Outside the city gates, Mahleck the King of Locusts sat atop his horse surveying the battle scene as the moon rose over the plateau. The city's weak defenses had been relatively easy to overcome once they made their way past the natural barriers. Adyll relied too long upon the protection provided by the cliffs surrounding it, never developing advanced weaponry or a strong army. Adyll had also never counted on one of their own citizen betraying them. His spies had found an Adyllian merchant travelling with the Narim, the desert nomads who often camped at the base of the Adyllian cliffs. The merchant was easily bought with the promise of coin. He had quickly gave up the hidden way through the cliffs and canyons to the heart of Adyll. Getting the army through the narrow passage proved the most difficult part of Mahleck's invasion. The king of Adyll rained down fire upon them from the tops of the cliffs, but the sheer number of the Swarm prevailed. King Pytr paid for those lost with his own life. Mahleck personally supervised his torture and death by fire. For being such a weak man, King Pytr had a strong will. He stayed alive longer than most of the other kings Mahleck had destroyed. He made sure the torturers were careful not to destroy Pytr's face, so that when his emissary brought the head to the gate with the Locust's demand for surrender, the citizens of the capital were sure to know that it was indeed their king that was dead.
Still, Adyll did not surrender. Mahleck had then pitched his tent hung with white cloth on a hill where it could be easily seen from the city, especially the palace. The city's defenses attempted a counterattack from the walls with volleys of arrows. The next day the Locust King's tent was hung with red. His emissary brought another message from Mahleck to the Queen Mila XI, ruler of Adyll: If she surrendered now, he would only kill the males over the age of 14. There had been silence from her Majesty since that message. And every night since then for seven days, the Swarm's trebuchets and archers launched fire into the city as soon as the sun set. They had carefully avoided aiming anywhere near the palace or the temple. Their aim was to sow division between the populace and their Queen.
Now Mahleck's tent hung with black. He intended to kill anything in the city that could not be used to serve him.
These citizens were soft and weak, like fatted calves ready for slaughter. The inner keep where the palace and the temple stood was in the center of the city, elevated above the rest, carved from the actual mountain. Mahleck estimated it would take less than a day to break through the city's gates. Once the Swarm was inside, he would do as he had done to all the other kingdoms he had conquered. The weak would be punished and only the young and strong would be allowed to live in service to the King of Locusts, the God-Among-Men.
At the top of the battlements he saw a glimmer of white reflecting the moonlight. He raised his hand and the Swarm's battering ram and battle drums came to a grinding halt. On the wall stood a beautiful woman in a white gown brocaded in silver. Her unbound hair fell in chestnut waves below her waist. A golden circlet adorned her head. On either side stood men almost as beautiful as she, wearing white robes with the silver hawk medallion indicating a life of service to their Goddess. Mahleck had not seen beauty such as hers since his youth, and it stirred something within him. Lust? No, a need to possess, to control, to subjugate. She would cower before him soon, and then he would destroy her.
“I would speak terms with you, my Lord,” she called down to him from atop the wall. She was regal, showing no fear, even in the face of surrendering her city.
He dismounted from his horse and approached the wall. “Terms? You saw my white tent turn red and then black. If you had surrendered when I first came to the city, you could have spoken of terms. The red tent was a warning, and you know the meaning of the black tent. Death. For all. Why should I speak terms with you when I can do as I wish here?”
“I can offer you the obedience of my people. No rebellion. No struggle. You need these people to work the land. What good is an empty city to you?” she asked.
She understood his position completely. An empty shell of a city did him no good. The land must be tilled to provide supplies for his army. The defenses must be restored, which would require raw materials and labor. Then there was the matter of sacrifices. If they were all dead, he would not have his sacrifices. She had to know what he would demand of her. It was known everywhere what he did to the rulers of the lands he conquered.
She was magnificent. Magnificent and brave. As brave as her husband. He wondered what her famed golden-haired daughter was like. If she had spirit such as this, she could be a match for him, once she was broken. And he would enjoy breaking her. “You may come down and speak terms, my lady.”
She disappeared from his sight, and a moment later the gates began to open. His army stood ready to rush the city. He held up his gloved hand and their motion stopped. The entirety immediately stood at attention as the Queen swept elegantly through the gate, accompanied by her twin escorts. Mahleck suspected these beautiful men were two of the warrior priests of this nation, possibly even the sons of the high priestess he had negotiated with in secret. Queen Mila XI stood within the gates, her gown glowing gold and orange in the torchlight, giving no indication she realized the city was laid waste around her. The stench of blood mixed with the smell of smoke. Surely a foreign smell to one who lived such a sheltered life as queen of a sheltered nation. She looked at him from eyes dark as ebony, and swept him a deep curtsy, her head bowed low, skirts in the mud. Her bodyguards also knelt.
“My lord.” An acknowledgement of her subjugation, stated in an unwavering voice.
He approached and held out his hand to her. She took it and kissed his glove but remained kneeling in the mud at his feet.
“Rise, lady. Come to my tent where I can receive you properly.” Taking his hand, she stood, still regal in her muddied gown. He led her from the gates to his tent, outside of bowshot from the city walls. Her bodyguards followed her, while members of the Locust King’s Swarm hurried out of their king’s way as soon as they saw him. Nothing impeded his path.