Chapter One Hundred Eleven: Overload
My nose started pouring blood as I picked up the mana of the fourth emissary. My vision went blurry, my balance was off, and I started to sway unsteadily on my feet.
One more, Sierra. Just one more.
Not that I had any idea what I'd do with the general once the emissaries were subdued, but I could only take it a step at a time.
I spent a moment trying to adjust to the flood of mana, removing my helmet and gripping my nose to stem the bleeding, before reaching out once again. I was so distracted by my headache as I stripped the last emissary that I didn't feel the change, didn't notice what was happening with the darkspawn around me. I was completely oblivious to the approach of the general, who'd clearly been watching the horde move around me and had deduced my location.
I looked up just in time to see an axe descending towards me, with not enough time to dodge, and I closed my eyes in resignation.
I'm going to die on this God-forsaken hill. I'm sorry, Alistair.
But the blow never came, and I opened my eyes again as a sword deflected the axe away from me.
I was roughly shoved aside by an armoured figure, and fell on my ass β between the pressure in my head and the push, I completely lost my balance. When I managed to regain my equilibrium, I looked up to see Duncan standing over me, engaging the now-enraged general. And then the rest of the noise from the battlefield filtered in to my awareness, and I looked around in a daze to see Riordan beheading one of the emissaries whose mana I held, while Conrad and Loghain stood back to back fighting a group of hurlocks. Further away, a group of soldiers fought their way through the horde to reach Cailan, and I breathed a sigh of relief.
The battalion had arrived, and brought a group of Wardens with it.
I scrambled to my feet, finding the daggers which I'd dropped in my fall, the pressure in my head now more bearable as the emissaries were slowly eliminated; I pivoted back and grabbed the mana from the darkspawn-from-hell Duncan was fighting just in time to see the Warden Commander freeze as the general shouted in his face, something unintelligible and unspeakably dark.
He just stood there, looking confused, as the general's axe was embedded deeply in his side.
I shouted, my voice lost in the clashing of swords and the battle cries around me; it felt like slow motion, like something out of a cheesy action movie, as Duncan slowly crumpled to his knees, then began tipping backwards to the ground.
I felt the pressure in my head flow out around me before I knew what I was doing, and the remaining three emissaries and the general were knocked off their feet by a powerful blast wave that completely missed Riordan, Loghain, and the rest of the people around me. The emissaries landed in pools of their own blood, none of them rising again, but the general rolled over, clearly dazed but alive. He was bleeding from the mouth and one eye was badly damaged, the socket deformed, the eyeball drooping, but he slowly struggled up to his knees, trying to stand.
I screeched angrily, gripping my daggers and preparing to lunge at it, when a great sword descended in my peripheral vision and the general's head flew a couple of feet, bouncing a little ways down the hill; arterial spray of darkspawn blood arced out and covered me as I looked over to see Cailan standing, chest heaving with exertion, leaning on his blade for support.
I turned back and dropped to my knees at Duncan's side; Cailan did the same, and helped me roll him over to rest against my lap. I wasn't surprised to see his vacant stare, blood trickling out of his slack mouth, but I had hoped he could have survived. I cried and wrapped my arms around his ruined torso as Cailan pulled the heavy axe out of his wound and dropped it. With shaky hands, I closed the eyes of the man I wished had been my father, then buried my face against his shoulder and broke down completely.
I sobbed for what could have been only a minute, or might have been an hour β I couldn't honestly say one way or the other β until finally Cailan and Riordan approached me. Cailan pulled me into his arms as Riordan gently, reverently shifted the body I held back to the ground. The Warden pulled off his own cloak and threw it over the corpse, before setting the two swords Duncan had fought with across his chest.
Cailan lifted me to my feet, and without letting go, half-dragged, half-carried me towards the camp behind us. The army that had arrived had mopped up the rest of the darkspawn that ambushed us, and the dead were being painstakingly laid out for later cremation; I didn't really register any of it as Cailan lowered me to the ground in what I realised had been set up as a makeshift infirmary. All around me, warriors screamed or moaned in pain from horrific injuries, while the remaining mages, Irving and a couple of others, did their best to tend the wounds.
Irving came over immediately, kneeling in front of me and asking me something; the question didn't even penetrate the haze I was surrounded by. All I could think of was that Duncan had died because of me. And now someone else would have to die to slay the Archdemon, someone who could have been saved, maybe my brother, or my husband, or one of the others I'd come to love like family over the last year, and it was my fault.
I twitched, startled, when Irving's magic aura swelled and he ran healing magic over me; it didn't last long before the exhausted-looking mage stood and spoke briefly with Cailan. The words 'shock' and 'comfort' penetrated the mist around me, and then Irving was gone. I felt Cailan settle to the ground behind me, pulling me back into his arms, as he started whispering comforting nonsense in my ear.
I finally stirred when Riordan knelt in front of me again, offering me the daggers I had dropped when I had seen Duncan fall.
"I'm sorry," I whispered.
Riordan had to lean in to hear me over the noise around us. "Pardon?"
"It's my fault," I elaborated. "I'm sorry."
"Sierra-" Cailan began, but Riordan silenced him with a gesture.
I continued sadly, "I got him killed, and now you're going to die."
Riordan sighed and took my hand. "It's no one's fault but the darkspawn's, and the one to blame is dead. You are not responsible for his death, any more than you will be responsible for mine. And, my Lady, I was always going to die in this fight. I do not wish to return to Orlais to await my Calling, and we both know I don't have much time. As for Duncan...you thought of him as a father, and he thought of you as a daughter. I cannot imagine any way he would rather die than to protect his little girl. I know he is at the Maker's side, and I guarantee he does not harbour any regrets about how he died." His voice cracked and wavered on the last words.
Surrounded by screaming, injured men, my brother-in-law and my honourary father's brother-at-arms held me while I cried, mourning the bravest, best man I'd ever known.
Finally Cailan was called away, and it forced me to start pulling myself together. Riordan, looking as depressed as I felt, offered me a scrap of cloth to dry my eyes and blow my nose, then gave me a hand up.
Something occurred to me as I looked at his sympathetic face. "Wait, what are you guys doing here? You're supposed to be taking down the Archdemon."
Riordan nodded. "So far, it hasn't come close enough for the mages or bolas to get a hit. We wondered if it might wait until the generals were both dead to come nearer. We were wandering more-or-less aimlessly, killing ogres and the like, looking for the general, until we heard you'd been attacked. Duncan," he swallowed, his voice cracking slightly, "immediately knew it would take the intelligence of a general to pull off such a feint. And we were the closest Wardens, so we came to ensure the general was killed."
My head snapped up, glancing around at the other Wardens where they were aiding the injured to reach the infirmary. "Then you need to get back out there!" I hissed. "What if the Archdemon lands while you're here? Don't wait for me. I'll be fine. Go, go, go!"
I made a shooing gesture, and Riordan tried to chuckle, almost succeeding. "Going, your Highness. Right away."