Read Game of Souls Online

Authors: Terry C. Simpson

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Coming of Age, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Epic, #New Adult & College, #Sword & Sorcery, #Adventure, #action adventure, #Epic Fantasy, #sword and sorcery, #Terry C Simpson, #Game of Souls, #Fantasy, #Soul, #fantasy ebook, #action, #fantasy series, #Mareshna, #Magic

Game of Souls (13 page)

A
n Assignment

D
ays had stretched into weeks and Keedar found himself not thinking much about home other than the occasional concern for his father. Rose kept him company on a regular basis when Hernol had no need for her. Keedar enjoyed her presence. Not only had she seen to his wounds, but she also kept him fed. Bedding her was a plus. She’d shown him around the Quarter, gotten him new clothes, and introduced him to several inns where he could enjoy the music and the food while he stole kisses from her.

He no longer wore the bandages, and the stiffness he once felt was gone. To be rid of the stench of medicine and old blood had been welcome. Of late, he practiced
sintu
, using his soul to coax his body into healing even faster. It had worked. Whenever he sparred with Martel, he could almost keep up, and not once in the past week had there been a twinge.

Sitting at the window, he was looking out onto the busy streets when he spotted a familiar form approach Martel. Keedar’s breath caught in his throat. It was the first time Father had come to see him.

“Rose?”

“Yes?” She was fixing her dress in the mirror.

“I have a visitor. Can you show him up for me, please.”

“Certainly.” Rose walked over to him, hips swaying, gave him a peck on the cheek, and left.

Keedar waited, listening for the footsteps on the stairs, and then as they approached the door. Seeing his father outside had brought a flood of emotions and longing. He was glad to see Delisar alive to say the least. Knuckles rapped on the wood.

“Enter.”

Father strode in. He had a satchel slung over one shoulder, and he was wearing a fine cotton shirt and trousers in his favorite blue. Delisar stopped, forehead furrowed as he eyed Keedar’s bare chest. Then he glanced over to the unmade bed and its covers and back toward the door. His eyebrows climbed his forehead before he smiled. “I see you have made yourself quite comfortable.”

Keedar’s face flushed. For the first time, he realized the room stank of sex. He opened his mouth, closed it, and then opened it again.

“No explanation needed,” Delisar said. “I would have done the same myself. In truth, I was beginning to worry. Since the time I brought you to the Quarter, I have yet to see you pursue anything but your training.”

More heat rose in Keedar’s face. To say his first encounter with a woman had been embarrassing as well as enlightening was an understatement.

“Come, give your old man a hug.” Delisar laughed, eyes twinkling.

Still speechless, Keedar managed a smile as he strode over to his father, and they embraced. The moment seemed to last forever, the scent of sweat and horse rising from Delisar. They released each other, and Father gave him a nod of approval.

“You look well,” Father said. “How are you feeling?”

Keedar raised his arm and turned a bit to expose his side. “As good as new.”

Father inspected his ribs and chest. “You’ll wear a few scars for the rest of your life.” He slid his fingers across the rough patches and the furrows along Keedar’s side. “But then there’s something about scars that makes women want you even more.”

“And here I was thinking she liked me for me.”

Father chuckled.

“How are things at home?” Keedar strode over to the bed, picked up his shirt, and began to pull it on.

“Fine for now. Sorinya got his due. A few more died than I would have liked, but sometimes that’s the price you pay.”

“The Snakes had it coming anyway. They were becoming too bold and careless.”

“Yes but they’re still our own.” Delisar sat in the chair Keedar had vacated. “At least this should sate the count’s appetite for a bit.”

“Who fell to Sorinya?”

“Several you don’t know, but he also got the ones that followed the counts’ sons.”

“All four?”

“No, three. Monroe, Handal, and Mileen.”

“And Killian?”

“He went into hiding. No one’s seen him since.”

Although they were from the Smear, Keedar felt little for those particular Snakes. They were the ones who had killed Raishaar so long ago. He regretted that Sorinya hadn’t gotten his hands on Killian. As the leader of that little group he was the worst of the lot.

Keedar got the distinct impression that his father was waiting to tell him more. “What is it?”

“I see you’re enjoying it here. I haven’t seen you look this content since Raishaar died.”

“And you dislike being the one to tell me it’s time to come home.” Keedar expected as much. He would be lying to himself if he said he had missed the Smear a great deal lately. Rose’s affections made it easy to forget the place. But home was where he belonged. For now. The time spent away from the Smear had got him thinking of the world outside Kasandar again.

“Well, yes,” Delisar said. “Except you won’t be going home just yet.”

Keedar’s eyebrows shot up his forehead.

“Word is that Winslow took issue with what happened to you. It’s an opening for us. A good time for you to work yourself into his trust.”

“How do I accomplish that?” There was no way he was venturing into the Ten Hills for a chance meeting with the noble. Not if he wanted to keep his skin intact.

“I’ll see to it that an opportunity presents itself.”

“Here in the Quarter?”

“No. I’ll have someone get you into Walker’s Row,” Father said. “The boys have a taste for the ladies there. Keep an eye on them and make sure they stay out of trouble. With what happened to Count Cardiff, someone will think Mandrigal Hill is at its weakest, ready for the taking. I would expect one of the other Hills to see this as a perfect time to be rid of Ainslen’s heir while the count is still recovering.”

The idea of heading into the more affluent neighborhoods was less than appealing. The thought of taking on some assassin? Even more so. “I’ll stick out like rotten apples on feast day. And what if I can’t stop the one they send.”

Delisar’s lips curled into a devious smile. “This time, I’ll ensure help is nearby. As for your appearance, you’re going to have the proper attire to fit in. I have been grooming you for years. Your time here has proven you can play the part. Your speech will tell them you’re educated, and your color will say you might be some noble’s bastard. All you need to do afterward is keep an eye on your two friends. I have a sense they will need you.”

Although skeptical, Keedar nodded. “I’ll do my best.”

“I’m certain you will.” Delisar strode over and ruffled his hair. “You always do, and it makes me proud to call you son.”

The gesture eased Keedar’s fears somewhat. He smiled, happy to know that he pleased his father. Yet, deep in his gut another sense told him things might not go as well as Delisar was hoping.

“First, before you leave,” Delisar said, “we must discuss how you will approach Winslow.”

Keedar sat back and listened.

S
hattered Dreams

“I
t’s nothing like I expected,” Winslow said as he thought of his training sessions the past few weeks. Tears almost welled up in his eyes, but he squeezed them back with grim determination. He could not bear to look at the citadel behind him. Instead he stared past the battlements toward the Whetstone Mountains, a white and green mantle upon their shoulders, their peaks shrouded by grey.

“Blades … glorified murderers. I tried to warn you.” Gaston stood beside him, cloak flapping in the wind.

When he needed time to think, Winslow liked to venture up onto Kasandar’s northern battlements, breathing in the fresh, cool, crisp air. The view beyond was a layer of grassy plains, copses, and undulating hills, all the way to the Whetstone’s rocky feet and snowy crags of their highest point. A contrast of soft and hard, fertile and barren, life’s warmth and death’s freezing grip. Reflections of Kasandar itself.

“No, they can’t be like that … all the stories …”

“Are just that, Wins. Stories. Songs, tales spun by those who are blinded by what good the Blades might do, or by those who wish to hide what they really are.”

Disheartened, Winslow shook his head in denial. “They are as much a reason we rule today as any other. The sacrifices they made for us, the blood they shed, the bravery they displayed … none of that is a lie.”

“With it all comes death.”

“But—”

“You’ve always chosen to ignore me whenever I say the Blades are nothing more than dregs, despite whatever education we give them.” Gaston turned and gestured toward Kasandar. “If you ever paid attention to the dealings of the houses like I have, you would know this, but you pretend the Day of Accolades doesn’t exist until it suits you. You act as if Far’an Senjin doesn’t surround you. Like when you wanted to take the trial. Despite what you might wish, you aren’t invisible, Wins. People see you for who you are: a count’s son. And not any count, one of the most prominent in Kasinia.”

Numb, Winslow took in the Ten Hills and the Golden Spires a few miles from where he stood. So distinctly defined were the richer neighborhoods from his vantage that he wondered how he’d never considered it before. They were places of wide, brightly lit avenues, small castles, great manses, brick and polished stone, thriving gardens, and air that one might savor when you inhaled

In contrast, the poorer districts were like creepy threads of rot at the edges of their neighbors, each one fouler than the next. Crumbling buildings, broken façades, and leaking roofs populated them. The homes crowded together, hugging each other as if seeking shelter from the denizens that walked the cracked cobbles. Garbage choked their streets. And if he was there at this moment, he would retch on the filth of decay and clogged sewers.

With his dreams of glory, and what being a Blade meant now shattered, much of Kasandar’s beauty felt like a lie to him. One big illusion.

“It’s better if you would forget becoming a Blade and concentrate on learning the intricacies of politics instead. Succession Day may be closer than any of us think,” Gaston said.

“I care nothing for their plots.” Winslow returned his attention to the north. “Sometimes I feel as if Kasandar itself is holding me back. There’s a bigger world out there than what we have.”

“Filled with heretics, thieves, the uncivilized, monsters, and madmen,” Gaston said. “You can have it. I rather my life here. You should too. There’s nothing out there for you.”

“And what’s here for me? Years stuck meddling in politics, wondering which house might be plotting to kill me? A life spent shackled to Elaina?” Count Cardiff had pressured him earlier concerning when he would ask for her hand. He feared his father’s reaction if he told him he had no intentions on marrying the girl. Particularly since Lestin had reported his inability to complete several requirements during his training. The count had actually snickered when he presented Lestin’s review. The expression on his face said he knew Winslow would fail long before the arrival of the actual test to become a Blade.
Where will that leave me then?

“Elaina’s a prize that many wish they had. Think of our lives, the privileges, the riches, the women,” Gaston said. “You enjoy them as much as I. Always have. Sometimes I fear you won’t realize all you have until it’s been snatched from you.”

“My dreams and yours have always been different.”

“Not so much different as mine being more sensible, more attainable.”

“So the bloodshed on Succession Day, all the lives lost and the chaos that follows, would be worth it to you?”

“If it meant my father or yours ruled? Yes.”

Try as he might, Winslow could not picture Count Cardiff on the throne. A man might as well wish to touch a star. “And you scoff at my dream to become a Blade? The day the houses rise against King Jemare is the day every count meets the Creator.”

Gaston shrugged. “And we would rise to replace them. It’s not as if they didn’t kill to achieve their positions.”

Winslow snorted.

“If you can have your fantasies, I can have mine. Anyway, enough of this brooding. You’ve almost ruined my mood for the night. Time for you to make it up with drinks and women. Jarina’s Hands?”

“If that’s what you wish.”

Count Cardiff had advised him to use caution and not venture to their usual haunts, warning of the possibility assassins might be dispatched from the other houses. It was his father’s way of controlling him yet again. Tonight, he would do the opposite, if only to feel as if he had some freedom.

S
tranger in Blue

K
eedar was flashing the most charming grin possible. Well, maybe it bordered on insolent. But insolence was a nobleman’s middle name, especially here in Walker’s Row. With his hair washed, it fell past his shoulders like layers of honey-colored satin. No dirt hid beneath his nails. He hadn’t felt this clean in years. When he thought on it further, he’d never been this clean. Inhaling, he savored his scent. He would be an orchid’s envy.

Dressed in silk pants, a homespun, white linen tunic hanging to his knees with dark crimson satin along the edges, and derin leather spaulders dyed to match, he strode along the flagstoned streets. Damn, he looked good. If he doubted his appearance, and he most certainly did not, the way the women eyed, ogled, and giggled at him would have swept them away. He smiled to himself as they whispered to each other.

Well known for its revelry, the Row provided a wealth of establishments where one could cater to almost any vice. The women here were renowned for being exotic, spanning from bronze-skinned, tattooed Farish Islanders; milky complexioned Heleganese from the far north; big-boned Thelusians, skin obsidian and shiny; slant-eyed Marishwomen with their stilted accents; to voluptuous Kheridisians from the western forests, noses refined, skin like silk. He even spotted a few Darshanese among them, the dark-haired, hook-nosed people standing out in beauty even here. Few among the whores were Kasinian, and of those, most bore the tanned or yellowish pallor that marked them as middle class folk. Each attempted to outdo the other in their style of dress, some to the point where they strutted around with only a lace cloak to cover their bodies. He shivered with the thought of wearing so little.

Keedar couldn’t help but stare. Nobles, accustomed as they were to the activities, paid the women no heed, laughing amongst themselves while heading to one tavern or another from which music tinkled or blared. A nightwatch patrol passed nearby, shields held in front, spears tapping the cobbles as they marched to the cadence of their boots.

Although Father had reassured him he wouldn’t be questioned by the watch or regarded in any fashion other than being of noble birth himself, Keedar still found the reality surprising and exhilarating, if a bit strange. He was used to the odd expressions in the Smear when he mingled on the streets. Once in a while, a person might make space for him. That was until closer inspection. When they noticed his cheap and at times patchwork clothes, they dismissed him. Along Walker’s Row, no one paid him any undue attention. In their eyes, he belonged.

The pudgy merchant who he’d rode with into this part of Kasandar was long gone, his coach trundling away as he headed off to sell wine and cloth. The same man, Denton, had turned out to be one of Father’s agents. Another eye opener. Denton informed Keedar where he might find Gaston and Winslow.

Jarina’s Hands, the sign out front declared, named after the Goddess of Revelry, Keeper of the Fourth Heaven. He stood before the tavern, the mélange of odors from within setting his stomach growling. The air in this district was such a far cry from the Smear, it smelled as if they were in two different cities. The perfumes wafting from the various streetwalkers were a constant reminder of the disparity.

Keedar expelled a breath. It was one thing to stroll along streets shrouded by darkness, quickly bypassing the illumination that torchlight and lamps provided, where he didn’t have to speak to anyone, but completely another to enter a tavern and not stand out. Worse would be if his mannerisms and language gave him away. Confidence is your ally, he reminded himself.

Acknowledging he would accomplish little outside, he straightened his back, strode to the door, and pushed it inward. What struck him as strange at first was noticing the souls from most within the room. They intermingled with each other, reacting according to that person’s purpose. He could tell where a woman didn’t appreciate being touched and the subsequent response of the man’s apology. Father had told him this might happen, the ability to sense other nimbuses beyond those of melders, but the abruptness of its appearance left him taken aback. Shrugging the thought off for the moment, he surveyed the serving hall.

Nobles crowded around tables, eating or chatting. Those in richer silks and satins had booths located to one side with softer lighting. A harp strummed in time to the low croon of a female’s voice that sang a tale of Emperor Ilsindin, the last Dracodarian monarch, as he tried to purge all Mareshna of the races he considered inferior or tainted. The conflicts had lasted several millennia, but people referred to it as the Thousand Year War. It painted Cortens Kasandar as the first great Mareshnan ruler after he defeated Ilsindin.

“Can I be of service, m’lordship? M’lordship?”

Keedar caught himself. He folded his hands, drew his brows together as if the serving girl had annoyed him while he was deep in thought, and then said, “Yes. I’d like a table, preferably in that corner.” He pointed to a section a bit dimmer than the remainder of the inn’s hall.

The slant-eyed girl, most likely a Marishwoman, bowed. “As you wish, m’lordship” Her accent confirmed Keedar’s assumption.

“Bring me a flagon of your finest and your best dish,” he added as he strode toward his chosen table, not waiting for her to lead the way.

“Yes, m’lordship.”

When he reached his chair, he waited for her to pull it out, and he sat. He waved her away. Leaning back to appear relaxed, he let the shadow cast by the curtain behind him fall across his face. Chatter and laughter rolled across the room in varying amounts. The more raucous men slapped serving girls on the ass or pulled them close for a feel. A few streetwalkers swayed among the crowd, offering their services from table to table. One man had his hand on a Thelusian’s tit, his pale flesh standing out on her inky skin. Keedar found Winslow and Gaston toward the back in a private booth.

Surrounded by four women, he thought the young men would be all smiles. Gaston’s pleasure was evident. Expression glum, Winslow stared into a glass and its red contents. One of the women, a Farish Islander with bronze skin and half dozen piercings in her nipples, snaked a hand out to caress Winslow at the elbow of his black satin shirt. He stared at her; she bowed, and eased away.

“Your drink, m’lordship.” The serving girl placed the flagon and a glass on the table. “The food will be along shortly.” She gave a quick dip of her head and left.

The night dragged with Keedar keeping an eye on the two young men. On more than one occasion, Gaston had his pants at his hips with a woman’s head in his lap. Winslow still appeared disinterested, no matter how many times his friend tried to cheer him up or sent a girl his way. Whatever was troubling him, Winslow had no interest in revelry.

To make certain he fit in, Keedar called over one girl or another from time to time, fondled them a bit, before giving them a few copper bits or a silver bit depending on how impressed he was with their bodies. He couldn’t help his manhood’s reaction, but he was able to restrain himself from going further.

He was dabbing at his mouth, the taste of the roast deer still fresh, and the effects of his drinking bringing on a light buzz, when Winslow stood. The count’s son dropped several silver rounds on the table, judging by the coins’ size. He helped Gaston to his feet. Cursing loudly, words slurred, Gaston made a feeble attempt to push off his friend before collapsing back into his seat. Winslow assisted him once more and headed for the door.

Keedar made to stand when he noticed a man across the room in an outfit of a blue so dark it appeared black. Under his hat, the man’s cheek bore mottled scars. What had drawn Keedar’s attention was sintu’s unwavering nimbus around him. It was so strong it resonated. Although the stranger was attempting to seem disinterested, his slant-eyed gaze tracked the young nobles several times. No sooner had Winslow and Gaston departed than the stranger stood and pulled the hat down. When he headed for the door, he moved with a hunter’s grace.

After Keedar dropped two silver bits on the table, and downed the last of his drink, he followed. Out on the Row, Winslow and Gaston were making their way down a side street toward a line of coaches. Not far behind, the man trailed, but he was steadily catching up. Consumed with supporting his friend, Winslow didn’t notice.

A knot formed in Keedar’s gut with the certainty that this had to be the assassin. He hoped the help Father promised would be nearby.

As the two young noblemen were passing a point along a building where the wall formed a corner, hiding that part of the street from illumination, the stranger made an impossibly long leap. The nimbus around him bunched and then expanded as he did so.

Winslow must have sensed the assailant somehow. He turned. Before he was able to extricate Gaston’s arm from around his neck, the man slammed into him, driving all three of them into the cutout behind the building.

Drawing on the same desperation that goaded him on in the Parmien, Keedar sprinted toward them. He rounded the corner in time to see Winslow, bare-handed, attempting to fend of the man whose arm rose and fell, metal glinting from his fist. Keedar barreled into the attacker’s back, burrowing his face into a cloak and clothes that smelled of pine cones.

They fell in a heap, but Keedar scrambled to his feet, daggers twirling up into his hands. Already standing, the man swept his hand out. Ripped from his grasp, Keedar’s daggers went flying.

Teeth glinting in a face wreathed in shadow, the man took a step forward. Keedar wrenched at his will, demanding that the attacker not see him. He darted first left then right, convinced his skill would work. The assassin’s tracking eyes and an even wider grin said differently.

Before either of them could react, whistles sounded, followed by footsteps thudding on cobbles.
The nightwatch. Thank the Ten Heavens.

With one last look at them, their assailant fled.

“Thank you … again,” Winslow wheezed.

“You’re welcome.” Keedar bent and helped him up.

Together, they rolled Gaston onto his back. He reeked of liquor. A bruise stood out on his forehead, the area wet, sticky, and red. They checked him thoroughly to ensure he suffered no other wounds. Though unconscious, he was breathing evenly and had a steady pulse.

Before they could decide what to do next, the nightwatch made it to them. Armor and weapons clinking, the soldiers surrounded them, spears trained on Keedar.

“Stop it,” Winslow ordered. “Put away your weapons. He’s a friend.”

A few hesitated, their gazes drifting to one of their order who bore a sword instead of a spear and shield. Unlike the others, he wore a leather coif under his conical helmet. There was something disturbingly familiar about the green eyes that regarded Keedar.

“What’s your name, sergeant?” Winslow demanded.

“Costace, young master.”

Winslow rounded on the other soldiers who still stood wary, eyeing Keedar and their sergeant. “Why are you looking to Sergeant Costace? I’m Count Cardiff’s damn heir.” He pointed at Gaston’s prone form. “And this is Count Rostlin’s son. I gave you an order, now obey.”

The men mumbled their apologies before easing back.

“Have a few of your men stay, Costace. The rest can try to find our attacker. He’s a man in blue with a hat.” Winslow nodded in the direction he disappeared. “He went that way.”

Costace passed out instructions, assigning four of the watch to them, and sending the others down the street. The sergeant then helped Winslow and Keedar carry Gaston to a waiting coach. They eased the wounded noble onto the cushioned seats.

When Winslow headed to the front to pass orders to the driver, Costace nodded to Keedar. “Thank you for helping the counts’ sons.” Under his breath he added, “Like you, he’s too valuable to lose.”

Under the lamplight in the coach, Keedar saw the sergeant’s face in its entirety. Martel’s green eyes stared back at him. The Sword cracked a smile.

“Are you well?” Winslow asked, glancing from Keedar to Costace.

Keedar hadn’t heard him return. “Um, y-yes,” he managed to say.

“You look as if you saw a spirit.”

“No, nothing of the sort. I was a little concerned is all.”

“No need to worry. You are under my protection.” Winslow dipped his head to Martel. “Sergeant Costace, we will be on our way.”

“Yes, young master. Safe travels.” Martel bowed and strode over to his remaining men. When the driver flapped his reins and rolled away, they watched until the coach was well on its way.

Winslow checked on Gaston once more. “He’ll be fine. A knock on the head has never stopped him before.” He opened a flap behind him through which Keedar could see the driver’s legs. “Head to any street near the Smear.” The driver gave a muffled answer that sounded like an assent. Winslow closed the flap.

Still caught up in the shock of seeing Martel, Keedar was staring out a crack in the curtains as the signs and establishments on Walker’s Row sped by. Father had kept his word in a most unexpected manner.

“So, this is the second time you’ve shown up at an opportune moment,” Winslow said after making sure his friend was comfortable. Two lamps on either side of the coach’s velvet interior lit his face. “The Smear I can understand, but what are you doing in Walker’s Row, and dressed as a noble no less?”

For a moment, Keedar considered lying. “With Count Cardiff still recovering from his wounds, my father thought someone might make an attempt on your life. Infighting on the Hills and all that.”

Winslow gave him a dubious look. “Two things. First, the business of the Hills is none of yours. And second, no man does something for nothing. What is it that your father wants?”

“Well, what happens on the Hills is more a concern than you think. My father’s interest is in profits. If he could gather some information on which noble is seeking what and when, or what particular goods the Hills might require, then his profit margins increase. With the right help, he could make certain items cheaper and forestall the usual price fixing that happens within the Consortium.”

Other books

Friends and Lovers by Eric Jerome Dickey
In Sheep's Clothing by Rett MacPherson
Against the Fire by Kat Martin
Seeing the Love by Sofia Grey
The Week at Mon Repose by Margaret Pearce
The Last Page by Huso, Anthony
A Perfect Mismatch by Leena Varghese


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024