Chapter 123: Payback
As he walked through the woods, Krulmvenor didnt dare think about how close the Lich had come to being murdered on this very spot. That wasnt because the thought made him uncomfortable, though. It was because it made his heart sing like nothing had in years.
Now that he had a skull full of goblins, keep secrets bordered on impossible, so it was better simply not to think at all. In that sense, he had finally become the perfect automaton that the Lich had wanted him to be for all these years. He didnt think about who he killed or why he did it. He didnt think about all those dwarves he had burned alive. He certainly didnt think about Oroza and how she had finally managed to slip the chains of the Lichs commands.
All he thought about was the next goal, and todays goal was a simple one: to burn this forest and everything in it to ashes. He didnt start that immediately, though. Though that would have been satisfying. Instead, he wandered through the moonlit glades, hoping to attract some sort of attention from the locals.
Each time some small beast like a fox or an owl flickered across his path, the voices in his head would open up in a hungry chorus of baying and obscenities. For a moment, his only desire in life was to run the thing down and rip it to bloody shreds, but he resisted. He was here for bigger game.
Kills it! a small chorus of goblins screeched.
Feed us! another shouted over a gibbering, unintelligible din of madness.
Krulmvenor struggled for a moment to retain control. While he moved through the forest, he kept the blue flames that were his tortured soul at the very minimum. The only visible fires were those that burned in his eyes. Everything else stayed bottled up inside his bones, where he was filled with ever-burning coals and rage instead of marrow.
He could feel strange magics here. The shadows were full of them, though they were not the dark sorceries of his master nor anything to do with flames or other elements that he had a passing knowledge of. They were thinner than that; they were insubstantial, like cobwebs or the oil sheen upon still waters.
It could very well be a trap, Krulmvenor realized. Behind these illusions, or whatever they were, there might be whole armies waiting in ambush just beyond what he could see. He didnt care, though. He welcomed death, and that was even true when he was still relatively whole. Each time the Lich sent Krulmvenor against a new opponent, he hoped that the darkness would finally overreach and that such an enemy would be his last.
Once he broke apart into dozens of lesser versions of himself, he didnt care what happened to himself at all. This didnt make him brave. There was no bravery left in his hollow metal bones. He was filled only with fire and madness now. He would have felt sorry for himself about it if he still had the privacy for self-pity.
When the first arrow finally came at him, it was much too quick for him to dodge. It streaked through the night, leaving a trail of white fire in its wake, but just before it hit his skull and they saw whether its enchantments or the Lichs forges were stronger, he ruptured, splitting into two. Each version of him was now a little to either side of the arrow, and it passed harmlessly between them before embedding in a nearby tree, where it exploded in a shower of sparks.
Maybe this will finally be the end, both versions of himself thought hopefully as they charged into the woods after their unseen target. Neither of them ran directly where they thought it would be. Instead, one version of the fire godling ran wide to the left, and the other ran wide to the right. More arrows came. Enough to know for certain that there was more than one of his opponents. Some even found their mark, and the copy that they stuck was either mangled or eliminated.
Suddenly, wooden talons and powerful jaws were tested against the steel that bound the many molten fragments of Krulmvenors soul, but in almost all cases, they were found wanting. Even bears and dire wolves lacked the strength to do much more than dent skulls or bend bones, and every one of them was immensely and enjoyably flammable.
Soon, the whole, smokey section of the forest spells of burning meat, but that was only the warm-up act for the giant oak. It began to move as soon as a few versions of Krulmvenor approached it, but before they could reach it, the thing came to life as a sort of tree giant and smashed three of him to pieces with its two-foot-thick limbs.
Treant, the word came to mind. It was supplied by the Lich because he had never heard it before. Perhaps shes even a godling, the Lich whispered. Capture it if you can; kill it if you must. Then it was gone again, leaving its pack of hunting dogs alone to fight the thirty-foot-tall giant.
You tread on hallowed ground, monster! the tree boomed in a voice that sounded like wind roaring through branches. This will be the grave of all who are foolish enough to invade my domain!
Krulmvenor wouldnt have bothered to answer its foe intelligently, even if it had been capable of such a thing. Instead, it hurled insults as much as fire, as the dozens of small battles and depravities were forgotten in favor of the new challenge. The goblins that were in the driver's seat now werent much more loyal to the Lich that had woven and bound their wretched souls than Krulmvenor was, but they didnt need to be. They craved violence, and a giant that could crush their rigid steel bodies like they were nothing but dried leaves was nothing if not violent.
I have beaten you once, and I shall do so again! she screeched.
The longer the tree fought against them, and the more it manifested, the more it shaped itself to resemble a giant woman with thick, rough bark instead of skin and leaves and vines for hair. She might have eleven been beautiful if she wasnt on fire.
The old wood was not yet burning, but the leaves had already flown apart into ashes, and the bark was smoldering. Even awash in curtains of blue flame, the oaken monster still raged. Every blow and swipe caused at least one version of Krulmvenor to wink out of existence, and as the total number of its copies drifted down somewhere below 100, the diffuse consciousness that was the core of its mind found itself rooting for its failure almost as much as its victory.
Slowly, her cries of defiance morphed into cries of pain. The fire godling understood that all too well. Some small distant point of hope that she managed to die properly at least and that no trace of her was left behind for the Lich to study and corrupt because, to his eyes, it was looking less and less likely that she was going to win.
As strong as the behemoth was and as many steel goblins as it shattered, it could not bear the heat of the Lichs unfire for more than a couple of minutes. Soon, wood was splitting as sap boiled into steam, and the wooden goddess was screaming in pain as much as rage as his strikes got slower and slower. After two minutes, she scarcely had the speed to connect her terrible blows with her agile tormentors, and after five, as she could do was make weak warding gestures as the goblins used metal talons to dig deeper and deeper into the veins of charred wood that penetrated almost all the way to her core.
It wasnt until she stopped moving completely, and the entire grove had been reduced to a charred ruin, that the sixty-eight copies of Krulmvenor spread out into the night. Freed of their chains, they spread out into the dark of the woods, looking to kill and burn.
They had no idea if they would find the elves or even other opponents worth fighting. They didnt care. They only wanted to maim and destroy, and Krulmvenor had no choice but to let them. Hed long ago lost control of the mob, and now he was just along for the ride as waves of blue fire beard throughout the forest in all directions, replacing what should have been the coming dawn in a few hours with an endless inferno.