Steel and Stone

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Book: Steel and Stone Read Free
Author: Ellen Porath
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of melted snow that might tell her if she was still Kitiara Uth Matar. Even as she looked, however, a voice in her brain reminded her that the mage hadn’t locked the box. Sudden thunder distracted her. She looked up.
    Now clouds coalesced in columns above the Meir’s castle, forming a thunderhead as high as a dozen castles. The sky above the mercenary camp was suddenly clear. The soldiers abandoned their duties. Frozen, mouths agape, they watched as the mage on the hillside drew the forces of nature into his grasp and commanded them against his enemy. On the parapets, the castle’s occupants were nearly as still. They gazed upward with dawning horror.
    The cloud throbbed above them. Lightning bolts of yellow, blue, and red burst from the churning mist. Thunder reverberated inside Kitiara’s head. She forced herself to remember to breathe. Her knees felt watery, and she leaned against a tree. If she’d had to defend herself now, she would have been felled as easily as a young sapling. But no attacker advanced against the mercenaries.
    Then suddenly the cloud opened, and fire poured down upon the defenders of the castle.
    Soldiers, peasants, and nobles screamed and sought frantically, futilely, to escape the liquid flame. Some managed to remove their clothing, only to discover that the brimstone adhered to their skin. Many, to avoid lingering deaths, dove to quick ones off the castle walls. Others tried in vain to protect the castle, shooting arrows toward the surrounding army as it waited safely out of reach of danger.
    Impotent against the brimstone, the Meir’s supporters burned to death where they stood. The wooden gate of the castle exploded. The top floor of the castle collapsed. A section of the castle wall cracked open. Through it, Kitiara saw the contents of water troughs boil and bubble. Then the troughs, too, exploded.
    So great was Janusz’s control that the mercenaries felt none of the fire, felt only a comfortable warmth beneath their feet. A hot wind streamed through the camp, and that, too, was almost pleasant, given the dampness they’d grown accustomed to. But the wind also carried ashes, and the eyes of the mercenaries streamed with tears.
    The wise ones held the wool of their cloaks before their mouths and noses. Lloiden did not. He collapsed, choking, to the ground before his tent, and Kitiara wondered if Janusz was avenging the insolence of a few hours earlier.
    And then it was over. The fiery rain stopped as suddenly as it had begun. The cloud hissed into nothingness. The mercenaries released their breath. What once had been an imposing castle was nothing but steaming wreckage. The opening still gaped at the front of the castle, but still no one dared enter. The air was thick with ashes and the horrible smell of charred flesh.
    One quavering voice rose out of the camp. “So why’d he bother to hire
us?”
the soldier asked.
    Then the Valdane appeared around the back of Janusz’s tent. He pointed his sword at Kitiara where she still leaned against the tree. “Attack!” he screamed, his face red with anger. “I hired you to annihilate my enemy! Now do it!”
    “Valdane,” Kitiara said wearily, forcing herself to stand upright, “there is no enemy. Your mage has killed them all.”
    But the leader waved his sword like a child tilting at an imaginary monster. “You will make sure, Captain! I want to be certain they’re all dead.”
    Kitiara tried again. “Valdane, no one could possibly sur—”
    “Find them!”
    There was no defying him. Janusz, looking half-dead with the effort that the fiery rain had cost him, dragged himself up the hill. His voice was barely audible, his face streaked with ash and sweat. “Valdane, it’s too hot in the wreckage for our soldiers to venture inside.”
    “Then send rain!”
    Janusz took a long look at the Valdane, then turned soundlessly and stumbled back down the incline. Kitiara heard more chanting.
    “It’s raining!” a soldier shouted.
    It was

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