Cae fidgeted in her armor, her hand grasping the whetstone she had been provided - the loud rasp of it drawing along the edge of her flaming sword was almost as loud as the crackle and the spray of sparks that sputtered up as hell forged stone met heaven sent steel. She frowned intently, then twitched her wings, then finally turned to the Baron of Fire, and snarled: "Where are they?"
"They're coming," the Baron of Fire said, reclining in the camp stool he had brought for himself. Not for the first time, Cae wished that she might have marched to war against the forces of Destruction with Ruti, gentle Ruti. But that was just it. While she found herself fond of the Baron of Rot - and sometimes, found herself still thinking on all she had seen of him during the preparations for this day - she didn't want such a kind soul so close to the spilling of blood, the clashing of steel, the dying of immortal souls. She frowned.
"Why did you volunteer again?"
"I'm the closest thing you have to artillery," Citri said, his voice wry. Amused. "You asked for it."
Cae had asked for war machines - which would do as they were told. She sighed, rubbing her gauntled knuckles against her chin. "Very well. Hm. You can cast...what, precisely?"
"Fire," Citri said, in that nominally demonic way: Unhelpful and imprecise.
"Yes, but is it fireballs, walls of fire, flaming spears, javelins, swords?" Cae snapped. "Do you know how much soul essence it takes, how many
motes,
it takes for each manifestation?"
Citri shifted in his seat and rolled those bright red-on-black eyes of his. Cae wished badly to dash him from the chair, just to watch the expression on his face shift to outrage. "I suppose singular attacks - a spear, a sword, a bolt of fire - take about one third the energy it takes for something that blankets an area. Making it last longer takes another third in that, and I can make something that blankets an area...I...I don't know, t...two to...six times? Seven, it depends on how many villages I am able to tap into, and how hard I am- what are you doing?"
Cae had rummaged into one of the pouches that hung from her layers of armor. She withdrew a small gemstone crystal that she had spent the last afternoon of her logistics expedition crafting. She held it before his brow. "Cast a fire bolt," she said, firmly.
Citri frowned. "What is this bauble?" he tapped it with his finger, setting the gem to swinging and glowing with a sputtery red light.
"Just do it," Cae snapped, using her best General Silverhawk voice.
Citri rolled those ruby eyes of his once more - but he forced himself to his feet. Standing at his full, lanky height, he managed to still over-top her, despite the high heels on her armor. He pointed with one long, lean, muscular arm at a distant tree that rose from the hillside that they were encamped on and fired a bolt of sizzling fire that whipped through the air and speared through the tree, leaving a smoking hole in bark. The gemstone throbbed and pulsed as Cae frowned at it, then drew it back down, putting it into the pouch. "Hmm, two motes," she murmured. When she knelt down, she spread her wings for balance - and gave no care for the fact that her spreading, glowing feathers nearly smacking him in his face. She scrapped at the ground, muttering under her breath.
"What is going on here?" A familiar, feminine voice spoke. Cae glanced up and did a double take - she had expected, somewhat, Laeushale. The suc...the fire spirit was often used by Citri and Lord Arral equally as a messenger. But it was surprising to see the gentle handed healer that had so eagerly tended to Cae's wounds dressed in matte black, glossy soulsteel chainmail, her shoulders covered with a pale white tabard with the rook symbol of the House of Ruin on it, the red flame of the Barony of Fire to the upper left. She had a spear in one hand, a shield hanging from her other, both the light make of a skirmisher.
"Laeushale!" Cae sprang up. "What are you doing here?" she asked.
"I'm part of the flying auxiliary," Laeushale said, her voice amused. "Fire rises, and so too, we shall rise above our enemies." She chuckled. "And like smoke, we shall leave them little to sink their teeth into. What's that?" She nodded to the half finished mathemantic equation. Cae sighed, then looked down at the etched runes. She had done enough to figure the whole in her head. She still frowned for a moment, fully considering it.
"You can fire your area of effect attacks three times, precisely," she said.
Citri crossed his arms over his chest. "I'm a Baron of Fire, you can't measure me like that-"
"I surely can," Cae snapped, turning to face him. "You will fire three times because the rest of the motes I have available for this battle are going to be spent
elsewhere
. Once the-"
More rustling wings. Sounds of footsteps. The two jerked her attention away from Citri, and she felt a bloom of relief. The army had begun to arrive. The demons came in drips and drabs over the next two hours, better than a mortal army might have, but worse than an angelic host could have. The primary forces had been levied from Despair and Fire's domains, with Rot being left untouched for the moment. This meant the majority of her ground forces were solemn halberdiers and speardemons, draped with black cloths to conceal their faces, their bodies shrouded by misting fog of blue and green that spoke of deep sadness. Behind them were archers that looked like women in mourning gowns, who carried not bows but were instead surrounded by a haze of glittering teardrop shards that had a sharp edge to them - deceptively sharp, despite the smoothness of their shapes. The Barony of Fire had levied quite a few Fire Spirits like Laeushale, forming a solid core of flying skirmishers.
In total, it was a paltry force for any mortal invasion and demonic attack beyond Hell. Glancing at Citri, Cae arched an eyebrow. He scowled at her. "This is a normal force, for Hell," he said. "When in Hell. I'm going to check and make sure everyone's here."
He stalked off before Cae could take that task on her own hands. She scowled after him.
"That...arrogant braggart!" she said, angrily. "He acts as if he is doing me a favor, just to assist me with fighting enemies that have taken his own lands! After
his
people kidnapped
me
to be
their
general! Argh!" She turned to face Laeushale, who had stuck the black tip of her spear into the ground to free her hand - but it was not for consolation or to simply wipe her sweating, red brow. No, it was to cover her mouth as her shoulders shook and, tabard or no, her chain-mail clinked. "
Are you
laughing
at me?" Cae asked.
"Oh, no, General Silverhawk!" Laeushale said, laughing quite clearly. "I was just wondering, when did you plan to kiss Baron Citri?"
"Kiss!?" Cae spluttered, feeling as if she had been smacked in the cheek by a drawn glove. She stepped away, gestured to the smoldering, blackened patches of ground that Citri's feet had left as he stalked away. "Kiss that? That blowhard?" She asked.
"It's just you two seem to arouse quite a passion in one another," Laeushale said, her eyes crinkling with amusement. "In a proper story, you'd be all over one another, once the adrenaline of the battle hits."
Cae crammed that mental image into the same deep, dark hole she kept memories of Ruti's naked body, speculations about Lord Arral's true form beneath his shadowy robes, memories of her intense dreams, and how Laeushale's massage had made her feel. Instead, she growled quietly. "I do not have a
passion
for that...that...red skinned, whip tailed, flame headed, smoke addled...
tomcat
!"
"Mmhm! Yes General, of course, General," Laeushale said, nodding and nodding again, with every word. "Of course you do not."
Cae sighed. She pushed her blush off her cheek then turned to Laeushale. "Are you in command of the flame spirits?"
"Yes, General," Laeushale said, her voice more official. More serious now.
Cae nodded, firmly. "Good." Her lips quirked up. "I have an order for you."
***
In what had once been the village of Lamerum, the demons of Pillage were having the best time they had had in quite some time. The Baron of Pillage, for all he served the Lord of Destruction himself, had not gotten much chance to wreak his favorite pastime upon a soul in Hell. With the Endless War in a perpetual state of shifting lines, attacks, defenses, encirclement and sieges, he was perpetually drawn away from Hell and into the front lines, where his demons were unto Legion...and his prizes were so...frustratingly
mundane
.
If a human army that called upon his spirits overthrew and sacked a city, what would they do?
Oh, they would ravage it, as they were wont to do. They would burn the idols of enemy gods, they would melt down jewelry and gold, and turn it into bars for easy transport. They would find gemstones, prying them from the fingers of dead nobles. They would find the beautiful and the helpless and they would take their base, wicked pleasures in whatever method their culture found most diabolical. And he would drink...and drink...