Home > Infinity Blade: Redemption (Infinity Blade #2)(17)

Infinity Blade: Redemption (Infinity Blade #2)(17)
Author: Brandon Sanderson

And at the end of it all, guilty though she felt, at least one thing good came of it. She found that, finally, her grudge against Siris—and what he was—evaporated. She could not blame him for being Deathless.

If she got her way, everyone would know this wondrous state eventually. Now that she’d embraced it, she realized that was the only true answer to this mess.

Make everyone Deathless. Then, Raidriar’s arguments held no weight. Then, she would never need to feel guilty again. She hastened to the command center to tell Lux of the plan.

She made it halfway before the fire began to rain down from the heavens.

EXPLOSIONS ON the horizon.

“No!” Siris screamed. He ran, frantic, helpless—his horse dead on the steppes somewhere behind him. He’d long since outpaced Terr and TEL.

The ground shook. Light flashed in the evening darkness. Again and again.

Destruction.

Death.

He’d failed.

The rebellion was no more.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

SIRIS WALKED, head down, among the blasted ruins of what had once been the rebellion headquarters. Burned bodies lay scattered like fallen branches. The command center was a smoldering heap, not a single wall still standing.

The Worker had known. All along, he’d known. He’d sent machines across the sky to deliver death. Siris fell to his knees near where small bodies lay in a depression, where they’d tried to hide. The children . . . the children he’d played with . . .

The Dark Self stirred. Furious, it wanted to lash out. Siris screamed, stabbing the Infinity Blade down into the ground.

Why? Why hadn’t the people fled? He’d sent messages telling them that the Worker knew where they were! What had gone wrong?

Coughing.

Siris stumbled to his feet, pulling the Blade out of the ground and waving it in the darkness. Burning fires gave light to the armored figure who approached. The figure had lost most of its breastplate and was missing one arm, which ended in a burned stump.

Siris recognized that armor. But moreso, there were few beings who could walk so confidently after taking such terrible wounds.

“Raidriar,” Siris said, lowering his sword. “What are you doing here? Shouldn’t you be back at the hideout?”

In a rare show of trust, the God King removed his helm, ripping it free with his remaining hand. The Dark Self thrashed inside of Siris. It recognized that face, identical to that of the Soulless he had killed shortly before.

“What happened?” Raidriar asked, dropping his helm, then wiping sweat from his brow.

“He knew,” Siris said. “At the palace, your Soulless . . . he was researching the Worker’s plots. He had found them, pulled them up on his screen. The latest was a strike that had been ordered on this very location.”

The God King cursed, stumbling closer. Siris tightened his grip on the Infinity Blade.

“Why are you here?” Siris demanded. What was going on? Isa? She would be back at the hideout, fortunately.

“Why am I here?” Raidriar said. “You summoned me!”

“I tried to send everyone away! My message was an alarm!”

“So he beat us in that, too,” Raidriar said. “He intercepted your communication, twisted it. Damn.” Raidriar glanced at the Infinity Blade, a veiled hunger in his eyes, but he didn’t reach for it. He walked over to a rise of broken earth and slumped down, back to it, breathing out.

Siris turned about, the numb feeling of loss returning. In his mind’s eye, he remembered these people cheering him, saluting him, looking upon him with awe. He’d failed them miserably.

“At least you have it,” Raidriar said. “The Weapon.”

Siris turned the Infinity Blade over in his hand. “He knew I was coming for it, Raidriar. The Worker . . . he knew everything. He even knew that your Soulless was infiltrating his systems.” Siris laughed, feeling as mad as the copy he’d just faced, and settled down on the ground. He pulled out a small mirror—a datapad—and tossed it to Raidriar.

The God King caught it with his single hand. He grunted, reading the illuminated screen.

Siris lay back, staring up at the sky. The only direction he could look and not see corpses.

He could still smell them burning, though. The Dark Self shook and growled. Siris barely kept it contained.

“He was wrong,” the God King said.

Siris sat up. “What do you mean? He knew about this, about the rebellion. He knew about Lux, had lists of our officers . . .”

“He thought you’d have an entire force of Deathless by now,” Raidriar said, holding up the pad. “It says here that this attack was in part meant to clog your rebirthing chamber, force you to spend weeks rebuilding your Deathless army.”

“A minor error,” Siris said with a sigh. “He was right about everything else.”

“It is important,” Raidriar said softly. “It means that he can be wrong.” He rubbed his finger along the outside of the mirror, as if it were some holy relic. “Unless this is some way of manipulating us as well. How to know . . . ?”

Siris groaned, climbing to his feet.

“And what are you going to do?” Raidriar asked.

“Keep looking for survivors.”

“You won’t find any,” Raidriar said, then pointed. “Though if you were going to, they’d probably be that direction. Near Isa’s body.”

Siris froze. “She came with you?” he screamed. “Why didn’t you say anything?”

The God King didn’t reply.

No!

Siris came to himself cradling the burned corpse. He didn’t remember running to it. It was her. Oh . . . it was her. Enough remained of her face for him to make it out.

Raidriar walked up, armor clinking.

Siris hissed, the Dark Self squirming free. He dropped Isa and scrambled for Raidriar, picking up a blackened stone in his hand, the only weapon he could find.

Raidriar leveled the Infinity Blade, which he’d been carrying behind his back. “You dropped something.”

Siris stopped short. Even the Dark Self cowered.

Raidriar held its point to Siris’s chest for a moment, then lowered it. “I am going to go and kill him,” Raidriar said, voice cold. “The Worker goes too far. This wholesale slaughter of my people . . . the indifference he shows for rule. I will cut his heart from him with the Weapon he himself forged.”

“I get first chance at him,” Siris hissed.

“Have you ever fought the Worker?”

“Does it matter?” Siris demanded, stepping forward, clutching his rock.

“Get hold of yourself, Ausar,” Raidriar spat.

“Why didn’t you tell me she was . . .” Siris gasped in breath. “You held off. To bring me pain.”

Raidriar glanced at Isa’s corpse. “I held off to get information. I didn’t want you running off until I knew what had happened. Now . . . forgetting to tell you that she was Deathless . . . that I did to bring you pain.”

“Deathless?” Siris stammered. He spun on Isa’s body.

“She stepped into the Pinnacle of Sanctification before we came here,” Raidriar said. “Her body is new to being Deathless, however. It will take more time than usual to recover. The first times are hard, as you may remember—but no, of course. You do not.”

Siris knelt again beside Isa. Could it be true? Was Raidriar lying?

If Isa was Deathless . . .

Siris looked up, coming back to himself. The Dark Self retreated—it wasn’t pushed down, it merely retreated to smolder like the burning buildings around him. To plot.

Oh, how I hate you, he thought, looking at Raidriar.

Now in control of himself, the Dark Self and his own self working together, he remembered the little precaution he’d put into place. He tapped his finger against his palm and activated the teleportation ring.

The Infinity Blade vanished from Raidriar’s hand, instead appearing in Siris’s own grip.

“Ah, clever,” Raidriar said. “I should have inspected it for a teleportation ring.” He nodded. “This is good. If I should fall while fighting the Worker, you can summon the Weapon back to you, so he cannot have it. It might even save my life, depriving him of the Blade, should the duel turn against me.”

“You really think I’m just going to let you leave with it?” Siris snapped.

“Do you remember fighting him?” Raidriar challenged. “Do you know his favored blows, his techniques? He is a master duelist. He is a master at everything. Have you fought him, Ausar? Do you know how to defeat him?”

Siris hesitated.

“I have,” Raidriar said, soft, dangerous. “I have bested him in sparring matches, on occasion. You will give me that weapon for the same reason that I sent you to fight my Soulless—because in this case, I have the better chance of winning. And we cannot risk losing.”

“We could go together,” Siris said.

“With one Infinity Blade? It would be pointless. I will go. It is my place. And you . . . you should take that one back to the hideout and place her in the rebirthing chamber. She has no buds yet to return to, and the chamber will ease the difficulty of her first recovery. Her Q.I.P. remains in a fragile state. She will need you near her when she wakes.”

Siris took a deep breath. All around him burned the tattered remnants of Isa’s rebellion. If she still lived . . .

The Dark Self had an idea.

With a sigh, Siris rammed the Infinity Blade into the smoldering earth, then gestured.

Raidriar snatched it up eagerly. “It is well you brought the information you did. We know where to find the Worker, now. I will strike as soon as my arm is regrown.” He raised the Blade. “It feels so right in my hand . . .” He started to walk away.

Then he hesitated, turning back in the night. “Our ship is at the hidden dock in the southern cove. Use it. See to your woman. I . . . I will see the Worker dead. I will chop off his head and set it up on a pole, for all to revile. This has been a long time coming, for me, Ausar. Farewell. Try not to let anyone kill you while we are apart. I prefer to think of that as my personal privilege.”

He stalked out into the night.

The Dark Self stirred, pleased.

I don’t mind if the Worker kills you, Raidriar, Siris thought, gingerly lifting Isa’s body. I’ve had my fill of it. I just want you gone.

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

IT DID not take Raidriar long to heal. He inspected his new arm as he rode his horse to the Worker’s bunker, a monolithic stone tower in the middle of a wide expanse of desert.

He was almost to the end. He stopped as he drew near, then unpacked something he’d tied to the back of the animal. Armor, his real armor, finished by Eves, who had met him on the way. The man had gathered several loyal Devoted out from under the Worker’s heel, and Raidriar had sent them on plots even Ausar didn’t know about.

Raidriar put on his armor. He would not go into this particular battle poorly equipped.

Curiously, he saw two daerils guarding the way in. Unusual for the Worker, who normally eschewed daerils in favor of Deathless guards. It seemed something just for Raidriar, a nod to the way he personally had always done things.

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