Linebeck's ventures into the inland waters take a turn for the worse. Fortunately, he runs into some familiar faces.
Or, well, maybe not so fortunately...
hiii everyone. i wrote another ghirazantbeck fic. do you want to see linebeck nearly bleed out? does that sound fun? what if he's cradled in the laps of handsome evil men while he's doing so? well, here's your chance!
     i think the sheer power trip of just crushing a regular car under its wheels would be enough to push him over the edge into finally becoming the bad guy
so for when my fic (and other series and roleplays and-) inevitably delves more into the twilight realm i thought it'd be handy to make an overview of all the settlements within the twilight realm paired with some general information. inspired wholly and blatantly by @pomgore who wrote a kickass post about hyrule in the wilds era and i remembered i'd been sitting on a WHOLLY SIMILAR CONCEPT for a year now. aaaaand one of my special interests is (pre)historic socioeconomic networks. so. if you like worldbuilding... here's a whole lot of it!
so the general idea of the twilight realm is that its a wasteland that was completely empty upon the arrival of the Interlopers, aka the first Twili, and that they had to make do with the rare bits and bobs that would grow in the landscape, what they had on their persons at time of banishment, and the occasional crate of supplies once Hyrule realized they'd sent their criminals to a fully-fledged world instead of just cramming them in a spirit prison. in Twilight Princess, we only see the Palace, hovering in the nothing... but i like to think this wasn't the realm's full expanse, but rather, the result of Zant lifting the whole thing into the sky so nobody could stop him from taking the throne.
so! with that background. here are some territories.
The Twilight Palace
the central place of the Realm! before the start of Twilight Princess, it is being ruled by House Borinu, aka Midna's father. it is seated atop a cliff near a dried-up lake, where a comet struck a long time ago.
the twilight throne is partially elective. all noble houses in the realm send their most talented children to the Palace to be educated as throne candidates. these candidates are then decided by vote.
that being said, the palace is basically the royal seat, the religious capital (huge massive temple dedicated to the clergy and worship/maintenance of the sols), and a university. mostly the candidates are educated here, but it's also where the state library is
culturally, it's a melting pot. mostly tradespeople, nobles, and clergy take residence here.
the best runesmiths are here - where the raw material for the magical runes that operate the realm's magitech are worked into final products of the highest quality. all settlements have a runesmith or two but these make the most complex spells. it's kind of like neon. you'll read more about this later
a fun little souvenir you may get here is a fossil harvested from the dried up lake below castle town. however, these were all harvested about a century ago, so either you're lucky and found the one guy who managed to land a legitemate fossil, or you're getting scammed.
Serrin
central plains settlement, south of the old lake of the Palace. ruled by house Hairai (descendants of the hylians)
first and foremost the territory houses a lot of carpenters. the wood from a different settlement, Ilitok, is processed into just about whatever piece of furniture or tool is in demand. wooden furniture isn't comminly used among nobles, but in many places is common for the average joe
"horses" are bred here. they are not horses. don't think too hard about what they are. they have four legs (usually), are strong and fast, and can be yoked to vehicles and ploughs. the plains are a good place for grazing (???) animals, and thus are best bred here, but used by all territories.
remember when i said a comet struck the old lake by the palace a long time ago? turns out there's a magically potent ore inside it. this is processed into long, thin threads in Serrin and transported to runesmiths to be worked into the final products
grains are produced here, but they are mostly fodder for the animals
Ilitok
a forest settlement, in fact the only place with reliable forest coverage. owns three sols to power the whole territory, ensuring its lushness. vegetation tends cluster around light sources! ruled by House Sadi (descendants of the kokiri)
this territory has a complete and total monopoly over forestry and logging. nobody else is allowed to even as much as think about touching these trees. locally, the logs are produced into planks and whatnot, but the finer carpentry is mostly done in Serrin.
silk is produced here. greenhouses are stationed around the territory. you'd think the white haze is from the moisture, but it's actually webbing. from very large spiders. the silk is collected, boiled, and weaved into precious fabrics. popular all around the realm!
foraged and farmed vegetation, like medicinal plants, spices, and foods like fruits and mushrooms, are produced here
as you can see from the array of high-status goods, Ilitok has some of the more skilled and clever tradespeople that can be seen in just about every corner of the realm
Uriyenil
a seaside/desert settlement. the ocean is so salty it's ruining the soil, so scarcely anything grows here! ruled by House Latiso (zora descendant). aka, Zant's family!
first and foremost the city is known for its salt refinery. seawater is channeled into an underground facility where the water is boiled, the salt is harvested, and the steam is collected for drinking/bathing water. there's bathhouses and fresh water available all over town thanks to this very sophisticated system. the salt is exported all throughout the realm - food is precious and often preserved, so salt is in high demand
pottery is produced locally, of a more coarse wear due to the salt-rich, sandy ground, tempered with seashells.
a few times a year, the whole city goes to the shore to catch seafood. it's treated as a festivity. if they're lucky, the molluscs will have pearls, which are worked into jewelry and sold. pearlescent seashells are also used for various art pieces. very bespoke!
metal ores are not mined locally, but metallic objects are fashioned here with intricate designs. not really weapons, think more like tools (pliers, scissors, pens, other equipment...)
given the prevalence of fine, silky sand, a lot of glass is made here. mostly the glass tubing for runesmithing is mass produced here as long single tubes.
other subsistence consists of vegetation that does well underground at low light, think "rhubarb" and "mushrooms". there are also some arid fruit trees that can beceaten as is or pressed for oil.
Qa'Yi
a steppe/desert settlement across the desert from Uriyenil, ruled by House Borinu (Gerudo descendant). this is Midna's family!
you can see this territory from miles away from the fruit orchards. these produce fruit all year round, given the twilight realm doesnt have seasons. this puts quite a strain on the trees, though, and significantly shortens their lifespan. big harvests are impromptu celebrated, making it a pain in the ass to visit the relatives for the holiday season
grain is also produced here but the yield isn't great
reeds and grasses grow better here, which can be woven into things like baskets and furniture for a more delicate, light look
pastoralism is a primary way of subsistence. herds consist of large, pillbug-like insects, roughly the size of small pigs, mutated through twilight exposure. the exoskeletons at slaughter can be used to fashion all sorts of objects
woolly dogs are also part of the herd. these are shorn for their thick, coarse fur, used mostly for weaving tent fabric. it's very durable and keeps the rain out.
glassware is produced here too, but more decorative, fine glass vessels in various colors.
overall a very trendy place, fond of fien fabrics and jewelry. tradespeople test new products first in Qa'Yi, and if it catches on there, you'll be seeing it all over the realm
Hokekyo
a wetland settlement of a mild climate, ruled by House Pinam (sheikah descendant)
due to the wet soil just about everything soppy you can imagine is produced here. think grains, primarily, but also all sorts of edible molluscs and a type of flax, which can be pressed for oil as well as used for fabric
being descendants of the Sheikah, they also kept weaponsmithing alive. cooking knives are made from the leftover ore, but nevertheless very finely produced and will last you years. military conflict is kept to a very careful and delicate minimum in the realm, so weaponry is mostly used for hunting and personal protection of the noble houses. more frequently, the clergy have a good few armed soldiers as well, to protect them while hunting for shades (a phenomenon that happens when new prisoners arrive in the realm). for that reason, there are always some Hokekyo craftspeople at the palace to arm the soldiers with spears
a kind of thick, yellowy paper is also produced here from reeds grown in the paddies. as you can see lots of crafts in this place involve a lot of waiting. very easygoing.
the clay here is very fine and makes for good porcelain, which is made a lot here
Kurun Katon
a settlement at the foot of a large mountain, near the sulphuric hot springs, ruled by House Minadar (descendants of the Gorons)
the clay here is somewhat acidic which produces some very interesting patterns on pottery when fired with glazes. the most reliable producer of pottery in the realm, with geometric patterns favored by the nobles as well as the commonfolk
they also quarry and sculpt massive amounts of stone in and around the mountain, which is used in much of Twilit architecture and furniture among nobles. those that want to emulate the solid stone style but don't have the money for it in their own homes, will make clay imitations.
more mining activity centers around the harvesting of ores and gemstones. the raw look of geodes is in popular tastes, but the more fine goldsmithing is done here too. even the ruling monarchs have some showpieces from here
you can fish in the mountain rivers but I don't recommend it
Nupriri
a settlement higher up the mountain than Kurun Katon, reigned by House Papei. up until a few centuries ago everyone else forgot these guys existed until one day their patriarch came down with a candidate for the royal throne. it is said a group of citizens from Kurun Katon decided to try and settle on the mountain and simply never came back down. (based on @sadnessisavegetable 's Roz!)
given it's very cold up the mountain, colder than anywhere else in the realm, a lot of fur clothing is produced here. these are very resistant to the elements and often used during storms. little fur gloves and shawls for decorative purposes are also in vogue.
coal is also mined for fuel. runesmithing is the primary form of energy in the twilight realm, but not always accessible to every person for every task. this gap is filled with coal from Nupriri, usually for cooking and heating smaller homes.
precious stones are mined here in smaller quantities, but given their rarity, much more expensive.
when i catch up with the illustrations for the previous chapters, i'll be making a proper tumblr post. for now i couldn't pass up on the joke. enjoy!!!
TFTK CHAPTER 25: RECRUITMENT UNDER THE TWILIGHT KING
After Zant seized the Triforce of power, the next-most important phase of his plan enters: rebuilding his army. Old allies are in need of rescuing and, conveniently, they happen to be trapped right in his fortress of choice.
aaand welcome back! the next 4 chapters have been up on ao3 for a bit, but i only just got around to the promo art. thank you all for your patience! inspo for the top panel comes from kentaro miura's berserk, chapter 86 [MIND CONTENT WARNINGS IF YOU HAVEN'T READ BERSERK BEFORE], because i wanted this moment of tenderness to look unnerving. YAY <3
speaking of content warnings. CW this chapter for gore and graphic violence. this chapter was betaread, as usual, by @bulgariansumo and @orfeoarte ! thank u so much!
ao3 mirror
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18
A ludicrous fantasy Ghirahim would once have mocked was now reality: Zant had claimed the Triforce. Its power thrummed in his veins like a second heartbeat, felt in shocks with the slightest touch. He felt it when Zantâs hand plunged into his chest to take their blade; he felt it when they shared a bed, ramming against his cheek when he laid his head upon his chest; he felt it when they as much as crossed gazes. Always deep, resonant, and rhythmic, the heavy beating of a drum right in his ears. It was alive â breathing that life into that wilted thing of a host, who had died two times too many.
Itâd been in his possession for mere days, and already their enemies were grasping for cards. None knew whether to storm wherever he lingered, or to evacuate wherever his serpent eyes sought their next siege. Ghirahim stayed by his side as his scabbard, as his retainer, and, somewhat discreetly, as his lover, march after march, watching the shimmering ocean of battles carried out in their name below, but finding far more intrigue in seeing their flames reflected in the Twilight Kingâs eyes. There was coldness in them, ruthless like a natural-born killer, but through it burst the sparks of a manic joy. Of elation, that tugged at the corners of his lips. These days, it was getting more and more difficult to read him.Â
This was the fourth day. They made it to the Temple of Souls in record time. Winter had not been kind to it â where once a labyrinth of lush roses grew rampantly on its estate, there was now a nonsensical mass of dead, black thorns, so brittle to the touch Ghirahim couldnât imagine them piercing skin. Yet they must have been, because there rang the occasional whine from their soldiers chopping the paths down. Ghirahim quietly thanked the fact Yuga was stuck in prison somewhere in that dark, gloomy building. The Sorcerer surely wouldnât have liked to see what had become of his prized garden, much less what Zantâs forces were doing to it.Â
When they broke through this first line of defense, the second stood waiting. Four days was not many to prepare against a siege, but it had been enough for Hyrule to put them in a small spot of trouble. Their forces were struggling, a sea of thorns at their backs to be pushed into, and wooden clubs meeting their match against tempered steel.Â
But Zant seemed unperturbed. He simply stood and stared at the Temple, watching as the last snowmelt dripped down the balcony. He turned to Ghirahim almost casually, held out his hand, and said, âPerhaps it is a little early for a spring cleaning, but we might as well start, no?â
His Blade answered wordlessly, took his hand. Fingers entwined, they stepped past their frontlines and into contested ground⊠Only for a shockwave to tear through the opposing forces, and cleave them a path. Those that didnât perish from the impact launched backward, slamming against the stone staircase leading up to the temple. They traversed this carpet of fallen soldiers almost without a care in the world, undisturbed by those who attempted to break past the force fields around them. Their steps forcing the blood out of crushed organs beneath, crimson splatters colored the ground where petals once lay. The occasional, opportunistic allied soldier would dart past them, but up until the doorway, they cleanly passed down their aisle.Â
What would normally require a battering ram and the effort of dozens of men, took Zant nothing but a forceful shove of the palm. The stone door before them thudded and shrieked, a spiderweb of cracks digging into its surface. It gave way soon after. Down it crumbled, the parts of it still intact creaking inwards on loose hinges. Past the rubble, dust, and pebbles, the next wave of Hyruleans greeted their intruders. The first fool to close in on them would feel a sword sneak past his gorget, and then, feel nothing at all. Blood fresh on his blade, Ghirahim struck down the next, and the next, and the next, fighting tirelessly to guide the Twilight King through the crowd.
But where were they headed? They knew nothing of where their prisoners were kept. Digging in his memory, Ghirahim recalled nothing vaguely even resembling prison cells in the entire building. The Temple was an archive, a sanctuary, a mansion. It was not meant to know enemies, much less to harbor them. Moreover, the place was a veritable maze. If they ran around recklessly in search of their lieutenants, they would certainly get ambushed.
At the risk of losing his focus, he started to dowse. Yuga⊠Though a powerful mage, his presence had always been weak. Ghirahim did not typically track smaller targets, but for the sake of speed, he attempted nonetheless. He honed in on a sound, a smell, a memory⊠Shrill laughter, rosewater, and a wicked glare from across the studio. Weak chimes in his core confirmed his calibration.Â
Yuga was upstairs. But, barely, it seemed⊠Whatever that meant. He had no time to linger upon it. Amidst his faltering concentration, Zant had slid in to defend him. This sight filled him with such an instinctual feeling of disgrace he took not a split second of hesitation to grab him by the arm, and promptly warped the both of them to the top of the stairs.
Hyrulean troops were sparser here, but they would not be for long once word spread theyâd arrived here. Ghirahim looked left, looked right, hoping for a confirming chime to ring out.
Left wing.
Zant kept pace with him, but Ghirahim felt his burning look of inquiry at his back. âYuga is kept this way,â he hissed out as they ran down the hall. âItâs best we get to him quickly.â
Oh, he could hear it already. How reckless it was to rush ahead with their troops lagging so far behind. How the path should have been clear before breaking out a prisoner. But the fool dragging behind him now had far too much power to worry about such practicalities. They cleaved through the hallway, right past the windows, the paintings âÂ
⊠This seemed familiar to Ghirahim. He had a feeling he knew where they were keeping the Sorcerer. Very quickly, he found the thought of it alone tacky.Â
To his chagrin, they found the jail room a mere few turns later. Steel bars had been fitted over the door and the stained glass windows around it. Before it stood waiting a handful of guards, who rushed toward them at once. Yuga was imprisoned in his own atelier.Â
Ghirahim sighed and took the first of the guards down. These men were slightly more competent, he noted quietly. They would have to be, considering who they were trying to keep in. It took a few nicks on his skin and clothing for him to find a momentâs respite to turn to Zant.
âYou can break through those bars yourself, no?â
He nodded in response, hesitating but a moment to step closer to the door. âRight, before we head inside. Yuga is going to be in an incredibly sensitive state. I think it would be wise if I led the conversation,â Zant said, ignoring the guard rushing towards the both of them until he sent the man sailing down the hallway with a flick of his hand. âI fear you might lack the tact for it.â
âLacking tact? Me? You have some nerve,â Ghirahim growled, refusing to humor him with his usual light air of banter. âYouâve spent far too much time buttering me up to start insulting me now.â
âItâs just a piece of perspective you lack. I mean nothing bad by it,â Zant responded, his hands raised defensively.
Arms folded loosely as to not lose his grip on his sword, Ghirahim frowned back. âAnd what, pray tell, is it that I lack? Or do you think me too stupid to comprehend whatever youâve got planned?â
âCome now, not so hasty. Itâs just an observation I made. Your disdain for mortals makes you miss out on crucial details, Ghirahim-ili. Do you have even the slightest idea as to what could make him⊠Distraught?â
Ghirahim sighed, furrowing his brow. âYuga is distraught to tears at the drop of a hat, to begin with. Were he to be upset in particular about witnessing the defeat of our Master, or something as juvenile as his precious roses being torn down, he would have little more reason to grieve than I do.â
Rumbling down the hall. Some crowd was approaching, whether friend or foe. They both ignored it completely in favor of their conversation. Zant smirked at Ghirahimâs response. âAs I thought. I must specify. Had you listened, you would have caught that Lorule is a kind of mirror world. In it, a doppelgĂ€nger of each living being is born⊠Yuga, as it would seem, fills the role of Ganondorf in his world.â
His esoteric trivia again. Ghirahim found it odd timing, frustrating almost. He certainly didnât enjoy the implications this one carried. â... I see. What about it?â
âA bit of sympathy is in order, is all. To give you some perspective. To lose Ganondorf, to him, would be akin to tearing your scabbard from you, and leave you without a hand to wield you. You could live, certainlyâŠâ
Ghirahimâs furrowed brow relaxed, his face now solemn. Zant was prodding at sore spots and he knew it â Ghirahim had experienced both of those, in relatively short succession, in the past few months. He was forced to speak aloud what heâd kept quietly to himself that entire time. â... But I wouldnât be complete.â
âPrecisely.âÂ
At once, Ghirahim was annoyed. Must he have been reminded of such agonies now, and share them with one he was so cross with? He had long opinionated himself about Yugaâs incessant clinging to what was supposed to be his Master, but this bit of empathetic pampering from Zant drove a nail right into his ire. Yuga was no more special than he. Even less so! What was a failed copy to a loyal blade!? How infuriating.Â
âHah! And you speak of tact,â Ghirahim exclaimed, frowning with a nasty grin. He decided there was little point in bickering in the hallway. So he marched on forward, giving Zant a stiff shove in the back to hurry him to the door. âThis entire lecture could have been condensed to a simple, âGhirahim-ili, let me handle thisâ. Not a snide comment necessary!â
Zant hardly stumbled, but easily swayed by him as ever, did exactly as he wanted. âPerhaps you are right, but I wanted to even the scales on the snark youâve been giving me the past few months, just a little.â
âYou are very lucky I canât break through that helmet, Twili.â
âIâm thankful for it every minute.â
With the doorway now free to open, Zant opened the door with silent care and slithered inside. âYuga, Lord of Lorule. Weâve come to free you from death row,â he announced.
When Ghirahim followed behind him, he realized instantly what Zant must have meant by a âsensitive stateâ. The atelier had been completely thrashed. Broken bottles of pigments littered the floor into a desolate rainbow amidst the toppled furniture. Strewn around the room, some crooked on the wall, were the remains of portraits, their faces burned off. There was but one painting intact enough to discern its subject â though for all of them, it could easily be gleaned. The scene unfolded just by the tall windows, covered in bars and thorns as they were, the grey skies beyond them shrouding the room in a cold, dull light.
Ghirahim felt an icy chill under the golden gaze of his late Master, piercing through him from across the atelier. The last depiction of Ganondorf he might ever see again, rendered in this loving detail, captured him in an instant, with his wild, fiery hair, his powerful build, and that stern, ambitious look that drove him to grovel every time it turned to him. So engrossed was Ghirahim, that he hadnât noticed the figure wilting before it.Â
Yuga sat at the base of the portrait, leaning into a nearby chair for support, as if he once had collapsed there and hadnât gotten up since. He was shrouded in black, the only color on him now being from his own hair. The once so-well-kept ringlets that bounced on his shoulders had collapsed into an unruly mass of curls, and just then, shifted across his back as he blearily turned his head.
Some glint of surprise passed through his face, but Yuga did not seem to have the energy to have it linger. As he turned to them, Ghirahimâs eye landed on one particular detail. In his madness, Yuga had ripped the casing of a decorative pillow to shreds with his teeth.Â
â... Zant? Ghirahim? You â Am I seeing ghosts?â
Zant stepped closer into the light, a dull white interlaced with the shadows of prison bars. âWorry not for your sanity, Yuga. We are very much alive.â
âBut⊠The Desert⊠We were certain you had perished,â Yuga tried to reason.
Zantâs helmet clattered and folded in on itself. Beneath it, he smiled sympathetically. âBy the skin of my teeth, I survived. I have Ghirahim to thank for it.â
Yuga turned to look at Ghirahim again, who, struggling to keep his expression straight after such a grating comment, nodded in acknowledgement. âI would be glad to see you, but, my friends, look at the state Iâm in. My masterpieces. Our army. Our Master,â he prattled on, gesturing pathetically to himself. Before Ghirahim could ponder on how pitiful he looked, Yugaâs words took a bitter turn. âWhy didn't you assist us?â
Excuses at the ready as usual, Zant responded quickly. âI was bedridden, still, the day Ganon fell. And if I hadnât been, I doubt our late Master would have wanted us to come to his aid.âÂ
Barely suspended disbelief crossed Yugaâs squinted eyes. âWhat do you mean?â
âGanondorf betrayed us. That desert was meant to be our deathbed, and we failed to comply to his wishes by refusing to be buried in it. I suspect he had been displeased with us ever since our defeat at Death Mountain, and has been attempting to get rid of us since.â
Liar. Filthy, snake-tongued liar.Â
â... That â I had no idea, to think that he wouldâŠâ Yuga was still for a long time, for as far as the chaos outside allowed for stillness. âFool I was. To be so close to him, and so blind to his plans. But what does it matter now? You say you are here to free me. What, exactly, is left of me to free? Iâm nothing, now. Iâve failed, Iâve been humiliated, and now, I am more powerless than Iâve ever been.â
And Yuga was buying every word of it like it was on discount. How fragile grief made the mortal mind! It was getting more and more difficult for Ghirahim to mask his disgust. But he could not simply zone out, close himself off from this exchange. These were lies that the both of them would have to hold dear, as to not betray to Yuga that they were complicit in the fall of Ganon. It would be a very, very bitter lie, for possibly centuries to come.Â
Again Zant walked closer to his frail lieutenant. He stood across him now, mere steps away. âOn the contrary, Yuga. You will be instrumental in my plans.â
Those final steps were crossed. Zant hunched down, taking Yugaâs hands in his and squeezing them. âBut I am. Yuga, you have wit. You have magic. But more importantly, you have my trust. â
Zant then laid his hands on his shoulders, staring him down with those wide eyes of his. âTell me, Yuga. What is it that you wish?â
His solemn chuckling having just come to an end, Yugaâs malicious side slipped through the cracks of his composure. He shook his head, cackling to himself through gritted teeth. His next words were growled through tears. âThat horrid land gone. I wish all of Hyrule to fall on its knees before me, its people begging us to forgive what they've done. Then, I want it reduced to dust.â
âThen we share similar goals, Lord of Lorule,â Zant smiled. He sensed weakness and dug his jaws in. âWhat of our Master? Would you not wish him back?â
Fury bulged through the veins in Yugaâs neck. â... Pay⊠Theyâll pay for taking him from us. From ME! Of course I wish for him. It feels like Iâve lost a limb, Zant. Like a part of me has atrophied. But a childish wish like thatâŠâ
Just as Yuga faltered again, Zant held him tighter, leaning into his field of vision. âWould you believe me if I told you, that there is a way? To feel his presence, for his power to dwell in you?â
Yugaâs head fell, his voice whittling down to a whimper. â... MercyâŠâ
âYou say you want vengeance. To reduce Hyrule to dust. Then we have that in common, Lord of Lorule!â
As fiercely as he did tenderly, Zant cupped Yugaâs face in his hands. At once forced to look straight at the other man, the first face heâs earnestly met in what may have been weeks, Yuga widened his eyes in surprise. Then, as the sad figure froze in his hands, Zant lunged down and kissed him firmly on the forehead.
Yuga yelped in surprise, his frame seizing up. Then convulsing, as a powerful pulse emitted from the both of them, strong enough to rattle the room and all its inhabitants. A grey, runed pallor spread through Yugaâs skin for just a heartbeat. As small as that glimpse of power had been, it was enough for him to burst into tears. Clinging to Zantâs breeches, he sobbed, and wailed, and pleaded. As simple as that, a new allegiance was forged.Â
Ghirahimâs eye trailed from the gray hand stroking and soothing the mourning sorcererâs shoulder, up to Zantâs face. When their eyes met, a triumphant, subtly vicious smile flashed back at him. What a dangerous ally heâd made.
Time came to free their other prisoner. By now, their forces had fought all the way up to the door to Yugaâs impromptu holding cell. A proper entourage was waiting for them at last. The last words exchanged and his tears dried, Yuga shifted in his seat. In his lap, he still held a black handkerchief, greyed, faded, and laces frayed, where listless hands had wrung the wetted fabric.Â
Their lieutenant made some wantful gesture behind him. âMy crutches, please, I ââ He struggled for a moment, hissing against the movement of his sore legs. âMy apologies, I havenât moved from this spot in quite some time.â
One of Yugaâs crutches turned out broken, doubtlessly during the same chaos that razed through the room he was confined in. Yuga paid the rest of the room no heed as they departed, making a clear effort to aim his gaze at nothing but the exit. Unpracticed as he was with but one crutch, Ghirahim joined his vulnerable side. It was a sorely uncomfortable affair. Both of them, in mourning, regretting the death of the one who symbolized their previous Masters. Yet, Ghirahim himself was composed, while the one currently hanging on his arm was a blubbering mess. Hidden behind a black veil was he, with reddened, puffed-over eyes, his gaunt cheeks, and the flaky skin on his fingers, drenched in tear-stained eczema. His despair truly made him ugly.
Though, he supposed Yuga had stayed by his Masterâs side until the very end. Abandonment, betrayal, such forces would never come to stifle whatever sadness came to rear its head in the poor wretched Lorian.Â
Ghirahim knew the raw spot his companion carried on his person now all too well. In his envy of such open weeping, he felt inclined to rip it open. At the risk of a warning glare from Zant, he broke his silence.
âI have to know, Yuga. That final hour. Did he die with glory?â
Yuga swallowed, sucked in a choked breath. He stumbled for a moment. Was it truly so easy to topple his composure like this? How delightfully weak.
âNever before have I seen such power. Such raw, glorious fury, encapsulating all he stood for. He was everything, Ghirahim,â were the words he landed upon, final like the closing of a book.
Their violent chaperones huddled like a shield around the three of them, they traversed the swirling halls of the Temple. They did so in silence, mostly, with Zant too focused on tracking the Ring Spiritâs vague magical aura, and the other pair, too engrossed in their own thoughts to waste any words. The deeper they crossed into the Temple, the less disturbance they received. Snarling against their foes, the Bulblin soldiers guarding their flanks fought off the few that dared pursue them into this labyrinth.Â
As though breaking free from a spell, Yuga mustered the decency to speak to the one assisting him in walking. He turned to Ghirahim with a slight smile. âYou have contempt for him, donât you, Ghirahim? He broke his promise to you.â
Ghirahim did not respond. The way he shifted his gaze to the floor could have been taken as a refusal to answer, but really, he was just considering the thought for his own curiosity. Contempt? Was he capable of feeling such things for his Masters? How would he go about picking such feelings out from between the mountain of disappointment, sadness, and guilt? This overall inadequacy?
Yuga did not let him consider for long. His smile turned wistful as he spoke. âI tried for you, you know. When he was in one of his rare, fair moods, Iâd approach him, and Iâd ask, âMaster, would it really be so terrible if you took him to your next battle? That boy cares for you so, it pains me to see him so neglectedâ. And do you know what he said?â
Yugaâs words almost shocked him. Fond reminiscence over mutual loss of a meaningful person. Common among mortals, but unheard of for him. How quaint. Heâd never had a conversation like this before. The novelty of it alone made Ghirahim set his frustrations with Yuga aside, if only to see as many sides of this exchange as possible. âNo. What did he say?â
Yuga mustered a laugh, lowering his voice somewhat in imitation of their Ganondorf. â âThat âboyâ of yours,â he said, âis a millennia old weapon. Youâd do better not to make him go softâ. A hopeless affair, it was! Even for me!â
The realization that Yuga had vouched for him, pleaded for wishes in his stead, without his knowing or urging, weighed on a part of his mind he didnât recognize. What a strange favor⊠Ghirahim looked to the man beside him, now seeing an ally⊠No, a friend, he hadnât known he had.Â
His own ignorance, paired with the thorough typicality of Yugaâs words, brought him a burst of laughter. Yes, that was how their Master was, exactly! âHe was right, you know.â
And though Yuga joined him in his laughter, Ghirahim turned away just as his companion was distracted by nostalgic mirth, to hide sadness of his own. That simple exchange confirmed it. The truth settled heavily in his soul. Ganondorf never intended to wield him. Never had, never would. He swallowed the finality of it all and bore the thorns it drove into his throat with silence.
After a long trek through foggy corridors, Zant stopped. To their right stood a door, at first glance unremarkable, with its mundane size and simple wooden frame. Stepping closer, one would notice it completely plastered in talismans. Different colors, shapes, sizes â Ghirahim thought he could even distinguish different scripts. The Hyruleans were thorough with their wards, for even the Demon Lord felt an unpleasant sting standing near the door. Had Wizzro been kept there, these wards would certainly be keeping him firmly trapped inside.Â
To the living, though, such things were mere strips of paper, and Zant began idly picking at their edges to peel them right off the door. As he did so, Ghirahim cast a bored look to where they came from, squinting against the persisting fog. He wondered if theyâd be able to make it back.
With the talismans removed, the lot of them passed through to find some matter of lodging, perhaps one meant for servants or guests. Its furnishings were mostly empty, save for some boxes and trinkets scattered around the shelves. But, more importantly, there sat a plain jewelry box upon the dressing table, a big, bright red talisman sticking it shut.
Zant seemed to notice his gawking and sidled up beside him. âI do believe I have kept you bored this entire siege. If you would like to do the honorsâŠâ
Yuga now taken off his hands, Ghirahim accepted Zantâs offer. He approached the box, and though the talisman itched his fingers through his gloves, he peeled it off no problem.Â
Almost immediately, the jewelry box began to shake. Cacophonous jingling of little accessories grated the ears, until a murky, groaning sound muffled all else. At once, the box shot open, a shadowy form bursting forth with clawed hands and gnashing teeth.
âA damn fool you are, to let me out of ââ Wizzro roared, only to sheepishly fold into himself once he saw who stood before him. He let out an awkward chuckle. âAh, erm, gentlemen. Hhhhi.â His mouth closed, then shifted into an eye, which darted between the three men before him. He lingered particularly on Zant, whose magic output evidently made him the biggest presence in the room. Naturally, a Spirit such as Wizzro couldnât wrestle his attention away from such a phenomenon if he wanted to. âYouâll have to excuse me for the outburst. You see Iâve been eh, locked in that box for â How long, Yuga?â
âBeats me,â said Yuga, unenthused about being involved in the conversation.
âYes, you get the idea. Quite a bit. Stewing in rage the whole time. You know how it is.â
Ghirahim raised a brow, having stood there deadpanned this entire exchange thusfar. âSure.â
âEither way, so,â Wizzro said, turning away from them to hide his face. He rummaged around in the box for a bit, plucked his own ring out, and twisted it nervously around his finger. âThereâs something⊠New, housing itself in you, isnât there, Zant?â
Zant simply stared.
âI take it weâre under new management?â
Now, Zant smiled. âYou learn fast. Yes, Wizzro. I will be requiring your services.â
âHow much⊠Bargaining space, do you allot me, Twili? You should know, a spirit like me is in high demand.â
âI know every inch of that fickle mind of yours, Wizzro. You shall have nothing to complain about. And if you did, I would give you reason not to.â
â Oh yeah. You havenât changed. Good, good. Very well, then. When do we start?â
âRight away, Wizzro, my good man,â said Zant, holding out his hand as if offering to shake it. Pointedly, his right, so that Wizzro would have no choice but to join hands with his ring in the middle. Ghirahim exchanged a look with the poor sod as he floated by to accept, and found him more nervous than heâd ever seen him.
The shriek that rang throughout the room the second they shook on their pact confirmed that Wizzro had good reason to be nervous. Something told Ghirahim the conniving rat wouldnât be giving them too much trouble from here on out. With that out of the way, the group of them, reunited at last, turned back down the hallway. There were still rats in the Temple, after all, and no King worth his salt would be caught dead with vermin in his home.
One last ally remained, and he may have been the most difficult to persuade. Frankly, Ghirahim wasnât enthused about this one, but they were strapped for commanders. His personal opinions, therefore, meant very little. So, there they stood, at the mouth of the Northern Eldin Cave system. Naturally, as they had succeeded in doing so before, their army would greatly benefit from recruiting an entire clan of dragons. Now that Hyrule had succeeded in doing the same, they could not afford to lose their own.Â
Thus Zant described it to his co-lieutenants. It was just the two of them today, leaving Yuga to rest and Wizzro to tend to administration. Ghirahim was simply tagging along as his scabbard, as he usually did, these days. To-day, he was glad for it. He wasnât particularly enthused about the idea of holding a conversation about the dreadful bore that was Volga, Dragon Knight. And he was certain it was Volga they were meeting with. The Dragons of this world hold boundless wisdom, though very few are equipped with the ability to relay it in mortal tongue. This left the Fire Dragons of Eldin with no option but to send their representative before the Twilight King. With the occasional gigantic serpentine head peeping in from the tunnels, Volga met them in solitary attendance, held emphatically close by the entrance of the cave system.
âSir Volga. We meet again,â announced Zant.
Volga, though clearly displeased by even the sight of his two âguestsâ, kept an impressively stiff upper lip before them. âYou know very well I do not bother with formalities. State your business.â
âMy conquering of the Seerâs territory surely has not slipped your notice.â
âIt has not.â
âYou will also expect that I am not content with this alone. Even after Ganondorfâs defeat, Hyrule remains contested ground. Your people, too, have stakes in this. This dwelling alone convinces me. Your relatives hunching through the tunnels behind you, I presume, are far too large, too numerous, to dwell in the caves of a nursery. You wish to expand.â
With a pound of his spear, Volga scoffed, though he did not smile. âClearly you know everything. Yet you bother to come and interrogate me. Why?â
âI simply thought a little sympathy might prove my good intentions to you.â
Volga, unlike many, saw through Zantâs sweetened words remarkably quickly. That was just about the one of the few things Ghirahim appreciated about him: the manâs resolve was like steel. âSilence! I will not hear another word. Shadow Lord, you are an open book. Next, you thought to offer some grand compromise, a way to use my people as your pawns.Â
I decline!â
At lack of response, Volga held his pike at the ready, fire pooling from between his teeth. âI will not repeat myself. Leave!â
Zant chuckled from behind his helmet, padding backward in resignation. But Ghirahim could see this surrender was completely false. Inside those massive sleeves, his fingers itched and twiddled. So Ghirahim steeled himself, his hands tense behind his back.
As he predicted, once Zant joined his side, he jerked his head toward him with violent anticipation. With a snap of his fingers, Ghirahimâs cloak disappeared, his chest exposed. Zant hesitated not even a second to rip his scimitar from its scabbard and bear down on the Dragon Warrior with voracity.Â
Ghirahim, naturally, could not stand idly by. Volgaâs fighting style was far more exciting to him than the dolt himself, and Ghirahim eagerly seized the opportunity to witness it up close. With a whirlwind-strength spin of his polearm, gashes formed across the torsos of both Volgaâs opponents. Yet it deterred neither of them. Furious blows were exchanged between the embers bursting through the air, the temperature in the tunnels at once reaching a scorching heat. Had it just been him and the Dragon, Ghirahim thought, this battle would have been delightfully equally matched, and he would have been eager to tear victory from his clawed gauntlets at the very last second. As it stood, Zant was there also, weakened only by his lack of killing intent. Ghirahim had almost gotten carried away by the thrill of battle â they were there to oh-so-diplomatically convince Volga, not murder him outright. Playtime was over soon. The butt end of Volgaâs spear shot towards him, and he surrendered through a refusal to dodge. As Ghirahim tumbled back onto the stone floor, he watched as Zant stood poorly guarded before the warrior now barreling towards him⊠And suddenly, the Twilight King disappeared.
There was a mere flash of confusion when Zant vanished from sight. Volga had but a second to check his surroundings before his adversary appeared behind him, his spell-drenched hands now enclosed over his eyes.
A sizzle. He screamed. Ghirahim could only catch a glimpse of what Zant had done between Volgaâs frantic clawing at his face, but it was enough to draw the conclusion. Slowly, but surely, a metallic, black mask was spreading across his eyes and fusing to his helmet. As Volga stumbled around the corridor, swinging wildly to find either an anchor or the wicked man who did this to him, the darkness down the cave began to clear.Â
Looming above the group of men was the rest of the draconic Clan, glaring at them with piercing teal eyes. Some bared their teeth in rage, tongues lashing and sulfurous drool burning holes into the floor, while others swelled their throat sacs, bright and glowing with kindling flame.Â
Yet Zant stood comfortably, almost oblivious to it all. Ghirahim came to put himself between the Twili and the panicking knight, with his blade drawn to threaten the foes before them. But something told him that even without this measure of protection, Zant would have had the same poise.Â
Zant spread his arms amicably. His upturned hands served as a gesture of peace, but the slight shimmer in the air betrayed it as a somatic command also, for shields to protect him from the dragonsâ rage.
âYou wish to have him back, no? Volga is a formidable warrior.â
Deaf and blind to his surroundings, Volga began to shift, as if cracking through the shell of his current form could save him from this blight. It did not â red scales turned to pitch black, jagged and pulsing with cyan magic. Ghirahim kicked the nuisance in the horn when he threatened to get too close.
Zant continued his oration. âThen hear me! If it is Eldin that you want, then my Kingdom shall have space for you. I merely request one favor in return: assist me in taking over Hyrule Castle. Doubtlessly, the Princess will have similar plans to my own, and I need the might of your people to overpower her.â
The teeth of his helmet clattering to expose half his face, Zant smiled. âDoes that not sound so violently simple?â
The serpentine heads above them growled, their wild eyes darting between each other. Some snarled, baring their teeth, others squinted, and yet others bowed their heads in resignation. With the loss of their interpreter, the beasts had no way to communicate with this strange adversary. But, after what looked like some squabbling, of nipping at one another and snorting steaming breaths, the hostile among them hesitantly turned and retreated into the caves. The largest dragon remaining locked eyes with Zant and nodded.
Zantâs gentle smile from before turned into a wide grin. With a clap of his hands, Volga stopped struggling. At once, he shrunk in on himself, his draconian features reverting back to humanoid ones. But he was different from before. His armor remained pitch black, jagged and pointy, his eyes covered by a visor that seemed melded to his flesh.Â
âI will return him to you when Hyrule Castle is secure and my usurpation is finished,â said Zant, nonchalantly under the eyes of the shocked dragons. Doubtlessly, they expected him to revert the curse. âUntil then, he will follow me just like this. Iâve found he gets rather uppity when you donât keep the reins tight⊠Now, farewell!â
Volga followed Zant wordlessly, like a drone, as the latter cheerfully turned to waltz right back out of the cave. Ghirahim shot one pitying look at the Dragon Warriorâs remaining clan, whose hearts collectively crumbled, and turned to follow.
With three more high-ranking officials under his belt, Zantâs life as a royal stabilized, turned almost mundane. The Temple claimed as their home base, the next phase of his conquering creaked to a slow start, gears a-turning. Piles upon piles of correspondence stacked on his desk, Zant himself laid low, having his commanders at their territoryâs borders keep his little place free from violence. It seemed to be working splendidly, because their pretentious pontifex of a King was taking full liberty to have some time off. Ghirahim stood at the staff entrance of the Temple, hands in his sides, waiting for the shadows in the distance to get a little closer.Â
Drawing near were Zant, riding the very same Bullbo he once carried the defeated Zelda on (heâd developed a fondness for the beast and was very pleased to discover it was still alive); and Lord Dargas, reigning Duke of Tarm. The plan seemed to be to pamper that wretched noble⊠Something about guaranteeing them a spot in Holodrum, in case they wanted to expand territories. Ghirahim watched the man fuss over his mustache and depend on three separate pages to get his arse down from his ludicrously sized horse and wondered if they couldnât have picked some other vaguely rebellious province for that scheme.
Ghirahim stepped aside to let through three Bulblins pulling a cart containing the spoils of their hunt, to find Zant trailing not far behind them. Said Twili came up to him smiling brightly.
Such a smile did nothing to Ghirahim. âSo. Did you have fun dodging your responsibilities with our good Duke? I donât see what youâre stalling for.â
âTo you it may seem like stalling,â Zant said, handing the massive spear heâd wielded over to a waiting squire. The weapon was so stupidly large, even an oaf like him wouldnât miss. âBut this, too, is part of politics.â
Ghirahim bumped him just a touch too casually for polite company. Said polite company pranced past them, his suit fully in order and dusted off, and the three of them exchanged a cordial greeting.
Ghirahimâs expression soured the second the Duke was out of view. âYouâre trying to win simple favors, now? How very unlike you.â
âPerhaps, but Iâve put it to the test,â Zant began, placing a hand on Ghirahimâs shoulder to lead him into the garden. âFor a King, there are two ways to assert his authority. The first would be appeasement; the second, tyranny, forcing obedience purely through violence. Considering your status as Demon Lord, I need not guess which of the two you are more familiar with.â
Ghirahim grinned. âAnd you are not?âÂ
âOh, I am. Most intimately, in fact. Tyranny is how I claimed Hyrule initially, and it is how Ganondorf led his army, as well. Coincidentally, both attempts failed, resulting in our deaths.â
âSo youâve decided to play nice,â Ghirahim teased, nudging Zantâs hand so it could slip to the small of his back.
âNot exactly⊠Relying on appeasement alone would require resources that we lack. Those of noble blood want extravagance and their every wish fulfilled. Which is where my experience with Twilit politics will serve me wellâŠâ Zant trailed off a moment, kicking a perished rose branch into the shrubbery. âTell me, Ghirahim-ili. What impression would it give to freshly war-torn people, to be met with a new competitor of the throne, who immediately throws luxurious parties?â
Ghirahim gave it some thought. âIâd imagine it could go either which way. Either you assert yourself as resourceful, or you might strike them as a pompous prick who doesnât know how to handle his own wealth.â Which wouldnât be too far off, he thought to himself.
âPrecisely. That is a gamble I cannot afford at this stage. So, we show them hospitality, a willingness to listen to their demands⊠But, just as Hyrule does, we have a trump card.â
Zant lifted his hand, his long sleeve dropping down to flash the mark of Power.
âConnection to the divine. I have claimed the Triforce of Power, as none before me could ever achieve, and Iâve wielded its power to seize the North. Any unwillingness to cave to my demands will be quickly snuffed out under the threat of such a force.â
âA solid middle ground, then.â
âSo you could say.â
âI take it, then, that our Summit is being held soon?â
âYes. The Duke of Tarm just so happens to be the first to arrive,â Zant said, turning to the stables behind them. Just as he stood and watched, the prey heâd claimed was being wheeled in through the back door â a large boar, only marginally smaller than his mount. Both found it macabre, a bit of a cruel joke, one that made Ghirahim turn back and Zant grin all the wider. âIâve extended invitations to just about all our former allies. Not a soul will be missing out â Unlike Ganondorf, I will not be playing favorites. Our forces need to know they can depend on us.â
Such a bold comment made Ghirahim shake off his discomfort in an instant. He sidled up closer to his monarch, nudging him through his thick robes. âAh⊠So you have no favorites, none at all?â
Zant smirked, locking this boldness in place by curling his arm around Ghirahim firmly, affectionately. âWell⊠Perhaps, Demonkind as of late, has been landing on my good side quite oftenâŠâ
Laughing, making jabs, huddled in the arms of a man who could crush him. To once again linger in the shadows of a greater ruler, but never losing prominence â like the gem-lain hilt of a blade glistening in the shade of a warriorâs cape. No longer would he have demand over the absolute spotlight, but rather, he would share it with a King, who in turn was completed by the sword heâd wield, his deadly tool of choice. A thousand years it had been, from his point of view, since Ghirahim had last lived like this. It was as nostalgic, as the lethargy of it all made his skin crawl. For now, it did little good to struggle against his overshadowing. He reminded himself that this feeling was what heâd chased ever since his revival⊠But his choice of pseudo-wielder was, to put it lightly, irking to a painful degree.Â
The playing field had to be leveled a little bit. He reached over to deliver a harsh pinch to the delicate underside of the Twilight Kingâs upper arm and reveled in the pathetic shriek it evoked.
Ganondorf has gone into hiding. His two most loyal servants guard the desert in his stead. Hyrule approaches, knowing not what kind of death awaits them, deep beneath the sands.
Zant tests out his blade.
FINALLY DONE! sooo sorry my beloved tumblr readerbase. this update has been available on ao3 for a little over a week now, but i had to steam through a pretty bad art block to get this promo image done exactly how i liked it. so without further ado, here it is!! i have a real doozy for you all today! again, thanks so much to @bulgariansumo and @orfeoarte for betareading the chapter! there's a couple secret languages in this chapter again... thanks very much to @unironicallycringe for helping me with figuring out Akkadian. as for the translations, well... you go puzzle it out!
content warnings this chapter for: graphic violence, animal death, medical gore, domestic violence/physical abuse (for lack of a better term)
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15
ao3 mirror
They rose before the sun had even fully set, thieving their love-nest of its purpose hours too early. Any preparations they could do, save donning arms and armor, would have been too late in this final moment before battle, but they had to be ready to defend themselves at any moment. The air was tense, dead-silent so as not to alert any potential enemy scouts. But in that deep silence, every nervous sigh, every jingle of chainmail, grated the ears from miles away.Â
So sat Zant in his chambers, eyelids still thick and heavy with sleep, but nonetheless perched at the edge of his bed, gazing out into the night sky. Ghirahim lied where heâd left him, sunken into his pillows and layers of sheets. In this companionable silence, there was as much to be said, as there was a lack of words to convey them. Indecision to what topic could suit the last hours before this all-out battle, they spoke of nothing at all. Yet there was deep understanding in it, a bond between them that only needed a glance of the eye to be conveyed.Â
Pacing anxiously was unnecessary. Ghirahim lay comfortable; to him, nothing enriched the soul like battle, and he was ready to rise every minute of the day. No need for armor, for food, for a minute to come to his senses. He could jump up the second the warning horns blared.
Thus, he dozed, his eyes on the tense Twili beside him until they wandered to the portrait above him. When had he moved it above his bed, he wondered? To think a man so reserved could be so vain. The gold of its canvas glittered in the weak light, egging on the stars in the sky beyond with its own splendor. Ghirahim felt a smile creep up on him and his eyes drew to a close.
He didnât quite keep track of how long he lay there simply sifting through the favorite contents of his core, before that line of thought was interrupted, and a warm static forced itself through his mental imagery. It started deep in his chest, washing over his every extremity in waves. His skin tingled, his breath hitched. A contented sigh dragged out from him and joined the warm air in the room. This feeling, how long ago it was since he last felt it. It could only beâŠ
Sat on the carpet beside the window was Zant, the Demon Scimitar before him. Moonlight could not hope to pierce the deep black of their blade; their masterpiece was a shadow among shadows. A vibrant teal glow pulsed throughout the veins in its fuller, like light beneath the ocean waves. That glow slowly grew richer, occasionally interrupted by the stroke of a cloth across the blade.Â
Ghirahim shuddered. There was the source of that odd feeling, that sent shivers up his back and caused his face and stomach to flush an embarrassing red. Soon Zant caught him staring at him past the mound of sheets and met his eyes â glowing, giving him no choice but to witness them â with a smile.
âPardon me. Did I disturb you?â
âDisturb is a strong word,â Ghirahim said, unable to suppress a shuddering groan. From fingerguard to its point, the cloth rubbed away every speck of dust and smudge of oil.
The sound that escaped him piqued Zantâs interest immediately. Eyes that should pay attention to the razor-sharp edge of their sword widened at him. âYou can feel this?â
Taps of powder against the blade. Puff, puff, little clouds of white dissipating in the gentle breeze. âTo some degree, yes.â
Bright, amber eyes narrowed. âWhat is it like?â
Adjusting comfortably, Ghirahim sank back into the sheets, hiding half of his face. He stared him down no lesser, though. âThere is hardly any equal to this feeling, Zant,â he hummed, pleased by the sensation of gentle polishing. âBut if I had to describe it⊠Something akin to having my hair brushed, or hands stroking my back, I suppose.â
Zantâs eyes turned to the sword, now carrying a certain spark. He beheld it in a different light. âI see. How fortunate to know.â
Ghirahim shifted, curling himself in the mass of sheets to get a better look at his machinations, but without abandoning the glow of their joint warmth. Their companionable silence returned, the quiet room filled only with the whisper of cloth against metal, and the gentle churning of his core. Warmth buzzed through him in waves, like fingers with long nails tapping and tracing the features deep in his chest. That so-abstract sensation turned ever warmer, more squeezing, when that familiar smell of cloves arose, and Zant turned to oiling the blade. Ghirahim cocked his head, watching intently. âTending to it again? So soon?â
Zant only glanced at him before returning to his focus. âOur sword is in its infancy, Ghirahim. It has to be nourished in its first year.â
âYouâve done your homework,â Ghirahim smirked.
âYou hardly gave me any choice, Ghirahim-hasir,â Zant smirked right back.
Another honorific! He laughed fondly, ever-so-amused by Zantâs habit of slipping into mother tongue. âThat one is new! What nonsense are you up to, this time?â
âNo more than usual,â Zant hummed, a touch of cheer in his voice. âNow get back under the covers and leave me to do my bidding. We must be in top shape before dawn, you and I,â he crooned, stroking the cloth down their blade in emphasis.
Ghirahim smiled, sighed, and complied.
That morning, Hyrule conquered the southern settlements in a matter of minutes. The market streets the pair had grown so familiar with, committed to memory through the smells of spices, pastries, and smoked meat alone, decimated at once. Not that theyâd made it particularly difficult for their adversaries; a minimal amount of monstrous troops were stationed there. This was their bait. A little trick tucked in falsely heightened morale, to fool the Hyruleans into thinking them weaker than they were. Besides, the locals stationed within sight would surely be healthily enraged by the sight of their beloved settlement being torn to the ground. Zant had planned for a bloody start.
The two of them were thoroughly locked away in the North. The Gerudo Temple Complex was a dark and swirling thing, a monumental goliath of sandstone and brick, its dimly lit corridors designed to trap anyone outside the clergy in the bowels. Deep within, it hid the Coliseum. A holy ground to desert peoples, later desecrated by Hyrule and turned into an executionerâs oubliette. Better known as, âThe Arbiterâs Groundsâ. Since its reclamation by the Gerudo (according to Zant, one of the few good things brought on by shattering the Mirror of Twilight), Hyrule was to never touch it again. The labyrinth would guard it for as long as it stood.
In other words, it was the ideal place to watch the battle unfold from afar. Their intel detected signs of three commanders: Link, the Goddessâ favored hero; Lana, still missing her counterpart; and an unfamiliar Sheikah warrior. Knowing the Hyruleans, they likely had more tricks up their sleeves. They needed caution above all.Â
Zant was eerily silent for most of their stay, retreating within his helmet. Had Ghirahim not known any better, he would have suspected him of sleeping on the job again. On the contrary, the Twili could not have been more alert. The ace up their sleeve was heaving and buzzing restlessly deep underground below their feet. The Twilit Bloat, Queen Mother of Zantâs favorite pets, spent days spewing forth countless Shadow Insects, which heâd hidden away in every nook and cranny he thought would make a decent vantage point. They were acting as his eyes in the field and to keep track of them all required his utmost concentration.Â
Until at long last Zant withdrew from meditation, the segments of his helmet squeaking as he straightened himself and turned toward his co-lieutenant.Â
âThey are inching closer to the oases. While they busy themselves there, now is the best time to start our preparations,â he said, beckoning him with a wave of his hand as he made his way through the keep.
Ghirahim, glad to finally have something to do, grinned. âYou mean to set up the⊠Shadow puppets, you mentioned, yes?â
âI have told you of my plan,â Zant agreed, scaling the steps to the decrepit altar at the center of the Coliseum. His visor rolled up to reveal a grin. âBut not yet of its execution. It should be most familiar to you, however,â he turned, his hand outstretched and palm facing the skies.
Ghirahim smirked and followed, taking his hand to have him lead him further up the steps. An arm curled around his waist, and he rested his on Zantâs shoulder in return. âHow courteous of you, Twilight King. Wonât prancing about distract you from your own casting, though?â
Zant smiled in turn. With a small pull at his waist, they quickly sank into a rhythm, waltzing under the sunbeams that peeked through the stone walls. âWe must enact our spell in utter synchronicity, Ghirahim-ili. This is the best way.â
A pulse coursed through him. Diamonds rose from their footprints, flickering with signs of their blooming magic. The beating of their feet and chiming of his core accompanied their dance like a dozen tambourines. Through their joined hands, sparks of power crossed into one another, melting together until the pictures in their minds became clear as day, a single being.
âI shall be the source, and you, my conduit. My power is yours to steer, puppeteer of mine,â Zantâs words echoed, but Ghirahim couldnât be sure if they came from his lips, or snuck into his mind without his notice. How cheeky.Â
And soon, that power manifested into being. Rising from the shadows, Ghirahimâs second pair of eyes came into view â or rather, he came into its view. A second Ghirahim took shape, its features growing more defined by the second. Terrible vertigo struck him, causing a temporary lapse in his steps. There was a disconnect, a duplication of his sight, but no identical one. He could see through his own body but through his doubleâs, too. His core swirled as he looked himself in the eye, standing in the sand with its muted colors and stiff stance.
âItâs easier if you close your eyes,â Zant whispered with a low croon, âtry not to think. Let me lead you, my Blade.â
Easier said than done, heâd say, did it not make such a drastic difference. Ridding himself of his second-sight made it all the easier to at least gather his bearings without the spinning surroundings there to distract him. But reaching this double somatically remained a challenge. It was like trying to steer a phantom limb. The tether was weak, but undeniably there, and getting it to move was akin to timidly pressing the keys on an old harpsichord. All the while this buffoon requested him to dance.
But that was the trick, wasnât it? Channeling their magic? He was no stranger to their bodies becoming one, in many senses of the term. It wasnât just his own magic he had to focus on, but the force linking its fingers with it, too.Â
Synchronicity. The picture through the eyes of his double became vibrant and clear as day.
His double twitched its fingers until they were veritably his, then took a stumbling step. Then another. Then more, stably, rolling its shoulders and bouncing on its heels. The shuffling of dancing feet was soon nothing but background noise, far removed from where his mind settled. Housed in this spectral clone, Ghirahim grinned, braced his fingers, and snapped.
The desert heat felt like room temperature. Or rather, like nothing at all, in this doubly-false skin. Having teleported himself, he stood a ways from the Southern Oasis, surveying his surroundings. Friend nor foe had spotted him yet, concealed as he was by the heat shaking the sights of their surroundings, but theyâd have no choice than to witness him soon. He sprinted across the desert, intending to snicker to himself, only to find not a sound passed his lips.Â
A gap in their illusion. How embarrassing it would have been! What if he had attempted to taunt their foe, only to be caught missing his voice? He quickly suppressed the urge to scold Zant for failing to inform him of this flaw. To cause dissonance between his two selves would collapse their plans like a house of cards. Which, obviously, he couldnât afford, as he was already perched on the walls of the Oasis Keep, staring right into fiery red eyes that pierced into him with malice.Â
The Sheikah man would be his first opponent.
His perch high up above did nothing to deter this stranger whatsoever. A long dagger whistled through the air just past Ghirahimâs ear, missing him only thanks to his own last-minute dodge. Ghirahim hadnât yet the chance to righten himself before his adversary took a running start and leapt against the corner wall, kicking himself off to clamber up and meet him at eye level. It hadnât even taken him five seconds to get to him.Â
This was going to be interesting. Ghirahim knew he couldnât lose his composure so early in the battle, but a warrior so quick and nimble made the stars dance in his core. The Sheikah was upon him in a split second, a long knife in each hand, eyes red and full of death. His strikes were lightning-fast and precise, but not fast enough to break past Ghirahim. This man was an entirely different territory from that white-haired dog. Where Impa combined her tremendous speed with heavy blows, her replacement depended entirely on the fleetness of his feet. And it carried him well. The two of them danced across the walls, locking blades like a pair of cats fighting atop a fence.
But, truthfully, Ghirahim was only humoring him. Against another human, the slashes of the Sheikahâs knives would have been lethal. But to Ghirahim, razor edges struck his sword with gentle taps at most. He had to put this boy in his place. Hilt in both hands, he boldly raised his blade to bait him with an opening â swung down quickly, to bait a crossing of knives, and catch his sword in between.Â
The Sheikah were a near-ageless folk, living potentially centuries longer than Hylians, if they so chose. This very moment, the Sheikah proved his youth, his inexperience, despite his prodigal martial skill. He acted exactly as Ghirahim predicted.Â
Now locked, Ghirahim shot him a grin, before pushing his bulk into his sword and tossing him sideways. The Sheikah shouted in surprise, stumbled. With the assistance of a showy flip and roll, he dropped off the wall and down into the dirt, quickly righting himself in fear of being ambushed.
Not a second too late! Ghirahim leaped for him, point of his sword aimed for the heart. Or, rather, aimed for the dirt, as the Sheikah darted away quickly. The pair exchanged blows, barraged each other with throwing knives, but their mutual bulk and speed resulted in nothing more than superficial injuries.Â
Ghirahim couldnât outspeed him. So, heâd just have to surprise him, instead. With only a small chime to announce his departure, Ghirahim disappeared into diamonds and landed himself square in the Sheikahâs way. The boy gasped in surprise, only barely managing to stumble out the way of the obsidian sword that flew toward him in a pitch-black streak. Now, all bets were on discombobulating his foe. The Sheikah was forced to face him more carefully, locked in a fierce combat. For every escape, every attempt at sprinting away for another trick, he was punished by the phantom that appeared in his shadow and threatened to rend him to pieces.Â
Dark blue Sheikah armor tore to show flashes of skin and bleeding gashes, staining a deeper red every second. But Ghirahim found himself not as unscathed as heâd normally be â this puppet was fragile, meaning even the small enchantments on this warriorâs knives could hurt him. It wasnât the same pain as heâd feel on his surface when injured. This was a magical, conjured pain, manifesting as a headache and stuttering of his core. But, injuries or not, he was winning. The Sheikah was slowing, growing into an easier target for his thrusts and merciless cleavings with every pace. And there he darted off again, some desperate manner of escaping! Of stalling time! Blood hung in the air, its particles catching delectably on his lolling tongue. He chased its source hungrily, wishing so it was his true self instead who would get to kill this wretched little thing, a mere pup in comparison to his superior. Ghirahim ached to run him through with this blade! Just a few more paces, another leap â
There was a track in the sand. In the corner of his eye, he spotted another. The Sheikah stopped at the joining of lines, readying something curved and golden.
The harp. The harp! His eyes shot to the Sheikah, who grinned at him with a squint, fingers at the ready over his blasted holy implement. Ghirahim looked back to the ground, where he now spotted an outline⊠And himself spot in the middle of it. An ominous hum, a faded glow, resonant below him as fingertips tensed the strings. Ghirahim turned to flee, but a second too late. With a mockingly cheerful tune, the magic glyph was activated, and a blinding field of light magic launched him out the gates of the Oasis Keep.
He skidded to a halt, clouds of sand trailing his heels as they coursed through. In his concealment, he was fortunate to find his first flaw; a black patch, crackling on the surface of his puppet. Their illusion was falling apart.Â
Now is the time to flee.Â
They thought it simultaneously, with Ghirahim immediately annoyed by Zantâs meddling.Â
Shielded by this cloud of sand, he turned tail and fled. Soon enough, fleeted feet dashed through the sand a little ways behind him.
Just like he wanted! Bloodlust made blind!Â
The next phase of their plan was imminent. He had to cross the sands to get to the cliffs, where he could funnel this little songbird into its cage. This seemed easier said and done, because the Sheikahâs tendency to make pot-shots at the enemy made it increasingly more difficult to conceal the black cracks left on his surface. He kicked up as much sand as he could in his sprint to keep himself shielded from prying eyes.
It was a mad chase. In short bursts, his adversary seemed to be faster than him, leading him to blink around to get away from the scatter of needles flying his way. A haphazard, zigzagging trail of metal pins traced their trajectory. Yet, the Sheikah seemed to be letting him escape, at least a little bit. Did he hope he was fleeing to some kind of hideout, and lead him straight there? Oh, if only he knew!
It was a good thing he didnât. They crossed into the Cliffs Keep, revealing a dead end. Realizing itâd been a trap, before the Sheikah could fully turn, the gates slammed shut behind them.
The enraged eyes of a cornered animal met with a dark grin. The two men flung at one another, daggers in hand. But Ghirahim felt weakened â the magic holding this form together barely persisted through its many cracks, and it was slowing his reflexes. To save himself some power, he dismissed the false cape, at once revealing the web of deep black fractures spreading across his skin.Â
This staggered the Sheikah for a moment, but baited him all the same. Daggers crossed, he lunged forward, and drove the tips towards his core. They tangled, tipped over, and landed in the sand, Ghirahim pinned between steel and soil.
For all this man knew, this was how a Sword Spirit died. The daggers sank into his chest, and Ghirahim let the illusion crackle into shards with a pained groan.
But not before leaving his parting gift. The Sheikah choked out a breath, his pupils shrinking to pinpricks. Ghirahim had driven a dagger right into his side.
He didnât have the privilege to see if this caused his opponent to collapse or not, for his eyes caved into dust soon after this deceitful blow. Then followed the rest of his body, leaving only a cackle to fade on the wind.
Deep black turned into an outrageously bright light. With a gasp, Ghirahim came to, finding himself held up by Zantâs arms. Never before had he felt this unsteady on his feet, this jittery like a newborn foal. His shadowy double was gone, which left him to deal with the dizziness of returning to his body. How convenient that this animate coat rack of a man was there to assist him in doing so.
Ghirahim patted Zant on the sleeve, wobbling to righten himself. âDeliciously dramatic timing, Twilight King.âÂ
âThanks. I thought so too.â
Zant laughed, patiently assisting Ghirahim through the last seconds of his vertigo. Once Ghirahim collected himself, Zant parted from him, again turning his gaze meditatively to the skies. âWe shall let them struggle with this predicament for a little while. Then, I will take your place on the battlefield, Ghirahim-ili.â
The battle unfolded just about how they expected it would. The gates they so merrily left open were breached by opportunistic troops zealously at first, but with the imprisonment of their Sheikah general, anxious caution took the wheel. Nevertheless, critical movement took place: Lana, who had been moving through the desert, succeeded in capturing the Northern Oasis; while Link, having first guarded their home base in the Bazaar, crossed the southern sands to attempt a rescue mission.Â
This was their cue. While their demonic troops clashed against Linkâs brigade, Zant hopped back on his feet, extending his hands.
âCare to assist me once more?â
Locked again in dance, they watched as a shadowy form knitted into being by their pedestal. The illusory shape of Zant, darker and more muted than usual, readied itself for its host. Much to Ghirahimâs chagrin, Zant was clearly more adept than he at shifting his consciousness, as his double was up and moving in mere seconds.
âYou close your eyes too, Ghirahim-ili.â
âThen who will keep watch of where weâre putting our feet? Moron.â
Ghirahim jested, but nonetheless allowed himself a brief respite, and did as he was told. Behind his darkened eyelids, he saw (though subtly) the world through the eyes of Zantâs shadowy double. He briefly worried if Zant had been spying along with him, too. Then, he felt some smug satisfaction in the knowledge, as he thought heâd made for a riveting battle just then.
Not a second longer did Zant let his puppet stick around and promptly sent it away. Just in time for Ghirahim to spin the both of them around and prevent them from tumbling off the altar.
Ghirahimâs impressions of this battle were vague, bestowed upon him in flashes through Zantâs incomprehensible sense of sight. The world was a blur of overly saturated colors in the Twiliâs eyes, splitting into sharply defined contours at every moving object. Of course, the rapidly approaching emerald green and blue was then clear as day, as was the glowing blade that cut through the air towards him.Â
But Link could not land a single hit on the Usurperâs false shape. Zant blinked himself across the sand and clapped his hands pompously, a playfully mocking tribute to Ghirahimâs favored spellcasting. At once, every gate in the battlefield slammed shut, isolating the three generals in their own death traps.
Wrathful Gerudo, Bulblins, and Stalfos poured from whatever crevice they could force themselves through to descend upon the now-isolated warriors. Whether they would surpass the Hyruleans in martial prowess remained to be seen, but surely, theyâd leave not a shred of their morale untouched.Â
Yet Zant led the Goddessâ little hero away from the onslaught, seeming to prefer a one-on-one duel, though thereâd be nothing honorable about it. This battle was an absolute waste of time, drudging Link along through the scorching desert to chase after his constantly teleporting apparition. Even if his opponent couldnât hear it, Zant couldnât help but giggle. With such a jovial mood, one would expect victory, but aside from Zantâs violent retaliations, his health rapidly failed him. Not only was his double on the verge of collapse, but nearly every hack and slash it endured bore down on its host. Dancing with a smile, blood gushed from Zantâs nostrils with every hit he took. Ghirahim doubted whether the desperation on his doubleâs part was an act â it contorted, stomped, flailing its arms and hurling wild bolts of magic at whatever blue banner-bearing shape it could see. But Zant seemed at peace, even as his puppet raised its arms to ready a bomb of pure, hexing shadow, only to find itself ran straight through by the Knightâs holy blade.
At once, the tether to their puppet was gone.
â... Thatâs it⊠Our first ruse is up,â Zant mumbled, before slumping forward, just barely caught by Ghirahimâs frame. The blood trickling from his nostrils was worrying still, so Ghirahim allowed him to collapse, lowering him carefully to sit at the edge of the pedestal. Yet, Zant declined any fussing over him, preferring instead to retreat into his mind again and survey the damage theyâd done. With his âdeathâ, every single gate in the battlefield flew back open â save for the Temple complex. Sitting side by side, Zant relayed what he saw through the eyes of his countless insect servants. Among the Hyruleans, there was relief, rallying cries spreading through the battlefield as they once again rushed forth to seize new territory. Their own forces still held fast. The defeat of their Lieutenants sowed seeds of anxiety, which their captains and commanders did not allow to sprout among the common infantry. Though the full plan of today was relayed to very few, every officer of repute knew not to lose hope when all seemed over.Â
Theyâd seen the captured beasts in their chains, after all, and had yet to see them surface in this battle.
One unexpected problem remained. When the gates to the Sheikah commanderâs imprisonment were opened, he was already long gone. The trail of blood scaling the cliff wall toward the Temple clued them in where he could have gone. He was trapped in here with them, somewhere. Zant seemed to take nothing but amusement in that thought.
Now, there was nothing to do but wait. Wait for a surge in confidence among the Hyruleans that would raise their might and lower their guard. If this took mere minutes or hours, then the blood spilled to tip the scales would simply have to be an acceptable sacrifice. Time ticked away mostly in silence. On occasion, Zant orated an update from the battlefield with his vacant, manic gaze. Ghirahim stared at the man beside him, bloodstained as he was, and wondered how far the gray blight had crawled up his arms today.
Zant perked up sooner than Ghirahim expected and turned to him. âTheir bases are almost settled. They are transporting their goods. Now is the time, Ghirahim. Will you do the honors?â
Ghirahim grinned. âGladly.â
Within a blink, Ghirahim disappeared from the Arbiterâs Grounds and materialized far below the earth. Deluge streams of sand poured down from above â he found himself in an underground cave, discovered long ago by the Gerudo when digging for water reservoirs. Quicksand pools from above fed this ever-filling chamber with gold, like an hourglass that would never tip. Behind him was a nearly-buried gate leading to the old waterways. In front of him were cages. He didnât want to keep the beasts inside waiting any longer; heâd kept them unfed a little too long. They frothed at the sight of him, spurred on by Zantâs blood caked into his suit.Â
âYouâll find something far tastier on the surface, my dears!â
One, two, three showy snaps of his fingers, and the chains bearing the monsters down disappeared. With a flex of his hands, his fist cloaked itself in glowing, purple magic. He took a running start, heading straight for the back of the cages (where the monstersâ eyes hungrily followed him), and launched himself at the massive lever that stood there. With one solid punch, the old mechanism screeched back to life, and past all its rust, the switch was flicked. A rattling that could only be produced by a machine at the end of its life echoed throughout the room. Tugged upwards by heavy chains, the cage doors were lifted, and out stormed their inhabitants.Â
But before they could make for the little creature that stood antagonizing them, a cascade of sand cued them in on the blue skies above. A ring tunnel of diamond magic pried open the quicksand pitfall in the ceiling and allowed these beasts the first glimpse of sunshine theyâd seen in weeks.Â
Not to mention, the smell of fresh carcasses.Â
The Manhandla, a four-headed, man-eating plant; threw itself against the wall and clambered up through its web of roots. The Molduga, the very giant sandworm Ghirahim had stolen away scarce a month earlier; took to the skies and flew through the opening. The Lanmola, a cyclopean centipede; swam up the stream of sand.
But that was merely the first wave. This was the Southern Desertâs treat: the North would get its very own collection of nuisances. His next teleportation took him to the mesas in the northeast, where six pairs of eyes furiously eyed him down from within their cave prison. The caverns in these rocky mountains were straightforward tunnels, opening right into the deserts. After opening the cages, all he had to do was give them an incentive to break free.
So, naturally, he brought the entire cave to a collapse. As soon as the beasts panickedly rushed out of their prisons, Ghirahim snapped his fingers and perched himself on the Mesaâs edge, overlooking the monstersâ exit holes.Â
The first to break free were the two Dodongos, bulky, rock-clad lizards; curled up and rolling, shot out like cannonballs. Then came the Helmaroc King, a giant prismatic bird; shrieking wildly and leaving a storm of feathers in its wake as it beat its wings and flew off. Finally, poking out one head after the other, came the Gleeok, the three-headed dragon; with stout little legs and clumsy, serpentine necks, it sauntered to the mouth of the tunnel somewhat timidly. But at the first sight of prey below, it roared viciously and spread its draconic wings, and set off in pursuit of violence.
Ghirahim returned to his post at once, finding Zant just as vacant as heâd left him, but with far greater amusement sketching his face. The Twili didnât appear to notice him as he sidled up next to him, hands in his sides.Â
âSatisfied by my handiwork, Twilight King?â
âMore than, Yima Zeeioitneit,â he responded. Zant had cleaned himself up a bit in his absence, but was looking no less gaunt. âWould you like to see the fruits of your labor?â
âGladly, I would,â Ghirahim said, keeping his apprehension about Zantâs intrusive, meddling magic to himself.Â
Zant shook himself out of his daze, at once standing with his eyes bright and glowing. âThen allow me some time to recuperate. I will share my clairvoyance with you in the meantime, Ghirahim-ili.â
Before Ghirahim could utter a word of questioning or protest, Zantâs shape turned pitch-black, becoming no more than a silhouette with shining eyes. A rustle sounded as the shade before him ducked down and turned into nothing more than a smudge, and, shockingly⊠Melted into the floor. Just like that, Zant seemed to have crawled into his shadow. There was the alarming presence of magic, certainly, but otherwise, he felt not a thing of it. At least, not until Zant fulfilled his promise. Ghirahim then learned, intimately, just what he meant by âclairvoyanceâ.Â
A sudden burst of droning visions took over his sight, shaking him into an unsightly stumble. Each flashed by for mere seconds before Zant flicked him over to the next, all blurring into the same haze. Only after sitting there, hands in his hair and groaning audibly, did he piece together just what he was looking at. It seemed that Zant had planted more of his Shadow Insects on the skulls of their monsters, and thus, allowed the both of them front-row seats to each individual rampage.Â
To the north, the Helmaroc crested to dizzying heights, carefully eyeing its companions. Yards below it, the Gleeok was circling the desert, scarcely avoiding flurries of arrows from piercing its wings. It found its point of interest in a line of provision wagons, which already had its many hands full with the giant lizards besieging it from both sides. Claws extended, it swooped down in an instant, plowing through the line of them with its razor-sharp talons.Â
Now out of a meal, the twin Dodongos sought their fortune elsewhere. They turned straight to the oasis, where they expected to rake in the biggest rewards, only to find the place heavily guarded. Grimoire in hand, Sorceress Lana nervously eyed down the two approaching beasts. She was a nimble woman, swiftly evading raking claws and blazing fire, but she did not take well to being surrounded. From the eyes of this Dodongo, she swooped in dangerously close. Just as the massive reptile thought to swallow her down in one gulp, a large, translucent cube was lodged in its gullet, and with the touch of the Sorceressâ hand, electrified. It shrieked and convulsed, reflexively clamping its jaws hard enough to crack its teeth, and just like that, collapsed.
This Dodongo was down for the count. But before its Shadow Insect died with it, it captured just a few more seconds. From the sound of blazing fire and the screams of their opponent, the beastâs twin appeared to hold fast.
The southern desert was similarly infested. The Manhandla had dug its roots throughout the sand, sprouting additional heads across the desert to drown it in a poisonous haze. Soon, only the dead could wander here, and the very bold. Those who dared approach the floral menace disappeared quickly past its massive teeth. Monitoring this monster led the pair of lieutenants to begrudgingly note that one of its four heads seemed to have gotten hacked off somewhere along the way. Though, they doubted they minded. If the victory was all too crushing, there would not have been any honor in it. Much less satisfaction.Â
This next vision was fully dark, until it burst with sudden light. How the fragile insect managed to cling on to this creature through all the sand was a mystery. From the shrill bellowing, these could only have been the sights of the Molgera, soaring through the skies in pursuit of prey. And what a target it had chosen! Skidding away from the sandworm, bow and arrow boldly drawn but visibly alarmed, was their favorite green-clad menace, his blue scarf long lost in the scuffle. He had felled the Lanmola in record time. From the look in his eyes, that wouldnât be his only trophy of today. Whether he would fulfill that ambition was another question. The Molgera roared and dove for him, but shrieked when an arrow pierced it someplace unseen, and veered off course. It burrowed beneath the sand once more, plunging their vision in darkness. Through the roaring of sand surging past the giant beast, there was a sound; footsteps, hurrying away. The Molgera homed in on its source and launched for the surface.Â
It breached, it opened its maw. A scream was heard, then muffled by the resounding clap of the Molgeraâs jaws snapping shut. As the Molgera twisted itself through the air, not a trace of the Hero of Legend remained.
Cackles and shouts of triumph and astonishment echoed through the Arbiterâs Grounds. Had the Twili stood beside him, rather than lie hidden in his shadow, Ghirahim would have embraced him and thrown him around the arena for good measure. What an undignified end for the little Hylian! Ghirahim was ecstatic. Already he swell with pride over the thought of informing their Master of this victory. The pair of them sang praises of this magnificent sandworm. Even after theyâd treated it so cruelly, it hadnât let them down in the slightest. Whether it could hear their words conveyed through the Shadow Insect, wasnât their concern.Â
Amidst their celebration, the Molgera suddenly groaned. Shuddered. Slowed in its flight. It contorted itself, squeaking in pain, until it tore its mouth open in a shriek. The Shadow Insect lost all functionality. Its host could only be dead.
What happened? It was in the air â how had it perished!?Â
Zant apparently had the same questions. He frantically browsed through the Insects still alive, until he found a proper view of the events through the eyes of the Manhandla. The Molgera fell from the skies, its spiked belly slit wide open. A rain of blood and guts splattered onto the ground before its multi-ton body hit the sand, sending forth an explosive dust cloud to shroud the battlefield from all.
Surfacing from that shroud, visible through the makeshift sandstorm by a glowing silhouette, was a newcomer to todayâs battlefield. Fi, doll-faced as ever, but her blue gemstone surface now tainted with viscera, had surfaced from the Heroâs blade, and freed her âMasterâ. Offering her wing, she stuck herself halfway into the Molgeraâs eviscerated stomach to pull Link free, soaked in mucus and blood. The morbidity of it all seemed completely lost on her gentle smile, as she stood watching him gather himself.
Ghirahim grit his teeth. âIt seems theyâve taken a page out of our book, Twili⊠Theyâre hiding commanders!â
âAnd where there is one, there may be more. They think they have us for fools.â
With the appearance of Fi, a Hyrulean war horn sounded in the Southern Desert. The troops in the North responded. Surfacing from Lanaâs shadow was none other than Midna, who immediately clenched a keratin fist around the head of an ambushing Bulblin commander. A sense of fury bubbled forth from his shadow, and lingered somewhere in Ghirahim, too. But as much as the arrival of the Twilight Princess spelled trouble, something about her appearance soothed Zantâs mood into a bubbly giggle.Â
She was an imp again.
The war horn sounded in the North. Two responded; one from the Western mesas, and one from the South. Through the eyes of the Helmaroc King, a far more alarming sight poured into the desert. The troops they had fought so deftly to thin out were filling their numbers again. Vast swathes of Zora and Gorons arrived through glowing portals and raced to assist the overthrown Keeps. Only to then clash against equally large numbers of frothing demon forces, pushing each other back and forth past a faultline of trampled steel. This visceral desperation of gnashing teeth and battered armor only left the frontlines in stasis for so long. The Zora Princess, her arrival announced by a tidal wave sweeping along her own troops in massive schooling, forced an opening through the simple measure of washing away everything in her path. She came out the other end of the first line of infantry clad in silvery armor, spear in hand, looking back at the dizzied and drowning mass of demonic forces behind her. This very measure would carry her to the northern desert, where she quickly joined Lanaâs side.Â
Lana startled when the Dodongo just in front of her was sucked into a maelstrom and launched across the sands. When she turned to find Ruto, some sort of sentimental conversation was surely being carried out. Watching from the Gleeok still soaring above the keeps, neither Ghirahim nor Zant cared to hear it. Their despairing, confused prattles were far more interesting.
The Gleeok swept in closer, ducking out the way of an impending lightning bolt sent from the Sorceressâ grimoire.Â
âI donât understand, Ruto,â Lana cried. âGhirahim and Zant were defeated, but their armies havenât slowed down whatsoever!â
Ruto intercepted an incoming belch of fire with a watery shield, bursting it apart in glittering projectiles as she dismissed it. The Gleeok shrieked when one of its many eyes was pierced. âDesperation, it must be. It takes a pair of cowardly men like them to rig such posthumous traps!â
âAre we sure it was really them Sheik and Link defeated?â Midna cut in, surfacing from Lanaâs shadow to glare down the limping Dodongo in the distance. âLike you said. Theyâre cowards! Iâll bet my entire treasury that the foes we saw were nothing more than illusions!â
A troubled expression dawned on Lana, which soon turned to anger. She burst out in front of the Zora Princess, spellbook at the ready, and sent out another burst of lightning. Though, this one was different. It broke apart like fireworks, each spark lighting its own deadly branch, that darted in zig-zags through the air. The Gleeok, hopeless to dodge such a flurry, lost one of its wings to countless tears and perforations and then crashed to the ground.Â
Before the beast could stomp its way inside the keep, Lana blocked its entrance with a crackling barrier and whipped around to look at her companions. âThen- The real Ghirahim and Zant⊠They must be hiding somewhere, commanding from afar!â
âOh, they canât be that far. Those two draw to carrion more than a common fly,â Midna grimaced, squinting to peer out into the scorching desert. âJust so happens, I got just the trick up my sleeve to get to the bottom of this. Ruto! Cover me!â
Ruto nodded, readying her spear to join Lanaâs side. Lanaâs barrier did not hold much longer. Every passing second, the Gleeok was driven to madness by two voices balking commands into its triplet minds, and could only think to throw itself at the magical wards harder. Finally, it burst through, and wasted not a moment to start snapping at the two warriors in its way. Lana fought grimoire in hand, turning scattered parchment into razor-sharp projectiles, while Ruto threatened every impending bite with a thrust of her spear.Â
While the Gleeok was rapidly losing scales to the combined assault, Midna stretched out her hand, readying a spell amidst the chaos. A gap tore itself through the fabric of reality, manifesting as a spreading shadow on the ground, soon thrumming and glowing with runes.
Stepping out of the shadows was a little girl, no older than eleven, who curtsied under the protection of her parasol. âAgitha has waited patiently as you ordered, Miss Kitty! How can she be of assistance?â
Lana was almost as disturbed by the girlâs appearance as Ghirahim and Zant, but clearly for different reasons. âA-Agitha? But⊠The two of you canât just go out there alone. There are still giant monsters alive!â
The Zora Princess glanced over her shoulder, the second of distraction nearly costing her a fin to the jaws of the Gleeok. âSorceress, if you wish to accompany them, We will hold down the Oasis.â
âRuto, are you sure? In this weather, the Zora-â
âDo not doubt the resilience of Our people,â Ruto interjected, jabbing her spear between the plates on one of the dragonâs jugulars. âWe know where their limits lie. Place your trust in Us. Now, go! Waste no precious seconds!â
âMy, what a shame,â a voice echoed from the dragon. âTheyâve become aware of our little plan quicker than expected.â
Zant figured to broadcast his mockery through the Shadow Insect still perched on the dethroned creature. Bleeding heavily from one of its throats, its still-living heads contorted their faces into toothy grins, the Gleeok puffed out its chest and stanced imposingly. The spread of its wings blotted out the sun above the keep, casting it in shadow.
Ghirahim found it a fine idea. âThen let them come find us! Weâll finish them off right away!â
Thus, precious seconds were wasted. By some incomprehensible measure of lollygagging, Midna stuck around while Lana and Agitha made for the desert. The pair of girls slipped past the Dodongo only thanks to Midnaâs uncouth taunts, who sent wolves yipping and nipping at its front legs. A little of Zantâs own hatred for the Twilight Princess must have leaked into it, then, because the beast took the bait hook, line, and sinker. So focused it was on the hounds and the woman cheering them on behind them, that it failed to notice its remaining surroundings. Its maw opened wide, readying a blazing inferno, and aimed straight for its annoyance.Â
Only for said target to dodge out of the way at the very last second, dragging the Zora Princess out of the trajectory along with her. Instead, the hellfire launched across, square into the chest of the already wounded Gleeok and melting everything in its way. A weaving path of coarse glass glittered in the sand, tying the two monsters by a thread of aggression. Their dragon could not resist retaliation and lunged for its treacherous comrade.
Thus, in the Oasis, two of the beasts were tearing each other down. In the sand wastes, one last beast made itself useful. The King Helmaroc, contrary to its name, was an obedient creature, and soared as high or hovered as low as they needed it to. Through its eyes, they saw Midna had joined the pair a little after her charade of chaos.Â
From this vantage point, Ghirahim and Zant quietly observed their desert trek. At least, until Zant clicked his tongue, seeming annoyed. âI see now why they brought the girl. I should have expected this.â
âSomehow, even when we share the same thoughts, you manage to puzzle me. Get to the point.â
âLook closely. They have a Goddess Butterfly. It will lead them straight to us, and the labyrinth will not keep them.â
Once again, silence fell between them. Less time wasted in the labyrinth meant fewer opportunities to whittle down their strength. With this many enemy commanders, such a head start was crucial.
Even so, the thought of their plan failing ever so slightly, filled Ghirahim with a strange sense of excitement. âAn unfortunate twist, but⊠Frankly, I was getting bored. Iâm itching for a fight.â
Then, as if Zant had taken note of his excitement, he felt the warmth of a smile inside his mind. âGhirahim-ili⊠When they arrive here, let us fight our hardest.â
Of course, the Helmaroc understood nothing at all of such banter. It was far more focused on the triad of two-footed creatures zipping through the sand sea. To a bird, this entourage of warriors must have looked awfully like a line of ants.Â
It dove down for them, talons outstretched, as if they were.Â
The first to react was not the Sorceress, nor was it Midna. Instead, the young girl turned a pouting face to the sky and popped the cork off a glass jar.
In an instant, a massive, emerald beetle appeared from thin air and swung its horn full-force into the Helmarocâs gullet. Their eyes in the sky shrieked. An explosion of feathers obscured their vision as the panicked bird flailed its wings, knocked entirely off balance by the throttling of this massive bug. Zantâs quiet marvel for the adversaryâs familiar was drowned out entirely by Ghirahimâs rage. How preposterous! This massive bird of prey, knocked out of the sky by a mere insect!? He took the reins immediately.Â
The beetle now dismissed, the Helmaroc King chased after the girls on foot, pouncing at them with its claws and jabbing with its beak. But just as it started to get the drop on the group, the Temple complex was in sight, and the doorway they slipped through would never fit their bird.
When the Helmaroc was left behind them, squawking and pacing indignantly at the gate, the trio chased the little glowing insect through the Templeâs ever-twisting halls. Following this journey proved to be a pain. Zant had only set up Shadow Insects in so many corridors, and tracking their trajectory was a dizzying flurry of different angles and crowding soldiers. Yet, Zant managed to follow them in glimpses. Hyrulean and Demon soldiers alike had swarmed the place, fighting pointless battles in corridors leading nowhere. Undead gaolers were already scavenging the heaps of dead and injured, either locking those still breathing in chains, or ripping the bones from the freshly deceased to replenish their own limbs. Thus, the pair of women led a child over this carpet of corpses. The girlâs fighting ability mattered very little here â they were under the protection of Midna and her wolves, but even then, little âAgithaâ, as theyâd called her, looked too stunned to do anything but keep running.Â
Along the way, found tearing the talons of a Dinolfos to replenish his throwing needles, was the Sheikah warrior. He had forfeited his turban to use it as a makeshift bandage for the wound in his side. The group swiftly urged him along. Striking down whatever station guards stood in their way, they reached the deeper bowels of the temple, where lines of defense grew more and more scarce.
The three eldest of the company grew more skeptical with each step. Midna leaned closer to Agitha, whispering something the Shadow Insect could not perceive.
âThe Goddess Butterfly is never wrong, Miss Kitty,â the young girl assured. She seemed to have full confidence in the butterflyâs sense of direction, and faltered not even a second in chasing after it. And that confidence was well within her right, for Ghirahim recognized these corridors. They would reach their location in no time flat.
Soon, the ground beneath the groupâs feet turned sandier and sandier, until the stone tiles were completely covered. They reached a dark chamber, lit only through the cracks of ventilation slits above the massive stone door across them. The butterfly fluttered across without a care, landing on the dusty surface of the door, and fanned its wings in rest. Agitha was about to tromp right after it, but the Sheikah stopped her with a firm hand on her shoulder. He pushed her back, right into Lanaâs protective embrace.Â
Painfully slow, annoyingly cautious, the Sheikah inched into the clearing of the room step by step. He could check for traps, he could listen for mechanisms and dowse for curses or enchantments, but he would find none. Instead, something found him.
A stinger, tall enough to almost scrape past the ceiling, shot out from the sand, and jabbed at the intruder. Its menacing needle missed only by the grace of the commanderâs reflexes, pushing the tail out of its trajectory with a talon dagger, but failing to crack carapace. Shaking itself out of the sand, the final bastion had revealed itself. The Moldarach, a massive scorpion of centuries old, screeched and chittered a word of warning. Its pincers snipped menacingly, tendons tight and fierce. Yet, under the threat of its lightning-fast stinger, the little girl was least afraid of them all.Â
Agitha looked up at the Moldarach in awe and rummaged in her basket, not taking her eyes off the creature once. âOhh, Iâd hate to hurt such a beautiful bug⊠Iâm sorry, liâl one! But I donât have a big enough bottle to keep you in!â
From it she retrieved an armful of glass jars, brandishing them as if they were explosives. Her entourage backed away hastily, clearly knowing far more about the contents of those jars than the Moldarach could. She tossed the jars with a sweep, racking them on the scorpionâs hard carapace at first impact. Out swarmed dozens of glowing, spectral butterflies, that headed straight for the first sign of soft flesh they could find: the Moldarachâs eyeball. The beast recoiled, pawing at its face in an attempt to shake the pests off, but it was fruitless. It could now only depend on the eyeballs hidden within its pincers, but in doing so, it revealed the soft tendons holding its claws together. Midna and the Sheikah exchanged a look, seemingly sharing an idea.Â
Getting up close to this creature proved to be a challenge. Lunging in to take out its claws also meant being subjected to the monsterâs lightning-fast reflexes, and Midna found herself trapped in its clutches soon enough. It squeezed, digging the teeth of its claws into her flesh dangerously. They hardly even needed the Shadow Insect for this â they could hear her cries of pain through the door. A little more and it might have killed her, had the Sheikah commander not severed the tender meat in its other claw. Its grip on the imp loosened in its distress and she managed to slip away, evading its gaze long enough for it to lose sight of her. The clash of claw, stinger, and blade continued, though the Moldarach grew more fatigued by the minute. Butterflies continued to eat at its face and attached themselves to whatever nerve opening they could find. Thus the creature slowed, its jabs and lunges losing their accuracy, until at long last it ceased its attacks altogether. They saw no use in waiting until the monster fully died; their little band of foils took this earliest opportunity to flee and push through the door.
The door slid open, grinding down coarse sand of centuries old as it slotted into the wall, and allowed the quartet of Hyruleans into the Coliseum. In the center they saw Ghirahim, lounging atop the Keepâs crumbling walls and examining his nails.Â
Midna scowled, her fangs bared. She felt at the wounds on her chest, already scabbed over â so quickly? â and glanced to her side, where the child stood waiting expectantly. âGreat work, Agitha. Now get out of here.â
At this command, Agitha looked to the Sheikah man with big, glittering eyes, smiling when he met her gaze with a nod. She curtseyed â if Ghirahim didnât know any better, heâd think it was at him â and, with a dainty clutch of her frock, hopped down a Twilit portal.
âThere you are, Demon!â Midna turned to foul, biting language the moment less-matured company was out of earshot. âJust you, huh? Go on. Cough it up! Whereâs Zant? I donât believe we got rid of him back in the desert. Not one bit!â
Ghirahim laughed, once again donning his gloves. Now more appropriately dressed, he hopped down from his perch and landed with a feathery flourish. Now that he seemed to be alone, and outnumbered at that, he decided he could afford a bit of taunting. He hummed, tapping thoughtfully at his chin with a wildly exaggerated gesture. âOh, who can say? You make such a poor host out of me. All these questions, yet Iâve no intent to answer them!â Resting his hand on his cheek, he turned to Midna with a grin. With a puff of diamonds, he vanished, then reappeared before Midna, leaning down to glare at her with one pair of big, buggy eyes to another. âSay, I have one of my own. You look different. New haircut?â
Midna bared her teeth in a snarl, the fist at the end of her ponytail balling tightly until its fibers threatened to give. She lunged for him, the massive orange hand open and clawed. When his defending sword caught on the curved metal of her bangle, she leaned in with a grin. âReal jester you are! I take it this was your idea, then? That gaudy-masked imp told me to send you its regards.â
Majora. Ghirahim winced. It was getting a little too quiet on the Arch Demonâs front, heâd thought. But to rear its head again and mess with the Demon Kingâs enemies⊠There was no telling of its little plans. He turned his blade with a flick of his wrist, threatening to sever her hair at the shackle, and forced her back. âIf I wanted you to be cursed, Iâd ask someone more reliable.â
His eye flicked to the ground. Where he stood now, the low angle of the light stretched his shadow to that of the Keepâs wallsâŠÂ
Zant emerged from the shadows in an instant, mere inches behind Midna, and swung at her like wings on a windmill. She shielded herself with the hair-clad hand of her ponytail, only to realize within a split second that the Twilight Kingâs new blade cut right through it. Ducking quickly out of the way, she spun through the air, launching herself to stand closer to her two companions.Â
âIt is a shame about your plight, Twilight Princess. I would have preferred to fight you in a more dignified form.â
When Midna forfeited a reply to glare him down, he laughed, turning to the altar behind him. âNostalgic, is it not?â Zant waxed, his arms spread as he spun himself to the center of the coliseum. âThe birthplace of our people. And perhaps, where the last of us will meet our end.â
Midna then made the grave mistake of taking his poetics as an opening and launched for him, the hand on her ponytail outstretched. The giant fist clenched around empty air when Zant promptly warped out of her way. Placing himself beside her momentum, he swung his scimitar down like a cleaver.
In an instant, magical wards were shattered. Showered in a foreboding glitter of gold, Midna cried out and smacked to the ground. But before Zant could lift his blade again and cleave her in half properly this time, the Sheikah dashed in to intervene. Only to then, himself, be driven to his knees by the daunting force of the Twilight Kingâs blade. It was two against one; each time Zant had subdued the one foe, the other would step in to try and take him out through his flanks. But Zant was too quick, his blade too sharp. Screeches rang out when the scimitar coursed past the edges of the Sheikahâs daggers, filling their cutting edges with worrying chips. Then, the first of them shattered to pieces completely.
Amidst it all, Zant cackled maniacally, madness tugging at his sweat-drenched brow with each swing of his sword. âWitness me, Ghirahim! We are unstoppable!â
But Ghirahim had very little time to witness. Lana had chosen him as her opponent and did everything in her power to keep him from uniting forces with his co-lieutenant. Frankly, he was a little amused that the Sheikah had not dared to face him a second time. But moreso, insulted, that the Demon Lord was not deemed a terrible enough foe to require backup to challenge. Tongue lolling from his lips in mockery and Annihilation in hand, he decided to make the Sorceress severely regret underestimating him.
Scratches tore through his robes and the strikes that hadnât broken through his leather mail had surely bruised him, but Zant didnât seem discouraged by injury whatsoever. Instead, he pushed through, seeking risk after risk and tearing through everything that opposed him. Soon, that boldness was awarded. Midna held up her hair-clad fist to defend herself, and Zant carved through two of its fingers as if it were made of wet paper.
Zant screeched with delight. âYour weeks of bedrest have atrophied your skills, Princess! While you lay there rotting in your own misery, I have gotten stronger!â
Midna growled, ducking behind the Sheikah to conceal herself from his bloodthirsty glee. Ghirahim, though, could see everything. Portals appeared in the shadows and from it surfaced a trio of wolves, each raising its hackles before bursting past the Sheikah and charging at the Usurper.
âSuch cheap tricks will not work a second time,â Zant clicked his tongue.
Then, with a gust of wind, he launched himself backward and well out of range of the two warriors. With a single twirl, he drew a circle in the sand with his feet, and raised his arms to the skies. When he parted his lips to speak, every shadow stilled at once, slithering beneath the feet of each combatant, turning the air thick and heavy.
The air grew heavy, stopping every warrior in their tracks. A pale blue light shone from above, but none dared take their eyes off him to look for its source.
One by one, limbs limp and gangly in their descent, three creatures fell from the sky. Upon hitting the ground, their bodies contorted as they rose, each more bizarrely and stiffly than the next. They were massive, gray things, fitted with stone masks upon their faces and a mass of wet, slithering tentacles pouring from their faces.
Without even having to command them, the monsters galloped on all fours to throw themselves at the hounds. They entangled in a mess of rune and shadow, tumbling through the dust in a bestial scuffle. Midna looked on with horror.
Her companion had different concerns. Distracted by the sounds of magic, she whipped around. âThat spell⊠How does he know that spell!?â
Just as Lana yelped, beset once more by the Demon Lordâs blade, Zant scoffed. âDid I not say I have gotten stronger!?â he taunted, knocking another brittle dagger out the hands of the Sheikah.
âStronger!? And yet you rely on them?â Midna shouted, hurtling herself past her fellow commander to throw herself at Zant in a raging flurry. Where Zant could not parry her, he settled for shooting her from the air at point-blank with his projectiles. âHow dare you utter even a word of affection toward our people, when you force their mutilated bodies to fight for your own gain!â
âMake your dogs stop attacking them, then,â Zant said, thoroughly nonplussed. At last, he forced both combatants off of him with a resounding shock wave, rattling even Ghirahimâs core where it rested in his metal.
When the ringing in his mind subsided, a different, familiar sensation took over Ghirahim. A blinking sound deep within him, imperceptible before, now alerted him to the presence of his kin. Fi â and by extension, most likely the green-clad knight tagging along â was fast approaching. âOh, thank Our Lord, your cavalry is arriving. I was worried it would get a little too easy.â
Lana fell to the ground as Annihilation jabbed into her ribs. Its point bounced off stronger wards than heâd been met with before, and though Ghirahim didnât exactly break skin, she clutched her chest with a groan either way. All three of their opponents exchanged a worried look, doubtlessly contemplating how to best gang up on them as they were bound to do.
Just as each of the Demon lieutenants took a step forward, deciding whose head to lop off first, new presences made themselves known. Pointing the glowing Goddess Blade forward in dowsing, Link entered through the stone gate, with Fi soon joining by his side. This second of distraction, a spark of hope for Hyrule, was just enough for the lot of them to scramble back to their feet and cluster into tight formation.
âEveryone, watch out,â Lana shouted, grimoire at the ready. âOnly those with the Triforce can wield that magic!â
âHe still has it?â Midna asked, eyeing Zant with her fangs bared.
Not expecting that reply, Lana turned to Midna, eyes wide with shock. âStill!?â
âOh, so you remembered,â Zant chimed, making his way to the clustered group without hesitation. âOur Master is quite generous with his gifts. A small piece of that power is all I need to decimate the lot of you, who now have none at all. You would do better not to underestimate us!â
Midnaâs eyes darted between her companions. A heaving, determined sigh tore through her. Then, her enraged expression twisted into a malicious grin. Her arms raised, she placed her hands on either side of her helmet. âDoesnât matter. I could best you then, and I can do it now!â
The Coliseum was bathed in shadow. Midna drew darkness to her like a cyclone. Where Zantâs shadowy magic was warm and suffocating; a pulsing, all-consuming parasitic disease, hers was an eerie chill. From the pitch-black surrounding her feet, three ancient stone artifacts, the Fused Shadows, surfaced and encased her like a tomb.
When the first spidery legs burst forth from the bottom of the Twilight Princessâ stone-hewn armor, Ghirahim found himself beset by his own opponents. Link, drenched almost completely red with monstrous blood, ran for him, aiming right for his chest. Disappointed, almost, that the boy had learned nothing, he took hold of the blade with his bare hand, flicking it aside just in time to be able to step out the way of Fiâs impending kick. They were teaming up against him again, just as their other, more wounded companions were now piling on Zant. Where worry once would have possessed him, Ghirahim was now buzzing with nothing but thrill. The boy was already exhausted. He would get to tug the cords of his life from him strand by strand, and he hardly had to break a sweat to do so.
With that ever-lasting nuance and his dancing blade demanding his every second, Ghirahim couldnât spare a glance at his battling compatriot. Not even as tendrilous arms, gnarled and glowing like smoldering branches of wicker, scampered around this battlefield, their incessant thumping shaking the rubble off the walls. Dust and pebbles rained down from above, only to be meticulously carved into halves by his sword. Some time ago, the duo of Link and Fi had bested him.Â
But back then, he didnât have this blade. Annihilation soared and carved, striking hard enough to make even the stone-faced Goddess Blade wince as he parried her swinging legs. With this power, enemy numbers didnât matter â he would win.
A twinge of anxiety simmered in him nonetheless. While he could indeed not spectate the battle behind him directly, he caught impressions from the piece of himself, wielded by his co-lieutenant. A screech of metal, a beast recoiled. Hair-coiled fists he so easily carved through minutes past now felt solid as rock. Midna could not find a way through his defenses, and the ground shook as she struggled away from his offenses. Those that dared to try left a taste of blood upon his blade, however slight. Weapons crashed into each other in such a cacophony he could no longer distinguish the flashes of light in his own battle, from the ones imposed on him by Zantâs hands. To any mortal, such a barrage of violence would render them collapsed in the confusion, but to Ghirahim, it was Paradise.
Yet, this could not last long. Caught in bladelock with Link, he swiftly kicked the boy off of him when an alarming sensation overtook him. The part of him resting within the Demon Scimitar overloaded him with visions. With the uttering of strange words, Lana had bypassed Zantâs wards. Metal groaned eerily, then exploded, shrapnel shooting into the sand. An inky-black fist clutched around an equally black steel javelin, then threw it whistling through the air. But Midna didnât aim for the now staggered Zant â she aimed at the ceiling. Chunks of stone and wispy sands rained down, blinding all who waited below, until the dust cleared. Zant noticed it before anyone else, and burst out into a shriek when sunlight flooded every corner of the Coliseum.Â
They hounded him like a pack of starved wolves. More blinded than ever and his skin blistering, Zant couldnât defend himself from the Sheikahâs assault, nor Linkâs, nor Lanaâs, all the while Fi kept Ghirahim across the arena. His guard dog, forced away from its flock. With every second in the sun, Zant was weakening. He simply couldnât keep up, not while blinded and in agony like this. With desperate flings of their sword, he only barely managed to deflect the blows that would have otherwise sliced his head off. Blood stained the sand around him as strike after strike tore through his armor like it was no more than air. When his weapon finally fell from his hands, Midna took it as a sign, and grappled his battered body with a tendril for each limb. When he lifted his face, his stare was aimless, but full of malice.
âSheik, now!â
Lana commanded, desperately eyeing the still-bleeding Sheikah commander. He complied with a nod too serene for such a boyish warrior. A glow gathered in his palms, abstract and foggy at first, until he grasped it, held it before him, and drew the string. Fuzzy sparkles shed from the light-made object, revealing its true form.
A bow. With a single blink, the Sheikahâs eyes turned from red to crystal blue.
It was the Princess! Ghirahimâs body froze over. In Zantâs current state, that single arrow would be fatal. What could stun their Master was deadly poison to his underlings.
An inhibition, once hard-coded into every fiber of his being, now shattered. Annihilation felt feather-light in his hands but crashed into Fi with the force of a stampede. A single facet chipped off her core, and would still be floating in the air when Ghirahim bolted to the center of the arena. Step, after step, after step, pummeling the sand into craters. The arrow nocked and braced, was then released. Ghirahim disappeared. A whistle, fletchings quivered in the air. Ghirahim burst into view in the middle of the Coliseum, arms outstretched. He grabbed Zant by the shoulders, and with a chime of diamond magic, they were gone.
The arrow pierced into the Keep wall. A piece of Fiâs core fell into the sand. Out of the five warriors present, none of them had been able to prevent their escape.
He needed shadows. There was only one place that would suffice. Around them, the world turned monochrome. With the Twili tucked carefully in his arms, he set his sights far beyond the labyrinth and took them both to the Palace. Nowhere would be darker than the quarters of the Twilight King.
Sheets hastily ripped off, bedding drenched in darkening blood. Zant lay stiff and unmoving, gasping like a fish, struggling none as Ghirahim ripped his clothes from him. A decorative fastening pin flew and clattered across the tile floor. Zantâs portrait above them looked on with a smirk.
Hyrulean weapons had gone right through his armor. He was a mess of red-stained wool and torn leather, gaping wounds pulsing fresh blood. Far too much of it. Ghirahim ripped the cork off a potion bottle with his teeth and shoved the glass opening to Zantâs lips, who coughed and sputtered as the thick liquid gushed down his gullet.Â
âJust this- Just this, and you will be alright. Stay with me,â Ghirahim hissed, keeping a close eye on the Twiliâs battered body. Wounds closed up, but too many remained raw and open. Cursing under his breath, he snipped his fingers, keeping one hand â glove bunched underneath his grip â pressed heavily to a gash on Zantâs thigh. And what a useless measure it was. This wound was just one of many that needed his attention. The sheets he tore from the cupboards, drenched in water from his nightstand washing table and spilled bourbon, soon lost their white cleanliness to deep, deathly red.
Needle and thread summoned themselves with a snip of his fingers. Sewing implements, but Ghirahim had little else in his reach. Zant cried and whined when the makeshift gauze was now pressurized by a knee, Ghirahimâs hands too occupied with the needle. Bent into a rounded angle around his finger, sterilized with a flame. He thread the needle and set to pushing it through flesh.
âIâd say your crying brings me misery, Zant,â he grinned, an expression creeping on him purely from his nerves, âbut do not stop. At least then I know you are alive and conscious.â
Pierce, tug, tie, and snip. Rhythmic and perfect, Ghirahim mended wound by wound. He knew how to carve flesh, so too, did he know how to sew it back together. Each wound bled with different severity. His midriff, his legs, his chest. There, heâd been carved down to the rib, surrounded by irritated flesh and glowing veins. The body tormented by these injuries cried and cried, but had not the strength to even writhe. As focused as Ghirahim was, his eyes still strayed and flicked to his right. Zantâs naturally pallid complexion helped him absolutely none in telling how much time he had. But his fading patterns did. Their teal glow almost ceased.
Another potion. This time, he poured some of it directly on the still-opened wounds, hoping their sizzle would burn the veins shut. Zant was awake enough to swallow the rest of it, but not to protest against the drops that snuck into his windpipe. Only when Ghirahim had turned him on his side to tend to his back did the healing liquidâs magical effect rejuvenate him enough to rasp and hack it up. He shrieked immediately when the sudden jolt caused Ghirahimâs needle to stick him.
âKeep whining, please,â Ghirahim muttered. âIf you have enough energy to act childish, thenâŠâ
Zant hissed, growled, snarled, every tug of the thread now an affront. His toes curled and his fingers dug in the sheets, weakly, but characteristically, either way. When every wound he could see was stitched, Ghirahim took the cords of lacing out the loops at his back and rid Zant of his final layer. Red, white, black; teal slowly returning, if it wasnât simply the phosphorescent glow of the room around them. In a few days, this body would be a rainbow of bruises. Should he last that long.
Only then did Ghirahim allow himself to draw breath. Not as a necessity, but as a soothing tic, to come back to his senses and for a second empathize with a mortal man. He slumped onto the bed, his head resting on Zantâs chest. It was in this rest that the full gravity of the past minutes reached him. Rather, it jumped full force onto his back, its weight forcing him into immobility and sinking him into the bed. Ghirahim couldnât recall when he started weeping; heâd been on auto-pilot from the second Zelda nocked her arrow.
Zantâs heartbeat thumped against his forehead, hard and heavy as it would whenever the Twili had a lump in his throat. Its pace quickened when Ghirahim spoke. âI almost lost you.â
Zantâs hand raised, then dropped onto Ghirahimâs back. Cold fingers stroked him softly. âYou may still, Oibedelrik, Yima Daegge Esweteli,â Zant whispered hoarsely, forcing his words out with the nigh manual contracting of his rib muscles. âOdowuni kem idzidiy Iya, ee Iya-â he murmured, his eyes rolling to the backs of their sockets. His eyelids fluttered shut, then shot back open, revealing darting pupils as if heâd just remembered where he was. âI am not yet bandaged,â wheeze, âand when my blood returns to me,â wheeze, âI may yet fall to fever.â
âShut up.â Banish the thought. As if he would be so negligent! A doctor, he was not, but as much as he could bring death, he could also spot its tellings, and he did not intend on letting it rear its head again. Ghirahim closed his eyes, listening intently to his pulse â as if it would slip away if he turned away for even a second â then raised himself to finish the job.
He had to go back to the battlefield. There was no telling whether all their beasts had been defeated or not, or whether they even had a chance to take down Hyruleâs commanders. He would return, alone if he had to, Ghirahim decided as he stroked a warm, wet cloth along the dried blood on Zantâs torso where his stitches did not taint him. But heâd only leave when Zant was stable.Â
In his spiraling, Zantâs hand had found its way to his hair, running its fingers through the strands. For once, Ghirahim cared not how bloodstained he would get. Zantâs weak voice muttered, slipping between heaving breaths. âAll of them, at once⊠I foresaw many, but every caste and cladeâŠâ
âI know, I know,â Ghirahim responded, wringing the blood from the reddened cloth. âBut the more we whittle down today, the less prepared theyâll be when Master strikes.â
âThere is no âweâ, Ghirahim. I cannot fight like this. I was bested once again.â
âI will take care of it,â Ghirahim muttered, a frown on his brow. He thought it ripe time to change the subject. âThe Princess, disguising herself as a Sheikah... Iâd almost say she exceeded us in trickery today.â
Zant sighed, his arm quickly becoming deadweight in his hand as Ghirahim took it for bandaging. That strange gray on his skin had spread almost no further. âPosing as a substitute for General Impa, I reckon.â
Ghirahim left Zant to his musings and grew oddly giddy with his own. The thrill of battle and clawing his companion away from deathâs door scalded him from within, filling him with an inexplicable well of energy.Â
âBut if the Princess is here⊠Thatâs good news, wouldnât you say?â Ghirahim began to prattle, a manic tug at his brow as he pinned the last few bandages in place. âFewer commanders are guarding the palace than we expected. If we hurry and inform Master Ganondorf, surelyââ
âGhirahimââ
But Ghirahim did not hear him. Whatever he said then, he could not even recall himself, so thoroughly he was caught up in a whirlwind of plans.
âGhirahim, stop.â
The pair met eyes in silence, one still wearing a bewildered grin, the other lying grim and pale on what was almost his resting place. âThere is no point. Your revelation will fall on deaf ears. We were never meant to leave this desert.â
Ghirahimâs expression dropped, managing only a slight grin in his confusion. âWhat do you mean?â
âMaster sent us here to die.â
âDonât be ridiculous,â Ghirahim frowned, fighting off a pit of dread in his gut. This was just his usual delirium, he thought. The same madness shaken into him by fear and injury, like it had Volga.
Zant, however, did not take his struggle kindly. He frowned at him indignantly. âYou call me ridiculous? You deceive even yourself. Face it, Ghirahim. We are two against seven of Hyruleâs finest commanders. This was a suicide mission from the start, as I suspected Death Mountain must have been, too.â
â... But-â Ghirahim struggled, shifting uncomfortably in his seat. Zant was a liar, he knew this. But now? To him? About something like this? Neither possibility, not Zant deceiving him so brazenly, nor being abandoned by his Master, computed in his mind. âWe were- What could I have done to displease him to this degree? Why would he want to be rid of me? You speak nonsense!â
âYou did nothing, Ghirahim. You are perfect. Your sole crime was associating with me. For me, it was only a matter of time until he did away with me. He is unworthy for the throne, and, one way or the other, I would have stopped him from seizing it.â
Ghirahim froze. Pieces fell on the ground before him but he didnât dare to watch them assemble. Something hot and furious was starting to thaw the ice of his shock from within. âWhat?â
âYour surprise tells me he did not even bother to confirm his suspicions before abandoning you.â With a huff and groan, he shifted, trying to prop himself upright on his pillow. The grimace he pulled in his pain remained in his face, molded from rage and hatred. âI detest him, Ghirahim, and finally he has noticed it. He must have known I wished for his death, and that I intended to follow through.â
Ghirahim staggered away from the bed as if pushed. An instant revulsion forbade him from staying anywhere near the wounded man before him, and in his disgust, he willingly followed this instinct. He scowled at him, wide-eyed and vicious, tongue lashing and drenched with venom. âSo your title was given to you for good reason. I cannot believe my ears. Immature little boy, you are! Our accursed usurper, unable to keep his grubby claws off any throne when he grows the slightest bit displeased. You ungrateful wretch!â
âUngrateful? You know not what you speak of,â Zant scowled right back, tears of rage welling up in his eyes and his teeth bared. The Lord of Twilight turned to him unflinchingly, hunched like a pouncing beast as if his drive to convince him had filled him with fresh vigor. âIn my time, Ganon was to me what Demise was to you. My God, I adored him,â he waxed, hands covering his face in grief. âI did his bidding. I worshiped him, freed us both from our decrepit prison. Yet, when I gave my life for him, he broke his promise to me. Instead of freeing my spirit to rule by his side, he took everything I ever worked for. And then- then-â Zant paused, hands falling limply into his lap. âWhen defeated by his little foil, when the strings of his soul dared touch upon mine to beg for my assistance, I denied him.â
Zantâs eyes turned to him again. The first hints of a smile pulled at the corner of his lips. âYou understand, donât you? It was no hero, no princess, who slayed the Demon King in the age of Twilight. The one to deliver the final blow, was me.â
That very second, a little part of Ghirahimâs world shattered. When he realized the consequences of plotting alongside a man so treacherous, the rest shattered with it. Right under his nose, Zant had made an enemy of his Master, and by extension, of Ghirahim. There were questions he wanted to ask, insults to be hurled. He could only think of one question, that bubbled to the surface of his heart like scum in a boiling pot. âHow long have you plotted this?â
Zant lowered his gaze, for as far as the stare of a near-blind man mattered. âFrom the very start,â he admitted, sighing. âAfter such a betrayal, to awaken to another manifestation of my tormentor, and have him once again demand my services⊠He may as well have spat in my face. Though, I admit, for a little while, I buckled. Somewhere, I must have loved him still, drawn to his power and our shared hatred for Hyrule as I was. I wanted to see if I could trust this version of him, who seemed so noble. But after your stories, Ghirahim, how his incarnations cast you aside so carelessly⊠I made up my mind. Ganondorf does not change.â
âSo then all of this was just a lie, part of your plans?â Ghirahim asked, his voice quaking. He didnât care for Zantâs excuses, not when they pulled every minute he spent by his side into question. Not when they sabotaged everything heâs ever stood for. âI, too, just a little scheme for you?â
Zant gasped, inching closer to the edge of the bed to look at him in pleading. âNo, Ghirahim. How could I have foreseen this? I came to you seeking an ally, and I found a new reason for my heart to beat. For every lie I have told you, I have spoken to you as many truths tenfold, in how Iâve grown to love you. It is only because of you I have made it this far. Youâve given me peace, soothed my soul when I threatened to bubble over. And, more importantly, Ghirahim-ili, you have made a warrior of me.â Zant urged, attempting a smile, his hand outstretched. âWhich is why I ask you to join me.â
Ghirahim was too stupefied by his words to answer. So Zant took advantage of his silence to continue. âYou know now of my hatred, my every motivation. Yet you stay loyal to him, even if you must know he will not spare you. He has not spared you, for he resigned someone so loyal to him to the same fate he did a traitor.â
His arms snaked around himself, his nails digging in the false skin of his arms. Ghirahim took another step back; the Twiliâs presence alone made it feel like insects were crawling inside his steel, tunneling through him like termites. His mind hit a roadblock, reached a final terminal, and the logic Zant asked from him sat horizons away where his tracks would not reach. â... Then if Master wills it-â
Zant shot up in his seat, snapping at him before he could finish his sentence. âDo you know how it hurts me, Ghirahim? To see someone so precious to me tear himself apart over someone who would shatter him on a mere whim? After all you do for him, he denies you at every turn and punishes you for the barest things. It has taken every shred of composure I had not to tear into him when he threatened to hurt you. If I had not hated him before, the way he treats you would have convinced me to.â
Heâd avoided his eyes up until then, but Ghirahim now shot his gaze straight at him. They exchanged a scowl, each gnashing teeth, one from hatred, one from love. Desperation seized him and sharpened his edge.Â
Ghirahim made for him and pushed him back into the pillows. âYou know not what you ask of me. To think I would care what hurts you now, after what youâve told me! You speak of whims? Youâre asking me to abandon my every purpose for something as small as your mortal love. My purpose is all I have. It is me. To ask me to betray Demise is to doom myself to scrap, Zant.â
Zant had refused a squeak when he was shoved. With tears in his eyes, he simply laid there, glaring at him. He cradled a freshly ruptured suture through its bandages. âYou are not yourself when you speak of him! Listen to the words you spew! Scrap!? So highly you think of yourself, you carry yourself as the priceless artifact that you are, yet when around him, you are degraded to the ranks of mere tools.â
Ghirahim gripped his hair in wild frustration. âBecause- I am precisely as perfect as I am because of Him! Without Him, without a hand to wield me, I am nothing.â
Zant stared at him, perturbed, before groaning in his agony and sinking into his pillows. For a moment, he wilted again, speaking bitterly as he resigned himself. âThen you have been, and will be nothing, for a very long time.â
In an instant, his vision went red. âHow dare you!â
Ghirahim pounced him, hands outstretched and clawed, landing square upon his chest, ignoring the grit of Zantâs teeth, his squirms, his pained squeaks. All he paid attention to were his wide-open eyes and the fear he could milk out of them. He gripped him fiercely by the shoulders and shook him as he spoke. âItâs all your fault, isnât it!? Why he would not wield me! Why I could not gain his trust!? All because of your greed, he now sees me as a conspirator to your rotten betrayal.â
His hands found Zantâs throat and squeezed. Ghirahim leaned in close, fangs bared. Zant did nothing. Just the sight of those glowing pupils fueled the fire of his rage. âA thousand miserable years Iâve waited, working hard to see him again. Do you have any idea what Iâve been through? Your puny, mortal mind could never comprehend the lengths Iâve gone to!â
He reared back his fist, and still Zant did nothing. âNow I can wait thousands more, and he will never wield me again!!â
Ghirahim panted amidst his accusations, tears streaming down his cheeks the second they beaded in the corners of his eyes. He scanned the Usurperâs eyes for substance, for anything that wasnât pity. When he didnât find it, he snapped. Before he knew it, his fist connected to Zantâs cheekbone. Crack. âHow could you do this to me? We were going to win!â Crack. âI would finally have been happy, after Iâve been alone for so long, and you RUINED everything for me!â
Crack. Snap. A whimper. There wasnât an inch of Zantâs face untainted by blood and bruising, and still, that horrible fool did nothing to stop him. âI should kill you!â
He sent Zantâs head twisting left to right, right to left, with each punch. His heart had broken twice over today. First, shattered to pieces from all hope of becoming his Masterâs blade. Then, its shards were trampled by the very man below his relentless assault, who had punished him so severely for daring to open himself to that mortal love. What a complete and utter fool heâd been. He should have expected to be punished like this, for entering a world he didnât belong in.
And still, past the swollen, blood-smeared skin, Zant did not take his gut-wrenching eyes off of him, trying to fool him into loving him again to save his own measly life. It was an outrage! A betrayal this massive, and Zant had the gall to try and garner his sympathy. To assert they were alike in fate. There was only one who had lost everything, whose prospects were null, and who was only living on borrowed time. Only one banished from his home, his every goal snatched from before his nose. Only one whom his Master truly abandoned, to never be forgiven.
⊠No.
There were two.
Before his fist could crash into him once more, a convulsion tore through Zantâs body below him. Within the blink of an eye, he changed. His skin lost all color, turning a deep, shadowy black, while his patterns dimmed, and his hair bristled into a brittle white, like spiderâs silk.Â
Zant was dying.
The ties to the Demon Scimitar pulsed in his chest. There lied that rebellious little dagger, the one that thumped against the walls of his core whenever this wretch would look at him in his strange ways. Did it not feel good? Its little voice whispered in his mind. Even if it was such a small piece of you in his hands, did it not fill you with joy? Master will not wield us, and this world has so few who are worthy of us. Is it not better to rest part of you in capable hands, than in nothing at all?
Ghirahim clutched his head, begging for silence. He could not handle even a second of doubt, of weakness. If this man were simply dead, everything would be so much easier. If he were the one to kill him, Master would forgive him. But are you ready for him to die?Â
He was. He would have to be. He wanted to be. It would be so simple. He just wanted to be wielded. To be held in someoneâs hands, to be part of something greater.
He wanted to be loved.
Please, help him.
Oh, God. What has he done?
He detested the despairing little squeak behind him as he walked away from that deathbed. Even more, he reviled himself, for glancing behind and allowing the teeth of guilt to sink into him at the pitiful sight of that beaten creature.Â
What he hated most was how heâd been convinced to return after his brief departure, healing elixirs in hand, and seeing tear-drenched eyes looking at him with a bloody smile.Â
Don't look at me like that, you horrible man. Youâve ruined my life.
But that pitiful part of him felt relieved how Zant could smile at the sight of him still. How Zant was glad to see him, even after attempting to take his life mere seconds earlier. A withered hand shook as it reached out for him. Ghirahim took it and squeezed.
The room was silent as Ghirahim nursed Zant back to health. Far, far into the desert outside, chaos was unfolding. The few remaining giant monsters were now surely being slaughtered, and their troops would have to cherish idle hopes of succeeding in their reign of terror, in their commandersâ absence. Deep, deep below the ground, Gerudo and Bulblin who could not fight were taking shelter in the dungeons, waiting for the pounding footfall to fade away and leave them in peace.
Neither side knew they were here. They would sit in this room, disturbed only by the glare of Zantâs portrait, judging this pathetic display. Zant strained to breathe. His complexion had inverted almost to its original colors, while his hair returned to its original, rosewood shade. However, some strands retained that ghostly white from before. Ghirahim hoped it would be permanent. He hoped he would remember this accursed day every time he was confronted with his reflection.Â
Never before had shadows bothered him. Now, in the deep darkness of Zantâs bedroom, it suffocated him. Neither of them said a word. There was nothing to say, but in this stifling pit of nothingness, he began to crave the slightest noise. He wished he could go back to a time when this dark was comforting, to be filled with nothing but idle chatter and the grappling of their bodies. Like this, through noise, through touch, Ghirahim could only think to hurt him.
So, Ghirahim seized the bridge of Zantâs nose and cracked what cartilage he hadn't shattered back into place. He took hold of his jaw, counted to three in his head, and popped the crooked thing back in its sockets. If Zant had cried out in pain at any of this, he wouldn't have noticed. The ringing in his ears was just too loud. His handiwork now finished, he trusted the potions to do the rest.Â
Then, he waited. For anything, really. For the battle raging outside to dissipate. For their forces to come bursting through the castle gate cheering with glee, or for the enemy to come raid it of every worth and woman inside, and drag the two of them to the gallows, while they were at it. But mostly, he waited for any change in Zant.Â
Look at him. He cannot even raise a finger to hurt you. You could end this right here, right now, Ghirahim thought to himself. Yet he sat and did nothing. When his eyes met the ones that stared glossily back up at him, filled with agonized gratitude, that thought snuffed out, and its wicker would burn no longer.
Ghirahim swallowed his apprehension, inhaled sharply, and sighed. âWhat will you have me do?â
Zant opened his mouth to speak, but the shards of crumbled teeth fell into his throat as he uttered his first syllable. Ghirahim sat and watched as he choked and spat them out on his pillow.
âWe are to wait out the right time to strike back for the throne, but today, we cannot. So we will have to fool them with one more ruse. Return to the battlefield, Ghirahim,â he wheezed, swallowing the blood from a dry throat. âStrike at whoever is closest. Be vengeful. Be fierce. You must fight like you never have before.
Zant breathed deeply. With each chug of air, another wound closed up, though their scars and deep black bruises remained. âYou are to disappear with me. They must be convinced that I succumbed to my wounds.â
You should have.
âAnd, to their knowledge, you will take to the grave with me. Come closer,â he said. His hand searched beside his face on the pillow and retrieved a shard of tooth, long and pointy, almost complete. With a tiny crack, he then reached over, and fastened it to Ghirahimâs earring, to an empty link remaining there. âA memento, to convince them of my death.â
Ghirahim rose again in silence. A little piece of bone so small dangled from his ear, but the weight of its burden could tip him over. Zant continued to speak as if this was the simplest matter in the world. âTake our blade. My power rests within it, still, and it is all the help I can afford you.â
Listlessly, mechanically, Ghirahim rose from his seat before Zant even finished his sentence. The sword lay by his bedside, hastily thrown to the side along with Zantâs armor. He picked up that shard of himself and apologetically wiped it of its grime.Â
A roar reverberated from outside, echoing past the sands and through the castle walls. Zant called to his attention again with his glowing eyes aimed straight at him. âThe Gerudo are innocent in all this. The least we can do is scare this vermin away from their homes. I trust you to have tricks up your sleeve, Yima Mionaida.â
Despite it all, his little nicknames stirred in his chest. Ghirahim clenched his fist harder around the grip of the Demon Scimitar, as if to smother it. His Diamond. The miserable, manipulative cretin that he was. And Ghirahim was doing all his bidding.Â
Just before he could turn his back to leave, he was halted one last time. âGhirahim,â Zant started, but he knew saying his next words would only draw his ire. His face said every letter anyway. Iâm sorry.
Ghirahim ran. Within a flash, he was back in the sweltering heat of the desert, bolting from the Temple Complex and kicking up sand trails in his escape. He tore past keeps, the slain corpses of their monsters, and field battles still unfolding between forces too stubborn to believe the war was won. Those who dared bar his way were dealt with swiftly, their heads rolling. He left the perfect trail like this. A pristine white lightning bolt with a sword sharper than the cruel edge of time, such a description could only fit one man. The eyes he sought snared onto him. Enemy commanders, skeptically scouring the desert and leaving not a stone unturned for a trace of Ganondorfâs finest. Now, they found him and were giving chase just like he wanted.Â
Blood and plate mail carpeted the vast sands racing below his feet. Rock outcroppings raced past; trampled patches of desert scrub â Safflina and a type of sagebrush. The smell of drying vegetation filling the air was the same as when Zant held sprigs from them up to his nose for inspection â and, finally, the gate to the bazaar, zipped past him. Almost, he, the false deserter, had gotten away with leading the lot of them out into the wider desert, until a familiar rumble ripped him from his concentration.Â
Ghirahim swerved to the side, narrowly avoiding a boulder that barreled past him. It skidded to a halt before him and unfolded, though he didnât have to see that transformation to know what nuisance stood before him. There was, once again, Darunia, Chief of the Goron Tribes.
âNot one step further, Pebble.â
The sight of him was enough to startle even Ghirahim, though he was too jaded to find any delight in it. Daruniaâs torso was heavily scarred, and his right arm, gone. In its place was a jumble of machinery, with pistons and gears whirring noisily to heave the weight of a massive hammer at the very end of the prosthetic limb. Beyond a solid steel helmet, the Goron Chief wore a wide grin, though one less eye stared back at Ghirahim than last time.
âThought to slip by us, did you? All on your lonesome?â said the Goron Chief, brandishing his weapon. âI wasnât looking forward to facing off against that nutcase anyhow, but a lilâ something tells me my siblings took care of that for meâŠâ
Ghirahim looked back. The peaks of Gerudo Palace were no longer in sight. For whatever chaos he would unleash⊠This would have to be far enough. All he had to do was stall for time until the rest of the Hyrulean commanders caught up to him.
âYou truly wish to keep me? Very well,â Ghirahim replied, holding the Demon Scimitar up to the sun. Sand powdered his bodysuit from top to bottom, crusting gray and gold in every crease. But their blade remained immaculate. Its silvery edge still shone into his pupils, like teeth flashing in a hungry grin. âMake this worth my while.â
Daruniaâs hammer pounded into the ground fiercer than ever. The springs on his arm, hefty as it might have been, gave him untold speed and force with each swing. Ghirahim couldnât stop the speed of that hammer anymore â where there were once bulging veins now sat machinery, forged from a steel he dared not chip the Demon Scimitar on. So, he had to settle for the rest of this massive creature. They clashed like this for what felt like hours, neither showing any signs of tiring. The resounding clanks of the warhammer striking upon resonant steel had surely deafened them both, and everyone daring to come near them. It was thoroughly inelegant. Ghirahim hissed, roared, lunged at him with wild swings wielding a sword leagues to big for his frame. Such wild desperation hampered him as much as it worked in his favor. A grief-stricken foe was always quickly underestimated. Even with his new accessories, Darunia would not leave this battlefield unscathed. A blade made from the heart would know how to find another without effort. As he riddled the Goronâs bulging ribcage with scars, a foreboding chime in his core once again alerted him of his pursuers. They were getting closer. He could feel it.Â
Then, for a second, he could feel nothing at all. A split second of distraction cost him dearly, when it allowed for Darunia to come within armâs reach and drive his hammer straight into him. The flat of the giant hammer drove into the side of his head with such a deafening impact he thought his head might snap clean off. Instead, he remained intact, launched across the bazaar to tumble through ruined market stands and trampled carpets. When he came to a halt, all he could see was dust, the approaching Darunia not more than a shadow in the clouds of sand. Ghirahim stood up, a hand to his wounded cheek to find it just that â wounded. Through his false skin, he could feel chips taken out his face, like little razor-sharp dimples on his cheek.
The rest of them were approaching now, right outside the gate. Ghirahim found the least he could do was give them a proper welcome spectacle. Concealed by the dust, he launched forward at the shape of the Goron Chief in ambush. Its wicked, curved tip aimed at the jugular. Darunia staggered away, but every twitch of movement just made the scimitar slice him deeper. With just one more stumbling step, Ghirahim got the vengeance he wanted. An arc of blood gushed from the Goronâs collarbone, splattering to accessorize Ghirahimâs wounded face. Clutching his bleeding wound, Darunia thrust his metal arm forward to push the Demon away from him and hobbled back into the dust.Â
Ghirahim gave chase until he remembered his task. Wind whipped through his hair and took the sands with it, revealing at last his surroundings to him. Standing in an arc around him, barricading his way to the desert, stood the mightiest of Hyruleâs army. There was nowhere left to lure them, this would have to be his final stand. He could not fight all of them at once â not Link, not Fi, not Zelda, not all of the other pompous royals gathered here. But he could make them see. The blade, the tooth dangling from his ear. Now, he would make them witness his sorrow. To their knowledge, it would be grief for a fallen friend, but in the depths of his core, he felt nothing more than disgust for obeying the word of another.
Tears gushed from his eyes. He was doing this â he was betraying his Master. Ghirahim (was he even worthy of a name?) contorted his face into a maddened grin. The carnage, the destruction, the pure, unfiltered chaos this final gambit would unleash might have pleased Him, but it would not be in His name. It was moot! He should have accepted his fate in the Arbiterâs grounds. He should have stood patiently waiting in executionerâs row, to be pierced by the very same arrow that he saved his conspirator from. If his Master willed him to shatter, to turn to dust and forgotten in the eyes of history, then that was to be his fate, and nothing more.Â
Instead, the Sword Spirit glared down the approaching Hyrulean commanders with the same manic grimace, and readied his spell.
He danced and danced through the sand, flickering himself atop every surface he could find to evade the grasp of his assailants. Midna and Lana were the first to stiffen, to call for someone to put a stop to this, but none of the arrows sailing past could hit their mark. Every word drained more and more energy from him. This was a true summoning, a bargain driven. Within the first uttering of the Arch Demonâs name, he could feel it watching, stalking around him like a wolf with gnashing teeth, licking its lips until it found his offer sufficient.Â
He would have thought it an infernal illusion, ripping him to some other plane of existence, did he not notice the straw hat atop the mask and the blue sky expanding behind it. The Skull Kid floated before him upside down, looking him dead in the eye. With a single tap on the nose, it shook him out of his paralysis.
âTook you long enough. Donât let me get bored again, Ghirahim-ili!â
It mocked, it shrieked with laughter, and it rattled its mask. Arms to the sky, it hovered squeaking and groaning with strain, and then with the same great effort, swung its clawed little hands down as if pulling a massive lever. Then, it waved cheerfully and disappeared within a blink.Â
Silence. Nothing at all. The commanders still around him stood waiting with caution, alarmed by the Arch Demonâs arrival, and just-as-sudden departure. Only when a rumble shook the pebbles on the bazaar grounds did they think to look up.
Not Ghirahim. He hadnât taken his eyes off the skies for even a second. He saw it the second Majora disappeared. A small dot, a mere speck in the endless blue of the cloudless heavens, approaching rapidly. The Moon was falling down on Gerudo Desert.
Cries of panic, of retreat. Chimes of magical transportation rang around him. Hyruleâs commanders were fleeing en masse. Perhaps he would not strike his intended targets, but he didnât care. This battle would find no spoils or prisoners. Nothing but a wasteland would be left, leaving not the slightest bone for the vultures to scavenge. Swirling clouds of condensation shrouded the Moon in its rapid descent. It was hypnotic, almost, Ghirahim thought, standing in the center of its massive shadow. He considered then what would happen if he simply stayed here. The clouds dissipated as the Moon crossed their threshold. By all means, he was insane for dawdling here, and yet he took the time.Â
Head cocked curiously, but eyes blank, he peered up at a giant visage that scowled back. Like it challenged him, almost. He was forged to survive any impact, surpassed only by weaponry that rivaled him in magic ability. But heâd never been hit by a meteor before. Would it shatter him? Did that matter? Oh, how tempting the thought was. He was a dead man walking either way. Where would he go if he survived such an impact? Master would break him.Â
Ah, his trump card was getting a little close for comfort now. He could feel the heat of its approach on his skin, its tremors shaking the ground beneath his feet. There were mere seconds between this moment and the inevitable crater the Moon would leave. He turned his stare away from the skies and turned to look around. Not a soul remained in the bazaar, but the soldiers that fled â be they friend or foe â certainly werenât far enough to escape the blast radius. Theyâd be dust soon, blend in with the sands.
Playtime was over. Heâd fantasized plenty. Zant was waiting for him; whether heâd find him succumbed to his wounds, or in a prime state to kill him himself, heâd have to see when he got there. Whether heâd have the guts to see him to his endâŠ
hello everyone i'm back!! sorry for the wait. i'm happy to bring you the next installment, slipping back into the Hyrule Warriors main plot: THE BATTLE OF THE TRIFORCE. Arms in hand, the Demon King's troops join to settle a conflict as old as time. Hyrule will not go down without a fight, but a fight is precisely what they've hungered for. This day, the Triforce will be bound to but one Chosen's palm - but whose?
this one is um... beefy... hope you enjoy!
CONTENT WARNINGS THIS CHAPTER: graphic depictions of violence, brainwashing/fatal possession, animal harm/death
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12
ao3 mirror
It was a monster of such volume that the air whistled and soared as it moved. Trapped in the dungeons of Gerudo Palace, the newest asset to their already venerable menagerie of monsters was adjusting to its new home. Poorly, that is. The Molgera whined, contorted, and pressed its massive, fleshy face to each corner, as if enough rooting around would magically create an opening in solid stone. Spikes rattled against the metal cage as the heaving beast slithered in its confinement. Cacophonous, like a hundred prisoners banging their cups against the bars in begging. Ghirahim stood hands at his sides before the bars of this colossal cage, fighting back the urge to poke at the beast and agitate it some more. From the tension building behind him, though, itâd seem the most amusement was to be found on this side of the prison.
âCooked up something nasty again, didnât you, Zant?â Wizzro wheezed. His laughter was like that of a pneumonic man on his deathbed.Â
The necessary arrangements now logged into the massive volume hovering before him, the living heap of cloth and malice patted a decrepit, clawed hand far too affectionately on the end of one of the creatureâs spikes. It recoiled nearly instantly. âI want partial credit for this one, you hear?â Wizzro sneered. The glowing eye at the center of his face squinted shut to morph into a grinning mouth. âIf it weren't for me showing you through the Ladyâs volumes, youâd still be nose-deep in the books by now!â
Zant stood aside, watching the wicked sorcererâs machinations with his usual cold patience. âYou will be duly acknowledged for your secretary duties, Wizzro, but the arcane achievements were my own.â
Wizzro clicked his tongue, shooting a nasty glare at his casual defiance. He seemed only mildly distracted by the gaping mouth now hovering wide open at the other end of the cage. A tendrilous tongue, one long bulb at its end, stuck out towards him. âPah. Whatever. Iâll make sure this thing is appointed to the right trainer,â Wizzro dismissed with a wave of his hand, turning instead to the strange shape poking and prodding at him.
As if all sense abandoned him at once, the ring spirit seized the decoy organ with both his clawed hands with great interest. The Molgera let out another wicked screech, sending spittle to drizzle (almost) all three men from its maw, as it lunged forward. Its gummy jaws slammed against the bars, prompting nothing but a cackle from Wizzro. âItâs an interesting one, to say the least!â
Ghirahim opted to watch these events from a healthy twenty feet away, while Zant simply grumbled, wiping his helmet clean. âThat it is. Iâd advise you to keep it intact before we strike Hyrule Castle.â
The dejected Molgera, curling up listlessly in its cage, seemingly accepted its fate as its arrangements were scribbled down in their finality. Each temper fickle in their own way, the pair of dark wizards settled the last logistics of their monstrous stocks before their patience mutually wore thin.Â
It was Zant who attempted to draw their conversation to a close, but not without drawing a last bit of ire. âWe will meet again at the siege, then. Our forces arrive from the north, and you-â
Wizzro snapped at him instantly, cutting past him with a dismissive wave of his hand. âYeah, yeah, weâre coming from the South, anticipating their backup, and whatnot. You neednât drill me on this, Warlock,â he gestured wildly as he spoke, slapping the massive logbook shut and dismissing it in a puff of smoke. âWe got the correspondence! We had the briefing! Itâs all in order. Other than delivering this beast to us, you have no business sticking your nose in our plans!â
Ghirahim felt a sudden boring of a bright red eye in his back. Heâd been perfectly content before to linger at the sidelines, amusing himself with the bickering of the other men, but could not help a coy flourish when a jagged nail was pointed at him. Wizzro gestured at him with a mild frown. âAlso. Why is he here?â
Zantâs helmet covered his face, but his smile carried in his voice. His helmet creaked a little as he turned to face his compatriot. âAny good King needs a chaperone, wouldn't you say?â
âHiya-hah-hah!â Wizzro shrieked in laughter. âAgain with the shticks! What Iâd say is that the âKingâ part is already doubtful, but âgoodâ is entirely off the table, you maniac!â
Clearly, this amusement was not mutual. The Twili had tolerated Wizzroâs ceaseless nonsense up until that point, but no longer. As if a candle had been snuffed, his temper snapped, and an enraged squeak echoed past his visor. He whipped back towards Wizzro, looming over him and balling his fists in his sleeves. âYou wouldn't know a King if oneâs fingers were shoved knuckle deep into your-â
âGentlemen! I feel like we all have business to attend to,â Ghirahim interjected, blinking himself between the two men with a hand each, grazing their faces. âAs much as you ripping each other to tatters would amuse me, Master Ganondorf would put me back in my box and throw me to the dragonets for letting any such shenanigans happen.â
Both of the robe-clad adversaries growled at the interruption as much as they did at each other, and so childishly exchanged a scowl in the line of sight that passed over Ghirahimâs head.Â
Zant dusted off the apron at his chest in an uncharacteristically pompous gesture. âBusiness we have, indeed. Let us depart at once, Ghirahim. Our time is better spent that way.â
Just as Ghirahim was about to turn and glare at him for yet another inciting remark, Wizzro made his immediate disinterest quite clear with a loud, hacking, drawn-out clear of the throat, and the turning of his back on his fellow commanders.
The pair of them chuffed out a simultaneous laugh at the display, before in equal coincidence reaching out for the otherâs hand. Fingers bumped, ears tinged the slightest red, and their hands clasped. With a chime and rustling echo, Ghirahim and Zant disappeared together, leaving behind Wizzro to dark devices theyâd prefer not to witness.
A nearly-collapsed outpost was to be their haven. Mere days before, this very fort had been raided by their forces. Their efforts tore down two of its three watchtowers and fashioned its gray brick walls with gaping holes. It would shelter their supplies and some of their men, but by far not all of them. Such a shoddy hideout was a statement; they had not a single intention of pulling back. Hyrule would fall at their feet today, and the Triforce was theirs for the taking.
Their formation gathered at the base of a nearby cliff, the platform itself elevated above Hylia River to the east. For the time being, they were sheltered from sight, but their advance had surely been sighted. Ghirahim could smell the pungent fear that lingered in the air. This quiet would not last long.
Ghirahim stood at the center of the formation, with Zant at the west-most end, and Yuga and his Master at his flanks. Though focused on the path ahead, he could not help an occasional glance to his left. He hadnât yet seen Yuga on the battlefield proper and certainly wasnât used to the sight of her in armor. Her curls spilled out from underneath a horned, brass helmet. Her armor was, in general, rather minimal, covering not more than her shoulders, her head, and her torso in a golden luster. Such was the outfitting of a spellcaster, he supposed.Â
His eyes then strayed to the right, lingering in momentary awe on the mighty form of his Master, before an unexpectedly bared face stared at him from further away. Zant had lifted the front of his helmet and waited for him to meet his gaze.
He looked at him with the same eyes he cast at him that morning. Small, squinted, and affectionate, peeking at him just past the thick fluff of his comforter.Â
âYou stayed.â
Ghirahim, equally buried under the heap of blankets, blearily turned to him. Some distance had been put between them in all their tossing and turning, and he found something shifting under the covers. Zantâs hand was seeking to grasp onto him. He laid his hand in his trajectory, and thought his smile contagious when the Twili indeed found him, squeezing firmly.
Yet, Ghirahim teased him with a frown. âOf course I did. Iâve been staying over, watching you sleep those wasteful hours away, much before.â
Zant blinked. âYes, but you were distant until recently,â he reasoned with a bit of a fluster, before burying his face further into the comforter and mumbling his next words. âI don't know. Perhaps it's silly.â
âIt is,â Ghirahim replied, meeting his hesitant, embarrassed face with a fond smile.
And how infectious that fondness was! Zant giggled softly, scooting just a bit forward to have him within armâs reach. Those ghostly fingers glided over his arms, to his face, and caressed him there. Zant touched him carefully, yet purposely, as if his very hands would gild him. Peering at him with such infatuation, something sadistically giddy lit up behind those amber eyes. Zant laced their fingers as he spoke, his smile cracking open the slits at the corners of his mouth. â... Watch me today, Ghirahim-ili.â
The warmth of their bed that morning may have been taken from them in the windâs chill, but their connection did not falter for even a second. Zant turned away, folding his helmet back in place, but demanding he looked at him, either way. Heâd entered the field empty-handed and announced that unarmed stateâs end with the flexing of his fingers. When he brandished his weapon, he did not carelessly whip the two scimitars from his sleeves as he usually did. This time, he balled his fists before his chest, a crackling, fizzling orb of magenta light pouring from between his fingers. Its grip clutched in his hands, the Scimitar of Twilight appeared, glowing fiercely in red. Zant at once swung it over his shoulder, metal clanking heavily on metal.Â
Before the sight of him could make Ghirahim swell with pride all too much, the raising of King Ganondorfâs hand snapped him back to focus. A shudder down his back straightened his spine, squared his shoulders, and guided his hand to his hip, where his sword sat sheathed.Â
Ganondorf marched to the front of his formation, bronze boots pounding on stone. He turned, his vibrant red hair whipping in the wind. A stern glare graced his features as he looked out over the troops, but standing so close to him, Ghirahim saw the corners of his lips tugging into a smirk behind his tusks. Master was confident â so he would be, too.
âGerudo, Demons, Monstrous Tribes, and those that joined us from beyond the Veil of Death, hear me,â he shouted, his booming voice rattling through their skulls. âAcross the Ages, my past lives have waged war against Hyrule, and all but once, we failed. We have been humiliated, banished, and eradicated from history, but no longer. Time is on our side now, my brethren. With the Triforce within our grasp, the Age of Demons is upon us.â
Ganondorf grinned, baring his tusks and wrinkling his fiery eyes. Sword raised to the sky, he thundered forth his promise. âHyrule will fall!â
With this final rallying call, their forces pulled out. Cavalry scouts burst past their frontlines, hooting and hollering atop hogs and horses. Oh, how Ghirahim yearned to set out in the same way! Still, no longer could he chase simple carnage. Not only had he a reputation to uphold, but their formation had to be perfectly tight for this initial stretch. His battalion trailed tightly behind him, each unit led by demons and living armor â ever his favorite. Those that didnât simply win his favor in skill just reminded him of home.
Zant, too, led his troops with remarkable poise. His soldiers rushed past him, but his towering height and flashy garbs continued to catch the eye. The soldiers rushing past him may as well have been see-through, for Ghirahim saw him clear as day, framed in zoetropic image.Â
He could see it all. His hands were firm on the hilt, his swings were smooth. He slid across the floor like that massive blade weighed nothing, with a stance no mere Hylian could topple. Each move was more calculated than the next, gliding from pose to pose almost mechanically. Zant was⊠Perfect, almost, theoretically. Such swordsmanship was a cold one, devoid of character beyond what could be conveyed in a manual. Zant was a puppet to his own knowledge, stern in what heâd learned. He showed nothing at all of the fierce, impassioned recklessness he unleashed when it was just the two of them.
This, too, was a message. Ghirahim hardly had time to think of its meaning when he himself was engaged in combat and drowned his fluster in bloodlust.
Bloodlust was not kept to him alone. As more and more Hyruleans forced past their frontlines, Zant grew overwhelmed. Bit by bit, that discipline chipped away.Â
The poor sods. They had no idea the Twilight King fought his best when unshackled.
Now content with his display, Zant ramped up his ferocity. With a single stomp, a deep black shock wave sent the four soldiers around him staggering, allowing him to pierce through the first of them unimpeded. His shoe planted on the standing corpseâs chest, he ripped the blade free and used its blood-streaked momentum to dismember the next in line. Projectiles from his sleeves, pulses from his feet, and the shadowy rays from his sword pieced together in a complex web of arcane and martial arts â not so different from how heâd fought before, but adding an elegance that was so sorely missed.
His lover wasnât half bad, he grinned to himself, watching the manâs battalion split off and head up into the Rockface Hills to claim whatever awaited them there.Â
Three battalions remained in their cluster. Soon it would be two.Â
A whistling in his ear and an uncanny instinct of foreboding dread alerted him to something awry in the east. Before the first moblin behind him could cry out in alarm, Ghirahim had already identified the source of his concern, his core chiming and blinking on pure instinct.Â
For the first split second, it could have been mistaken as a flaming cloud, tearing through the air with the glare of the sun obscuring its flight. A volley of burning arrows nearly went unnoticed, had he not shouted for shields, and raised a barrier around himself and the captains at either of his sides.
The only commander he could see, and he hoped heâd heard his warning, was Yuga. A panicked wave of his scepter betrayed that heâd turned to the source of the noise just a touch too late. With a yelp, Yuga raised one of his portraits to shield himself, but his startle made him careless. The bolts thwacked into the ground at his feet, each missing its mark until a single one didnât, and buried itself into his lower leg.Â
The earlier gasp of panic forced itself out of him with a horrid shriek, and a wobble of his stance. Kept upright only by the desperate support of his staff, he composed himself, but in body only. In an instant, Loruleâs finest sorcerer turned rotten in temper and was eager to let the world know.
âI would say youâd rue the day you crossed me, but when Iâve finished, you will be naught but ashes in the wind!â Yuga hissed. Yuga spat. His normally so dainty hands grasped the arrow in his leg firmly, before snapping off its length, leaving only a splintered stump lodged by his ankle.Â
It took one stumble for him to realize he could not walk with such an injury, but he refused to back down. Purple swirls of malice radiated off of him as Yuga began to hover above the floor, bracing his staff in a knuckle-whitening grip. Gnashing his teeth, he glared down the troops beyond the cliff and screeched his curses in all their brutality. âFoul wretches! Maggots beneath my boot! Return to the rotten flesh you crawled from, hideous things!âÂ
His feet now off the ground, Yuga launched himself forward at breakneck speeds, his curls nearly uncoiling themselves in his haste. One swing of his staff and the portraits that circled him spun around him like a whirlwind, each spewing a hellfire of lightning into the swarm of men he forced himself through. That draconic trail scorched itself into the grass as he soared by, cleaving through whatever once stood in his way. The sorcerer disappeared into the crowd, the sounds of carnage overpowered only by the throat-rending cackle that roared free from the banshee of this battlefield.Â
Not a moment was wasted. Soon, red and scaled hides filled in the cracks weaving through the Hyrulean frontlines, as bokoblin and lizalfos alike rushed to seize this vital opening.Â
Distractions now out of the way, Ghirahim felt oddly relieved. Being the sole commander now at Ganondorfâs side caused the thrum of his pulse to soar. The Eastern Keep was drawing nearer, and conquering it would break them all into the wider Hyrule Field.Â
A blue-clad soldier closed in on him but was swiftly kicked out of the way for the crime of disrupting his thought process. With the onset of enemy soldiers pouring in through the gates, his once so-perfect formation was refusing its emulsion. Frontmen skewered each other on their pikes at both sides, a battle of endurance to see who could wrestle the clutches of death the longest. Their collapse meant the line of soldiers behind them breaking through, blending gold and silver in their raging strife. A wicked force tore through the minds and bodies of the warriors, and her name was Furore; a mass, blinding anger, of knowing that if either force failed, they would fail for good. Yet in her mantle she carried glee, the joy of battle, to motivate them with more than fear. For it was this fear that, were it to overpower their minds, would make them not more than beasts!Â
Ghirahim was no mere recipient of this force. He seized it, made it his own, and knowing that mayhem would soon reign, lit the embers within. His eyes flit to the side, burning pupils catching on a beloved target. Ganondorf, too, was entangled in battle, cutting down the few soldiers that dared to approach him. Such foolishness made for a fine warm-up, perhaps, but the smallfry was by far not worth the Gerudo Kingâs effort. They ought to breach into more challenging grounds!
Launching himself forward, Ghirahim bounded for the keep. A devastatingly easy prospect: break in; clear it out; take out their commander. It was an easier task than usual. Being the only entryway to the northern Hyrule Field, the Keepâs gates were swung wide open, spewing out platoon after platoon. He just had to worm his way through.
In such an enclosed space, controlling the crowd was child's play. Frankly, most thinking went into just what was the most amusing way to take care of this little problem. He stood perched atop the drawbridge, pondering his approach as the soldiers surged below him like a tidal wave. Stuffing a cork in that seemed like a prime first choice.Â
With a snap of his fingers, a barrier burst into view, putting an immediate stop to the Hyruleansâ advance. He hardly had to do a thing after, Ghirahim noted with amusement. Not expecting a sudden wall, the frontmost soldiers slammed face-first into the diamond-spangled forcefield. With some luck, some would have been stabbed or crushed purely on accident in the jostle⊠But heâd see that when he got there. Padding leisurely across the upper footbridge, he made his way to the keepâs balusters, where about a dozen archers waited for him.
Bolts plinked uselessly off his skin. With a leap, he bridged the distance between them, and let them taste the bloody merits of a melee fighter firsthand.
Heâd hardly finished with the lot of them before the first of the soldiers heâd trapped down there came running up the stairs. Ghirahim grinned, relinquishing his grip on the larynx heâd just crushed and dropping the poor wretch to the ground. The Hyruleans funneled straight for him, barreling in a line as neat as angry men could manage. Ghirahim could taste their blood already.
Soon, he did. He drove his blade down the collar of the frontmost soldier, piercing the gap in her gorget, and kicked her down the stairs before sheâd even finished dying. For a moment, the crowd stumbled, balance lost under the deadweight piled on top of them, but their haste won over their supposed respect for their deceased. The corpse was callously tossed to the side, plummeting into the crates and barrels below.Â
Such was how Ghirahim held the stream of warriors at bay. Even though the piles of bodies and half-alive things grew ever greater, every new batch of soldiers seemed to reach higher and higher steps near him. It wasnât until one of them bore down on him, pushing to force him back, that he noticed just how many of them were teeming in the lower levels. Peeking past the railing, the keep seemed to be more crowded than it was when heâd started. Ghirahim shook himself free with a shout, stabbing through the offending soldierâs gut to throw him off the stairs, but found three more of them surrounding him.Â
Heâd bitten off a little more than he could chew. Reinforcements were in order. Hand raised, he braced ready to snap his fingers and rid the entrance of its barrierâŠ
⊠Until a sudden presence materialized in the center of the fort. A massive shockwave followed, deep dark and full of hatred, sending every single soldier that set foot in the Keep either out the gates or into the wall.Â
Zant, scimitar on his shoulder, stuck out his arm, pointing a pallid finger at a flashy-looking soldier that lay hunched over and dazed in the far corner.
âFound you.â
Suddenly forgetting all about the soldiers surrounding him, Ghirahim vaulted off his high ground and joined the Twiliâs side.
âYou donât intend to steal my thunder, do you?â Ghirahim prodded, nudging his co-lieutenant on his bloodied sleeve.
Zant chuckled in response. âYou looked like you could use some assistance. Iâll leave the final strike to you, but do not dawdle. More of them are coming.â
How dishonorable, to have to deliver the mercy strike on a dying man! He approached the opulent knight â a Caster himself, whose aura tied to the southern gates. The man panted, twilit runes festering on the bare skin of his palms as he reached for the Demon before him. Whether he pleaded for mercy or sought to ready some sort of spell, Ghirahim couldnât quite tell. Nor did he really care.
Blood trickled down pearlescent armor as Ghirahimâs sword skewered through his throat. A last gasp sucked through the gaps around the blade, bubbling the blood that spurted free in an obscene rattle. The tip of his blade scraped past bone, picked at the cartilage. Such sounds alone, that carried from his sword into his core and truly made his body and weapon one, were almost enough to make him forget the outside world.
But it didnât, for with the life of the Keep Captain, so too was the golden barrier extinguished. Finally, they could move for greener pastures, and he would see his Master truly in action.
Flanked by his two remaining commanders, the Demon King strode on, mocking the shining ostentation of the distant Hyrule Castle with his glory. Where any other royal would shelter behind the might of his army, Ganondorf broke past it, crowning his frontlines with his presence. Even with the oceanic vastness of the troops behind him, all eyes, all dread, were focused on the sight of him alone.Â
Truly, what a sight he was! The very air itself howled in pain as he swung those massive blades. Just one strike of darksteel sliced common armor to ribbons, its sheer size taking out a dozen men in the blink of an eye. Where Zant prevailed in wild strength, and Ghirahim mastered bloody precision, their King encapsulated these martial styles into one deadly whole.
The trampled grass of Central Hyrule Field now under their feet, the three men looked onward, their eyes on the nearest gate to Hyrule Castle grounds. With its gates firmly locked, spiked barricades littering the paths, and wooden shelterings strewn to hide soldiers unknown, this Keep would prove to be a tough nut to crack. Neither of his companions commented on it, but the occasional sheen of metal between the battlements clued Ghirahim in on archers at the ready, too.
âIt seems their efforts are focused on guarding this keep, Master,â Zant proclaimed, bounding his way next to the Gerudo Kingâs side with a slither in his gait. âThey can only guard the palace from so many angles. Surely, their Northern bridges are less fortified⊠It may cost us some time to travel âround, but it would give us better chances at overwhelming their defenses.â
Ganondorf grunted and furrowed his brow. âAnd do you volunteer to such a plan?â
Eagerly clutching the grip of his scimitar with both hands, Zant giggled, nodding strongly enough to bob his helmet. âYes, Sire. My squadron and I can force such a measly gate in no time flat.â
With that answer, Ganondorf turned from him again, eyeing his surroundings carefully. Ever defiantly, his gaze fixed upon the fortified keep before them again. He never did take well to being told what to do, and that obstacle beckoned him with a challenge. âThen go. We will stay and secure more territory.â
The East Field Keep proved to be a challenge, indeed. There was no forcing those doors, they would have had to go around.Â
Nigh yanking a field scout off his horse, he hissed an order into the creatureâs droopy ears to summon their raid captains there at once. Going up and around was going to require ladders, but with all that rubbish in the way, theyâd never even reach the base of the wall. Whatever was hiding behind the barricades would have to be done away with.Â
Lizalfos attempting to clamber over the wooden barricades were run through by the soldiers hiding behind them, while those trying to skirt around them met the same fate. It was going to take a lot more heavy-handed work to clear the way, and Ghirahim delightfully volunteered. To serve as a meat-shield was far below him, but little pinpricks bothered him none. So long as he could sprint past just one gap and shake those fools up, their forces would soon follow.Â
A rain of splinters left in his wake. He made quick work of the barriers, bursting through them with his fists alone, and ripped whatever unfortunate soul he could get a grip on back through the opening with him. Soldiers bearing their own massive shields followed suit, with his very own Darknuts taking inspiration from his infernal technique. Bounding in rapidly from the North, the first of the raid captains arrived. Oil-drenched torches sailed through the air, setting the barricades aflame, and soon, the field was riddled with charcoal and ash. Their siege towers soon followed, tall, wooden things, sawed like the necks of dragons, and slammed nearly uncontested against the Keep walls. Shrieking and screeching bokoblins clambered their way up, and sowed chaos on their stronghold from above.
Ganondorf did not wait for the path to be fully cleared, and joined in on the carnage with great amusement. Taking advantage of the archersâ panic, he hacked and slashed his way through the remaining eyesores to run right for the looming gate. One sword sheathed at his hip, he balled his fist, his eyes clouding over with something truly malicious. Just a spark of that ancient terror was summoned, then, and for a moment, the tether that bound Ghirahim to his Master tightened, digging into him as if wreathed in thorns.Â
With a roar of a battle-cry, he reared back his fist, before his form disappeared behind a swirling black mist. The gargantuan shape of something terrible, an earth-shaking manifestation of Vengeance itself, shrouded the Demon King and braced to attack in the very same way.Â
Giant knuckles pounded into the gate like a battering ram. The impact was thunderous, clattering teeth and eardrums for miles to come. Wood charred and smoldered where Ganonâs fist struck it, and though the gate had, by some miracle, not flown open, itâd been knocked nigh entirely off its hinges. Screws and chains kept it standing in a flimsy wobble, like stringy tendons refusing to relinquish a limb. There wasnât a point in it any longer â the first demonic forces were pouring into the Keep from above, and the gap their King had forced in the doors would fit their footsoldiers just fine.
Just as Ganondorf unleashed his victorious laugh, a series of explosions caught their attention.Â
Ghirahim turned to the source of the noise, only to find tall plumes of smoke rising from the Northwest Checkpoint. Pulling his sword from a fallen soldierâs chest, he gestured to the distance. âMaster! To the North, Zant has broken through!â
Unsheathing his second sword again, Ganondorf growled. The bulking shadow that loomed over him slowly fizzled away and shrunk down to a mere wisp that slithered down into the folds of his cape. âThen I shall join him. You stay here and retain our frontline.â
Ghirahim nodded and turned. Just as he was searching for an allied banner to join forces with, his attention turned again to his Master who, a few paces further, had turned back around, his gaze fixed on the field across him.Â
Courage had been sorely missed on the battlefield up until that point. Now, a shining example of it, with sword drawn and eyes fierce, tore his way through Hyrule Field. Ghirahim scowled at the approaching Reincarnated Hero, but his attention soon split to his Master instead, who stood grinning. He decided to keep any mocking comments about their little foe to himself, for now.
Stepping up to stand beside him, he called to Ganondorfâs attention. âA simple distraction to keep us from moving north, without a doubt.â
âThat matters not. I have a score to settle with the boy,â the Gerudo King replied, tusks still bared with his cruel smile. âIt seems the Hyruleans seek to entertain me⊠If they wish to lose their greatest asset so early in the battle, then I will gladly oblige.â
Ghirahim knew better than to disturb an ancient rivalry, for he was there when it first came into being. Still, he gave one uneasy look back at the pillars of smoke. âWhat of Zant, Master? Shall I join him? Having him lead such a siege on his own would be a death sentence.â
Ganondorf scoffed, giving his concern not a momentâs notice. His sights were set on the Hero, and nothing else. âIs Wizzro not approaching from the south, still? The creature has always been drawn to his dark proclivities. If Zant wishes to be a King in his own right, that much assistance must suffice.â
The Kingâs dismissal pooled with strange dread in his gut, but Ghirahim banished anything that stood in the way of his loyalty. Sword over his chest, he bowed, baptizing himself again in the cold clarity of servitude. âAs you wish, Master. Not a soul will intrude upon your duel, that I promise!â
Fending off anyone that went near, Ghirahim circled the duel in his lethal dance. He was quick, he was efficient â he drowned every instinct to flourish and impress, for if he were to distract his Master from this crucial battle, heâd sooner shatter than forgive himself. With the Keep nearby in shambles, he was almost fighting too leisurely. The battle was under control.
At least, until reinforcements came from the East. Marching through the Keep at the other end of the field, another wave of Hyruleans came their way. Ghirahim hissed, surveyed his surroundings, and came to a painful conclusion. There were by far not enough of their forces here to hold back the oncoming onslaught.
Driving his blade into an approaching knightâs shoulder, a sudden burst of inspiration struck him. He retracted his sword, indulgently lapping off its trail of blood, and shot a playful look at his defeated opponent. Sated by the piercing scowl of fear, Ghirahim pushed him over, leaving the man to bleed out on the floor. He knew just how to handle this.
Picking out a target was almost too easy. The Commander at the front of the crowd stuck out like a sore thumb, bearing a gilded shield nearly as tall as himself and a bright plume on his helmet. Kicking up sods of grass, he broke into a sprint to head straight for this flashy figure. With pleasantly surprising dauntlessness, the commander did not flinch. Faced with an ancient demon barreling towards him, all he did was brace his shield and brandish his longsword, ready to strike.
The fool could raise his shield all he liked! All he had to do was make contact!Â
Ghirahim raced across the ground with the speed of Zephyr, his every step taunting the man to show him just a shred of fear, but to his maddening delight, he continued to find none. Such men were always his favorite. They could still break.
Mere seconds away from the oncoming battalion now, he used his momentum for three long, bounding steps, before bracing his knees and launching himself forward, arms outstretched. Alarmed cries rang out, but he heard them not much longer. The second his palm laid flat on that opulent shield, diamonds surrounded the pair of battlers, and in that shroud of diamonds, they left the scene.Â
With most forces sent out elsewhere on the battlefield, the bridge to the North-East felt like a quiet enough spot to conduct his schemes. Using the commanderâs disoriented dazzle to his advantage, Ghirahim swiftly kicked his shield out of his hands, sending it clattering across the stone floor.Â
The racket seemed to shock the man back into focus, but before he could ready his stance, the demon was upon him, clutching him by the banner on his chest to yank him at eye level.
âDo you think your Princess cares, Captain?â Ghirahim hissed, pushing the man closer to the rockface wall. âA monarch that wants her people to thrive does not send them to battle unprepared. Here you are, facing against the Demon Lord, wielding an ordinary blade. You think you can hurt me with this?âÂ
Once again swept away, drunk on his own power, Ghirahim pushed himself away from the man, leaving him dazed. The smell of fear was pungent, ambrosiac in the air, and yet, the soldier gripped his sword tighter. Ghirahim met those burning red eyes with a grin, his arms spread in a mocking invitation. When the man charged for him, he didnât move a muscle â he did not even flinch, merely stood, daring him to strike.Â
And strike he did. A wicked slash of his greatsword, aimed at his chest, poised to kill. In the hands of such a towering man, bearing a sword of this caliber, such a blow would rend flesh down to the bone, hack through, and rend the lungs to shreds. Yet, when the edge of the blade reached Ghirahim, it tore nothing but the fabric of his cloak.
In an instant, Ghirahim was back on him, hands clutching the banner at his chest and driving him against the wall, his knee jammed between his armored legs.
âYou see?â he whispered, leaning close to press his forehead against the wretchâs helmet, and peer into the whelk that hid inside. âYou are powerless against me. Your precious Zelda has forsaken you.â
His victim shook his shoulders in an attempt to wrestle him off, but all it got him was punishment. Ghirahim slammed him back against the wall, helmet hitting stone with a resounding clunk. Leaning down into the dizzied manâs eye contact, the demon tilted his head. âDoes it not anger you? All your years of training. They reflect in your strikes, boy. You are not mere cannon fodder. Thou art a warrior. You have your pride, and here you are, reduced to a meat shield for the inflated ego of a rotting royal family.â
Painted lips curled into a smile, Ghirahim crooned his temptation into the ears of a lost man. âHistory would find you blameless, were you to channel your rage nowâŠâ
His words were a poison, seeping from his flicking tongue to probe at the edges of the defenseless manâs psyche. Mortal minds were simply so fragile, so permeable, needing only the stroke of a pointed nail to tear a hole in its tender fabric. And how easily it tore, how quickly the man once struggling turned to putty in his hands.Â
âYour will may have been signed the moment you stepped into this battlefield, but destiny still has its branches for you, Captain. You will not find your greatness with Hyrule, but perhaps, were you to join us against itâŠâ
The hands grasping his cloak weakened, a sword clattered to the ground. Ghirahim chuckled. It wouldnât be long, now. The veil was torn, the soft gray meat of this flesh-bornâs brain practically between his fingertips, its every shock and pulse struggling to get past his dark enchantment. And when the man began to gurgle, that tell-tale death rattle of the mind, Ghirahim keened with glee. Ichor poured from the soldierâs tear ducts, his nostrils, and, were they in view, heâd see it dribbling from his ears, too.Â
Ghirahim, too, had a little puppet now. Soon, heâd have many more.
âPick up your blade and run along, human. We have work to do.â
The man stumbled off, his shambling gait slowly righting itself. It was a dirty little trick, for certain, but one he thought would please his Master dearly. The ichor that dripped from the man was a sign of contagion. The second he was to mingle with his fellow men again, his curse would spread, and tempt every man that joined him in this same betrayal. A vice to most, but to a demon, such pride was a delicacy.
Moments later, Ghirahim perched atop the rock outcropping, overseeing his handiwork. To his glee, it appeared that not only had his little trick indeed turned the reinforcements back where they came from, his Master had enjoyed similar success! His blue scarf tainted red, Hyruleâs Hero turned tail and headed back for the castle, leaving King Dragmire to tear down the crowd in pursuit.Â
Such a well-oiled plan almost left him a little bored. Still, such a large group managing to somehow sneak past where Yuga was supposedly stationed, worried him. Leaping down from his vantage point, he flagged down whichever raid captains he could find on the way, and headed for the Keep that bridged Hylia River.
Such a small, thoroughfare keep was apparently a low priority in the Hyrulean defenses. Very few soldiers were stationed here, which took mere minutes to be cleared out, whether fled or felled. Dirty little chores like these were unbecoming of a demon lord, Ghirahim bemoaned to himself, perching himself on of the battlements of newly conquered territory.Â
He hardly had time to assess the view beyond the Keep before a shrill voice interrupted him from below.
âLord Ghirahim,â exclaimed Yuga, hovering down by the bridge. He floated up to him soundlessly and sat on the balustrade beside him. Turning to look up at him, he addressed him pleasantly. âA sight for sore eyes. And how sore they are, indeed! Chaos reigns in the East. Theyâre killing each other out there!â
Ghirahim looked down at the Sorcerer and found him worse for wear. His banners were rendered to tatters, his armor dented and smudged, not to speak of the sweat and grime that tainted his skin. His mortality reared its ugly head, certainly, in the way he sat there hunched and panting. Nevertheless, it felt like a bad idea to tell him of all people that his appearance was anything less than perfect. A bit of small talk seemed like a much better option. âOh, so youâve noticed. Some of my finer work, wouldnât you say?â
âSuch mass hysteria was your doing? Why, Iâm impressed,â Yuga chimed, looking at the distant crowd with newfound interest. Perhaps his little trick had worked a little too well â it looked like those flies were dropping faster than the contagion could properly spread. Before he could lament this setback any further, Yuga kept him engaged. âI suppose all is well on the central front? Otherwise, I havenât the faintest idea as to why youâd be busying yourself with my turf.â
Ghirahim laughed, preening his hair. âAll is well, indeed. Just before I arrived, I witnessed Master forcing that eyesore of a Hero to go running on back to his little home.â
âOh, splendid. How I wish I could have seen it,â Yuga languished, resting his chin on his palm with a sigh. âI suppose I should be glad enough for this sorry affair to be over soon. With that worm out of the way, the tides are surely turning in our favor.â
Something about those words jabbed their way into his ire. For a battle that he had yearned for from the moment heâs been summoned, to be dubbed a âsorry affairâ, picked at the stitches of an old wound the sorcerer inflicted on him. Was this the man his Master favored over him? Perhaps his injuries made Yugaâs whiny side surface, but he hadnât reconciled with him quite enough yet to give him the benefit of the doubt. Deigning to respond, Ghirahim stood atop the fort looking for a fight to join, but he ended up finding something else.
Hiding in the sunâs glare, a shadow approached and spread its wings. An exasperatingly familiar dragon came into view, the beat of his wings whipping the two menâs luxurious hair in the wind. The membranes of his clawed wings billowed like sails in the catching air, the thin cracks in those black expanses spilling the sunâs radiance between. Volga landed on the bridge with heavy thumps that caused the bridge to whine under his weight. He looked a little more dull than usual â his fiery mane was reduced to a flicker, and his scales lacked their red sheen.Â
Volga craned his face up to look at the pair, baring his fangs as he spoke. âThe Zora Princess has arrived, riding tides summoned by a noble I do not recognize. They douse my flames too quickly. I alone am no match for them.â
The earlier drab from before faded in an instant, a sparkle igniting in the sorcererâs eyes where a foggy haze had just been. âOh, how Iâve longed to meet with that adorable siren princess once more,â Yuga proclaimed, pushing himself off his seat to float gently to the ground. âI shall join you. Gladly!â
Ghirahim raised a brow, his eyes flitting between the two men below. How quickly that prissy figure managed to turn his mood around, all with the promise of a pretty girl! Still, he feared his recklessness, for if there was anything Yuga would risk his hide for, it was the promise of beauty. His eye on the hastily-treated arrow wound on his lower leg, Ghirahim sighed. He could only hope his concern wasnât taken as an effort of friendly reconciliation.
Quickly masking his uncouth state, Ghirahim hopped from the battlements to stand beside his co-lieutenant and address him with a light scold. âYuga, youâre injured. Iâll not encourage cowardice in the slightest, but Master will not forgive you if you act rashly.â
âSome nerve you have! You neednât worry about me, Blade. Iâll see to the eradication of these fools⊠With the utmost elegance,â he waxed with a voice like a dream, his arms raised in a flourish.
Yet, when Yuga shot forward to head to this promised reunion, his supposed companion did not follow. The sorcerer turned to find Volga hesitating, his head lowered and his scaled back raised. Draconic Warrior Volga was cowering.Â
âWhat ails you, beast?â Yuga questioned, his scowl wrinkling his bloodied brow bone. âOne little setback and your claws lose their edge? Join me!â
A growl resonant enough to shake the drawbridge chains vibrated the wood beneath their feet. Volga slinked away, spines bristling and mane sputtering with flame, and hissed as he spoke. âThe Demon King cares not! He sends us to our deaths,â he spat. âI will no longer fight as a pawn in his name.â
Ghirahimâs fangs bared involuntarily. Such insolence was unacceptable. Maddening! His fingers curled fiercely around the grip of his sword, and his gaze zoned in on a vague, pink mark behind the dragonâs shoulder, left there once by his Masterâs trident. But before he could drive himself into the tender flesh of Volgaâs weak spot, Yuga gripped him by the horns and shook him, forcing their eyes to lock.
âKnow your place, cave-dwelling reptile!â Shouted Yuga, face contorted into a snarl. âYou dare let your loyalty stray now? You turn against our Master, in his greatest hour?â
Volga struggled against him, bearing a strong endeavor to win, but the handle those twiggy arms had on him was unfathomably relentless. Any attempt to shake him off seemed futile â Volgaâs muscular neck writhed, its tension tightening his body enough to flare out his plating. Veins bulged on the Lorianâs temples as his rage built. It was fire against fire, bull against fighter. Their scuffle lit a new spark in Volgaâs sputtering flames, but before he could use it against his captor, the back of Yugaâs boot slammed his glowing maw back shut.Â
That treacherous attack only served to make Yuga angrier. He now fully yanked at his horns, dragging him with him to solid ground. Even after all this berating, Volga still refused, digging his claws into the soil. Yuga looked down at the grooves in the ground and cried out in disgust. âSickening! Pathetic! Shame upon you, for daring to call yourself a dragon! Have some sense! It seems I must knock it into you.â
Steeling his grip, Yuga lifted himself higher in the air, dragging the dragonâs head with him. His arms raised, his eyes spat fire, hovering fearlessly before the snarling maw mere inches from his feet. With one shrill cry of exertion, he swung his arms downward and threw the Dragon to the ground.Â
Volga hit the ground chin-first, hissing in pain and rage as the ground cracked beneath his plating. Before he could gather his bearings, Yuga bore on him again, his uninjured foot stomping down on his snout. âYou wish to be respected? You want to be treated as more than a pawn, as you say? Then show us! Show yourself as more worthy than the beating I will unleash upon you, should you refuse!â
For his last sneer, Yuga leaned in close, hissing his venom through clenched teeth. âNow you cough up whatever sickly bile allows you to spray your flame, Lieutenant, and you better do it soon, before I reduce that bulky form of yours to oil pastels!â
At the threat of his staff, Volga bounded away, his tail lashing with a vicious temper. He gave the pair one more skeptical look, before chuffing out an agonized, wretched burst of flame, and turning back to the distant battle. Taking off into a gallop, he climbed the air with beating wings, and announced his return to the masses below with a guttural roar.
Left behind, the Sword Spirit looked up at the wild beastâs ascent with an air of calm, while Yuga stood panting next to him, his flushed face slowly returning to its usual corpsely gray. Such a performance deserved a bit of accolade.Â
âMy. I couldnât have said it better myself,â Ghirahim said, bringing a hand to his face in idle amusement.
Yuga paused, swallowing to gather his breath, before chuckling in response. âSpare me the cajolery, Ghirahim. I have a royal visitation to attend.â
Just like that, the Sorcerer lifted himself off the floor once more with a wave of his staff, and along with the breeze, he was off.
This side of the battlefield now thoroughly occupied, Ghirahim skirted along its edges, the rush of the river below carrying him on its roaring winds. As Volga relayed to them, the Zora were advancing rapidly from here, but on his own, he wasnât keen on drawing their attention. As tempting as the thought of sticking it to the Lorian was by stealing his kills, the Zora often bore enchanted weapons. The Demon Lord wouldnât risk his pristine state for mere petty gestures!
Racing down the path to the south, Ghirahim had the quiet hope of running into his Master. Something akin to worry tugged at his strings when he saw the gates to Hyrule Castle nearly untouched. A mass of soldiers kept any invading forces at bay â which meant that Ganondorf was being held up by the bridge, for whatever reason. He had to cut through the crowd somehow.Â
A remedy (or, a minor poultice at most), to his predicament, appeared in the shape of raid squads by the crags, who stood gathered around a cavalier scout relaying her rapport.Â
Desperate for any news at all about the sudden delay of the advance, Ghirahim hurried on over, urging the scout to tell her tale.
The Gerudo woman tightened the reins on her antsy steed and addressed him with a bow of her head. âThere was an ambush from the Eastern Central Keep, My Lord. King Dragmire was impeded, and now, Commander Link has fled to the Castle. We are sending reserve troops to clear the path.â
Ghirahimâs eyes narrowed. The disgust in the air around him was palpable, enough to further panic the scoutâs horse. âThen I shall go with you.â
The cavalry was fast but not much faster than he. The gaps in the crowd the scout cleared for herself closed up quickly before him, and with every soldier he cut down, his disdain grew. So soft. So weak. What tricks could these ants possibly have gotten up their sleeves to give his Master this much trouble?
With every pace, the mass of soldiers grew ever-denser. The red plume of hair that was once his guide was soon no longer dependable. Overwhelmed by their adversaries, the Gerudoâs horse let out a hellish shriek when run through by steel, and soon, slumped to the ground, its rider perishing with it.Â
Yet, he no longer needed her. The bridge was in view, and soon he would reunite to assist his Ruler, his Master, his â
Cyan, bluer than blue, sped back down the bridge like an arrow. Towering stature, white hair, and red eyes that left glowing streaks as she moved. Ghirahim knew now what had delayed them so. To think a General as renowned as her would retreat so soon, hardly even injured!Â
Just as he intended to ignore this display of cowardice and let her run her merry way, a sudden force yanked his head to keep his eyes on her.
âShe aims for the Temple,â hissed a sudden voice in his mind. âShould the Hyruleans get the Great Fairyâs assistance, we will surely regret it!â
âZant!â Ghirahim whispered in retort, âyou have the nerve to get into my head?â
âDo not distract yourself with technicalities,â Zant growled. âGo!âÂ
Biting back his ire, Ghirahim hissed through his teeth. How could he allow for such a vulnerability in his own mind? Had a tether been planted there, without him noticing? If so, then when?
All such questions had to wait for later. A blade like him would only take commands from his master, but he took the liberty of taking Zantâs words as a friendly suggestion. He had been waiting for a proper face-off with the Sheikah general, to test if this one was a more exciting opponent than the previous. His feet took off below him without a second thought.
The thrill of slaughtering hundreds was fair enough a way to sate him, indeed. But nothing fulfilled him, nothing made him feel like he was truly fighting, like an impassioned one-on-one with a worthy warrior who wanted him dead for more reasons than simple victory.
Tracking the scent of her blood alone, Ghirahim burst after her with speed that would strike envy in a lightning bolt. Though the prospect of giving chase for the sport of it was plenty attractive, he knew better than to let his amusement get ahead of him. No, for now, he merely wanted to get a better look at the Temple and see where he could best ambush her. He could afford no distractions, so his path had to be clear. Yanking the raid captains heâd run into earlier with him, he set forth to the temple stairs, and waited for the right moment to rear its head.
Ever-so-politely, the Commander did not keep him waiting long. Ghirahim lavishly draped himself atop one of the few pillars still standing above the Templeâs crumbling staircase, strewn as it was with holes from beast claws and long-gone explosives. Somehow, this barren place still held onto its sanctity. He wondered how much further they would have to ruin it for that persistent, divine itch to stop.Â
That idle thought could only ever be that, though. His target burst from the crowd, and in her near-blinded fury, almost completely overlooked his presence. Carelessness was one thing, but plain rude was another! With a scoff, Ghirahim jumped down from his perch and landed himself square in her path. In an instant, she staggered back and drew her blade.
âAgain you cross my path, Impa, and how your numbers have dwindled. You were a mighty people once, a veritable threat,â Ghirahim purred, circling the commander. This alone stopped her advance and drew her weapon, for she was healthily wary of turning her back to him. âAnd now, you can hardly even be called a tribe. Once you served the Goddess, now merely Her diluted blood, who with each thinning drop tore down your numbers, your dignity⊠Are you truly content with this?â
If she was ever at the edge of being compelled, Ghirahim certainly didnât notice it. Impa thrust her greatsword toward him just as he took a step closer. âWhen the lands we stand on were still called the Surface, there was your kin, mercilessly slaughtering mine. You dare speak of our tribe in solidarity now? Spare me your poisoned words, Demon. I will not be manipulated by the likes of you!â
âOh, well,â Ghirahim cackled, ducking from the second strike from her blade with his hands childishly clasped behind his back. âIt was worth a try, I suppose.â
The giant slab of steel came for him again, slamming into the ground where he once stood with her full weight behind it. Yet the Sheikah was nimble, and thus, frightfully strong, in how she twirled and slid around him and dragged the heaving weapon along with her. He had to take his every step with extreme care.
Her attacks did not go uncontested. Ghirahim drew his sword in retaliation and threw himself upon her in a flurry of blows. There was something familiar about the way she fought â reminiscent of the so-called Hero, perhaps. But in those brazen arms hid decades of discipline and ferocity. What she lacked in holy power, Impa made up for with expert technique.Â
In other words, he was in for an incredibly enjoyable battle.Â
Though his sword was smaller, more nimble than hers, she managed to deflect nigh every strike and dodge away from others. He was certain he at least nicked her fingers once or twice, but either she simply didnât care, or some form of enchantment had been cast on her.
This suspicion was confirmed when, with a sudden wince in her expression, she left herself wide open for just a split second, and he thrust for her chest. Though her armor here was bare, the tip of his sword still bounced clean off, a golden flicker rippling where heâd struck. Had Hyruleâs Princess so graciously cast the same protection over a mere servant, that sheâd bestowed upon her divine Hero? How delightfully sentimental.
It did not matter. A barrier simply meant he had to hit harder, as he did last time. Lacking the privileges of Zantâs magic from his previous attempt, he just had to make do with his own. With her next strike, he jumped back far further than he needed to and deftly escaped her range. He had to be quick, but the slight limp in the Sheikahâs step assured him heâd have just enough time for his little party trick, if not with ten milliseconds to spare. With no further hesitation, he held his rapier out before him, and with a flick of his wrist, twisted it in his grip, and buried it into his own chest with a decisive thrust.
Shock. He just won another second!
His core ran hot. Burning, searing metal to its melting point, enough to pulse an aura of sickly purple from his chest to his entire body. Grass was charred beneath his feet as the heat coursed through his every inch, but by far stronger was the sheer darkness. Whatever life once carried in the ashes below was promptly snuffed, its soil scorched and poisoned. He gritted his teeth, not in pain but in exertion, as the searing flame in his chest grew ever brighter. His magic was doing its work; his will was next. For every blade forged needed a purpose, a name. And what was this one? Once, it was to be his simple favorite, light and easy to wield. But over the years he had accumulated many more just like it, and its value had diminished to that of mere nostalgia. Such a loyal friend needed something more potent.
What did he want for it? It needed to strike true, to be wicked in every edge yet sharp enough to cut through mountains unharmed. It had not to be graceful, but to simply bring death.Â
And when he pulled it from him, glowing bright red from the hellfire heâd retrieved it from, it became a jagged thing. The picture of a grimace, of metal that in itself bore rage and scowled at its foe.
Yes. I shall call you Annihilation.
Impa closed in on him bearing her scabbard as a shield. Her feet ground tracks into the soil as she slid at him with enough speed to knock him off his feet. And it would have, had he not braced himself the last second, meeting the firm wood of the scabbard with a ram of his elbow, cracking its polished blue surface. The impact loosened the greatsword in its hold and she took full advantage of this. Impa kicked the scabbard fiercely, sending it swiveling around to sit at her back, and unsheathed her blade in its momentum, seeking to cut him down in one broad sweep.Â
This was his new petâs time to shine. Instead of the traditional parry, he swung the cursing black blade downward. Sharp edges stuck together until the sharpness of his own prevailed and slid down, dragging an ear-grating screech out of the Sheikah greatsword. A strike so wretched it taught steel to feel pain! Ghirahim chuckled as the two swords buried their tips in the dirt between them, but was smart enough not to linger long.Â
Before her heart could finish another beat, Impa swung her blade back up, sharp edge upturned. Glittering specks of hair scattered in the wind as Impa cleaved through the tips of his bangs. In an instant, his vision went red, a crimson hue that pooled from the Generalâs eyes and washed over all of his vision. Such rage emboldened him as much as it weakened him, for the second he spent gritting his teeth and indulgently spying for a weak spot to torture, Impa punished him.Â
Blade outstretched, she dove beneath his arms and swung. A deep line carved into his gut, carving through his false skin and splintering a groove in his surface.Â
They were petty injuries to his body and standing, but enough to send him into rage. One hand fiercely gripping her shoulder, he pushed himself forward, driving his knee into her gut. Impa staggered back with a groan, shaken but unharmed, and kept herself standing with her sword as a crutch. With this new distance wedged between them, he once more pulled his cleaver and lunged for her.
She parried him once, twice, that massive eyesore of a blade serving far too well as a shield until it didnât, and he struck the gap between her arms and armor.Â
Annihilation slipped through, obsidian steel hungering for bloodshed, and tore a gaping hole into the magic that protected her. A fountain of golden sparks followed her in an arc as Impa fell to the ground. She hit the floor with a heavy thud, her scabbard cracking further beneath her bulk.Â
Ghirahim hopped back with whimsy, tongue darting between his lips and sword at the ready, as she jumped back upright with a swing of her legs. Even without her divine protection, she seemed just as hellbent on striking him down. But no matter. His next strike would not miss.
For just a second, her scarlet eyes parted from their contesting gazes and flitted to the Temple behind her. Impaâs feet braced in the soil, her knees bent, and she shot for her goal.Â
Ghirahim didnât let her set more than even a step. Those signs of her escape were subtle, and anyone even a smidge less analytical than he would have missed them. But Ghirahim drove a dagger into her hip before she could even think of which foot to put where, and nearly sent her tumbling.
Yet Impa kept going, shielding herself with her scabbard as she advanced further up the temple stairs walking backward. If she thought getting the high ground would put her at an advantage, she was dead wrong! Ghirahim hurried after her in pursuit, lunging for her legs as swift and deadly as a viper. Her balance was wobblier now that sheâd been injured, but her fury had not depleted even in the slightest bit. He saw it clear as day in her eyes â either she would get to that Temple, or she would die trying. If only all Hyruleans saw the beauty of such dedication. Perhaps, then, some of these battles wouldnât have been so dull!
To Ghirahim, it was a test of mettle, or rather, the indulgent act of poking a sleeping bear with a stick, while Impa treated his ceaseless meddling as the annoyance that it was. Hoping to finally throw him off her trail, she swung down, the embers in her eyes bursting into wildfires.
Ghirahim raised his blade in defense, edge catching on edge once more.
With a single flick of his wrist, the greatsword slotted into the jagged shapes of his masterpiece and became trapped there. This blade was not a mere extension of his body â it was him, a piece of his very soul, granted physical form. It held onto Impaâs weapon without as much as a shiver, clasped with the same deft ease as he would have pinched it between his fingers. Their eyes locked, dog meeting wolf dangerously outmatched, and Ghirahim flashed a smile.
The muscles of his arms tensed. Impa couldnât escape, so instead she attempted to push through. Out of pure curiosity, he let her try. He gazed up into the blade, and oh, how beautifully polished, clean of any grime or corruption. Their eyes stayed locked until he met his own in the swordâs reflection, and his lips curled into a grin. He was immaculate still, the assault on his haircut aside, while she stood panting, scowling, and shaking above him, her teeth grinding audibly with every bit of force she pushed into the blade. Falling apart like this was a shame of such a good swordswoman. He wouldnât bear to look at it, if he didnât delight so much in being the cause.
So, he put an end to it. With his only warning being a yell of exertion, he used her strength against her, and with a swing ripped the blade clean out of her hands. The greatsword careened down the stairs, cracking the stone bricks beneath it in its rancorous descent. Before she could think to dive after it, Ghirahim reared back again, and hacked her clean in the shoulder.
Impa fell to her knees with a guttural cry, for a moment, finally looking defeated. She glared daggers at him when his heel planted in her chest. With the cadence of a butcher missing the right tendon, he ripped his sword back out, beholding the blood seeping down its sawtooth edge. What a beautiful, loyal thing, yet one even he hesitated to lap clean after witnessing the damage it did.Â
In his distraction, the General made her escape, staggering further up the stairs. They were both thinking the same thing: could she make it to the temple, before the gnarly wound on her shoulder sapped her off her strength, and sent her to Deathâs door? Her arm dangling uselessly at her side, and her blade buried far beyond where she could escape from him to retrieve it, Impa shot him a foul look.Â
His confidence was getting ahead of him! From her upturned palm, a bright blue light surged, its specks of luster dazzling him before they struck him like a thousand darts. Yet this magic did not pierce, it did not scratch. Rather, it stuck to him in droplets, merging in ever greater globs in less than a second. His vision blurred, his hearing grew distorted and whined, and before he knew it, his head was encased in a churning sphere of water.Â
The thought that she attempted to drown him amused him. An airless laugh bubbled forth from his lips and echoed through his abyssal scoldâs bridle in crystalline chimes. But this amusement did not last long. A kick to his chest sent him tumbling to the ground, and icy daggers pinned his cloak to the ground in an attempt to keep him down. Distraction, after distraction, after distraction, all in the feeble hope to cross that field and plead the Fairy Queen for her aid.Â
The poor thing hadnât the slightest clue he didnât need to see her to strike her. The dagger in her hip betraying her location, he raised his hand, fingers tense, like drawing taut the string of a bow. A snap. Cold steel flew, whistling through the air as it followed the trail to its brethren, and struck flesh.Â
Impa cried out, stumbled, and at last, fell forward onto the steps.Â
Ghirahim strutted on over, sword at rest but not yet sheathed, to stand over his once-opponent. A little river of crimson poured free from her, dripping down the stairs and staining its pure white marble in the stench of near death. Yet, listening carefully, it appeared she still breathed.Â
He nudged her carelessly with his foot. âLady Impa, I must say, Iâm impressed. You and I make for such an excellent pair of duelists when you donât insist on making every turn of my life into complete misery.â
With her last shreds of wakefulness, Impa turned to gaze at him. Her complexion withered, but her eyes had not yet glazed over. She was angrier than heâd ever seen her. âYou⊠VileâŠâ She hissed through blood-stained teeth. âWretched thing, a traitor, a dishonor to the world, for your own selfish needs, youâŠâÂ
The corner of his lip twitched in annoyance at this name-calling. Ever the high-and-mighty, righteous woman, perhaps even more of a bore than her predecessor. He was almost glad that the blood loss seemed to be taking her ability to speak from her, but then a sudden pulse of energy alerted him that some other force was at play.Â
Golden specks of light rose from the General. She, too, took notice of them, a sparkle of bitter hope lit in her expression. A weak laugh was all he heard from her, until the light flooded her body, and she was gone.
With the Sheikah Chief defeated, Hyruleâs army devolved into further chaos. If they had been betting on reaching that Fairy to ensure their victory, then the sudden outpour of soldiers could only have been their last-ditch effort. Ghirahim rose, his cape tearing to tatters under the daggers as he shed it. Standing atop the temple stairs, he ran a hand through his hair, shedding the water from his vision to survey the battlefield.
It was a deluge of blue and silver. Were they winning before, then the Hyrulean swarm that broke out from the now-opened gate to Castle intended to change that. All matters of banners, people from every corner of the country, dashed forth from the palace and the foothills.Â
The princess was nowhere to be seen. Unmistakable to his analytical eye, however, a corridor, narrow as it was, cleaved through the masses. A certain someone else was making his way through the field again. Mounted on horseback, Link, his palm ablaze with golden light, shot through the field like an arrow.
Zant, Yuga, Wizzro, Volga, his Master, anyone, they were nowhere to be seen. As far as Ghirahim was aware, there was nobody else to stop the Knight that galloped straight for their base. Somewhere, a hunger for that old dynamic between hero and thrall awakened in him again, turning from an urge to a fiery prey drive within a split second. He was no stranger to chasing around little blond holy men. By all means, this was his calling.Â
And so, shattering the stone steps beneath his heels, Ghirahim bounded down the Temple stairs and threw himself into the mass of soldiers at the foot of the hill.Â
Yet, he could find no opening. The crowd was forcing him back out every step of the way, as if they could sense the string that tied him to the boy, and feared what would come of it, were the two ends of it to meet.Â
It was thoroughly amusing. No matter how sheer the numbers, these forces could only ever slow him, not stop him. Though even distraction would prove to be dire, the further those hoofbeats strayed from him. He had to be in pursuit and had to do it fast, but the dense formation barring his way left not a single opening. Such an advantage would have to be gained the old-fashioned way.
Shields raised before him as soldiers pointed their spears at him, rancorously barking commands for him to keep his distance, or to surrender, or to keel over and die already, and other such nonsense. It was starting to get annoying, really. Again, the gleaming metal pointed at him was of a mundane sort. He peered down at the spearheads in disdain. The jumble of sticks and steel wobbled, pointed insistently at him, and swayed all too tantalizingly.
Before the oafs had a sliver of an idea, he swiped a handful of them into his hand, crushing the bouquet to splinters in an instant. Taking advantage of the knuckle guard on his rapier, he twirled the blade around his hand and changed his grip to that of a cutthroat. He was upon them in a flash, breaking through the first line of shields with a single kick, and carved through armor and flesh alike with the full weight of his momentum behind him.Â
But the cavity heâd cut into the formation would only hold so long. Hundreds of the shouting sacks of skin seemed hellbent on stopping him all at once, hounding him with everything they had. Shields bashed into him, swords and spears clattered and bounced off his skin but tore his clothing to tatters. It wasnât long before their desperation made them forfeit their weaponry altogether, settling for trying to kick him over, or yanking at his arms, if only to stall his advance for another second. Eyes darting dangerously, he cut down whoever he could focus on long enough to kill.Â
Ghirahim trudged on, heaving, stained in blood, mud, and whatever else. It was slow, it was humiliating, but it was progress, and he could bear this nigh endless assault, if only for the carnal, berserkerâs satisfaction the blood on his blades brought him.Â
At least, until he heard something unmistakable. One of these dogs had the gall to laugh.Â
There stood Ghirahim, his beloved cloak tattered, trampled and abandoned, his clothing hanging from him in ribbons, his skin cracked with glittering black and his hair tousled from far too many gloves yanking at it. They didnât simply want to impede him, they fully intended to humiliate him.
Enough!
He wasnât sure if he simply thought it, or shouted it to the heavens, but within an instant, his brute endurance changed to a rush of bloodlust. With a cry, he raised his arms and summoned a glittering red, impenetrable barrier.
The small crowd bunched in there with him seemed to realize that it was merely their own numbers they could trust awfully quick.Â
Ghirahim greeted the dawning fear that would soon suffocate his playpen with a cheek-splitting grin, baring every pearly white tooth he had.
Where the density of the crowd was once their greatest strength, it was now the soldiersâ downfall. There simply wasnât enough space for any of them to join in proper formation, much less extend their sword. It was by design, of course. Ghirahim burst out in laughter, as gleeful as he was sadistic, as he began to tear away at the soldiers around him. Oh, how quickly they donned that veil of valiance again, so desperate to fall in honor after throwing themselves at him like animals! They certainly werenât holding their fairest warriors as reserves. Even the blood tasted vile on these ones. The crowd thinned rapidly with the fury of his blade, which, to his amusement, made enough space for some of these fools to try and fight him again. It turned to a delightful routine â parry, perhaps a second clash of swords, then a jab at the shoulder, and a stab to the gut. Around them, the barrier had turned from red and gold to a flat crimson, obscuring his private arena from the outside world in a curtain of blood. And what a carnage it had been! Only five of them were left â ah, forgive his enthusiasm. Four, now â Three, tearing limbs out their sockets, crunching their jaws under his fists â two â
And then there were none.Â
Ghirahim stood upright, surveying his handiwork with renewed clarity. Cloth, skin, chainmail, plating, and shields alike accumulated on the floor in a scrapyard amalgam, groaning wetly under the force of his footsteps. A rhythmic pounding of pommels against his barrier thrilled like a landslide in the air, but he was confident the masses would not break through. He stroked a hand through his hair, only to notice black talons peeking through his gloves, and begrudgingly smiled.Â
His power was getting away from him again. Looking around the death gathered at his feet, he knew just the way to righten this new burst of energy. Unencumbered by his now-deceased assailants, he stretched himself with a laugh, cracking his shoulders to spread his hands to either side. Dancing forward across the heap of bodies heâs left, he swayed his arms in fluid motions, like plucking the strings to a harp. With each twitch of his fingers, he felt the power surge from the fading life beneath his feet, up his legs, and to his core â an eerie feeling, yet unrivaled in its profoundness, that chilled as much as it burned.Â
With two snaps of his fingers, spectral servants surrounded him. Heâd wasted enough time; he had to catch up with that boy, and fast. Of all the strings that tugged on him, the one tied to the Heroâs Incarnation pulled the hardest. His barrier now dismissed, he sent the specters forward to clear his path, only to find the battlefield had changed in his absence. Drawn to the scent of blood, heâd imagine, Bokoblins had poured into the cracks of the Hyruleansâ defenses to draw ever nearer to the palace. Finally, some more backup than the measly groups heâd summoned!Â
He ran, he cut down anyone in his way, and he swerved through any opening he could. His feet pounded across the bridge, wind soaring in his ears. Moreso with kicks and elbows than with his swords, he broke past groups of soldiers, only to find an iconic presence tower above it all, glaring at the setting sun.
âMaster,â Ghirahim cried out, and launched himself to his side to run beside him.
Ganondorf looked down at him over his shoulder. Past the blood and grime that others had splattered on him, he was as immaculate as heâd been when he first arrived. âThe boy fled before I could engage. The Hyruleans are planning something, and I have no intention to-â
Golden beams of light had the audacity to interrupt his magnificent words and rip their attention to the north.Â
âThe bridge keep⊠They have it out for our bases,â Ganondorf growled, stroking a hand across his black steel blade to charge it with wicked thunder. âKeep me no longer, Sword. I must be swift.â
Were it any other time, burdened as he was with the despair of judgment and abandonment of his Master, Ghirahim would have hung his head and accepted his departure. But this grave turn in destiny, where finally, the Demon King would get his hands on the Triforce, invigorated him to boldness never seen before. He lunged for the departing Gerudo and clutched his arm.Â
âIf heâs going for our bases, Master, there is but one place he can go. Iâll take us there,â he shouted over the noise of battle, never shying from his gaze, even as he scowled at his sudden forwardness.
Yet Ganondorfâs expression softened, if one could ever call such a vicious grin âsoftâ. To Ghirahim, it was the most reassuring sight he could see.
Ganondorf turned to face the golden light once more, and spoke with narrowly restrained eagerness. âThen get on with it.â
Ghirahim gripped his arm with more vigor than heâd ever held anything. Diamond magic gathered at their feet, enveloping the both of them in a maelstrom that rippled the grass and billowed fabric in its intensity. Enveloping the Demon King in his own power sent his core into overdrive. Steam burst from his gritted teeth with a single pant, the sheer exertion threatening to melt him down. The golden light inside that man was simply so grand, so all-encompassing, that to wrap around it with the fickle fibers of his own seemed insurmountable. Yet he, the Demon Kingâs blade, his servant not only by design but by fierce desire, would not falter.Â
When they tore through the fabric of reality and landed at the foot of their base, the sheer vertigo of the transportation was enough to bring Ghirahim to his knees. He clutched the pommel of his Masterâs sword, panting, and craned his head to look up at him. Ganondorf looked down at him past his pauldron and nodded at him, a smirk pulling at his features. Heâd intrigued him â perhaps even impressed him!Â
Invigorated by the urge to have those eyes on him again, he wobbled back on his feet, as if born again, to trail after the Demon King as he marched onward.
Ganondorf turned his attention to a second rain of light pelting from the sky, steeling his grip on his crackling blades. âHyruleâs Hero intends to drive us out of their turf. How fortunate that we can meet him halfway.â
This corner of the battlefield was still under their command, but their influence was slipping. Anything past Hylia River seemed to have been reclaimed by blue and silver, and their sickening radiance grew ever closer. It was a battle of endurance now, where the Demon forces had to resist being driven back, lest their goal slip through their fingers.Â
It was dire, yet it was not. Were he among Volga and Yuga, whose fire and thunder lit up the skies behind him, he might have despaired. Were he still trapped in that humiliating clash heâd ripped free from, he might have faltered. But sheltering the mighty back of his Master, whose shoulders squared exuding nothing but power and confidence, he knew victory was mere inches away.Â
That inch was announced with the skidding of hooves and the blowing and snorting of a startled equine. Link forced his horse to a halt, blue eyes shooting a piercing gaze at the two of them as they caught him off guard.Â
âOh, come now,â Ghirahim chimed, collecting himself with a whip of his hair. âDonât be shy! Youâve come this far, surely you didnât think weâd let you claim our territory unchallenged?â
Ghirahim laughed, his arms outstretched in invitation as he waltzed his way over to the knight. The young man was worse for wear â his green garb was dirtied from his earlier battle, and though heâd been run through the infirmary, his heaving stance betrayed painful injuries. Yet, that furious, noble glare was unmistakable. Heâd dragged himself here with willpower alone, and that very force would carry him âtill his heart gave out.
Which, frankly, sounded like a fun little exercise.
Another smoky laugh escaped him when Link spurred his horse again, setting out for him with full intent to smack his head clean off his shoulders. Ghirahim looked back, inviting his Master to mock their adversary, and found him permitting his whims with a squint of his eyes.Â
Just before the advancing horseman could strike him, he disappeared with a flash and zipped back into view a ways behind. The horse bucked and staggered, aggravated not only by startle but the instinctual ferocity of demonic presence.Â
Ghirahim watched on in amusement as Link struggled to pacify his mount, finding it the perfect moment to prod at him some more. âQuit bullying that poor animal and face us properly, boy! Youâre not slipping past us again!â
Eyes flitting between his two foes, Link grew antsy atop his panicked steed. He dismounted her with a sweep of his leg, setting her to run free, and once again brandished his sword. Both feet now firmly on the ground, his earlier discombobulation was nowhere to be seen. When Ghirahim prowled toward him, tongue darting between his lips, Link scowled at him with nothing but a righteous sense of duty.
Snapped out of his bloodlust, the sword spirit straightened himself, his free hand before his chest. âAs you wish, Master,â he stated, retreating with a bow to let Ganondorf take his place. âSame arrangement as before?â
The Demon King shook the sparks on his swords awake. âLet not a soul through.â
âAs you wish.â
And so, Ghirahim braced himself again, darting forth to clear the King a proper arena. Those with seconds to spare would soon be dragged on the periphery with him, riddling the edges with hulking monsters. Two separate worlds were unfolding on this battlefield, that of the raging war of the masses, and the private duel guarded so tightly at its borders. In the natural order of things, those spheres would never have met, not until one of them ended, but a twist of fate broke their edge.
Just behind him, Ghirahim noticed a Dinolfos seize one of the Hyrulean captains in its gauntlet and lift them off the ground, inspecting them with nostrils twitching and teeth bared. With a furious hiss, it tossed the soldier to the ground, sending them skidding into private grounds.
Ghirahim would have torn the wretch apart for disturbing their Kingâs space, did he not notice just who was thrown to his Masterâs attention. With scarlet hair, golden armor, and richly patterned clothing, the identity of this soldier was clear. Even more damning was the blue-and-silver banner hung from her waist.
The distraction allowed Link an opening. Ganondorf grunted as a gash was hacked into his thigh, but his first wound only served to invigorate him. âWhat is the meaning of this?â He snarled, tusks bared. The strikes he delivered upon Linkâs shield caused the boy to buckle through his knees, and be thrown to the ground with the next. âYou dare poison my own people against me? To think Hyrule calls me wicked. You would have Sisters slay each other.â
Link and his fairy stayed silent. He threw himself back on his feet and lunged for the Demon King once more.
If the battlefield was in dissonance, then the fatal clash behind him was a symphony. There was no desperation in it â the drive to see each other dead was pure and true, and Ghirahim would give his life to protect it. The bodies he left in his wake were his offerings, gifts for his Master, to keep that music safe and undisturbed.Â
Yet, even with this passion, in his strife to keep the raid squads at bay, an ominous glow in the skies distracted him. At once, the familiar comfort of servitude was shattered. Ghirahim kicked the burly Hylian before him to the ground and skewered him in place, if only to allow himself a few seconds unimpeded to keep an eye on that strange sight. The glow was met by a smoldering darkness from below, that formed a murky yellow globe just beyond the fortifications in the East. From that same faux-sunspot, light rained down from the sky, pelting down on the barrier in ground-shaking ferocity. But this attack was different; rather than the golden rays invoked by the descendant Hero, this one was a pure, blinding white, taking the shape of thousands of arrows. Zant had anticipated it! How nostalgic it must have been, for light and darkness to clash once more!Â
Then, the unthinkable happened. Not in that it was impossible â really, it was the only logical outcome â but in that heâd never want to imagine it. The Twilit barrier shattered to bits.
Ghirahim froze in place, eyes glued to the shining barrage from the heavens.
Even through the ringing in his ears, Ganondorfâs voice rang through clear as glass. âPrincess Zelda is growing desperate. If sheâs felled Zant, she will make her way here shortly.âÂ
Felled?
âDo not let her reunite with her Knight, Blade!â
His feet moved on their own. Were there any soldiers impeding his way, he must have taken them out in sheer automation, for he didnât notice them. All he had eyes for was the deluge of radiant arrows that turned the condense in the dark clouds above into a glittering expanse of stars. The heavens rejoiced and cheered for their princess as she took away what mattered to him so.
Ghirahim ran, too numbed by shock and steered by command only. What would he do, were he to round that corner and find her there? If he found something else he wouldnât want to see? Would he be able to look away long enough to take her down?Â
The swarm of Hyruleans thickened around him as their demonic forces dwindled. Their keeps were being cleared out and invaded swiftly, leaving their most competent generals struggling to retain their ground. Yet, every one of them that saw his advance, rallied to clear his path. They could not win this war with numbers alone â everything rested on defeating the bearers of the Triforce.
The northern gates were in sight now, their doors blown to scrap and splinters, and the surrounding ground scarred with blight. He sprinted through them, rattling the bridgeâs chains with his pounding footfall as he rushed to get to this final stand, only to skid to a halt.
In the distance, he saw a clash between beast and man still unfolding, as if the world had not ended here moments before. Approaching in eerie silence was an armored Bullbo, growling in strain against the many arrows that pierced its hide, but more notably, carrying an unbelievable shape on its back.
Zant slowed his steed with a pull on its reins and sidled up next to Ghirahim. Now witnessing him from the side, a second passenger came into view. A bloodied bronze gauntlet on thin, serene arms, and a curtain of vibrant, straw-blonde hair, draped past The Twilight Kingâs lap.Â
Retracting the visor of his helmet, Zant bared his smile. âHail, Ghirahim-ili. I see you have stopped General Impa, as I advised. Well done,â he said, looking to the skies to find golden light still raining there. âWhat of the boy, Link?â
â... I⊠Heâs⊠Master is, ahâŠâ Ghirahim stammered, his throat suddenly feeling too tight to speak. âLink is weakened, and we stopped his advance. Master⊠Will prevail. Zant, how-â
âExcellent,â Zant interjected sharply. âOur victory is at hand, Ghirahim, but I am too weakened to escort the Princess on my own. Wizzro can only keep the forces behind me at bay for so long, thus, I must make haste,â Zant seemed to soliloquy for a moment, before looking down upon him from his mount again, grinning his teeth bare. âWill you join me for this grand finale?â
Ghirahim was too paralyzed to refuse or accept. Zant took his silence as confirmation anyway. He took off in a gallop. Feeling the strain at his collar, Ghirahim followed.
Hyrule field was in a greater state of chaos than Ghirahim had left it mere moments before. Enervated by the battle, the remaining demonic forces grew ever fiercer. Were it not for the bounty they carried with them, the sides would have seemed equally matched. Ghirahim wordlessly fluttered around Zant like a moth contemplating the light of a lantern, striking down anyone that came close. And those numbers gained, indeed, as they drew ever deeper into the conflict. Zant had drawn his blade, but from atop his porcine steed could only do so much.Â
The sight of the Princess splaying across the saddle eased their burden as much as it increased it. Hyrulean soldiers grew panicked and enraged, bearing down on them in droves, while their monstrous captains saw it as their cue to join their entourage.Â
As the eye of the storm formed around them, Zant addressed him. âYou saw it. That golden light, decimating all in its wake. A magnificent power, isnât it, Ghirahim?â
âIt is,â Ghirahim replied. And you defeated her, he thought to himself. Against all logic, Zant came out victorious. At this point, asking him âhowâ would only have resulted in a lackluster answer. Nor would knowing just âwhoâ this figure was sate him. The desire for questions was beginning to wane.Â
Ghirahim knew power when he saw it.
Zant chuckled behind his helmet. Tiring of this pace, he sent his mount into a gallop, and forced his way into the crowd. The Bullbo shrieked, tossed its head, and sent men tumbling, and grew ever-fiercer as more and more blades drove into it. With a sweep of his adamantine sword, Zant poked holes into the line of Hyruleans for their own troops to flood into.Â
He shrieked with laughter, yet held the princess fast to his saddle with care, as he turned his steed to face his co-lieutenant with masked glee. âAll of it will be ours, very soon. Hold fast, Yima gradiegra. Master awaits.â
His Dagger.Â
Yes, he could do that.
With the sounds of combat mingling with the thunderous laugh and shouts of the Demon King, Zant deemed them close enough to dismount his beast. Sword sheathed at his back, he hopped down almost leisurely, as if the fate of the world wasnât perched upon that very saddle. He turned, reached up for her, and let the limp frame of the defeated Princess Zelda collapse into his arms.Â
He lifted her carefully. Her head drooped against his shoulder guard and her arms laid over her stomach, as if she were naught but asleep. With her face now visible, Ghirahim could hazard a guess as to how sheâd been defeated. The same pale gray of the hands that cradled her spread to her own skin, besmirching her features with runic pestilence. She breathed still, but there was no telling for how long.
As they drew closer to the fated strife that awaited them, Ghirahim felt like every step hollowed him out deeper. It was an odd feeling, acute in its onset, that gnawed at him without apparent cause. The leash that bound him to his duty tugged on him ever stronger, but as he drew to its source, he felt the urge to dig in his heels and resist.Â
Something wasnât right. Wasnât there more he had to do? More he had wanted? Thousands of years he had dedicated to this goal: deliver the Triforce unto his Masterâs hands, so He may claim the Surface as His. It was right before him now, on the cusp of being completed, but it felt wrong. Unfulfilling.
It was just as heâd felt before, but now, he realized just how time had gotten away from him. Never did he expect his wish to dodge out of reach so quickly. With each pace of feet that shouldnât be, his melancholy grew. His purpose was about to conclude, without him where he belonged. The Demon Blade was firmly in his scabbard and refused by his Masterâs hand. In such a crucial moment, he never got to be his sword.
With that pit in his core, he watched on as the masses split by his blade and the duel carried on. Even as war raged on for hours, Ganondorf retained his poise. His stance was like that of a mountain, never to crumble, only to erupt. The flats of his enormous swords acted as shields against the fury of Linkâs attacks, while their edges bore down on the boy like a butcherâs knife. His Master wielded those blades forged in the sword spiritâs shape, but empty of him, to strike down the reincarnation of his foil, almost in mockery. Ganondorf realized the picture he was meant to fulfill, certainly. He was the image of Demise, but as proven time and time again, he was his own man. With such pride came its own tools, resigning Ghirahim to symbolics only, to be by his side as an object of veneration.
But looking upon Zant, carrying the Hylian Princess in his bloodied hands, his world went still. Even he had fulfilled that part of their mission, the Twilight Scimitar as his implement. If Ghirahim didnât know that sword to be empty, he would have taken its twilit glow to be an insult, a triumphant laugh to have stolen the King of Shadows from him. Ghirahim taught those very hands to grace that hilt, and now that they were wrapped around foreign steel, an entirely new feeling chilled him; sharpened his gaze. It was an emerald, serpentine envy.Â
All that time he spent training him to wield this very blade, and now, the fruits of his labor went to that wretched thing. As he had once intended, indeed, but now that his goal was attained, he felt not a shred of satisfaction. He felt robbed, instead. The one to feel the maidenâs blood coursing down his blade should have been him. It was only logical - it was just!Â
The surrounding armed forces were split into a perfect crowd. Some were frozen in place, looking on in horror as the bloodied dove that was their Princess hung cradled there in her defeat. Others threw themselves at the Twilight King in almost bestial rage, swords outstretched, had they remembered to wield them in their fury, to strike down the wicked foe that carried her. Yet, none could manage to reach him, being bounced off by a shadowed shield, or ran through by the Demon Lordâs blade, who stood to defend him without even thinking to do so.Â
In an odd tranquility, Zant padded over to Ganondorf, the bottom half of his face bared and his lips a mirthless smile.Â
But even with the approach of his defeated compatriot, Link did not relent. He took one look at Zelda and his face tightened into a wide-eyed snarl, before throwing himself back at Ganondorf with furious abandon. His adversary merely laughed. Whatever respect he had for his foe was no longer visible on his face. Ganondorf braced his swords, turning them in his hands with flowing sweeps like they weighed no more than paper, to deflect the Master Swordâs glowing strikes. Steel sang and thrummed under the relentless flurry of blows, but all was drowned out by the thunderous laughter from beyond the wall of metal.
Link was fierce, unrelenting. Red stains spread under his tunic where the King did not strike, but where old wounds tore open under sheer strain. Sweat coursed down his face, mingling with the tears pricking at the corners of his eyes. His stumble betrayed a pain untold. Yet, none of it stopped him, even as Zant drew closer, the Princess in his arms.
Tiring of the boyâs meddling, Ganondorf glared at him past his massive blade, before whacking the holy sword right out from his hand with one mighty strike.Â
Ghirahim knew that alarmed chime better than anyone. He taunted her with a cheerful tone of his own.
Now disarmed, Link seemed undeterred. He wasted not a second before diving back for his blade. He could not get far before Ganondorfâs golden gauntlet clasped around his left wrist. Hyruleâs beloved Hero was lifted into the air kicking and screaming, at the horror of every bystander â all but two. The Gerudo Kingâs metal-clad fist drove into his ribs, shattering through a glimmering golden barrier and striking chainmail with a sickening crunch. Just like that, Link was silenced, gasping for air that would not enter him, and eyes bulging in their sockets.
And so, with his two servants standing before him in adoration, Ganondorf held his foil in his hand like a hunting trophy, and extended his other, palm turned up, to receive his next piece of destiny.
Zant stepped forward once more. He craned his head to the side, looking at Princess Zelda almost wistfully. All was silent, save nothing but the shifting of fabric, the clanking and jingling of bangles and armor, and the Princessâ strained breathing, as Zant held her out to his King in shaking arms.
Ganondorf snatched her from him without a second thought. Hoisted in the air by her wrist, Zelda still did not stir, dangling limply before her fated companion. That green-clad companion now only had eyes for her. Link stared at her pleading as though worrying enough for her might wake her.Â
Whatever sentimentality was about to unfold, The Demon King put a swift stop to it. A pulse of energy burst from him with the clench of his fists around their arms. All troops were forced into silence, with two lieutenants brought to a kneel. Something thrummed in the air, like the warning signs of a thunderstorm, carrying a heavy pressure that stoked the breath. Where the sun had once cast the battlefield in a pale gold, darkness now crept in past the hills, summoned from far and wide to swirl at Ganondorfâs feet.
The bearers of Courage and Wisdom recoiled, writhing and contorting in agony as a golden glow was forced from them. Their captor paid their anguished cries no mind. The light poured from them ever stronger, almost blindingly so. Their magic had a mind of its own, knowing that to be parted from their vessels would be an unprecedented act of wrongness, and kept itself lodged firmly where it sat. It shrieked, struggling to keep itself contained, until at last, it could fight against pure power no longer.Â
That same golden glow ripped from them in an instant, and Ganondorf seized up, his head craned to the skies. Wide-set eyes pierced the heavens, their gaze alone boring a hole in the dark clouds that gathered there. A resonant thrum caused the debris on the ground to skip about like grasshoppers, an image so playful yet foreboding.Â
That humming grew louder, deeper, until it shook the crowd so deeply all were deafened by the shaking of their own bones, and it burst into a climax. More radiant than ever before, a bright red light flared from the Demon King as if the sun itself stood in their midst. Fierce energy whipped around him like a maelstrom before it shot into the sky, lighting the beacon to signal the beginning of the end. Above it all, Ganondorf laughed.
Drained of their worth, two Hylians were relinquished, and dropped to the ground.