Chapter 721: A Short Lesson in Divinity
St. Merzhin used his divinity with a vengeance as he stood atop Vesuvius back.
The battle had been long, tough, and important.
All around him, a scene that resembled one hed imagined one would see in the hells, unfolded.
The Heroes, Thameish knights and a group of allies from Generasi were defending a pass leading to the mountain city of Llanesam far in the western part of Thameland.
They had made a stand there.
Behind them, a vast medical camp sprawled within this strategic city that provided aid to hundreds of wounded from across the region. A supply depot in Llanesam also fed thousands of soldiers who marched through these lands.
Llanesam couldnt be allowed to be destroyed, though the Ravener-spawn were bent on doing just that.
In front of the Heroes, a sea of the creatures filled the pass; bone-chargers, chitterers and skinned ones, gathered with their commanders. Behemoths, scores of gibbering legions, and rampart-crushers lumbered into the pass, a hunger for death in their eyes. The Raveners minions pushed forward with a fury unseen before, throwing themselves at the Thameish shield wall with no care for their own lives.
They were bent on slaughter, driven only to complete the Raveners cause.
Though now, stiff resistance met them.
Stiff, and fatal resistance.
With the Heroes and Generasians joining the fight, the tide was turning against them.
Themelands Heroes, Generasis Watchers of Roal and Tyris Goldtooth with her familiar, Vesuvius, were tearing through them. Hart had taken a position in the centre of the shield wall, his enormous blade chopping bloody swaths through the monsters.
His speed had grown since Uldars Rise, and with that speed, he quickly cut down droves of monsters before they could advance further. At his side stood Cedric, wielding spells and his spear with equal ease.
Drestras true form soared above, strafing monsters with torrents of flame. On the dragons back sat Thundar, raining storms of force-enhanced bolts down from a magically-infused crossbow, with precision.
Tyris weaved fire and stone through the enemy ranks perched on Vesuvius back whilebehind herMerzhin uttered a long, impassioned prayer to Uldar.
Or rather, to his spirit.
Even the deeply devout Saint wasnt able to reconcile his faith with Uldars actions, nor the fact that the god he so believed in, was dead.
And so the Holy lord of Thameland went unto his peoples enemies, and he cursed them! He said unto them, Let the blood of those who wish to harm my people thin, for if the blood of the innocent means so little, then let theirs be as water! he chanted.
Divinity resonated within him, pouring free in a wave of invisible might.
The power bathed the Ravener-spawn, leaving them shuddering in its grip.
In numbers, bodies fell, contorting, blood thinning, changing, transforming to pure water. Shuddering became spasms, and spasms became death.
The Thameish army, Heroes and their allies had, so far, cleared much of the pass, giving them reason to cheer. The joyful sound echoed through the air, yet Merzhin could not share in their cheer.
His past inaction lay heavy on his soul as he remembered Carey. His friend should still be here with them, but his naive and blind trust had cost her her life.
It would take more than success in a single battle to redeem him for that sin
Without warning, they appeared.
One moment, Merzhin stood watching the enemy armys decimation.
The next, his vision was filled with a bloody form.
What in Uldars name? he cried, recoiling.
An instant later, Vesuvius groaned as a party of mangled bodies appeared from thin air, landing on his back.
Vesuvius? Whats wrong Tyris turned, screaming at the scene behind her.
Merzhin gasped, thinking his eyes were deceiving him.
Atop Vesuvius shell, covered in caked blood and seemingly lifeless, were faces he had not seen since Careys funeral.
Faces in ruin.
He recognised Alex Roth, the Fool of Thameland, whose gaping stomach wound was so deep, it was a miracle he still lived. His chest was covered in blood, but he was still breathing. In his arms was the huntress, Theresa.
Her skin was seared, burns covered most of her body, raw, crimson, blackened; she was likely well past pain now, and horrifically wounded.
Brutus, her cerberus, lay beside them, battered and bleeding, his chest heaving.
With them were two giants that Merzhin didnt know; one was wounded, though not nearly as badly as the others, the other was clutching the first to his chest.
Hel Alex choked.
W-what? Merzhin gasped.
An iron hand seized his shoulder, squeezing tight, sending a shock of pain through the slight Hero. Claygon floated above the others.
Healthem! he bellowed, his voice echoing through the pass. Fathermy familytheyre dying! Heal them!
Merzhin swallowed, turning back to the ruin of folk hed fought beside at Uldars Rise, and began doing what he was called to do.
He set his jaw and got to work.
The othersexcept for Alexturned to him.
Um, could you heal my father? Bjorgrund asked.
Dont waste these peoples time, Birger said with irritation. Ive learned to live with it. You cant regrow a leg.
He healed such deep wounds, Bjorgrund countered, looking at Merzhin. And father, you said your aches and pains are gone. Please, I need to know, can you regrow my fathers leg?
The Saint of Uldar looked around. Um, helloBjorgrund and Birger, was it?
Aye, dont waste your time, I know you cant regrow a leg the old firbolg started.
Actually, it should be possible. Perhaps.
Silence fell.
What? Birger asked, a yearning lit up his eyes. Truly?
Uldar and some of the great Saints of old have regenerated limbs with divinity, Merzhin said. Though it can take anywhere from days to months, depending on the age of the wound and the power of the priest. Apparently, from what Theresa said, the First Apostle can.
Cancan you do it? the old giant asked.
II do not think so. Not yet, Merzhin said apologetically.
Well, if that First Apostle regrew his arm, you should be able to do the same, right? Thundar asked. I mean youre more powerful than he is; you stopped that interdiction.
Merzhin suddenly laughed, a rare sound. His high voice oozed with a bitterness so deep, it grated on the ear. There was no mirth in that laughter, though.
Please understand, I wish I was more powerful than him. I dearly wish it were so, Merzhin said. Do you know how divinity works?
Uh, cant say I do, I gotta admit, Thundar said. Is it like mana, where you just gotta practise to get better?
No. Merzhin shook his head. Divinity is granted to us from our deityor from the throne he or she sits upon. Faith flows from a believer to what they worship: their deity, for example, and then that faith transforms into divinity. When a priest calls on that power, divinity flows to them so they might perform a miracle, but it requires a gate to come through. And that gate is ones soul.
Merzhin held everyones attention.
The soul acts as the gate that divinity flows throughbut a deitys strength is much greater than a single mortal soul; if one calls on too much of their holy god or goddess power, then, that would be like forcing a flood through a tiny gap in a weak dam. The dam would burst.
Oh Theresa murmured. So that means the soul would break?
Exactly, Merzhin explained. There is some skill needed when calling upon a miracle, but the strength of ones soul is the great limiter, rather than ones skill. As one uses more of their deitys divinity, the soul strengthens overtime like a muscle; that is why older, more experienced priests can perform greater miracles than, say, one who is first granted divinity.
The small man made a sound of disgust. The Mark of the Saint grants me a deep, deep connection with Uldars power. One that is unrivalled. It strengthens my soul as well, but there are still limits. The First Apostle has the Mark of the Chosen. His Mark has a lesser, though similar gift to the Saints. But he has also had hundreds of years to strengthen his soul and practise his skills. He can call on far more power than I can; but, my authority in Uldars hierarchy is still greater, so I can counter his interdictionsbut, were I to try an interdiction myselfthis weak, unworthy soul of mine would shatter.
He looked at Bjorgrund. To put it simply, I dont know if I can heal your father. He looked at Birger. But I would like to try. When there is time, I will try my best.
Thank you, the old firbolg said. If we survive that longif these powerful enemies are tracking us somehow, then we might be dead before long. Wed already be dead if thatFirst Apostle, you called him? If he wasnt so focused on killing Alex, none of us would be here to tell what happened.
Alex twitched.
Thats whywe should teleport back nowfind himand kill him! Claygon hissed.
I want to go back too, Theresa said.
Aye, Cedric jumped in. I wouldnt mind a rematch mself. I owe the damn bastard.
No.
Again, the atmosphere in the tent went quiet.
All eyes turned to Alex.
No, we cant do any of that, he said grimly. Ive been thinking about a lot of things. About who they focused on, about what that means, about how theyre targeting us.
And what did you come up with? Theresa asked.
Alex shook his head. Thats the thing; next to nothing. I dont know how they found us. I dont know where they are in the Empire, and I have no idea what their next move will be
His mind turned to Selina.
...or who theyll target next to get to meor any of us.
All the more reason to hunt them down, Theresa said.
Alex shook his head. We dont know how to find them and tonight was sobering. We cant leave our loved ones unprotected; they could attack us from anywhere.
Do westop searching for the sanctum? Claygon asked.
No. Alex shook his head. Now, we need even more answers. Answers that Keldas notes might give us, and the longer I have the Mark of the Fool, the more time theyll have to kill me while Im still vulnerable.
Sowhat does that mean? Theresa asked.
He looked at her grimly. It means that the best move is for me to not put our loved ones at risk. The best move is for me to move quickly and quietly to find the sanctum.
Alex swallowed.
The best move is for me to search for it alone.