The Unbroken C. Clark (best books to read for self development .txt) š
- Author: C. Clark
Book online Ā«The Unbroken C. Clark (best books to read for self development .txt) šĀ». Author C. Clark
Standing behind the line and barking orders was the Blood General. She was like a matchstick in the dark, her thin figure a dark silhouette, her blond-white hair and its flying strands like a flare. The cords of her neck bulged as she shouted to fire, load, change weapons, over and over. Firing on Touraineās people. She understood the struggle on Djashaās face.
āNo.ā Aranen tugged Djashaās wrist, the word already broken with loss as she said it. āDjasha, come with me. Please.ā
Djasha took a dazed step toward Cantic anyway. Touraine threw her arm in front of Djasha to stop her, and the BrigÄni woman wrapped her hand around Touraineās forearm. Touraine almost screamed at the burn of the womanās touch. She jerked her arm away.
Djasha turned back to Aranen and gripped Aranenās arms with both hands, as if her touch wasnāt fire.
They spoke in ShÄlan too rapid for Touraine to follow, but the plaintive look on both of their faces told Touraine enough.
Then Aranen whispered, tear choked, āYouāre going to die.ā
Djashaās smile was haggard in the shadow. āI will either way. But I can finish this. Go.ā She pointed the same way Touraine had, forward, to the southern wall where the rebels might still be waiting for more prisoners, the injured, and the coming retreat.
āNo. Together.ā Aranen squeezed Djashaās hand hard.
They were resolute. Touraine understood. Cantic had broken their lives. She had broken Touraineās life, too, in a way, even as she had built it. They all had some kind of unfinished business with the Blood General.
āI take it you still have ShÄlās magic?ā Touraine asked, holding up her burned wrist.
āI have enough.ā
āThen you come at her from this way. Iāll loop behind that buildingāāTouraine pointed to the administrative buildingāāand come at her from the gate side. Attack when sheās busy with me. Take these.ā She unslung the muskets. They felt cumbersome to her now. She moved better without them.
The two priestesses nodded, and Touraine took off. She ran through the empty darkness between the north wall of the compound and the jail, the command building, and the infirmary, with the noise of Canticās line to her left. Occasionally, a wild shot from the rebels pinged the ground near her, but nothing hit flesh. She slipped through the alley between the infirmary and the command building. It was already stacked with corpses, but they were too orderly to be anything but plague deaths the soldiers hadnāt taken to the fires yet.
Touraine looked back down the road, to her left, where Djasha and Aranen were waiting for her.
Canticās back was to her right. She was flanked by a junior officer on each side, their pistols in hand, their swords on their belts. One of them was speaking to an aide, and Touraine waited for them to finish, for the officerās attention to return to the battle. Her long knife was both slick with fear sweat and sticky with blood. As the aide ran off to relay their message, Touraine finally stepped out.
The noise that had been muffled a moment ago now hit Touraine with full force. Canticās voice was raw and ragged as she shouted orders. The yelling was interspersed with gunfire and cries of pain. They were all so busy with the fight in front of them that Touraine stabbed the junior officer to Canticās right before anyone realized an enemy had gotten behind their lines. She stabbed the one on the left clumsily, trying to hurry as Cantic turned. The young officer staggered back, almost taking Touraineās knife with him.
āGeneral.ā Touraine straightened in the middle of the street, holding her long knife en garde.
The generalās open coat fluttered in the nightās gentle wind. She looked at her two guards, one dying, the other hunched over, trying to get a grip on his pistol. She held out a hand to stop him.
āLieutenant,ā Cantic growled. She barked at the young officer, āTake over the line. Keep the sky-falling dogs pinned.ā Then she turned to Touraine, drawing her officerās sword.
Touraine told herself that she was not afraid to die. She told herself that she didnāt care if she died now or thirty years from now. That she didnāt care if she never saw Pruett or Jaghotai or even Luca ever again. Each thought was a lie, but she acted as if she believed it. She looked up at the night sky above the compound and inhaled deeply. The dust of the desert had a distinct smell, and Touraine caught it even in the stench of battle.
Hurry, Djasha. Then she focused on the momentāand the steelāin front of her.
Another rumor the Sands had spread in their bunks long ago: Cantic had been the best sword fighter of her age, second only to the princessās guard captain. Touraine hoped that particular snatch of gossip, at least, was stretched.
āIām sorry things will end this way, General.ā
Touraine tested Canticās defenses with a jab of her long knife. She didnāt have to win. She just had to buy Djasha time.
With your life?
Djasha was the reason Touraine was still alive, despite everything. She had saved Touraineās life and given her a place to belong. Sheād shown Touraine mercy when she could have destroyed Touraine with the flick of a wrist. This was the least Touraine could do.
Cantic lazily parried Touraineās blade to the side.
āYouāve lost your mind, Lieutenant.ā Cantic stepped closer, her sword pointed toward the dirt. āTell me they have some magic hold on you.ā
āNo.ā Draw this out. She settled her weight on her back leg, coiling her power there. āMore like they cleared my eyes, sir.ā But Touraine wasnāt good with words. She wasnāt like Luca, stabbing cleverly at just the right weak spots. Touraineās best weapon had always been her body.
She sprang at Cantic, knife aiming for the
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