The Pool
"Are you sure you're ok?" Shannon asked worriedly, trying to offer Valia her shoulder to lean on.
"Yes, I'm fine. I need this. If I don't get out of bed and walk on my own two feet, my muscles will melt, and I'll never regain my strength," she replied, trying to hide her fatigue. She had run almost nonstop for weeks to get from Welindar to Colbrand, but now, just walking from her home to the palace was taking all her strength. "What did you call this, Noah? Physical therapy?"
"Yes, that's right. It's an important stage of healing, especially for the injuries you've suffered. But don't push yourself too hard, otherwise it'll do more harm than good."
"More harm than good? Having you with me in the War Room might do that."
"Seeing as how Adwith Tarnas has finally returned, I should greet him as a fellow gold-rank knight. Besides, almost every gold-rank knight in the country is attending this meeting, and we need to get on the same page regarding the Profane."
"Just please try not to cause trouble."
"I'm not the one you should be worried about."
They arrived at the palace, and Noah and Valia flashed their emblems so the guards would let them enter. They walked the corridors towards the War Room, reminding Noah of his first visit. It was just after the Red Revelry, when all of his fellow cadets had been injured by the onslaught of bounty hunters roaming the city in search of him. Just one year ago, he entered as an academy cadet, and was now returning a gold-rank knight.
They paused at the door, and Valia turned to Shannon. "Down the hall is the waiting room for squires and attendants. You'll have to stay there during the meeting."
Shannon appeared dejected, but obeyed. She left Valia and Noah and went to the waiting room, finding it full of men and women garbed in polished armor and spotless uniforms. These were the trusted subordinates of the greatest knights in the kingdom, putting abundant effort into maintaining their appearance and that of their superiors to exude an aura of strength and dignity. Shannon, her horse ears and tail on display and wearing the clothes of her tribe, stood out like a sore thumb, and she could see it on their faces. Embarrassment and shame flooded her momentarily, but she shook those feelings aside and raised her chin. She had earned the right to serve Lady Valia and Lord Noah, earned the right to stand at their side, having fought with them against the might and horrors of the Profane.
"Good morning," she said with a brisk nod before taking an open seat.
Back in the War Room, Noah and Valia were facing a similar reception. Noah, a former criminal and enemy of the state, and Valia, the seasoned knight who had abandoned her duties and fled the country with him. There were many faces that Noah didn't recognize, gold-rank knights who were absent when he was here before, most of them glaring indignantly. And at the end of the table, shooting daggers from his one eye, was the legend himself, Adwith Tarnas. The last time Noah and Tarnas faced each other, a fiery barrier separated them, with the broken and bloody Prince Seraph lying nearby. Tarnas had sworn he'd kill Noah, but now they found themselves working together. At least Gradius was absent--a small blessing.
"Look what the cat dragged in," one dark-haired man muttered.
"Dragon. For me, it's "look what the dragon dragged in," but don't dwell on it," said Noah. "Sir Elyot, Sir Aithorn," he then greeted with a nod.
"Sir Noah."
"Lord Noah."
The two greeted him in kind, but Aithorn's words caused a tremor. He always addressed fellow gold-rank knights with professional courtesy, but the respect in his voice had only ever been heard when he spoke to Tarnas.
"What is this lord business?" General Delta grumbled.
"I am a Sylphtorian lord, having earned the trust and friendship of Queen Elisandra and the elves."
"And why would the elves trust someone like you?" a blonde woman asked coldly.
"You would be amazed by how helpful I can be when I'm not foolishly antagonized," said Noah as he and Valia walked around the table to a pair of empty chairs and sat down. "You may not trust me as an ally of Uther, but you can trust me as an ally of Sylphtoria, making me an enemy of the Profane, same as all of you."
"This coming from the man whose Profane whore killed the king," said Berholm.
"Ah, Sir Berholm, good to see you. I had heard you were grievously wounded in the battle, but I'm glad you're still with us. We'll need your strength and wisdom for what is to come. I had nothing to do with Bella's actions. She was driven by obsession and twisted by the power of the Profane. What happened to the king is tragic and serves as a perfect warning for the kind of enemies we'll be facing. Look, I didn't come here to argue. The Profane have their sights set on world domination, and we can't waste time and energy squabbling amongst each other."
"You have a lot of nerve to come here, acting so flippantly, especially after what you did to the prince," Tarnas growled. Noah sighed. It didn't seem like things could be glossed over, so he might as well bring it out into the open.
"Yes, that's right, how is Seraph doing? Have you rebuilt him into a respectable warrior after I demolished that useless monolith of ego that stood before?"
"Noah..." Valia muttered, sensing the rising bloodlust in the room.
"I held him accountable for his crimes and taught him humility. Galvin murdered and maimed two dozen of his own citizens trying to kill me, and Seraph knew what he was doing and felt no need to stop him. Were they not royalty, they'd be kicking at the end of a rope. He was a catastrophe just waiting to happen, and I undid years of coddling and praise. You should be thanking me for letting him keep his life and giving him a chance to start over and live properly. If you've done your job right, hopefully, now he's become a man with some backbone. So I ask again, how is he doing?"
"After he woke up from what you did to him, his powers were gone. I've spent the last year training with him out in the wild, and he's barely regained a fraction of his original magic. He was our greatest weapon against the Profane, and you broke him."
"Disappointing, though I'm holding out hope that he can still become the warrior you believe him to be. But enough about that. I have skills to contribute to this effort, and possess no ill will towards your country. Once we vanquish our shared enemy, I'll move on to greener pastures, and you'll be free of me. Until then, if not for Uther, then for the sake of professionalism, let's try to work together and get this job done."
"Noah and I spent eight months with Prince Lupin, helping him fight the Profane," said Valia. "We've seen their strength up close, and the lasting damage they leave behind. Welindar has been rendered utterly toxic, saturated with dark energy that kills and corrupts all life. I don't know if it can ever be repopulated. They've developed a method to turn humans and beastmen into quasi-Profane using special parasites that produce unholy venom, and have remade Handent into a farm to cultivate their ranks."
"And now Lupin is dead, and you expect us to trust you," said General Delta.
"Lupin was my friend. He and I fought side-by-side against Kaisen the Liger, a powerful beastman warrior who was turned into the ultimate fiend. During the battle, we split up. Lupin could no longer fight, so I left him with his healer, Nell, while I went to finish off Kaisen with my companion, Shannon. She delivered the finishing blow, but though we broke his body, his mind refused to die. The strength of his resolve is almost commendable. An explosion of dark energy swallowed the city, turning all of its inhabitants into the monsters that marched on Colbrand as per Kaisen's will. If Lupin didn't die in the explosion, he was turned into one of the beasts and killed by the Wassengel."
"The Profane have already tried to destroy Sylphtoria," said Valia, "but the elves are ready for war and standing by. They will fight alongside Uther, but we need a plan and strong leadership. What is King Galvin doing about the Profane?"
"If we spread our forces too thin trying to protect wild territory, the Profane will tear through us," said Tarnas. "He's ordered the legions to fall back to more secure areas and to bolster a solid defense. He's spoken of building a wall lined with garrisons, but the time and resources it would take, even with magic, doesn't make it feasible. A chain of forts and watchtowers are being constructed to defend against another horde and will slowly be improved. Handent is vast, and we don't have the manpower to expunge the Profane, even with Sylphtoria and Vandheim helping us."
"What is Vandheim's stance on the issue?" Noah asked.
"They're too busy dealing with their own internal issues to help with the Profane," said Berholm. "Until a fiend army is on their doorstep, we shouldn't expect them to invest much attention."
"So for now, all we can do is remain on the defense, correct?" the blonde female knight pondered. "But the longer we wait, the more powerful they'll become. What happens when they send another army to sweep across the countryside while staying out of range of the Wassengel?"
"Can the Wassengel leave the ocean and move inland?" Noah asked. Everyone exchanged glances, not sure of the answer.
"Colbrand is built on Enochian ruins, and the Wassengel was a defensive weapon they used for protection," said Elyot. "Our human predecessors simply woke it up and managed to unlock the means to control it, but we shouldn't put our hopes on sending it to the front line."