Short in words, but as the Great Ayshe did say: not lacking in action.
Chapter 9.Leilani couldn\'t scream either. Her breath escaped her silently as she slipped through the air, falling through oblivion towards certain death. Time seemed to slow to a crawl, and images of her short life flashed before her eyes... settling on one memory of her brother. He stood before her now, in her vision, smiling his brotherly smile.
He was always so proud of me. He always protected me. The image vanished; he was not here to protect her this time.
She watched her hair as it reached up towards the sky, rippling and waving as if it could somehow hold on to the air, somehow stop the decent. Her thick braid flapped about before her eyes, untill the flower her mother had given her ripped from the material, too weak to withstand the force of the fall. She left it behind as it began floating down on its own. Too slowly; it mocked her with its weightlessness. Soon it was gone. She felt a twinge of sadness, and a single tear escaped her eye. Her mind gave in to the realisation that she would never see her family again. She realised she was about to die.
Lights danced about infront of her eyes.
More visions? I don\'t want to feel the grief anymore. Let me just disappear, she pleaded to the Gods. She couldn\'t stand having failed to bring Sam back. She couldn\'t stand losing her mother\'s precious gift. To see their faces again would be- No, but these looked different. They looked real. Her eyes focused; time quickened again. She felt strangely warm as the lights multiplied and gathered around her.
She wondered if this was a trick of the mind. Perhaps she had died already? Maybe this is what it feels like? She felt as if she was slowing down, resisting the pull of gravity. Slightly, ever so slightly... but it quickly grew stronger. She realised how sickened her stomach was before, because now she felt as light as a feather. She felt safe, in the grip of an ethereal hand that encompassed her in its gentle energy.
Soon she had stopped falling completely. The braided flower fluttered slowly past her; its petals had become remarkably withered and colourless. To her suprise, she began moving upwards again. The phenomena frightened Leilani.
What\'s going on? How can this be? In her confusion, the girl barely missed the sight of a large, black creature plummeting past her. Her pained eyes fixed on the shape.
No, please... please don\'t let that be the demon...She watched from above as the creature spread its leathery wings, turned in mid-air, and began speeding back towards her. Panic filled her thoughts, and she began struggling in the magical binds. However, they continued relentlessly to power her ascention towards the sky, gaining speed as the creature below drew ever closer. But she wasn\'t gaining enough, and she couldn\'t free herself. Even if she could, she would just fall anyway. Either way, she was still going to die; this wasn\'t her day.
The strong beat of enormous wings was upon her, now moving roughly the same speed as her helpless body. She closed her eyes in suspense, not noticing the glow around her as it faded. She was softly released, but the drop still made her yelp in suprise, untill she was caught by something- but not the vicious talons of a murderous beast, as she had expected. In reality, she was now sitting on its back, and she realised it wasn\'t the Callicantzaros at all. Infact, she had seen one of these particular creatures before. Some merchants favoured these over Pterosaurs, being able to more swiftly carry passengers over harsh terrain. It had a small head, attatched directly to its thickly furred torso. The leathery wings looked almost skeletal, with long, boney fingers outstretched, a thin membrane attatching each digit to the next. They pumped the air powerfully, propelling it upwards at amazing speed. A Megaras. Which means she was now sitting with its rider.
Still fearful, she craned her neck up to see who had caught her. A familiar grin met her eyes, brimming with all the usual emotions; confident, cocksure, arrogant. But now it seemed also genuinly pleased to see her.
She smiled back at him. \"Thanks, Cama...\"
Camazotz tipped his hat, and gave her a wink. \"I was just passing. Thought you might need a lift?\"
\"Oh no!\" The girl\'s smile suddently vanished as her mind fell back to reality. \"Moogie! Moogie\'s still up there with the demon!\" She cried.
\"That\'s where we are headed now.\" Though calm, his voice held a sense of urgency. The Xacha kicked his heel into the side of the Megaras, pushing the creature to the limits of its strength. It had been a tough decision, to choose whether to save Leilani from falling to her death, or lose her and ensure Moogie\'s valuable survival. He had passed Moogie on his way down the cliff; she spotted him, eyes brimming with concern as he decended into the deep mist. In doing so, he had put the Prophecy at risk; Moogie may already be dead by now.
Leilani felt nauseated. They were travelling fast, but she could only just make out the bottom of the Gondola car in the distance. She feared they would be too late. How long can one possibly survive, standing suspended thousands of feet in the air, on a square platform with a bloodthirsty monster trying to kill you? As the Megaras drew up level with the car, she got her answer: as long as it takes.
Moogie half-stood, knelt on one knee, near a corner of the car\'s roof. The boxes under her feet shook as the Callicantzaros charged at her again; she barely dived out of its path, receiving long gash across her face. It matched the others she already suffered on her leg and chest, dripping blood down her cheek as she winced in pain. The demon would have fallen off the roof from the miss, had it not the advantage of its wings, which it used to turn in mid-air and take a more powerful swoop towards the helpless Enkidukai. A thunderous bolt of electricity sent it crash-landing onto the cargo, thwarted by Camazotz\' everpresent Glyph collection.
Moogie turned to him and limped to the edge of the Gondola. \"Quickly, catch me!\" She cried. The stunned demon shook its body and pulled itself to its feet, quickly recovering. The Megaras moved in close and landed on the side of the car, its huge wing claws piercing the frame as it held on. The screams of the passengers inside was audible now, their calls no longer drowned out by booming wingbeats. The sudden weight of the creature started the Gondola rocking unsteadily, and Moogie barely managed to stumble onto the animal\'s back, helped on by the others. Pulling at the Megaras\' reins, Camazotz took them into flight again. Now he had a score to settle.
With fierce eyes glowing like hot coals, the Xacha commanded his mount to grab the Callicantzaros with its claws. The huge bat screeched in delight, lunging at its prey with cruel playfulness. The demon darted about the platform, narrowly avoiding the razorsharp talons that thrashed and sliced the cargo boxes in their wake. Meanwhile, Camazotz quickly grouped together several Glyphs and started to call on their combined power for a more potent spell- one that Moogie instantly recognised.
With a shocked gasp, she pulled his arm back as he raised it to begin casting. The action disrupted the spell, causing him to nearly drop his Glyphs as his hand became burnt with the discharge of the spell\'s unreleased energies.
\"What are you doing?\" He yelled, turning to her in annoyance. \"Don\'t you want it to die?\"
\"You were going to cast Flameburst! What are you thinking?\" Moogie gestured urgently towards the car. \"There are people in there! They would be burned alive!! Ah!\" She was forced to grip his waist tightly as the Megaras took another swipe at the demon. The Callicantzaros took to flight, swinging around to flank the more cumbersome flyer and charging relentlessly at its passengers. The attack was met with the Xacha\'s re-casting of the feiry spell, that sent a ball of explosive fire hurtling towards the monster.
Barely pulling away in time, the bat and its riders narrowly escaped being engulfed in the flames of the resulting impact. To Moogie\'s utmost horror, however, the Gondola was not so fortunate. She watched as the explosion ripped through the open windows of the car and instantly burnt through the cables holding it safely in the air. The screams of pain and horror echoed endlessly in her ears as she watched the destroyed car plummet down the cliff.
Camazotz made no effort to follow. They were unimportant to him. Staring intently at the thick black cloud at the center of the dying flames, he saw that the demon was gone. Not even its charred corpse remained for him as a trophy as the smoke lifted. But he knew that it had survived, unsummoned by the Strangers that controlled it, who were watching them even now from the Winch station above. He threw an expressive hand sign to the sky, growling in anger as he signalled to the Megaras to start decending.
Leilani cowered before him, and Moogie held on loosely from behind. Their tears streamed freely down their faces. Moogie, in particular, felt a pain like no other. Those people had nothing to do with the Prophecy. She wanted to save their lives. She thought she had. She had stopped Camazotz\' casting- she warned him that they would die. But he did it anyway. He didn\'t even glance down as the rope had burned through and released them.
He... killed them.
\"...You killed them all...\" she whispered.