new
creature. The enchanting glow faded partially as Adder manifested his newest
fighter.
In the
moment that the Seraph of the Aether appeared before Adder, it forced a glowing
card to materialize in its hand. Adder gazed over the battlefield, passed a
pair of cards to his newest sorcerer, and then compelled it to approach the
towering wall of ice in the distance. While Romulo worked to wrap his head
around the unusual manifestation, a flash of lightning shot across the stormy
sky. Elena used the lightning to study the enemy’s face from a distance, and
before it faded, she realized that she had certainly seen him before. She could
feel her nervous system stumble toward some reaction, but she still did not
know where she had seen him.
“Forger!
Enchant the ground behind you. Empower yourself and your ally! Transform this
hopeless clearing into Soul Territory,” Adder commanded.
Quickly
realizing the threat this posed, Romulo dove into his grimoire and swiftly
searched for a handy spell. But because he was still out of reach, he had no
way to retaliate when the Faithful Forger of Fountains struck a decisive blow.
By attacking with ethereal whips of enchanted water, she struck the Barricade
with enough force to send fractures across its icy flesh. The Forger then
danced back onto the luminous earth, sprang forward, jumped back again, and
then jolted to the side. Each time she stepped on the glowing space, Adder
shone even brighter than before. He then compelled his Seraph of the Aether to
advance and cross over the enchanted ground. Then, by commanding the air beneath
its wings, the Seraph fiercely struck the Ice Crystal Barricade.
In
realizing the extent of his disadvantage, Romulo compelled his Barricade to go
on the attack. He forced it to cast Trade Power for Strength, enchanting it
with a fearsome strength. But when Romulo’s sorcerer swung its icy arm at its
enemy, the Seraph of the Aether cast a powerful spell of its own.
By
using the magic of its spell card and draining all the light from Adder Neonia,
the Seraph of the Aether unleashed a whirlwind so powerful that it overwhelmed
Ice Crystal Barricade. The extraordinary vortex stripped debris from the street
and devoured every falling raindrop; it voided the Barricade’s attack and even
lifted it off the ground. The ice wall partially fractured from the pressure of
entering the air, and Romulo watched with horror as his creature then fell to
the ground far away from him. He was now practically defenseless.
However,
Romulo felt that he had invested too much magic into his sorcerer to just let
it fall now. So by sacrificing his stamina, he struck his green monolith with a
hammer and forced it to resonate. With a sudden burst of emerald energy, Romulo
manifested his Dancing Wind Priestess while forcing his Barricade to retreat.
He then passed a pair of cards to his sorceress as he fought to catch his
breath, and then he commanded his sorcerers to meet near their enemies. While
fighting to stay upright, Romulo compelled his Dancing Wind Priestess to pass a
card to his Ice Crystal Barricade. She then struck the Seraph of the Aether in
a cyclonic strike before retreating to the space in front of the living ice
wall.
In that
moment, Adder realized the brilliance of his enemy’s design. The Dancing Wind
Priestess surrounded herself with a powerful whirlwind which would deter any
attacker, but she had parked herself protectively in front of her ally. And
because the Ice Crystal Barricade formed a large ice wall across the
battlefield, the enemy sorcerers had no way to go on the attack.
But
instead of attacking, Adder compelled his Seraph of the Aether to retreat back
into his vicinity. As the Seraph moved, it crossed over an enchanted space,
causing Adder to glow faintly again. Despite the forceful winds and the rain
which poured around him, Adder passed three cards to his sorcerer. It then flew
forward and unleashed the magic of a spell with which it was entrusted. This
spell spurred a forceful vortex that merely intensified the surrounding storm.
Adder called out, “Invoke the Whirlwind! Blow back the Barricade!”
When
the cyclonic winds strengthened, they forced the cobblestone street to tremble;
loose stones clacked against each other while others lifted into the air. The
extraordinary winds pressed upon the massive ice wall and even pressed it
backward; they overpowered Dancing Wind Priestess’ protective gust. The Ice
Crystal Barricade partially fractured when it landed upon the cobblestone
street, and then the Faithful Forger of Fountains rapidly lunged forward. By
Adder’s command, she violently struck Romulo’s sorcerer while enchanted by the
spiritual magic around her. She attacked with enough force to shatter the ice
wall, and Romulo watched as his living shield collapsed in a shower of ice
shards. Flakes of snow and ice danced in the air, fighting to withstand the
falling rain. And in the next moment, both the Seraph and Forger advanced.
Romulo watched with concern as his enemy’s sorceress stepped dangerously close
to his resonating monolith.
“You
should consider it an honor that I’m attacking so aggressively. You’re too
powerful an opponent to give any slack. Seraph! Start your combo! Unleash your
Aethereal Surge!” yelled Adder.
By
Adder’s compulsion, the Seraph of the Aether then unleashed a powerful spell
which sent streams of white energy across the battlefield. The glow illuminated
every dancing raindrop as it surged into both conjurors, enchanting them both
with a bright light. Both Elena and Romulo watched as he acquired the same
mythical light as his enemy, although the light which embraced him was far
dimmer than Adder’s. However, Romulo realized with a grimace that the Seraph of
the Aether clenched another spell. He braced himself and glared forward as a
flash of lightning coursed through the dark clouds.
As soon
as the Seraph’s spell took effect, Romulo felt a surge of pain course through
his body. He nearly dropped to his knees as an energetic stream of white plasma
poured from his body and surged toward his enemy. Elena shouted and slammed her
fists against the Adriatic Emblem, but she failed to break through; she was
forced to watch as Adder Neonia pilfered the power which had enchanted Romulo.
When the transference ended, the glow had completely faded from Romulo’s body.
Adder, on the other hand, now illuminated the rainstorm with a brighter energy
than ever before. Elena could tell with one glance that Romulo did not have the
strength to manifest another sorcerer, so instead he sifted slowly through his
spell cards.
“That
monolith kinda came from nowhere… but that doesn’t mean it can take a hit. It’s
already weak. Take it out, Priestess,” Romulo muttered as he compelled his
sorcerer to race across the alleyway.
When
the Dancing Wind Priestess struck the white monolith and shattered it, breaking
its bond with Seraph of the Aether, Adder glared at his enemy and asked, “Why
are you ignoring me? I was told by my men that you fight with honor.”
As he
fought to catch his breath, Romulo retorted, “I fight with honor because my
other opponents are pawns. Puppets. They’re not evil, at least not all of ‘em.
They’re just doing your bidding. Far as I’m concerned, you’re the one
attacking defenseless cities. You’re the one hurting innocent people. You’re
the cause. You’re the villain. You could end this onslaught with a wave of your
hand, but instead you’d rather hurt people who just wanna live in peace.”
With an
amused stare and a boisterous laugh, Adder asked, “Is that really your reason?
That’s just so dreadfully boring. I
expected better of you! Here my men have hyped you to be some brilliant
tactician, but you’re just like any other enemy I’ve ever crushed. Just some
poor sap with a bleeding heart, spouting tired rhetoric like he’s all
righteous. I really thought you were different! Such a shame. You’re just an
above-average conjuror… and that’s it. There’s nothing interesting about you.”
In that
moment, Adder compelled his sorceress to strike Romulo’s green monolith with a
full-force strike. The glowing water scoured the monolith and nearly broke the
connection, but Dancing Wind Priestess remained intact. Romulo then commanded
her to race across the battlefield and directly strike the Forger, but the
enemy sorceress deflected the strike with a simple spell. And with a forceful
onslaught of glowing water, Adder defeated and shattered the Dancing Wind
Priestess. After the Forger took one last step to the side, Romulo was left
completely defenseless. He stared down his enemy’s sorceress as thunder shook
the storming sky.
“You’ve
been a massive disappointment. Go ahead and use
my own sorcerer against me. It’s nothing I don’t see coming, but that’s
just the theme of this whole encounter,” Adder taunted.
Romulo
grumbled and reached for his black monolith, knowing that only his Typhoon
Paladin could save him from this predicament. He sighed, cursed himself for
getting backed into this corner in the first place, and then struck his
monolith with a small hammer. A vortex of black energy emerged from his
monolith and cast a gentle darkness across the rain.
At the
same time that a web of purple lightning shot across the clouds, an electric
glow illuminated from inside the vortex of black energy. The Typhoon Paladin
materialized in the heart of the storm, and after receiving three spell cards
from Romulo, it unleashed a thunderous punch directly upon the Faithful Forger
of Fountains. Adder Neonia watched with intrigue, noting that Romulo had not
bothered to pass spells to his Priestess even when she needed it most. He
concluded that his enemy had invested everything into this one sorcerer, and he
had planned to all along. Directly after the attack, the Typhoon Paladin raced
across the battlefield and thundered toward Adder.
The
Adriatic warrior did not even bother attacking his enemy’s monolith; he instead
compelled his Forger to race across the luminous battlefield. Though the Soul
Territory enchanted his sorceress with a speed boost, she still could not catch
up to Typhoon Paladin. Romulo commanded his sorcerer to sidestep the Forger and
then strike her monolith with a luminous punch. He struck with enough force to
sever the connection, and then the Faithful Forger of Fountains shattered and
faded.
“Ringmaster
of the Wildfire, go forth and strike him down,” Adder commanded as a shower of
red light forced every raindrop to shimmer. The storm itself seemed to reflect
the crimson glow.
A fiery
glow illuminated the rainstorm as a new sorcerer materialized. Even though rain
poured from the sky above and left puddles upon the street, this water could
not suppress the sparks which danced around the Ringmaster of the Wildfire.
Adder excitedly passed a pair of cards to his newest sorcerer, and then he
compelled the Ringmaster to cast one immediately. The sorcerer unleashed the
magic of the spell card in his hand, preparing to engulf his enemy in a devastating
fireball.
“Typhoon
Paladin! Save yourself! Invoke your icy imprisonment,” Romulo commanded.
As soon
as the Ringmaster of the Wildfire ignited his fiery sphere, Typhoon Paladin
shut it down and froze the spell with chilling magic. However, this powerful
spell caused the ice to devour its own caster’s limbs, leaving him vulnerable
and open to attack. Adder commanded his sorcerer to strike, and then in a
flurry of flashing sparks which evaporated the falling rain, the Ringmaster
unleashed an incendiary attack. The high-temperature strike assailed Romulo’s
sorcerer, but it failed to melt the ice which held it back. But as if that
weren’t enough, Adder Neonia set his unused monoliths on the ground beneath his
feet.
“I
almost have enough strength! Lend me your power, my sorcerers. Ringmaster! Use
the Advanced Art of Aether!” Adder announced as his sorcerer steadied the spell
card in his hand.
In that
moment, a divine-looking fire ignited every monolith around Adder’s feet. The
white fire scoured his monoliths, even the green and red ones which had already
been used, unleashing streams of heavenly energy which then poured directly
into the Adriatic warrior. Romulo watched with shock as his enemy became more
luminous than the lightning which shot across the sky. Elena angrily banged her
arms against the white wall of the Adriatic Emblem, certain that Adder would
soon unleash another monstrosity. And as if to confirm her fears, Adder forced
two spirals of luminous energy to race across his arms; they converged at a
point in the space between his hands. Every falling raindrop became a tiny
shard of white light as the Adriatic Warrior forced another monolith to
converge between his hands.
Adder
asked, “Have you ever stopped to ask why it is that we are able to manifest
sorcerers? We all have no magic. We have no power. And yet we can summon
entities who wield a fearsome sorcery. We can even command them with our will!
Have you ever asked yourself why?”
Trying
to conceal his terror with a joke, Romulo chuckled and answered, “Of course
not! I’m really not the brightest; I’ll never understand how a vibrating rock
can manifest anything. But it doesn’t matter to me!”
“I
think most of our enemies are that same way. Heh, you get a little speck of
power and think you’re in control even if you don’t understand why. But in the
end, that will be the reason for your downfall. You don’t have the intelligence
to put up a real fight. You weren’t around when we shattered the past and
forged a new future; that means you’re fuel at best. A roadblock at worst. And
now it’s time to see the instrument of your downfall—my Apothecary of Enchanted Aether,” Adder announced across
the violent storm.
After
materializing the monolith in his hand, Adder unleashed his Apothecary of
Enchanted Aether onto the battlefield. He manifested an entity which surrounded
itself with the shadow of the fallen Forger, and then it attacked with a spiral
of enchanted water. The attack sent fractures across Typhoon Paladin’s armor
and nearly knocked it to the ground. Adder then compelled his two sorcerers to
race toward the center of the alleyway, standing in the luminous safety of Soul
Territory. Once there, the Ringmaster of the Wildfire unleashed a swirling
vortex of fire. Romulo watched with worry as the flames surrounded his Typhoon
Paladin, but to his surprise, his sorcerer still stood when the searing cinders
fell. Sparks danced through the air and illuminated the rain around him, but
Typhoon Paladin narrowly clung to life. Steam lifted from his skin.
Though
Romulo felt like he was at the end of the line, Elena slammed her fists upon
the glowing wall and yelled, “You can pull your way out of this! I know you
can. I know you will! This world is a sick dream, but at least you can steer a
dream when you know you’re in control.”
“Steer
the dream…? Elena, what makes you think this isn’t real?” asked Romulo as he
reached for his red monolith.
“I know why he looks so familiar. This
sounds like it’s not real because this world isn’t real, but… I saw
Adder in a dream of a different place. He wasn’t a heartless warrior like this.
He was a good man with a good heart, so either this isn’t real or that wasn’t
real. It’s too much of a coincidence if it’s anything else! So control this
dream or at least wake up!” Elena shouted from the other end of the Adriatic
Emblem.
But
Romulo shook his head and muttered, “I’m sorry, Elena… but I don’t know what
you’re talking about. This is real, I promise you. And there’s only one way I
can save myself.”
Romulo
unleashed the power of his monolith by releasing a sudden vortex of crimson
light. He set the monolith on the ground and watched the red energy converge.
When he manifested his Rogue of Broken Justice, Romulo pulled a card from his
grimoire and glanced at it. Romulo narrowed his eyes and saw that the card was
a Berserk Heart, which meant he still had a chance to win this brutal fight.
“Rogue
of Broken Justice, advance on the enemy; get in position! Typhoon Paladin,
unleash your magic! Dance of the Fiery Gust!”
Romulo
compelled his Typhoon Paladin to run toward the other sorcerers. He imagined
commanding his strongest sorcerer to strike both enemies, and then he would
enchant it with the Berserk Heart so that it could attack again. Between that
and the Rogue, Romulo figured that he could crush his enemy in one fell swoop.
But when Typhoon Paladin pushed its way closer, Romulo realized that it could
barely move without collapsing under its own weight. The Apothecary of
Enchanted Aether watched the enemy approach, and as soon as it came too close,
the enemy sorcerer unleashed its vile spell.
Romulo
watched as a sudden alchemic burst engulfed his Typhoon Paladin and vanquished
it at once. The sorcerer shattered, and the black monolith finally stopped
vibrating; all the spells it carried fell to the ground beneath the pouring
rain. Romulo fell to his knees as he realized that he had no way out. He
watched his enemy’s sorcerers advance, but he cursed a quiet lamentation to his
own failure.
“I was
supposed to protect this city. It can’t end like this,” Romulo whispered.
Elena’s
shouts became increasingly frantic as she slammed her fists against the
luminous wall. But when she watched Adder’s sorcerers overwhelm Romulo’s Rogue,
she felt her adrenaline surge. Sweat covered her skin and rain soaked her hair.
Her muscles flexed with power as she shouted and punched. Steam lifted from her
body in this violent state of panic. With a sky-piercing shout, Elena punched
the wall with more force than ever before; her fist broke through the barrier
as her pegleg fell out from underneath her. She landed on her arms on the
cobblestone street with a painful slam, but she ignored her bleeding wounds and
crawled closer to her friend. Both Romulo and Adder watched with shock; they
had never seen anyone or anything break the Adriatic Emblem.
“Just
conjure something and run! Let’s just run away together. This city isn’t worth
your life!” Elena shouted at Romulo.
But
Adder retorted from across the storm, “You misunderstand my intentions! I could
conquer this city in a matter of hours; this city is a benefit but not my
priority. All I really want now is to take out Romulo Soliatsis. No one else
has the power to oppose me.”
But
when Romulo tried to stand upright, his legs nearly collapsed under him; he
retreated back to a crouch on his hands and knees. Between running for hours
and manifesting his sorcerers, Romulo did not have the energy to run. Instead,
he weakly grabbed the nearby cards which had drifted downstream from the
puddles. He then grabbed three monoliths—all
except the blue one which was too far away—and
pushed them toward Elena.
Romulo
whispered to Elena, “You have to protect them because no one else can. I know I
have no right to ask this of you, but-”
“No,
shut up! Shut the fuck up! You’re not dying, Romulo! I won’t let you. I’ll put
myself in the way before I let that happen! I don’t know if this world is real,
but… if it isn’t a nightmare, then it’s just a shattered future. Something you
shouldn’t die to defend! Please, just run
away from here. You’re the only thing I have. You’re the only one I care
about! You can’t just let him kill you,” Elena begged.
Because
of the fiery glow which illuminated the rain, Elena realized that the enemy was
close. She swerved around and yelped when she saw Adder and his two sorcerers
just a short distance away, ready to attack at a moment’s notice. But when
Adder saw Elena’s face, he tilted his head and pursed his lips. He even took a
half step backward and stared at Elena as if in a trance.
Adder
Neonia announced, “If you were anyone else, I would tell you it’s too late. I
would kill you both in cold blood and leave it at that. It’s only because of
our past that I will let you live just this once. Just make sure it’s the last,
Elena. This time is the last.”
Elena
gasped as she realized that he recognized her, but then Adder stepped closer
and grabbed hold of Romulo’s shirt collar. Romulo groaned, and Elena yelped;
she threw her arms at her enemy in distress. But before she could even strike
him, the Apothecary of Enchanted Aether seized her arms and effortlessly
restrained her. Elena wriggled and wrestled but failed to free herself; her
half-detached pegleg scraped uselessly against the cobblestone. The Ringmaster
of the Wildfire glared disdainfully as Adder lifted Romulo into the air, and
then he walked away. Romulo winced with pain and coughed out a word of
farewell, but Elena could barely hear him over the pouring rain and rumbling
thunder. She could barely hear him over the sound of her own screaming.
After
Adder turned down a different street and went so far that Elena could not see
him, the Apothecary of Enchanted Aether dematerialized. Elena sobbed and shook
in the pouring rain as she quickly collected Romulo’s belongings, but she still
could not stand upright. After many minutes of trying, she realized that her
half-detached prosthetic did more harm than good. She removed the pegleg from
her stump, used a brick wall to pull herself upright, and then hopped on one
leg across the cobblestone street. She chased her enemy by hopping through the
roaring storm, following a faint trail of blood in an attempt to find her
friend. She winced with every step, and before long, her left knee ached from
the impact of each step. The pain and the panic brought her to tears, but she
pushed herself forward for minutes. Even when she slipped and fell to the
ground, she pulled herself up and kept going.
In the end, Elena spent hours trying to crawl and hobble
along the blood trail, but when she finally reached its end, she saw that it
led to Aegea’s town square. She saw the silhouette of a circle atop a wooden
pole, and a few other citizens stood beside it beneath the pouring rain. Elena
felt her ice turn cold as she pushed herself closer, and when a flash of
lightning illuminated the sky, she saw the head of her friend placed upon a
pike. Romulo’s blood stained the upper half of the pike, and red-tinged water
splashed along the puddle below. Elena felt her entire body turn cold, and she
dropped to the ground and spilled her belongings. She stared into Romulo’s
lifeless eyes as the flash of lightning finally faded. She saw his auburn hair
dance limply in the wind.
Though she could feel her body surrender to exhaustion,
Elena whispered a promise to her fallen friend, “I swear I’ll make him pay for
what he did. He should have killed me when he had the chance.”
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