Read Darkstone - An Evil Reborn (Book 4) Online
Authors: Guy Antibes
Each of the four Warstone books has a distinct storyline and flavor as they tell the story of the Warstones.
Darkstone | An Evil Reborn
consists of two parts:
The Throne of One Thousand Steps
and
All Forces Converge
We start with the story of Vishan Daryaku, as a boy in Dakkor. He lets us share bits and pieces of his life, even after he rises to rule all of the continent of Zarron, of which Dakkor is a part.
The second part returns to the Besseth Alliance as it position its armies to fight Histron and retake Foxhome Castle. The Alliance takes the fight to Daryaku, who... I get ahead of myself, read the following book to find out.
Darkstone | An Evil Reborn
The Warstone Quartet: Book Four
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Part One
The Throne of One Thousand Steps
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~
V
ishan Daryaku’s wide eyes
followed the white marble staircase ascending into infinity with his father’s ceremonial throne at the very top. His eight-year-old mind told him that no person could ever climb all of the way up.
“Vish,” Sulm, his tutor, clapped his charge on his thin shoulder. “I want you to count all of the steps.”
“All one thousand of them?”
Sulm nodded. “Every one.”
How could he ever do what Sulm asked? Vish narrowed his eyes. “Won’t my father be upset?”
Sulm softly cuffed Vish’s ear. “We wouldn’t be here if he was. Now go.”
Vish took a deep breath and would take one step at a time. He began to climb up the steep incline. Ten, fifty, one hundred, two hundred. His efforts echoed around the vast stone room. Every breath, step and grunt echoed in the vast emptiness.
He looked down at Sulm, now standing far below him. Vish continued until he arrived at the golden throne above. He had counted less than the thousand steps. How could that be? People called where his father lived The Palace of a Thousand Steps because of the throne, but there were only three hundred eighty-two.
He leaned against the golden throne and called to Sulm. “There are only three hundred eighty-two!”
Sulm beckoned him back down. “Be careful not to slip, Vish.”
When the boy reached the bottom he furrowed his brows. “There are supposed to be one thousand steps. Where are the rest?”
“There aren’t any.” Sulm said as he gently guided Vish out of the great throne room, walking in silence, as they always did, in the palace proper. They strolled outside into the hot sun, seeking the shade of palms as the pair made their way to Vish’s mother’s house. Father had eleven wives. Vish was the youngest of his mother’s children. Younger wives bore the Emperor younger children and were of relatively lower status. He was the twenty-second son with more already behind him.
Vish didn’t understand. “But, the Palace…”
“You have just seen the difference between truth and perspective. What is the truth?” Sulm said quietly.
“There aren’t one thousand steps.”
Sulm nodded. “That is quite correct. What is the perspective?”
“It’s a big lie,” Vish said as a flood of disappointment overcame him. “There are only three hundred and eighty-two steps, no matter what anyone says.”
“That’s right, will you tell your father that there aren’t a thousand?”
Vish shook his head. “My father knows and permits this lie. He would be angry if I contradicted him.”
Sulm ruffled Vish’s dark straight hair. “That is perspective. We must always know the truth, but we also must know what to do or not do with it.”
“I’m not very happy about perspective. Is it because my father has all power in Dakkor?”
Sulm pursed his lips and thought about his response. Vish wondered if Sulm were considering a truthful answer or one filled with perspective. “Yes, he has power, but perspective can be applied to the truth in many situations. Telling one of your twenty-eight sisters that they aren’t pretty is another exercise of utilizing perspective. Perspective is not just used to avert an angry response, but to keep someone else from feeling bad.”
Vish walked into his rooms with Sulm dutifully holding the door open for the boy. At his age, the sitting room held toys and books of learning. He wished it would stay that way, but he had observed how tutors and decor changed in his sisters’ rooms as they got older. He rolled the concept around in his head. Change made him uncomfortable.
“Perspective is another word for lying, isn’t it?” Vish finally said what he wanted to say in the Throne Room.
“In many cases perspective is what drives us to lie, to dissemble, to do all manner of things, but in the case of the thousand steps, we don’t speak the truth and in that, perspective forces us to lie.”
Vish didn’t like what Sulm taught him, but he recognized the harsh lesson that his tutor had just given him. Sulm might have exercised perspective and never told him, but this was better. Vish would have to think more on his lesson.
~
“My boy,” Princess Yalla said, “how were your lessons today?” All of the Emperor’s wives except for the first, the Empress, were called princesses. She stood in the kitchen overseeing her slaves make the evening meal for the six children and her in their house.
Vish took a huge bite out of a sweet roll. “Profound,” he said with his mouth full.
She laughed. “That is a big word for a little boy.”
The roll tasted good and he might get a slap on the side of his head if he didn’t finish what he had bitten off, so they both waited. “I learned about perspective today. Sulm had me count the Thousand Steps.”
“So you know there are less than four hundred of them. Symbolism is a great power and One Thousand sounds more important than four hundred.” She looked back and gave an instruction to the woman seasoning some kind of little birds. Vish didn’t know the birds’ name, but he liked their taste.
“Three hundred and eighty-two. Sulm told me that no one is supposed to say it’s only that. He called the practice ‘perspective’.”
Yalla turned from her instructions and widened her eyes for emphasis. “That is a profound lesson. What have you learned?”
“That I need to use more perspective, mother.” He took another big bite and left the kitchen when she returned to her servants.
He walked slowly back to his room and took out the other sweet roll that he had hidden from his mother. She didn’t seem bothered that it was all a big lie. He knew enough to recognize that. Vish lay down on his bed and dug into his second sweet roll and looked at the painted ceiling of a blue sky and palm fronds extending out from the corners. The picture always had enchanted him, but today all he noticed was the flat ceiling and colored paints covering the wall. Perspective. Sulm’s concept of perspective had taken something from him, but he didn’t quite know what. Excitement? Imagination? How he had looked at the world around him?
Sulm had spoiled him somehow. Vish didn’t think he would look at what went on around him in the same way. He remembered the times his mother or his nursemaid had cuffed him for the times he had said something naughty to his sisters or when he complained to his mother. He had no problem spouting out the truth as he saw it, but now he realized that perspective—knowledge of how his words might be taken—might have averted a slap or two.
He resolved that he didn’t like perspective, but he’d need to learn to use it. Sulm was right in teaching him about the steps, he thought as he reclined on his bed to take a nap.
Vish woke to sound of the patter of the raindrops on the stone paths outside his open window. He got up and pulled back the heavy white window screens. He always liked the patterns that ironworkers had twisted and turned into the screens. The silk panels that allowed him privacy were wet and hung limply from the frame.
He stuck his head out of the house. He closed his eyes and let the warm rain make little snakes of his dark hair and cooled off his face. Vish didn’t need any perspective here. Rain could be cold or warm, but it always, always, came out wet.
Sulm had taken away the comfort of certainty earlier in the day. At some time his mother would no longer allow him to snuggle up to her as she sat talking to the other wives and the rare visitor. He’d seen it before with older sisters.
Why did life have to change? He wished he could freeze everything in its place like the colder north in Serytar where the blond people lived. North of Dakkor, Serytar was home to the Moonstone. The Duke and Duchess of Bomai kept it close. Sulm had taught him that they could link their minds. If someone could look into another’s thoughts would they see truth or see perspective? Perhaps both? He didn’t see any use for such a magical device and would never want to be linked to anyone who could see into his mind. He didn’t think he could hide thinking about the truth from anyone. Perhaps the Duke and Duchess were cursed by having to possess the Moonstone? Vish nodded and concluded that must be the case.
The thoughts tired him and Vish yawned. The storm had passed and only the diminishing dripping of water remained. He returned the window screens to their proper place and went back to bed.
~
“Wake up, Vish. We have much to go over today,” Sulm said, as the tutor gently shook Vish’s shoulder. “History, ancient history. We have stories to learn this morning and later we will go over number calculations.”
Vish liked history, but numbers? Not so much. He rose from his bed and went into the washing room where he performed his morning ablutions while Sulm fussed with the wall of his sitting room that served as the classroom.
“We will talk about the four Warstones. Sit at your desk and write out notes,” Sulm said.
Vish’s eyebrows rose. “I thought about the Moonstone last week after we came back from the palace,” he said as he took his place and pulled out paper and a charcoal stick.
“You did?”
Vish had no desire to share his thoughts about perspective since he really hadn’t become comfortable with the concept. “It is far to the North in Serytar. The Duke of Bomai is a magician and uses the stone to link his mind to his wife, the Duchess. I think they have a hard time hiding the truth from each other. Between them, they can’t use much perspective.”
Sulm laughed. “Good, excellent in fact. You have grasped the purpose of our walk in the Court. I think you are correct. The husband and wife can’t hold any secrets from each other. I think it would be a curse, myself.” Sulm laughed again. “The stones all have legendary powers given to them by the Great Emperor who ruled the world from Ayrtan.”
Vish had to laugh. “There’s nothing over there. Barely any plants and filled with savages.”
“Barely any savages, either. That’s because of the curse.”
A curse? Vish didn’t believe his teacher. This might just be another lesson in perspective, so he’d go along. “What curse?”
“We will get to it as we go. All four of the stones shared one special power. The holders of the stones could communicate, wherever they were, with the other stones.”
Vish sat up straighter at his desk. “Anywhere in the world?”
Sulm nodded, smiling. “Anywhere.”
That might be fun, thought Vish, but then he just as quickly realized that his mother would always be able to find his location. He shivered in the warm room. “What about the other powers?”
“The Moonstone allows the holder to link permanently with another. Legend has it that there was a general and an administrator that ruled Dakkor for the Great Emperor. They always fought, so the stone linked them together. Now, it is said that the holder of the Moonstone, the Duke of Bomai traditionally links with his wife and the stone enhances their physical powers as well.” Sulm shrugged. “I don’t know if that’s true. That’s all anyone knows. The dukes of Bomai don’t tell others what powers the Moonstone has.”
“So next is the Bloodstone in Besseth?”
Sulm smiled and patted Vish on the head—an always-unwelcome familiarity. “The Bloodstone can be allegedly used to give the owner youth if that owner has Affinity. It fell into the hands of the ruler of the Red Kingdom and still denotes the royal line. However centuries ago, one of their kings kept his youth for much too long and became such a bad ruler that he lost his head. Alas, the Bloodstone did not have the power to heal. Ever since then, the king of the Red Kingdom, traditionally, does not have a single shred of power.”
“That’s the only two I know of,” Vish said.
“There are four, remember? The third was lost long ago on the isles of Roppon. It was said to be a truth stone created because, even back then, Ropponis did not trust each other. An emperor embarrassed himself by forgetting that the truth telling went both ways, since the Sunstone had to be held by both parties in order to work. The emperor became enraged and either hid or destroyed the stone.” Sulm began to pull an old book from Vish’s bookshelf and opened it to a certain page.
“The last stone ruled them all. The Purestone, it was called. It enhanced the magical power of the Great Emperor. For some untold reason, the three other stone holders waged a war on Ayrtan against the Great Emperor. Its great cities were destroyed and the land laid to waste.”