Part 4
Part 5
Part 6
Part 7
Part 8
Part 9
Part 10
Millie made
her way through the battleground with her mighty broadsword. The fighting was
going well.
She knew enough
about war, and she wasn’t naïve, so she did not entertain any fictions about
winning the battle permanently. Yes, the centaurs were stronger, but the
Wraiths had numbers in their favor. They were pushing them back momentarily,
but that was all. Before long, the dark creatures would start regaining
terrain.
But that
didn’t matter. Millie’s plan involved a different course. The battle was just a
way of getting into the city. She had now managed to do that, and she galloped
at full speed towards Castle Ivory. If she managed to kill the Dark Sorceress,
victory would be theirs despite the outcome of the battle.
__________________________________________________________
Grand Mage
Odette arrived to the Throne Room, flanked by her two friends, Dawn the tiny
fairy and Mia the mermaid princess, who at the moment had legs.
The elf
immediately raised her magical staff, ready to fend off the Dark Sorceress, but
the place was seemingly empty. It was a large chamber, placed at the very
highest tower of Castle Ivory. The throne itself was carved directly within the
bones that formed the farthest wall. But like everything else in the castle, it
had been blackened by the evil magic.
There was
something else that differed from the Ivory Throne that Odette had seen
illustrated on countless books of the lands she had visited: a heavy iron trunk
full of chains and an enormous padlock, stored underneath the bony chair. As
they looked at it, it stirred slightly, as if there were something alive inside
trying to get out.
“Can you
guess who is in there?” a malevolent voice hissed nearby.
They were
all startled. Kneeling in front of the Throne was a figure that hadn’t been
there a second before. It was a curvy elf woman with blue hair and white eyes,
holding a staff of her own that was more like a gigantic and horrific axe. It
was the Sorceress herself. Odette wasn’t too surprised that she knew how to become
invisible.
“So we
finally meet in here, Odette,” she said with a laugh. “You look much better
than the last time we saw each other, though you still aren’t a match for me,
and neither are your powers.”
The axe
started to glow with a bluish hue, as Odette’s crystal shone red. Neither elf
was moving, but they stared at each other in a battle of wills. If any of them
failed, their staffs would be destroyed.
It soon
became apparent that the Sorceress was indeed more powerful than the Mage.
While Odette was struggling to maintain control, her enemy just smiled and
permitted herself to center her attention elsewhere.
“Mia, I
must say I’m disappointed in you. I expected your betrayal, to be honest, but
it also served its purpose. I’ve been waiting for your friend to come here.”
Mia wanted
to cry, but she didn’t. She glared defiantly at her captor.
“Still, I
thought you valued the many gifts this world had for you, and treachery can’t
go unpunished, so…” said the Sorceress. “I’ll take care of you later.”
Mia looked
down at herself in time to see her legs fusing together and growing colorful
scales again. Unable to stand anymore, she fell over the floor, fully back to
her mermaid self. Though much more comfortable in this form, she couldn’t do
anything to help her friends in the coming battle, not to mention there was no
way to get into the water on time. She would die in a few hours… that if the
Sorceress didn’t kill her first.
“You’re a
monster!” said Dawn, staring at the dark elf with tears on her eyes. She had
tried to deny that her little sister was really that bad, but now she knew.
“What happened to you, Karina?”
The evil
ruler looked at the tiny woman at the mention of her real name.
“A fairy?
Ha! I hadn’t even noticed you there! And who…? Wait… Dawn, is that you?”
Karina
laugh was long and chilling.
“Look at
you, big sister! I’ve been waiting
for you too, but I had no idea… I mean, it’s hilarious!”
Dawn just
wanted to slap her smug face, but she knew she was powerless to take on her.
Had she been a dragon still… but no, right now, Odette was the only shot they
had at winning.
“So, you
got here,” continued Karina. “The last spot of the board game. You’re supposed
to win now, aren’t you? Yet the game is still on! Why would that be? So, care
to take a guess? Who is in the iron chest?”
“The rest
of our friends…” said Dawn horrified.
Karina
laughed again.
“No, not
at all! You’re the only players I’ve met so far” she confessed. “The one I got
there is an old man who goes by the name of Gamemaster. He created all of this.
He controls the game. Or well… he used
to control it. I don’t think he expected me to be so powerful to actually
defeat him and trap him in there. But I did, and now I am the Master of the
Game!”
“So our
next goal is self-evident…” said Odette.
Bringing
out her full strength, which she had been saving, she managed to overpower
Karina for a second. Her axe didn’t break, but the Sorceress was pushed away a
couple of steps.
Ready to
fight, Odette faced her opponent, pointing her staff at her while she produced
a flaming ball with her other hand.
“Try to
open that trunk, Dawn!” said the Grand Mage, releasing the fire against Karina.
The witch
deflected it on time and got on her feet, her axe ready to meet Odette’s staff.
Dawn tried
to fly in direction of the Throne, but she wasn’t fast enough. Karina slapped
at her and the small fairy fell against the ground, next to Mia, her little
wings too hurt to take flight again.
The battle
between the two powerful elves was extravagant. Spells flew around as their
weapons swung against each other. It wasn’t clear who would win, since they
looked evenly matched, at least in the inexperienced eyes of Dawn and Mia.
Karina’s power was raw and wilder, but Odette’s practiced and elegant attacks
kept her at bay.
Finally,
it looked like the Dark Sorceress was getting tired, and for an instant it
appeared like Odette would disarm her. But then, Karina took advantage of a
well-placed attack and withdrew towards the Throne, putting some distance
between her and her enemy.
Then, she
hit the floor with the tip of her axe and a gigantic blue force field erupted
around it, protecting both Karina herself and the chest below the Throne.
“You can’t
win!” she teased from inside her glowing bubble. “Maybe I can’t defeat you, but
you can’t get to the chest either, and I just have to wait! You have nowhere to
go! The city is surrounded by thousands of my wraiths. Once they defeat the
centaurs, they’ll come for you!”
“I don’t
know,” said Odette, trying to hide how exhausted she also was. “It seems to me
like Millie could win that battle.”
“For a
while, maybe. But even centaurs can’t fight forever. Wraiths don’t tire,
they’re not living beings! Before long those centaurs will be slaughtered, and
then they’ll come for you and trap you.”
Dawn
wanted to think that Odette had another plan, but that didn’t seem to be the
case. So they were truly doomed.
“And don’t
expect any help from the outside,” continued Karina. “This field I’ve created
is too powerful. There’s nothing that could…”
The whole
castle trembled. Something had hit the walls with such strength that everyone
thought it had to be an earthquake.
One side
of the tower shattered with the clash, and Karina’s defensive spell flickered
before vanishing entirely. Half the castle had fallen, and they were now facing
the outside, most of the Throne Room’s walls completely destroyed.
The person
responsible for the strike was immediately revealed. Standing beside the tower,
almost as tall as it, there was an enormous blonde woman: a giantess.
Mia stared
at the massive features in front of her and gasped. Despite the fact that she
was so large, and that she had aged a couple of decades, she could recognize
the face of her best friend. Her usually very young, very little friend.
“Alexandra?”
she called.
The Queen
of the Giants didn’t listen. She fell on her knees, too tired to even raise her
fingers again. She had managed to destroy the Dark Sorceress’ powerful shield,
but the magic had taken its toll on her. She looked weakly at the small
creatures inside.
Karina seemed
shaken and afraid for the first time, but she was quickly recovering. She used
her axe as support to get back on her feet and laughed dismissively again.
“Very
impressive… a giantess. One of the biggest ones, I think. But she has also failed,
as you all have.”
But
Alexandra’s attack, if brief, had served a purpose. The castle’s defenses were
completely down. Anyone could enter now. And someone did.
Jumping
across one of the enormous holes in the walls with her powerful legs, Millie had
finally arrived to get her revenge. Before Karina could even react, she took
the broadsword across her back and swung it cleanly through her enemy’s axe,
which shattered with a blue explosion.
The Dark
Sorceress was positively terrified. The centauress seemed ready to take off her
head with her next strike.
“Prepare
to die, witch,” Millie said in her fierce voice. “Vengeance is mine.”
“No,
Millie, don’t kill her!” someone said behind her… an elf dressed in red. “It’s
me… Odette. You can’t kill her! She’s not a character! She’s a real person,
she’s Karina!”
“She’s my
sister!” said Dawn weakly from the floor “Please don’t harm her, Millie.”
The
centauress captain hesitated for a second, and taking advantage of that, Karina
got back to her feet. Even without her axe, she was a formidable fighter. She
produced quick spells from her hands which Odette and Millie deflected with
their weapons, but that wasn’t slowing down the Sorceress.
“She got
more powerful!” noted Odette, panting.
“It was
Millie’s inner darkness that did it,” commented Karina with a smirk. “For a
second there, she really wanted to kill me! Can you believe that? Your meek
friend is full of rage, and I fed with that. You can’t stop me now.”
Mille was
pushed aside. Odette was about to fall too, but then she smiled, looking over
Karina’s shoulder.
“We can’t
stop you, but maybe she can.”
The Sorceress
looked at the Throne. Sitting casually in there, her bow pointing directly at
the iron chest’s lock, there was a large Amazon woman.
Nobody had
noticed it when Charlene, the barbarian Forest Dweller had quietly entered
Castle Ivory behind Odette and Dawn, just when Mia had opened the doors.
She had
crawled unnoticed towards the Throne Room, agile as a monkey and silent as a
shadow. She had listened to every conversation and seen every battle, and had
patiently waited for her moment. Every time Karina attacked one of her friends,
Charlene got closer and closer to the Throne.
Now there
she was, one of her explosive flaming arrows pointed directly towards the
prize. The Dark Sorceress’ fastest spell couldn’t prevent what was about to
happen, so she just stared in horror at the chest.
Smiling teasingly,
Charlene released the string. The padlock exploded and the chest opened itself.
It was
empty.
“What?”
It was
Karina who had spoken. She looked at the vacant box in disbelief. And the voice
that responded was that of a stranger:
“You didn’t
think I would wait patiently in there, did you? And miss all the fun that’s
been going all around the game?”
They all
turned in the direction of the lovely voice that had just spoken.
Striding
slowly downstairs there was a beautiful woman, clad in a white dress so bright
it was almost hurtful to see.
“Gamemaster?”
asked Karina dumbfounded. “But… but… you were an old geezer!”
The
powerful being smiled kindly.
“I can
take any form imaginable. That’s what you wanted me to be that day at the
dungeons, so that’s how I revealed myself to you. But this is my true form… or
close enough. There was a time, thousands of years ago, when I was just a
little human girl, not much younger than you all really are. But I lived in a
different world than yours, one that was a lot like the one you’ve seen here.”
The
Gamemaster looked around her with a sad smile.
“It was a
dangerous but beautiful realm, until it was destroyed by a magical cataclysm. I
was the only survivor, chosen by the Gods because of my creativity. They made
me almost like them. They invested me with their powers of creation.”
“Why?”
asked Odette.
“So that a
part of my world would survive. My homeland only lives in my memory, but now
others can experience through this game I’ve created. Of course, it’s only an
echo of the real one, but it feels real to you, doesn’t it?”
The
Gamemaster looked proud of that achievement.
“So the
actual purpose of the game is… to have humans share the experiences from your
extinct world?” asked the giantess Alexandra, who was recovering slowly.
“Yes, what
you’ve experienced was mostly real in a different time and place. There were
giants in my world, and there was a war between the Fenneris and the Mirells,
not much different from what you experienced. Of course, the decisions you make
affect the outcome, which might differ from the historical one… mostly, at
least. Like in every game, there were certain paths that each of you was meant
to follow.”
“But…”
this time it was Karina who spoke. She still looked the most confused of them
all. “Even for me? I wasn’t a player! You told me I was the villain, I… I went
off-script and kidnapped you!”
The woman
smiled delightfully.
“No, you
didn’t. You were meant to think you
went off-script, but you did exactly what I needed you to do when you caught me.
Or rather, when I pretended to be caught. You know, Karina, maybe you’re not as
evil as you think you are, you were just doing what the game required!”
Karina seemed
crestfallen.
“But you
played your role wonderfully. You’re a natural for this kind of game! We’ve had
many people playing our villains through the years, but you were one of the
most convincing ones!”
Karina
looked imploringly at Dawn.
“I would
have never harmed you, I promise,” she said. “None of you. I just wanted you
to…”
But Dawn,
who was once again able to fly, looked at her sternly.
“You did very
bad things in here, Karina!”
“Now, don’t
judge her too harshly,” the Gamemaster said. “You’ve all noticed how your
personalities changed to fit the characters you’ve become. Hers did too. Also,
unlike the rest of you, she had talked to me, and she knew this was just a game to its full extent. She was
just playing… But yes, part of what she did came from her own actual nature,
from things she has felt inside all along.”
“Like her
hate for us!” said Dawn, who still seemed mad at her sister.
“No, no, I’ve
never hated you! I… Okay, I’ve been kind of an asshole to all of you, but you
were once too, and I bet you don’t even remember it!” said Karina.
Dawn was
shocked.
“What do
you mean?”
“Do you
remember when we were all younger, the first time you came around to the house
to play role games with your friends? I really wanted to join, but you pushed
me aside because you didn’t want to play with your uncool little sister any
more. I was really sad, so I decided to hate the games, and be horrible to your
friends, because I was really jealous of them!”
Despite
her mature appearance, at the moment Karina was acting very much like the young
girl she really was inside. Gone were her evil impulses and brashness. She was
scared and vulnerable again.
In fact,
all the other girls also noticed that the personality traits they had gained
inside the game were gone. Odette didn’t feel as wise anymore, or Mia so
conceited. But the one who felt the strangest was Millie. She wasn’t brave and
aggressive anymore. She was back to her shy self, and she felt mortified about
being a half-naked centauress in front of her friends.
“I just
wanted to be like you, Dawn,” continued Karina. “And in this world, I had the
chance to make you and your friends look up to me. I’m sorry if I got too
caught up in that.”
“But why
didn’t you tell me how you felt?” asked Dawn.
“I don’t
think girls our age are very comfortable expressing their true feelings,” sobbed
Karina. “It was much easier for me to pretend that you were all losers and that
I was much better. But I guess that’s what every bully does. I have no excuse.”
Dawn
embraced her sister. It was a funny sight, the curvy elf hugging a tiny fairy
while trying not to squash her.
“So, what
happens to us now?,” asked Mia from the floor, still a bit uncomfortable on dry
land because of her large tail. “Will we get back home now that the game is
over?”
“Yes,”
said the Gamemaster with simplicity, but then she turned to look at Charlene,
who was still sitting on the Throne. “But we have a winner, don’t we? And that
has to count for something.”
Charlene
got up. Despite still being tall and athletic, she felt awkward and
underdressed again for the first time since her change. She wasn’t looking
forward to going back to her chubby body.
“What does
that mean?” she asked timidly.
“Well, you
all have to go back home. That’s
mandatory,” said the Gamemaster. “But as the winner, you get to pick the exact
conditions of your return.”
“So you
powers can also reshape our world?” asked Millie curiously.
“I’m a
demigodess with powers of creation, so yes.”
Everyone
looked intently at Charlene, who felt pressed to make her choice. The Gamemaster
approached her too and they talked lowly for a while.
Well written. Good turn. Can't wait to see how their world is changed!
ReplyDeleteOr unchanged. There's the chance she'll want things to go back to normal, and...
DeleteNo, okay, you know me. Obviously I won't do that :P
Ooh, very exciting. I was wondering when Alexandra and Charlene would appear. I also like how you explained their personality changes and how Dawn and Karina were able to open up to each other. Can't wait to see how Charlene chooses her prize.
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked it. Just wrote it today but I had it planned far longer.
DeleteThe final part should be a bit shorter.