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Chapter 760: Land of Fire


Flames erupted from the ground like monstrous trees. The tips of fire were the branches; the billowing black smoke, the leaves. Tree after tree stood in the basin, connected by their canopies into one vast dark ceiling that swallowed the sky.

Walking beneath them, Thuram felt the temperature rise with each step. Sweat beaded from his forehead in drops the size of peas; his entire back had gone damp and sticky. This was a different world from the cold desert outside—the Months of Demons’ chilling winds found no purchase in the core of Mother Earth.

“So this is why it’s called the Land of Fire,” said the golden-haired Divine Lady, turning slowly to look around. “I never thought the Southernmost Region held such an interesting place.”

Having traveled with Iron Axe’s party for a week, Thuram had begun to learn their names and natures. The one who had spoken was Andrea—an archer whose proficiency with a bow put the most seasoned hunters of the Sand Nation to shame. She would certainly be standing beside the almighty Lady Ashes in the imminent holy duel.

“Interesting?” Ashes pulled her lips into a flat line. “This place is a steamer. Ordinary people would be cooked through in two days.”

“That’s exactly the kind of thing someone with no appreciation for atmosphere would say.” Andrea shrugged. “Naturally, a person of limited taste can’t recognize the beauty of a place.”

“You seem to have misplaced your towel. Very stylish, with all that sweat on you.”

“Buzz off!”

Thuram felt a quiet sympathy with Andrea. To him, the most beautiful place in the Southernmost Region was not the Silver Stream Oasis—the home and cradle of the Mojin Clan—but this: the flame-throwing Land of Fire, and the Endless Cape beyond. Dangerous as both were, they stood as the dwelling places of the gods, the sources of the Ironsand people’s faith. The Land of Fire was where clans proved their bravery and tenacity before Mother Earth, contending for status and power. The Endless Cape was where offerings were made to the sea deity, in hope that he would bless the clanspeople and feed new blood into the Silver Stream so that fresh oases might form in the desert.

The terrain of the Land of Fire was a depression in the earth, with a low rise at its center—shaped like an inverted basin. Its size could have held several Iron Sand Citys. The constant heat had baked the surrounding sand until it hardened and fused, and walking on it felt like walking across a floor of stone bricks.

On either side of the wide, solid path were dark shafts and abysses. Underground fire poured out of them without ceasing, baking the earth from beneath. Most astonishing were the colors. Any Ironsand person seeing this place for the first time would be transfixed: beginning from the abysses, the palisade walls on each side graduated through varying shades of crimson—growing darker as they rose toward the surface, the palette of charcoal held at the edge of brightness for too long. Then, abruptly, at the surface, the color changed entirely: bright, glittering green. The sand here had melted and recrystallized into glass, and the glass-like surfaces refracted the firelight in every direction, as though the ground had been laid with jade.

Above that was the Land of Fire’s timeless signature: the orange-red flames themselves. A dozen pillars erupted from the basin floor, circling the high platform in the center—the site of the holy duel, the most important ground in this entire place—as though the flames had gathered to witness the arrival of a new challenger.

In this place, shades of red and green met and tangled, with the underground blackwater glinting below and the gold of the far dunes catching the light beyond the smoke. All the colors of the desert, gathered into one basin. On a clear day outside the Months of Demons, sunlight would have filtered down through the smoke overhead. Only the underwater Endless Cape, which also roared with its own flames, could rival what was laid out before them now.

“This place is beautiful—but it would be better without the fighting and bloodshed,” said Drow Silvermoon, Thuram’s owner and the princess of Osha, breaking her silence. “As His Highness Roland said: if it could simply remain as a scenic place, it would be a famous…”

“National natural park?” Hummingbird—the other petite Divine Lady—offered the words.

“Yes. That’s what he said after he went to see Devil’s Town behind the snow mountain.”

“It’s fitting of a king to think exactly as I do,” Andrea said, tipping up her chin.

“Have you ever actually seen the place he was talking about?” Ashes asked.

“It doesn’t matter. I have an excellent imagination. From his description alone, I’m certain it’s magnificent scenery. A person of limited experience wouldn’t understand.”

Heyy!

Whenever Iron Axe or the Divine Ladies spoke, they mentioned the King of Graycastle’s name. It had become a reflex, involuntary as breathing. Thuram found himself increasingly curious about what kind of man Roland Wimbledon actually was—that the Ironsand people and the Divine Ladies trusted him so readily, the latter especially. A traveling merchant had once told him that the Divine Ladies revered by the Mojin Clan were evil figures hunted by the church in the Four Kingdoms. Yet the way these women spoke of the king suggested something entirely different from that picture.

When the party climbed onto the platform, the waiting Cut Bone clan warriors greeted them with hissing contempt. The other clans watched from a distance with expressions that were somewhere between disdain and unease. The thunderous defeat of the Iron Whip clan had spread through Iron Sand City before the dust had settled: the Stone Castle where Iron Whip’s chief Rubaka lived had collapsed in the explosions, taking him and his kin and his men with it. The six great clans had become five overnight—and that gap could not be filled quickly. The other clans understood, now, the weight of what they were looking at.

Even so, revenge was an immovable law among the Ironsand people. The blood feud between Iron Whip and Osha was no secret. No warrior from outside the two clans had ever invaded Iron Sand City before, and Drow Silvermoon’s plan for vengeance was, by every precedent, impeccable. The other clans could only watch with barely concealed fear, or keep their faces carefully blank.

What none of them know, Thuram thought, is that the Cut Bone clan is only the first. Every clan present will face a challenge before this is finished. They will either stand their ground or be crushed beneath Drow Silvermoon.

The chief of the Raging Flare clan—serving as arbiter today—walked to the front of the gathered audience and spoke in a carrying voice. “May Osha’s chief step forth.”

Drow inhaled slowly. She took one step forward. “I am here,” she said.

The arbiter nodded. “This is not your first holy duel, so the rules require no explanation. The Cut Bone clan has sent twenty-two warriors. Select your weapons. The promise you made to the Three Gods cannot be broken—but you may surrender at any time. Otherwise, the last side standing claims victory and the right to enter Iron Sand City.” A pause. “The duel begins when both sides declare themselves ready.”

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