Faluel had already seen the city from Lithâs memories but it was still such a magnificent masterpiece of magic and technology that the Hydraâs amazement was completely genuine.
âWhat is this place?â Friya blurted out, her enthusiasm turning into suspicion as she finally had the time to take a good look at her allies. âI thought that elves lived inside the Fringes and had golden skin whereas yours is light brown. Who are you guys and what are you doing here?â
âDo you know where my people live?â The orc shaman couldnât believe her pointy ears.
âNo, I know where one tribe is and their hospitality was far from pleasant.â Friya raised her rapier, Dreadnought, staring at the rest of the members of the senate in suspicion.
âYou donât look like an Emperor Beast and youâŚâ She pointed at Syrah with the blade and then at Ryla. âWhat the heck are you?â
The Hati Queen was equally suspicious, moving her eyes from the women to the fallen Tyrant while pondering the events.
âThe timing of the rescue was really convenient, just like the fact that this woman claims to have met elves. Itâs all too good to be true.â Yet Morokâs conditions were truly dire and Friyaâs smell told Syrah that the human woman wasnât lying.
Also, she was genuinely scared.
âIâm no Emperor Beast.â The Hati Queen said while studying the reaction of her alleged saviors. âIâm Syrah, a Hati. The Elder Beast evolution of the warg. This is Ryla and she is a Fomor, the next evolutionary step of the Balors who descend from humans like you.â
âAnd Iâm no elf.â The shaman lowered her gaze in shame. âMy name is Brâey and Iâm an orc. It means âcreature of the darkâ in elvish. Before our fall, we didnât live on the surface like our cousins, but deep underground where mana crystals grow.â
âThat makes you the bastards who raided the cities of the Kingdom and killed hundreds of innocents!â Friyaâs outrage was as genuine as her increasing fear.
What Syrah wasnât aware of, was the fact that Friyaâs anger was actually aimed at Glemos for putting the monsters through so much suffering and her fear was due to her lack of acting skills.
She was terrified at the idea of their lies being exposed and having to fight to the death so many enemies without her dimensional magic.
âCalm down, kid.â Faluel, instead, was unreadable. âWe came here to help Morok avenge his father and thatâs what we did. The rest can wait until he wakes up.â
âBut, Master Faluel, they-â
âAccording to the demon, they possess the Tyrantâs bloodline legacy and if we alert the Council, our friend will lose his birthright and these people their lives. Donât be so quick to judge before hearing both sides of a story.
âLife is often more complicated than it appears.â
âBe careful.â The orc shaman said via a mind link. âThe Hydra is as strong as Glemos was and her equipment is terrifying as well. She canât kill us all, but we canât stop her from escaping either. Not with all the safety measures of the south entrance down.â
Syrah nodded, glad that the interests of her people and those of their guests still aligned.
âPlease, donât be afraid.â The Warlord knelt and with her the Balors and the few Fomors in the monster army. âI swear upon my life to be loyal to Glemosâ heir and that Iâll do everything in my power to protect him.â
âWe swear!â The Balors and all the believers of the cult of Glemos shouted as one, tying Syrahâs hands even tighter.
Balors and Fomors already considered themselves a superior race due to their close resemblance to their god and because he had always favored them. Ryla being both the Warlord and the high priestess only made things much worse.
âIâve just lost a tenth of the main forces of my army. I need to play this with extreme caution. If only Urhen was the Warlord instead of that zealot, I wouldnât be risking a civil war.â She thought.
âEven if we win, without the Balorsâ help, Zelex will fall way before we are ready to move and our new home wouldnât last more than a few weeks. Without them, the ogres will die, the trolls will become unstable, and the goblins will be nothing but dead weight.
âOn top of that, that damn hole in the ground exposes our presence to anyone flying above Zelex.â Syrah cursed their bad luck and resigned to putting the lives of their people even more in Faluelâs hands.
âI know that I have no right to ask you for help and you have no reason to accept, but please, listen to me.â The Hati Queen fell onto her knees, her forehead touching the ground. âI need you to close the hole on the surface and hide it to the best of your abilities.
âIf our enemies find Zelex, we will lose our lives and everything your friend has done until now will be for nothing.â
âWhy do you need my help?â Faluel shrugged, feigning ignorance. âMoving a bit of dirt and setting a few arrays is no big deal.â
âIt is for us.â Syrah replied. âOut of Zelex we revert to our fallen state and we age no differently from a normal monster. Also, we have little knowledge of arrays. Everything you see here is the work of the Tyrant bloodline, not our own.â
âI see.â The Hydra nodded. âSince youâve saved my friend from that monster, I owe you this much. Yet after this, Iâll consider us even and I have no reason to trust a monster.
âAlso, be aware that Iâm going to set the arrays so that if anything happens to us, the position of this place will be visible for kilometers so donât try to pull anything funny.â
âDo whatever you deem necessary.â The mistrust and questions of the Hydra reassured the Hati Queen. âThank you on behalf of my people.â
âIf this was just a farce, the Tyrant wouldnât be on the brink of death and his women would be eager to help us in order to earn our trust. I guess miracles do happen, after all.â Syrah thought in surprise.
âI canât believe this actually worked.â Faluel thought in equal surprise. âFrom blowing the entrance open to showcasing the âchosen oneâ in order to increase the influence of the high priestess and undermine the Queen, Lith predicted it all.
âHe staged every step of the fight so that once it was over, the monsters would be forced to ask us to stay and help them. This way, we get to have a tour of Zelex and understand if the children of Glemos can be reasoned with without even trying.â
Yet despite her admiration for Lithâs foresight, Faluel felt guilty for deceiving the monsters like that. She was betraying their trust, playing with their beliefs, and exploiting their grief from the rites of passage all at the same time.
Their King had died for mere hours, hoping to buy enough time for their god Glemosâ return and Lith had delivered them the best next thing right after fueling the fires of their superstition.
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