The Final Redemption Michael Manning (best motivational books of all time .TXT) đ
- Author: Michael Manning
Book online «The Final Redemption Michael Manning (best motivational books of all time .TXT) đ». Author Michael Manning
âBack,â said Penelope, pointing in thedirection they had come from. âI still need to findhim.â
âWhat if it happens again,â askedWalter.
Gareth spoke then, âIt wonât. Theexplosion was caused by the destruction of his enchantment. Hecould not easily create another like it.â
âCould he beâŠ?â asked Penny, notwanting to finish the sentence.
âDead?â said Gareth bluntly. âHe diedsome time ago, but if you mean âgoneâ, Iâm afraid not.â
The Countess kept her featurescomposed, but underneath she felt a twisting pain in her chest. Herresolve had not changed however. âFly dammitt,â she urgedKarenth.
Traveling back, they covered the milethey had lost and soon were within half a mile of the area whereMordecai had been. Walter had replaced their semi-invisible shield,but he had reduced the amount of light and aythar that they couldsense even further. He was taking no chances.
Then he closed it completely, leavingthem flying through what seemed to be an endless black void. âIcanât tell which way Iâm going,â complained Karenth.
âTurn around and head toward theground,â said Walter. âIâll give you enough to see a bit on yourway down. We canât go any closer in that direction.â
âI felt nothing,â saidMillicenth.
Gareth spoke then, âMalâgoroth hasarrived.â
âI would have felt that,â insisted thegoddess.
âMy magesight is far better than yoursat a distance, Lady,â the archmage told her. âEspecially when weârecloaked in this shield.â
The goddess didnât reply.
Carefully, Karenth made his way to theground, and as soon as he had set talon to earth Walter resumed hisabsolute invisibility, sealing them away from all sight andmagic.
âHow close are we?â askedPenny.
âToo close,â said Walter, âless thanhalf a mile probably.â
âWe canât help him if we canât see,âshe pointed out.
Gareth interrupted, âExactly. We cando nothing.â
âThat isnât why we came,â sheargued.
âThen youâre deluded,Countess,â said the archmage sternly. âWhat you failed to sense,while Walterâs shield was faintly open, is that there is a beingbeyond it that can crush us with nothing but a thought. The veryfact that you can breatheright now is only thanks to the amazing gift yourwizard here possesses. No human could produce a normal shieldstrong enough to prevent just the pressure of the aythar out therefrom crushing your will.â
Penny chewed her lip. She hadnâtcaught even a hint of the sort of pressure she had once felt whenconfronted by one of the gods. It gave her new respect for Walterâsspecial gift, but at the same time she was frustrated by theirhelplessness.
âWhat should we do now, Countess?âasked Millicenth demurely.
âWe wait.â
A sudden booming rumble echoed acrossthe valley, sending vibrations through the ground. âWe shouldprobably excavate a bit,â suggested Karenth helpfully. âIt might bebest to be slightly below the ground level.â
They agreed, so the god of justiceused his power within the confines of Walterâs invisibility shield,making a six foot depression in the soil.
More booming noises followed, leavingthem to wonder, blind, at what might be happening.
âIt should have stopped by now,âdeclared Doron, puzzled.
âWhy?â asked Walter.
Karenth took up the question, âBecauseof their relative strengths. Malâgoroth should have finished itwithin seconds.â
âHeâs playing with his food,âsuggested the Lady of the Evening Star.
âNo,â said Gareth, âtheyâre stillfighting. There wouldnât be so much noise if it werethat.â
Penny had taken a seat onthe ground. She held a hand in front of her face, but the darknesswas absolute, and she couldnât see it at all. Listening to theconversation around her she struggled to retain hercomposure. Think about somethingelse, she told herself, but it washopeless. In the black earth she felt tears begin to roll down hercheeks, and for the first time she was grateful for thedarkness.
Another rumble rolled out, shakingthem in their hidden cavity.
âHow is he doing that?!â said Doron,still incredulous.
âThe man has an amazing proclivity forsurprises,â observed Gareth dryly.
A rosy light began to filter in, andthey could see a painful expression on Walterâs face.
âWhat are you doing?!â shouted Gareth.âHeâll find us!â
âThe mist,â said Walter as sweatrolled from his forehead. âHelp me.â
Able to sense the outside world again,Gareth felt the red spellwoven mist that Malâgoroth had summoned.It had covered their niche, and like some strange acid it wasdevouring Walterâs shield. His body relaxed, and his eyes unfocusedwhile the red haired archmage reached out, listening to the voiceof the earth. A moment later it flowed over their small pitcreating an earthen ceiling. They were fully entombednow.
Walterâs face relaxed as he restoredthe shield. âThat worked,â he said after a second. âBut beingcompletely under the ground will make us noticeable. It wonâtmatter if weâre invisible once Malâgoroth notices a strange emptybubble in the earth.â
Garethâs voice answered him in thedarkness, âHe wonât find an empty place. The earth believes thisplace is whole. It will not betray us.â
âI wish I understood how that worked,âsaid Walter wistfully.
âMe too,â said Garethhonestly.
The earth continued to shake until atlast it seemed to jump under their feet, threatening to dislodgetheir makeshift ceiling.
âThat had to be it,â said Doron with ahint of something like hidden glee.
The world grew silent, andthen an even greater blast shook them. Minutes passed and nothinghappened. Penny thought of her children, and began to regret herdecision. Iâm stupid. Weâre going to die,and Iâll have accomplished nothing.
In her memory she heardMortâs favorite saying, âStupid neverdies.â Inside she was wound so tightlythat the phrase, which she had never thought much of before, almostmade her laugh.
That was when the screamingstarted.
The first was impressive, an agonizedcry of someone being tortured, but the second, which came a halfminute later was so loud that it seemed as though the world itselfwas dying. Pennyâs hands were over her ears but they hardlydiminished the sound. Worse, she could recognize the voice.Mercifully, Walter adjusted his shield to prevent sound fromentering as well.
In the silence, there was nosolace.
***
Time passed slowly, with nothing tomark it. In their dark and silent womb the world had ceased toexist. Deprived of her senses Pennyâs mind began to create sightsand sounds to fill the emptiness. At first they were small,imaginary noises or half-heard phrases, some accompanied by asudden image or a flicker of light, but as time dragged on, theygrew more real.
âItâs over now,â said Mordecai,sitting beside her.
She ignored the illusion, for she knewher mind was playing tricks on her.
âIâm
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