Read Embers of a Broken Throne Online

Authors: Terry C. Simpson

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Epic, #New Adult & College, #Sword & Sorcery, #Fantasy, #elemental magic, #Epic Fantasy, #Aegis of the Gods, #Coming of Age

Embers of a Broken Throne (18 page)

BOOK: Embers of a Broken Throne
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Varick nodded. “They say the new shadeling incursions are the product of this Setian uprising.”

“You were with me in Castere,” Ryne said. “I know you saw the Alzari, and many might think what the Tribunal preaches is true. If this threat is what they say then they will hold nothing back in destroying Benez.”

“Agreed. It’s why they sent actual Tribunal officers and a few Exalted. They also gave me additional soldiers.”

“Look to your men, Varick. Walk among them as you often do, as your predecessor and mentor, Stefan Dorn always did. Listen to them. I’m certain you will hear many of them voice their doubts about what occurred at the Iluminus.
Those
are the soldiers the Tribunal sent you. Lastly, look to those Exalted, to any among your men who find one reason or another
not
to cross the Vallum. Your answers lie there.”

After a deep breath, Varick’s expression became empty. “When I reach Benez, you’ll have your answer. Until then, I have strategy to discuss.” Without waiting to hear a response, he turned his back, and strode from tent.

With a sigh, Ryne left. He prayed he wouldn’t need to kill his friend.

C
hapter 23

“S
o, with Benez’s wards activated, we play wait and see with this Knight Commander Varick. I just hope Ryne succeeds. I would rather not have to fight.” Ancel hated the idea of losing anyone else. He stood next to Irmina atop Benez’s wall, overlooking the Netherwood, the smells of wet earth and rich forest drifting on the air. Clouds scudded overhead, puffed mounds of ash to match the towering trees. Rain pattered on his head, and a cold breeze flapped his cloak out behind him. “You’ve met him, what kind of man is this Varick?

“Not one to make any decision lightly,” Irmina said. “I’ve seen him plan strategy and fight. He’s excellent at both, possibly as good as your father.”

“And he’s got a massive Tribunal army at his disposal.” Ancel sighed heavily. He couldn’t do much about the situation but wait. “How much longer for this visitor of ours?”

“He should appear any moment.”

“Any word on the Banai?”

“Yes. An eagle arrived this morning. Apparently this Gavril is someone with rank among the Banai’s religious sect. He’s willing to meet with you at a place of your choosing.”

“Good.” Perhaps he could bring the Banai over to their side if Gavril was as much in his father’s debt as Jerem mentioned. So far Father’s other contacts had not responded. It bothered him a bit that Father hadn’t specifically mentioned the man. He hoped it wasn’t due to some enmity he knew nothing about.

Off to the right, a bird twittered. A red cariot by the sound of it. Except red cariots weren’t known to live in Ostania. A dozen forms appeared within the trees. Accompanied by several Seifer and Nema and their animals, a charcoal-skinned man on horseback approached the city, huddled into furs as if it were the dead of winter instead of the beginning of spring. The man kept glancing around him, the whites of his eyes stark, gaze flitting between the daggerpaws and the wolves.

Irmina grunted. “Lord Traushen.”

“You know him?”

“Yes, an annoying and shrewd Cardian Lord. He petitioned the Astocan court before King Voliny was exposed. He’s the one I told you of some time ago.”

“Hmm.” Ancel had listened to her tell the story of her exploits in Castere. Hearing her describe the Astocans and Cardians had been fascinating.

The group drew closer to the main gate. Soldiers called down a challenge. The patrol gave the appropriate answer.

Ancel eyed Lord Traushen, frowning at the nods the guards gave the Cardian as he passed through the gates. It was as if they were old friends. “I suggest we find out what he wants.” He strode to the other side of the battlements from which he could see much of the city as it sloped up, buildings seeming to grow atop each other. He Shimmered to the ground.

Irmina landed beside him. “How did you know we’d be able to accomplish that?”

“Accomplish what?”

“Shimmer. With the wards, I thought—”

“As far as I’ve learned, only a complete obstruction of light can prevent a Shimmer.”

“An umbra. I’ll keep that in mind.”

They found Lord Traushen dismounted and waiting at the gate. A guard was hurrying up the main avenue to carry word of his arrival to the castle.

“We’ll take him from here,” Ancel said to the guards. The men bowed and returned to their stations.

The first impression of the lord said he was the type of man who tended to peer over his nose with disdain at anyone he thought inferior. And that meant almost everyone who wasn’t named Lord Traushen. He somehow achieved this feat despite the top of his fur hat falling even with Ancel’s lower chest. Similar to the Astocans he had slits on the side of his neck that fluttered when he breathed. Dark pupils with a hint of gold glittered from a face like black glass. Or a burnt pot. Either would do. Never before had Ancel encountered a person with such a complexion. He made charcoal look good.

“I was about to say I’m here to see Stefan Dorn and his son.” Lord Traushen’s easy smile stood out, chips of bleached bone in a tar pit. His voice was garbled, almost a growl, which made Ancel strain to understand him. “But I think I’ve found the son.” The rain pattered harder, a drizzle becoming pebbles.

“Maybe you have.” Ancel strode over to the man with his hand out. “More importantly, who are you?”

“You look quite a bit like your sister.”

Ancel froze and withdrew his hand. Behind him, he heard Irmina’s gasp. He became acutely aware of the pendant under his armor.

“My sister died a long time ago. So did my brother.” He hadn’t shared what Ryne told him with anyone. A thousand questions raced through his mind, but he forced them down.

“So the tale went,” the man answered easily, “a cleverly concealed lie. Or if not a lie, let’s say misdirection?” He shrugged. “Cardian myths say a netherling brought her to us.”

“I’d be careful where I told such stories.” Ancel causally leaned his hand on the sword hilt at his hip. “My father might not take them well. Neither may I.”

Traushen sniffed the air, and then licked his lips. Above the clasps of his cloak the slits beat feverishly. “No slight intended, but you’re placing me in a dire situation, one that could cost me my life.” Traushen produced a handkerchief and dabbed at his face. “I was ordered here by your sister, Queen Lina the Everlasting, Ruler of all Cardia, the Right Hand of Aeoli, the Left Hand of Hyzenki. When she bids any of her subjects to complete a task, it must be done, or else one loses his head. I’m quite fond of mine.”

“Then you should be quiet when it comes to any siblings of mine,” Ancel said softly.

“But I cannot, and thus my dilemma.” He held up his hands slightly apart in a gesture of helplessness. “I’m the poor ant with the boot hovering over him. Regardless of the danger to myself, I must deliver.”

The man certainly did have a way with words, a bit annoying, but disarming at the same time. Qualities that went well with his infectious smile. His odd manner of speech and accent, however, made Ancel want to stuff his fist down the lord’s throat and tear out his larynx.

“By the way, this is an interesting place you have here,” Traushen added. “If I’m not mistaken those men outside, well brutes or savages really—” Irmina’s snicker cut him off, and Traushen dipped his head, offering her a smile. “They’re Erastonian and Everlander descendants, some of them might even be from the original bloodlines …” He placed a hand on his chin to stroke a non-existent beard. “I always thought the Dosteri seemed somewhat familiar. And this,” he said, gesturing up toward the castle and the obvious signs of the city’s revival, “who would have thought to see the Setian return? I have little use for prophecy, but to see one come to pass is fascinating. Might make a man believe the rumors of the Shadowbearer’s return.”

Ancel found himself struggling against Irmina’s hands as they gripped his quivering forearm. He glanced down to see he’d drawn his sword halfway from its scabbard. Water dribbled down his leather pauldron and onto his vambrace, staining the dark leather darker. The wetness felt colder. He shuddered.

“Calm down,” she implored, voice low. She eyed Traushen. “Be more careful of what you say if you wish to keep your head.”

Rainwater dribbled down Traushen’s face. He sputtered when he spoke. “I, I can see that now. I, I intended no slight.” He dipped his head in apology several times.

“If that’s the case you wouldn’t have mentioned the man who’s tormented his family,” Irmina said, scowling.

Traushen bowed again. “I apologize. I, I wasn’t thinking.”

“No you weren’t.” Ancel released his grip on his weapon; Irmina’s hand remained on his arm. Although the lord said the words, Ancel doubted Traushen ever did anything without thought. “If you intend to speak to my father, I suggest you don’t make the same mistake.”

“Again, my apologies. I’ll do as suggested and take more care with my words in the future.”

Anger abating, Ancel turned from the man. “Follow me.” He strode up the avenue, unperturbed by the increasing downpour, forcing Lord Traushen to follow.

“Are you alright?” Irmina asked.

“I’ll be fine,” he answered, resisting the urge to twine his fingers into hers for the comfort it would offer. Offering her a smile, he continued on their path.

This far down into Benez, the cobbles were cracked and broken, muddy from the passage of soldiers, collecting pools of water, some already stagnant from precipitation weeks’ prior. Since winter had only recently ended, insects hadn’t begun to thrive yet, but Ancel was certain these pools would be teeming with little cretins at some point. The idea made him want to scratch or slap at his neck. Moss and lichen swallowed the buildings in this section of the city, signs of stone few and far between except in the places where the structures had begun to crumble. As much of Benez as was experiencing a revival of sorts, a vast part of the city was dead. Haunted by its past. Still and silent. Skeletal. A shade of its former glory.

“So, tell me about this sister of mine. How is it that she didn’t know our father was alive?” Ancel slowed a bit to allow Traushen to catch up.

The man huffed, muttering something about the cold under his breath. “The same way you and many others didn’t know she or your brother Anton still lived: deception, misdirection, a healthy dose of influencing others with the same story. The formula should be familiar.” Lord Traushen glanced at Irmina from the corner of his eye.

The Cardian was right. Under the Nine’s direction the Tribunal had applied the same methods for millennia. Histories shifted, myths changed, legends rearranged and made, men worshipped like gods, good made to seem evil, and vice versa.

“What does she want?” Irmina asked.

“To rekindle her relationship with her parents.” The Cardian eyed Ancel. “To help defeat the shade and whoever might be behind the resurgence of its armies. And to get to know her little brother.”

Little brother. Ancel replayed the phrase several times, letting it roll through his mind, off his tongue. It felt … good. A hint of a smile touched his lips.

“Since she’s this, what did you call her? Queen Lina the Everlasting? I suppose she has armies at her disposal,” Ancel said.

“Indeed, one that when I left was on the verge of taking Castere, and with it, all of Astoca. Given direction by one of your own, a High Shin Jerem.”

The idea of such a force on their side brought a hundred possibilities. Ancel was glad for Jerem’s success, and relieved that the Astocan and Cardian problem had resolved itself.

“So,” he said, “tell me about my sister.”

As he listened to Lord Traushen, excitement bubbled through him. Since Ryne had revealed that Anton and Celina lived he’d fought hard not to say anything about his brother and sister to anyone. It had been especially difficult on nights spent with Irmina. Seeing his father lose a bit of himself made keeping the secret doubly painful. Yet, he’d promised Ryne and Jerem not to broach the subject for the sake of their people. But now with Traushen here, all would be revealed, the blame not on his shoulders. He hoped the news brought his father some solace, a measure of the old Stefan.

With newfound eagerness he took in the histories the Cardian spilled before him, the rain and coming storm forgotten, swept away on the winds of Lord Traushen’s voice. He held Irmina’s hand, squeezing as they walked, each tidbit a morsel he devoured. To know he had a sister and a brother ready to fight or already fighting on his side made the past few months worth the hardships they had endured.

When finally they stood before his father in his bedroom, Ancel was grinning. He couldn’t help himself. In response to Stefan’s questioning frown, he gestured to Lord Traushen, introducing the man as a Cardian ambassador. Then he pulled up a chair to watch.

With Traushen’s every word, Stefan’s eyes grew wider and wider until they appeared as if they’d burst from his skull. All the while, Stefan was muttering under his breath, shaking his head in denial. When at last the Cardian Lord leaned forward and whispered something into his ear, Stefan scrambled over to a small jewelry box. From it he took a pendant. Ancel recognized the piece. It was similar to the one he wore under his armor.

“Prove what it is you say,” Stefan ordered, hands shaking as he held up the charm. “Let her show me the twin to this.”

As if he expected the challenge, Traushen strode over to a message map at the rear of the room. He walked along its length, taking care where he stepped, and making sure he didn’t damage the replicas of the world’s cities. At Castere, he stopped. A nimbus sprang up around him as he Forged.

Ancel waited, not daring to breathe. The lights on the map glowed in a message he couldn’t decipher. And then the air split. The hole was less than a foot tall where it stretched from the representation of the city to the air above it. Squinting at the portal, both in thought and concern, Ancel couldn’t suppress his gasp when a chain dangled through the opening. The pendant’s twin swung from it

He made to voice his concern, but Fathers eyes, brimming with tears stopped him. Stefan stared at the pendant a moment longer before the message map’s portal closed. As if released from some enthrallment, Stefan collapsed to his knees, praising Ilumni. Ancel made his way to his father and hugged him tight.

BOOK: Embers of a Broken Throne
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