B5 Chapter 20 – The Tearing Fabric of Reality
by inkadminWorthy looked up as his sense of danger surged. A useful feat, to be sure, but at times like this, it was a constant distraction. This was a massive battle! Of course there was danger everywhere, he didn’t need the Unseen tugging on his blasted ear trying to warn him about it.
In this particular instance, he was grateful for it.
“Somethings coming through!” he bellowed, then swung his warhammer in a blistering arc.
The monster in front of him shrieked in pain as he smashed the outstretched hand that had been trying to tear him in half. Scales flew into the air and he felt bone break. Screeching, the kin staggered back, the leg no longer able to take its weight, and Worthy took advantage.
He leapt forward, shifting so quickly he appeared to blur as his hands slid together to grip the handle of his hammer. In a massive overhead strike, he brought the hammer-point down on his foe’s skull, smashing it to a pulp.
With a moment of breathing space, he flicked a glance to the other side of the rift, his eyes piercing through the veil of darkness that obscured the undead horde within. Tyron was still standing on that ridiculous platform of his, his hands in constant motion as he rained down spell after spell. What was more impressive was the sheer size and ferocity of the skeletal army around him. Blazing with purple fire, the skeletons fought like demons, moving lightly over the ground as they inexorably advanced.
To think a single Slayer would be capable of dealing so much death. Worthy hadn’t seen anything like it since his brother and sister-in-law had taken the field. Tyron still had a ways to go before he ascended those heights, but if he kept going like that, there was certainly a chance he’d get there.
Worthy could still remember the little boy who’d learned to walk toddling between chairs in his Inn. Beory had always been certain he’d grow up to be powerful, even back then, when there was just an ambitious gleam in his eye, reaching for the next table leg. She’d been certain of it.
“What the fuck is that?!” Gawn roared, and Worthy was snapped out of his momentary reverie.
The largest portal in the center of the field seemed to stretch and fray at the edges as something pushed against it, trying to force its way through. Worthy’s sense of danger was blaring as he watched reality itself warp from a tremendous mass trying to break through the weave.
“Big kin coming through!” Worthy roared, hefting his hammer again.
“How big?” someone called back, possibly Rurin.
“The biggest!”
“Oh, shit!”
Every Slayer in this assault was gold-ranked, and had fought the giant, lumbering kin that had roamed the plains of once-Granin over the past few years. Enormous, savage beasts, sustained by the magick that had birthed them.
This… this was different.
It was hard to make out the details of the monster as it filled the rift. Air rippled and twisted, the rent in reality itself obscured his view, but he gained a distinct impression of mouth. Way too much mouth.
“Clear the floor!” Worthy bellowed, holding up his hammer to draw attention to himself. “Open the firing lines and get ready to hit and run. It’s dangerous!”
His words were passed down the line to those who couldn’t hear him, and the Slayers quickly adopted a reasonable formation.
These were professional monster killers who knew their business like the taste of their lovers’ lips. They weren’t daunted in the field; nothing could shake them.
The melee fighters, be they Swordsmen, Hammerers, Defenders or Guardians, all braced and began a frontal push. They needed to kill as many kin as possible before whatever it was managed to come through. Trying to deal with a large monster while a horde of little ones nipped at your heels was every Slayers’ nightmare.
Imbued by the power his gold ranked Class gave him, Worthy’s hammer moved like an extension of his arm. His balance was flawless, the strength of his arm and shoulders unmatched. He felt like a juggernaut, able to smash down monsters ten times his weight with the might of his weapon.
Raising the level cap of his Hammer skill to seventy had been a good choice. Magnin had always preached the importance of raising the fundamental weapon skills, and as usual, he’d been right. Only the Gods knew how high that man’s swordsmanship had been at the end, possibly at level one hundred?
They’d already been fighting for hours. Worthy’s shoulders burned and his breath was coming hard and fast. Heart pounding in his chest, he could feel the fatigue just starting to kick in, but he knew he had plenty left in the tank. Enough to get the job done.
With the members of his new team with him, Worthy felt safe enough to advance further, pushing right towards the heart of the Broken Lands. Gawn was a Guardian, and a damned good one. With him on his right side, massive tower shield raised, Worthy knew he’d be protected.
On his left, Byron, a Battlemage, kept his staff ready, flinging deadly, short-range magick right into the faces of the beasts. Lecia would be somewhere behind them, using her force magick to protect the back lines, although it would have been mighty useful to have her in the grind with the rest of them. She could generate enough power to knock a monster off its feet, even the larger ones, making it easy to pounce on and finish off. The trick was in playing the angles right, at least, that’s what she said.
“When it gets out, be careful,” he warned Gawn as they continued to press forward. “Don’t think you can take a hit. It’s not worth the risk.”
“Do I look like someone who wants to die by getting stepped on?” the Guardian shot back. “I’ve seen enough people get pancaked to know my limits.”
“Aye, well. That’s good, then.”
There was sound building around the rift, a whine that was quickly rising into a scream. The creature in the rift loomed larger and larger, forcing its way through. Space itself seemed to bulge outwards, distending around the titanic maw of the beast as it pressed and pressed against the Dimensional Weave.
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Here we go.
Tyron, it appeared, had also realised that time was up. Giant skeletal warriors, clad in black armour with great, two-handed swords, strode forward from amidst the horde, their blades emitting black smoke as they walked. With great sweeps of their weapons, they cleaved a path through the smaller kin, cutting their way straight towards the emerging beast.
With an ear-splitting howl, the rift-kin burst through the rent in space, materialising in a new realm in a storm of power. The rift itself seemed to scream in pain, its edges tearing and fraying as the great monster appeared, perhaps opening a fraction wider in the process.
As he’d thought, the kin was enormous, probably weighing over a hundred tons. Towering over the battlefield, it opened its comically large maw and roared again, shattering Worthy’s ears.
“Blood and bone!” he cursed, clapping a hand to his ears. When he pulled it away, his palm was slick with blood. “Fuckin’ hell!”
Thick scales covered the creature’s hide, with hundreds of protruding, rocky growths along its body. Four-legged, it stomped out from the rift, though Worthy had no doubt it could rear up and swipe with its tree-trunk thick front legs.
Trailing black smoke, the huge skeletons marched forward, glowing purple eyes unwavering as they held up their blades and prepared to engage the monster. As big as they were, Worthy didn’t think it was a good fight for them. A single swing from that beast would rip those bones apart.
It seemed his nephew agreed with him. Just as they drew close enough to engage, the monster lunged forward, snapping with its mouth open frighteningly wide. As if they’d predicted the move, the skeletons skipped back with surprising agility. A storm of spells rained down from above, sharpened bones that mostly skittered off the beast’s thick hide.




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