Chapter 271: Rescuing the Princess
As Syd fell from the boughs of the tree with all the grace of a dead goose, Jadis contemplated the likelihood of her survival. Looking at her status sheet wasn’t a great deal of comfort.
Jadis Ahlstrom
Race: Nephilim
Primary Class: Mirror Knight (30)
Secondary Class: Perverted Ritualist of D (23)
Tertiary Class: None
Combined Level Rating: 53
Health: 226/1300
Magic: 310/310
Attributes
Strength: 214
Dexterity: 60
Agility: 254
Vitality: 100
Fortitude: 70
Endurance: 72
Arcane: 0
Divine: 0
Eldritch: 254
Focus: 1
Resilience: 30
Will: 5
She had lost more than a thousand health points since the battle against the dragon had started. A thousand health points. The average person would have died ten times over from the amount of damage she’d taken from the dragon, yet she was still kicking. Well, she was also fighting demons and a possessed wind mage, lying in a crumpled heap somewhere in the forest, and falling from a very tall tree. She wasn’t just healthier than the average person, she was a lot more diversified.
The seventy or so feet she was falling was going to hurt. A lot. She could jump to incredible heights with her increased Strength and Agility, but that didn’t mean the landing would be any gentler for her. Still, with her armor and Fortitude, Jadis was fairly certain that she could survive the fall. Probably. But how much health would she have left after the landing? Not much, by her estimate. In the best-case scenario, if she had a hundred health left after hitting the ground, she would still land directly next to the ice dragon.
The ice dragon that exuded a constant aura of freezing cold that had already proven more than enough to sap her health in a very short amount of time.
Jadis rapidly went over possibilities, her mind working overtime as she plummeted in slow motion. She needed to find a way to lessen the impact of her fall. Dys was too far away to get to Syd in time to catch her. Jay... Jay was in a sorry state. Jadis wasn’t even sure if that self could stand, much less run. The pine branches rushing by her were either just out of reach, or too small to hold her armored weight.
Well, fuck. She was just going to have to stick the landing and hope she could sprint away from the knocked-out dragon in time to not die from its radiating cold.
As Jadis girded her resolve for what was likely going to be the most dangerous five seconds of her life to date, she felt a presence nearing Syd. It wasn’t the dragon. She was still trying to right her descent and was staring at the quickly approaching beast lying on the forest floor. She didn’t sense the malicious blood thirst of a demon, either. No, the thing nearing her felt... familiar. Familiar and decidedly grumpy.
Noll’s thick arms wrapped around Syd’s waist and under the back of her legs, catching her as she was about thirty feet from the ground. The force of their collision made both of them grunt as his trajectory brought her away from the dragon. In a moment of mental dissonance, Jadis found herself, for the first time in her life, being princess carried by someone who wasn’t her own self.
Syd frowned, but didn’t bother peppering Aila with questions, not when she was focused on clearing the battlefield of demons. Instead, Syd made her way to the wagon with all the speed she had to find out the answer for herself. What she found did not please her.
“What the fuck!?” Syd cried out, seeing Eir kneeling on the ground next to a motionless Gunnar.
The elf had her eyes closed and was muttering a prayer, her hand on the blue elf’s chest. Healing power glowed between them, but the soldier’s condition remained unchanging. His arm had been cut off; the limb was pressed up against his shoulder but the cut was obvious. Next to the two of them sat Sabina, cradling a pale Sorcha. The goblin was clearly in a lot of pain, but more than that, Syd could see that where her left foot should have been was nothing but a freshly healed but still raw-looking stump.
“I’m sorry Jadis,” Sabina said quietly, looking up at Syd with sad eyes as she hugged the goblin to her chest. “Alex is gone.”
“What!?” Syd cried out again, Sabina’s sentence making no sense to her whatsoever. “Did—did Alex do this!?”
“No, no!” Sabina said, twitching like she was going to stand. The movement made Sorcha groan pitifully, though, so she immediately settled back down. “Alex saved us! That prisoner, the one with the scythe—”
“Eike,” Sorcha clarified weakly.
“Right! Eike,” Sabina nodded. “She broke free of her restraints. She killed Gunnar. Or, I think she killed Gunnar, maybe not? Eir would know better. She cut off Sorcha’s leg though and she would have killed me too, but Alex stopped her and—”
“Wait, wait,” Syd cut her babbling friend off. “Alex stopped Eike? How? Where are they?”
“Oh, ah, I don’t know,” Sabina said, looking around the wagon. “I’m not sure how, but Alex got out of the cage and got, uh, bigger, I guess. Last I saw it was wrapped around Eike’s head while she stumbled off into the woods over that way. I’m not sure where either are now.”
That... that was a lot to process. Jadis didn’t even know where to start. Well, looking at Eir and Gunnar, she did know where to start. As much as she wanted to ask Sabina for more information about exactly what had gone down, she couldn’t waste time on that. She needed to get healing from Eir as quickly as possible and then get back into the fight. But first, she needed to let her elf lover do what she had to do for Gunnar.
“Is he going to make it?” Syd asked, kneeling down next to Eir and the unmoving soldier.
The priestess made no response, only continuing to chant under her breath as she channeled healing energy into Gunnar. Syd watched and waited, not pressing her lover further while she worked, but the sounds of battle made her tense, never mind the issues she was dealing with from her other bodies.
A loud roar made Syd turn her head to look back down the hill. She saw Noll was there now, as was Bridget. She could see the orc’s blue flame shining brightly in the growing gloom of the twilight shadows. Noll had leapt into the air to cut at the annoying wind mage, but a strange beast had appeared in the sky and attacked him before he could get to the possessed elf.
The creature was large, maybe half-again as large as a frost drake, but with long, thin, batlike wings instead of front legs. Its neck was long and its head was shaped oddly. Its long jaws looked oddly too wide for its body, but when it opened its mouth to snap at Noll, she saw that a second pair of inner jaws lashed out from within, trying to grasp at the mercenary with hooked teeth. The beast’s scales were a shade of olive green and a row of long black spikes jutted out from its spine, going all the way down the length of its sinewy tail.
That had to be one of the possessed black-spined wyverns Jack had warned them about. The Fetch had said there were two of them, though where the second was Jadis couldn’t see.
“Ah, praise Lyssandria,” Eir said with a relieved tone, drawing Syd’s attention back to the elf.
Looking back down, Syd saw that Gunnar was breathing again, albeit shallowly. He was still very pale and his eyes were closed. Worse, it didn’t look like his arm had reattached. Jadis wasn’t even sure how that worked with magical healing, but she’d have to ask Eir about it later.
“He’ll live?” Syd asked, drawing Eir’s eyes up to hers.
“Yes, he should,” the elf nodded, her voice strained. “A miracle, truly.”
“That’s my Eir, the miracle worker,” Syd said, a lot of feeling burning behind those words. She raised the visor on her helmet and gave her lover a quick kiss on the cheek. “Can you work more wonders for me, please? I’m nearly out of health right now.”
“Of course,” Eir said, already putting her hands on Syd, their healing magic washing through her. “How goes the fight?”
“The demon possessing the dragon is dead. A lot of the demons down the hill are dead, too. Maybe a fourth of them are left, but I’m worried more might be coming. We need to start pulling back to our fallback position soon.”
Eir nodded, her face a mask of concentration as she pumped healing magic into Syd. Without even looking at her status sheet, Jadis could feel the difference the priestess’ healing was making on her other two bodies, especially Jay. Soon, she’d be back to full health and then all three of her selves would work with the others to clear the last of the demons attacking them off the face of Oros. Then they could all fall back to the prearranged defensive spot and—
A terrible yet familiar sensation ran up Dys’ spine as she dodged around the battlefield, still grappling with the tornado effect blinding her. Juking out from one way to another, she left the cyclone behind for a moment. Long enough to see a sickly yellow-green glow emanating from the body of dead demons lying at her feet. In fact, that horribly familiar glow was emanating from all the demon corpses scattered across the forest floor around her in a large radius.
“Everyone, DOWN!” Dys screamed as she dashed out of the killing field.
Two seconds later and the world exploded, the bodies of the hundreds of dead demons rupturing in a noxious cloud of blood, meat, and bone shrapnel. Dys stumbled from the blast, most of it hitting her back as she leapt clear of the bloody explosion, landing somewhere to the north of the battlefield. As she caught herself, armored boots skidding in the snow, she raised her head to see an old enemy emerging from the forest shadows, its awful face greeting her with a wide rictus that had haunted her nightmares for months.
“You...” Dys snarled, her eyes meeting the dead orbs of the Twisted Wretch Matriarch. “I’ve been hoping I’d run into you one last time.”
The matriarch only grinned in response.