Ian Irvine
Alchymist
A Tale of The Three Worlds
Volume Three of The Well of Echoes
Part One
Phynadr
One
The mud was made from earth and blood, organs and entrails, for the battle had raged back and forth until the dead carpeted the ground. It was the most ghastly sight Irisis Stirm had ever seen, and after a day and a night she was still stuck in the middle of it. The flower of humanity's youth was being slaughtered outside the walls of Snizort, and there was nothing anyone could do.
Dropping her broken sword in the mire, Irisis took up a sound one. There were plenty to choose from. 'Scrutator,' she said as they climbed a little knoll, boots skidding in the wet. The rising sun picked out red eyes in their dirty faces. 'What are we going to do?'
'Die' Xervish Flydd grimaced. 'This marks the end of civilisation, of everything I've fought for all my life.'
'I won't give up, surr.’
'Very noble of you, Irisis.'
'There's got to be a way.'
'There isn't. There's too many of them and they're killing us twice as fast as we're killing them.'
Irisis looked around. 'Let's try and get to the command post. It's not far now.' It stood on a flat-topped hill away to their right, and the Council flag still fluttered there. 'At least we'll be able to see what's going on.'
'Where's Ullii?' said Flydd, very belatedly.
'Hiding, I expect.'
'Then she's got more sense than the rest of us. What about Pilot Hila?'
'She was killed in the first attack yesterday morning, not long after the air-floater crashed. You stood over her, holding the enemy off, until she died.'
Flydd shook his grizzled head. 'I don't remember. I can hardly remember anything about the past day.'
'I remember every minute,' said Irisis, 'and I wish I didn't. Come on.'
A lyrinx staggered out of the wallow to their left. The creature stood head and shoulders over Irisis, who was a tall woman, and its great mouth could have bitten her leg off. One leathery wing dragged in the bloody muck; a mighty arm had been severed at the elbow. It slashed feebly at the scrutator, who swayed backwards then lunged, plunging his sword between the armoured skin plates and into its heart.
The creature fell into the red mud, splattering it all over them. Flydd did not even look down.
'Where did you learn such swordsmanship, Xervish?' said Irisis. The scrutator was a small, scrawny man, past middle age. She had seen him fight before, but never with such deadly efficiency as in the past day.
'The scrutators have the best of everything, so I was taught by an expert. Even so, that move wouldn't have worked on an able-bodied lyrinx.'
They passed between two clankers — eight-legged mechanical monsters big enough to carry ten soldiers and all their supplies. The one on the left looked intact, though a headless man lay on the shooter's platform up top, slumped over his javelard, a spear-throwing device like a giant crossbow. Another body was sprawled on the catapult cranks. Once the node had been destroyed its field vanished, and the clankers became useless, immobile metal.
A lone shooter stood behind the loaded javelard of the right-hand machine, training his weapon back and forth across the battlefield. He fired, and the heavy spear was gone too quickly to trace, taking a distant lyrinx full in the chest.
'Nice shooting,' said the scrutator, squelching by.
The soldier shook his head. 'Not good enough to save us, sum' He jumped down. 'It was my last spear.'
'Where's your operator?'
'Dead!'
'What are you like on the ground?'
The soldier turned out the inside of his jerkin. Irisis caught a flash of silver.
The scrutator stopped dead. 'You earned that with a sword?'
'And a long knife, surr. At the battle for Plimes, two years ago.'
'I need a good man with a blade. Find yourself a weapon and come with us.'
Irisis was astounded. The scrutator was known for decisiveness, but to select a stranger so quickly was unprecedented. 'I hope you're a good judge of character,' she said out of the corner of her mouth as they slogged through the bloody mire.
'I chose you, didn't I?'
'That's what I mean.' She grinned. Irisis, with her yellow hair and that long, ripe figure, was a beautiful woman, even covered in mud and gore.
'You didn't see, did you?'
'The badge? No.'
'That was no badge. It was the Star of Valour, and it falls to few living men to wear their own.'
They angled across the field towards the command-post hill, skirting a wallow in which lay the head of a soldier like a single flower in a brown bowl. The eyes stared right at them. Irisis looked the other way. They'd seen a thousand such sights in the past day but still it made her stomach roil.
'Your name would be Flangers, would it not?' said the scrutator.
'That's right, surr/ said the soldier. 'How did you know?'
'It's my business to know the names of heroes. Do you know who I am?'
'Of course. You're the People's Scrutator.'
'Where did that name come from?' Flydd exclaimed.
'I can't say, surr,' said Flangers. 'The soldiers have always called you that.'
Disrespectful louts,' growled Flydd. 'I'll have a detachment or two whipped, and then we'll see if they dare such cheek.' There was a twinkle in his eye, though, and the soldier saw it.
Irisis chuckled. Flydd liked to be in control and to know everything; it was a rare sight to see him surprised. 'I'm Irisis.' She offered Flangers her hand.
'You're not from these parts, Flangers?' the scrutator went on as they began to climb the hill.
Flangers shook his head. He was grey eyed and fair haired, with neat, sunburnt features set off by a jutting jaw. Though not overly tall or muscular, he was lean and strong. 'I'm a Thurkad man,' he said, staring blankly at a pair of bodies that lay side by side without a mark on them. The swarming flies were already doing their work.
'Refugee?' asked Flydd. Thurkad, the greatest and oldest city in the west, had fallen two years before, ending the resistance on the great island of Meldorin.
'No. I joined up when I turned fifteen. Six years ago.'
'Did you see much fighting before Plimes?'
Flangers named half a dozen battlefields. 'More than I care to remember.'
'You must be a fine shooter,' said Irisis, 'to have survived all those.'
'Or a lucky one,' said Flydd, slipping in the mud. 'I could use a bit of that now.'
Flangers helped him up. 'It ran out today. I've not lost an operator before.' He was not bitter about it, though many a man might have been. 'We're done, surr. It's over.'
'You're a hero, Flangers. You can't talk like that.'
'I've seen whole nations wiped out, surr. The ancient wonders of my homeland are no more, the millions who dwelt there dead or scattered across the globe. Even Thurkad, the greatest city the world has ever seen, lies empty and in ruins. There's no hope left. The enemy will eat us all.' He gave a little shudder of horror. 'Even our little children.'
'You know the penalty for despairing talk, soldier?'
'For many of the common folk, death at the hands of the scrutators is preferable to being torn apart and eaten.'
'Yet despite your despair you fight on.'
'Duty is everything to me, surr,' said Flangers.
'Then may you take comfort from doing your duty. Give me a hand up here, would you?1
Taking the scrutator by the elbow, Flangers helped him through the steep pinch to the top of the hill. At the edge, Flydd took Irisis's arm and moved away. Tell me, Irisis, do you despair as well?'
'No.'
'Why not?'
'I know you'll find a way to save us.'