"We're almost there, men," Agrius, knight-captain of the Saintly Order, yelled into the dwindling light of dusk.
The wind howled a frightful, discordant note and a powerful rush of air and dirt raced down from atop the rocky plateau, into the treacherous, uphill path that Agrius and his small band labored to climb.
"Cover!" Agrius roared. A curtain of swirling debris lashed down the face of the cliff with the speed of a tumbling avalanche.
The men threw themselves against the ground, one by one, as squad leaders relayed the order through the rank. A hail of rock and dirt slammed against the huddled mass of soldiers mere seconds after the calls went out. Shouts and curses rose and fell like the ebbing tide. After a time, the roaring gale began to dim and fade to a soft breeze.
The captain gained his feet and turned his head ever so slightly over his right shoulder. "Company, recover!"
The men of the troop stood warily, fear and adrenaline plain as day in their eyes. Of course, Agrius knew it wasn't just the storm, the mountain or the fall that troubled them, it was what lay ahead and the dark rumors that had sent his sword forth.
A crackle of heat-lightning traced the sky and the ensuing rumble was the deep basso of an old god's voice. The wind whirled, pulling the swollen mass of dark clouds that wheeled overhead into vicious, ever tightening spirals. The rain came, scattered and infrequent, like blotches of ink.
As the group reached the pinnacle of the path that led to the plateau, the sky broke open, unleashing the true deluge. A flash of lightning raced across the sea of clouds and a fierce white light fell to the earth.
The black, wrought iron gates of Avarithe, the castle built atop the plateau, emerged from the gloom, its sprawling towers like dark fingers trying to tear the heavens asunder. Thunder crackled.
A stone path was cut into the top of the plateau, leading from the black gate to the entrance of the main hall. Avarithe was like darkness itself, for the stones of the castle were cut and laid with great obsidian blocks, sanded to a mirror finish. The growing tempest was reflected in the face of the castle, giving it an almost otherworldly appearance, as if it had coalesced from the bowels of the storm.
"To the great hall, ready your swords!" Agrius bellowed. He drew his blade from its scabbard, holding it aloft to emphasize his command.
There was a cacophony of steel as each squad leader passed the command down the column and soldiers drew their weapons. Agrius moved between the black gates and up the path to Avarithe. Behind him, the men of the Saintly Order followed, the rough shod steel of their boots pounded in unison, broken into two columns with the captain at the head. In the reflection of Avarithe's stone they looked like ghostly apparitions walking the path of the damned.
They had come to deliver light to a bastion of evil. They had come to root out demons set loose upon this world by the Lord of Fire, enemy of all. They had come to fulfill the will of Annovax.
Warning calls erupted from the towers ahead; shadowy figures moved across the ramparts, inhumanly quick, and a den of piercing, high pitched voices shrieked over the tumult of violent thunder. The vision had spoken truth, as Agrius knew in his heart it would. A brilliant flash of lightning found its way to the earth and bathed the castle in wan, white light; the illumination revealed ghastly figures atop the ramparts, their skeletal arms raised, with decayed fingers drawn against bowstrings.
The captain let loose a shout and raised his sword. He broke into a sprint towards Avarithe, where skeletons, the infantry of the Lord of Fire's army, began to amass at the front of the castle hall. The men followed in his wake.
His sword burst to life with soft, golden light, following inlaid filigree that curved down to the pommel. The light became a scintillating sun for a brief moment as bowstring's twanged and arrows whistled amidst the pouring rain. The captain's pace abruptly halted and he slid along the stone pathway for nearly a foot, his body hunched as he grasped the hilt of his sword with both hands and raised it above his head.
The arrows reached their zenith and gravity carried them down towards the formation. The captain swung and the blade's light became a tangible force, splitting the darkness apart as if cleaving night to day. The curtain of rain parted and a rippling wave, like the surging ocean, sped towards Avarithe and the falling arrows. The ground shook. In the reflection the light looked like a comet, careening across the velvet, night sky.
Arrow shafts burst asunder with a violent crack as the tips touched the heart of light. The denizens of the dark screeched and their bones rattled as they fled from the battlements, clawing one another in a macabre melody. The light fell upon them. A howl of voices rent the air as their bodies burst aflame and fell to ash.
A figure in black armor emerged from inside Avarithe's entry-way. It was tall, twice the height of a normal man, with protruding ribs that broke through fractures in its dark breastplate. With a sweep of its staff, the skeletons that had been forming up in front of the castle set off towards the advancing columns.
Mikaylson, the lieutenant of the Saintly Order, screamed, her voice carried in the brief moment of silence left by the sudden charge, punctuated by the heavy clap of rain and the sound of scraping bone. "Necromancer! Ready your shields!"
The squad leaders echoed the command and broad, flat shields that were slung about shoulders were brought to bear.
"For the light!" Mikaylson yelled. The soldiers burst into motion and the two columns parted about their captain, advancing in a tightly clustered formation. Agrius sheathed his blade and fell to the rear.
The necromancer called out, his voice metallic and alien inside his helmet, his words the foul invocation of dark magic. The skeletal horde rushed the Saintly Order's line at breakneck pace, for now that the necromancer was among them they would hold no fear of oblivion.
The armies crashed together, shield on bone, metal against body, and the resultant sound eclipsed even the crackling thunder. Bone splintered. Steel sang. Men screamed. The horde rattled. The horde clawed. The horde howled. But the line held.
Far off, the necromancer's voice boomed and curling veins of darkness flowed forth from the tip of his staff.
The hollow eyes of ten skeletons within the rattling mass began to glow with a sinister light. The necromancer's magic made them frenzied, made them desperate to kill, to rake and claw living flesh. They pushed against the shield-wall with the weight of a tidal wave slamming home against the shore-line.
"Rain of bone, get ready! Second rank, shields into position!" the captain shouted from the rear.
The second file moved into position behind the first and raised shields over their heads. The front covered themselves as much as they could behind the wall of steel.
The glowing skeletons erupted in a shower of splintering bone that smashed against the shield-wall with the force of a cannon. A man screamed, but the line did not falter.
"Advance, lads, let's not let these bastards get the best of us," someone called out from the formation.
As one, the soldiers of the shield wall stepped forward and slammed against the fresh gaps in the horde, forcing their rank to crumble. Swords swept between the first row of soldiers, wielded by the second, ripping into rib-cages, slicing vertebrae and shattering decayed bodies to fragments.