As promised earlier in the week, here’s the second half of Chapter 1 (first half here). I’ll post the next scene soon, too, since I know folks will be wondering what’s going on in Amaranthe’s part of the story. Thanks for checking out the previews!
***
Realization dawned on Maldynado. “You think they got her during that time?”
“Books, Basilard, Akstyr, and Yara, go east around the lake,” Sicarius said. “The emperor, Maldynado, and I will go west until we meet.”
Maldynado bristled at having Sicarius give orders–this wasn’t an exercise session, after all–but they could vote on who the ersatz leader would be later. Besides, he was sending Yara and Books, the two people most likely to heckle Maldynado, off in the other group.
Everyone else must have also decided this wasn’t the time for arguing with Sicarius, for they trooped off in the indicated directions without a word, though Sespian did pause to gaze to the east. He had an urgent reason to reach Sunders City, Maldynado recalled. But, when Maldynado jogged after Sicarius, Sespian fell in behind them, apparently willing to help look for Amaranthe first.
Good kid, Maldynado decided. At least that’s what he thought until Sespian started peppering him with questions about his family.
They had scarcely started down a muddy trail weaving through ferns and trees on its way to the lake when Sespian asked, “How do you get along with your brother, Maldynado?”
“I assume you mean Ravido, though I don’t get along with any of my siblings, Sire.”
“Yes. Have you communicated with him lately?”
“I haven’t communicated with anyone in the family since the old man disowned me over a year ago.”
Sespian ducked a branch stretching over the path. “Would you admit it to me if you were in regular contact with your family or… to anyone else?”
Anyone else? What “anyone else” was out there that the emperor thought Maldynado might contact? “I imagine not, Sire. Given that some of my family members are apparently up to seditious activities, it wouldn’t behoove me to be in contact with them.” Behoove? Had he actually said behoove? Wandering around with Books was having a tedious affect on his vocabulary. The rest of the words sounded stilted too. He hated having to be careful about what he said. If Ravido got anywhere near the throne in the Imperial Barracks, Maldynado hoped he tripped over it.
“You’re honest about that much at least.”
Maldynado was honest about everything. Occasionally he might exaggerate when it came to exploits involving women, but that was natural. “Uh, yes. Does colluding against the throne still carry a death penalty?”
“I believe so. Though… if you had been colluding and were to decide that helping me is a better option, we could waive any head-removal penalties.”
“I’m not colluding, Sire.” They’d reached the lake, and Maldynado shielded his eyes with his hand to exaggerate the fact that he was searching for Amaranthe. Maybe Sespian would notice and decide question-asking time could wait until later.
“I wonder if Ravido always had an interest in ruling,” Sespian said.
Maldynado managed to keep his sigh soft.
“Back when you did have regular contact with him, did he talk of the family’s glory days? Of when the Marblecrests used to rule?”
“Sire, he’s more than twenty years older than me. I never knew him well.” Maldynado wished Sicarius had split him off into the other group, heckling notwithstanding. Or that the emperor would ask him some questions. Not that Sicarius would answer. Maldynado didn’t think he could get away with that. Silence could condemn him.
Sespian climbed on top of a log on the path and paused before stepping down. “Am I premature in asking questions?”
“What?”
“Corporal Lokdon suggested I have a few drinks with you before discussing family matters. Unfortunately, this swamp is lacking in purveyors of alcoholic beverages.”
Maldynado, climbing over the log himself, almost fell into the ferns on the side. “Amaranthe suggested you question me?”
“She assured me you weren’t conspiring with your brother and said you might be a source of information on him and any other friends or family members who are assisting him with his dubious goals.”
“Oh.” It stung that Amaranthe had suggested Maldynado might betray family members, but he supposed she’d been watching out for his backside. The next time the group wandered past enforcers or soldiers, the emperor could order him killed with a wave of the hand. “I don’t know what Ravido is up to, Sire. Has he already passed the point of no return?” Maldynado thought of the weapons delivery outside of Fort Urgot. His brother might be in the incipient stage of an uprising, but if blood had not yet been shed… “Or is it possible he might be talked into giving up his wayward plans?”
“I’m behind on events, thanks to being ushered all over the empire to inspect military installations, but the last I heard he hadn’t killed anyone. It’s possible banishment would be punishment enough. But… if he’s put things into play while I’ve been gone, then the law and hundreds of years of imperial precedent would demand his death, yes.” Sespian frowned, perhaps not liking the idea of killing Ravido, or killing people in general.
Ahead of them, Sicarius had disappeared around a bend, and Maldynado nodded that they had better hurry up. He could use the short jog to give himself a moment to respond as well.
Distracted, he misjudged a step and his boot caught on a root. He recovered his balance, but not without cracking his elbow against a sapling. Another bruise for the collection. What a day. “Yes, Sire, drinks would have been appropriate before asking me to share information that could result in my brother’s death.”
Sicarius looked back at Maldynado with an extra dose of coldness in his hard eyes. That surprised Maldynado. Why would Sicarius care one way or another about Ravido’s doings?
“So,” Sespian said, “though you don’t particularly like your family, you’re not willing to betray them.” He seemed to be mulling the fact over, rather than judging Maldynado for the choice.
Maldynado pushed a hand through his hair, tucking a few loose curls behind his ears. “I don’t want to be flushed down the wash-out with them, but I’m not ready to volunteer to be the trap that ensnares the bear for the hunter either. I’m already… I already betrayed the family once. If I did that to my mother again, she’d wring my neck herself.”
“I see,” Sespian said as they continued along the path. Softly, perhaps more to himself, he added, “Loyalty may be an admirable trait in men, but I do wish more of them would direct it in my direction.”
With Forge scampering around the capital, infiltrating the Imperial Barracks, Sespian must have trouble knowing who he could trust. Maldynado felt for the kid and wanted to help, but–
He stopped a hair shy of crashing into Sicarius.
Sicarius had stopped to face the emperor. Though it was always hard to tell with him, he looked like he had something to say. He glanced at Maldynado, didn’t utter a word, then strode ahead several paces where he knelt to examine the ground.
Sespian’s forehead crinkled. Maldynado gave him a shrug. He couldn’t explain Sicarius either.
“Fresh tracks.” Sicarius stepped off the trail they’d been following around the lake, touched the broken tip of a thin branch, and veered into the foliage on a short peninsula.
Maldynado pushed past ferns to follow him, wondering how Sicarius managed to move through the same vegetation as him but without making a sound. After he ducked a branch growing a mossy beard so long it’d make the hairiest old men in the Veterans’ Quarter jealous, the water came into sight again. Sicarius had stopped on a muddy bank at the end of the peninsula. Maldynado didn’t need to be a tracker to spot all the prints. Many different sizes and styles of boots were represented. If Amaranthe had come ashore here…
Sicarius knelt and touched the ground. He brought a finger to his nose.
“Blood?” Maldynado asked.
“Yes.”
“Amaranthe’s?” It was a dumb question–people’s blood didn’t have an identifying smell, did it?–but Maldynado somehow hoped that asking would lead Sicarius to say, “No, she’s fine. This belonged to the bloke she punched in the nose.” It was an unwarranted hope though. Maldynado would bet on Amaranthe in a one-on-one match-up against almost anybody–even if she wasn’t stronger or faster than her foe, she’d scheme up some plan to defeat him–but against the ten or twelve people responsible for these footprints?
“Likely,” was all Sicarius said.
He touched one of the footprints. From where he stood, Maldynado didn’t see anything special about it, but Sicarius grew still. “Major Pike was here.”
Maldynado put a hand on the nearest tree for support. “The Major Pike you described as Emperor Raumesys’s master interrogator?”
“Yes.”
A twig snapped as Sespian pushed his way out of the foliage behind Maldynado. He took in the scene with a grim set to his mouth.
“They must have seen her fall.” Sicarius pointed to a mark near the water. “When she came ashore there, Pike was waiting.”
“She came ashore, as in her broken, battered body floated up to the bank, or she walked ashore?” Maldynado asked.
Sicarius strode back into the underbrush, quickly disappearing from view.
“Oh, no,” Maldynado said, “no need to answer our questions. We’re just speaking to give the wildlife something to listen to.”
A crow squawked on the other side of the trail.
“Yes, like that.”
Sespian hadn’t said a word, and he didn’t react to Maldynado’s sarcasm. His eyes were cast downward, toward the trampled mud where Sicarius had found the blood. Maybe he felt partially responsible for Amaranthe’s predicament. Did emperors have the capacity to worry about commoners? Not a lot of Maldynado’s own warrior-caste brethren did, but Sespian seemed a sensitive sort. Too sensitive maybe. If he had the brawny assertive mien of his predecessor, Emperor Raumesys, he might not have so many people picking on him as someone easy to remove or shunt aside.
“We better go after him.” Maldynado pushed into the foliage, figuring he’d lose track of Sicarius if he didn’t follow immediately. As it was, he reached the trail and didn’t see anyone. He searched for fresh boot prints, but the ground was harder packed there, and he couldn’t decide which way the kidnappers had gone. He listened for a rustle of leaves or snapping of twigs that would announce Sicarius’s passage, but of course that never came. Near the water’s edge, a frog started croaking, but nothing stirred in the underbrush.
Sespian, making less noise than Maldynado would have expected, stepped back onto the trail. “Which way?” he asked.
Uhm. Maldynado pointed into the woods opposite of the peninsula and headed in that direction. If Sicarius had stuck to the path, Maldynado should have seen him. Besides, he didn’t want to appear clueless in front of the emperor.
Maldynado pushed through dense, tangled undergrowth for several minutes and was about to confess that he’d been guessing when the crow cawed again. Complaining about assassins passing nearby? He angled toward the call.
Up ahead, the trees thinned. Afraid he’d simply walked in a circle and returned to the lake, Maldynado almost turned around, but curiosity or perhaps intuition prompted him to continue.
Between one step and the next, the trees ended. Maldynado found himself squinting into autumn sunlight slanting down from a swath of open blue sky. A huge circular expanse stretched before him with all the trees, bushes, grass, and moss cleared. No, not cleared, he realized as he walked off an edge, almost tripping because of a height difference from one step to the next. The entire circle, easily hundreds of meters in diameter, was a foot lower than the surrounding earth. The foliage hadn’t been cleared; it’d been smashed. Compacted beneath a weight so great, even stout trees had crumpled beneath it, their trunks flattened into the ground.
“Bloody bears,” Sespian breathed. “They landed here? I didn’t realize how big that craft was. Or how heavy. How could something with such mass fly?”
“I don’t know.” Maldynado tilted his head. “Bloody bears?”
Sespian flushed. “When I was growing up, one of my bodyguards always said, ‘bloody balls.’ I adopted it until my mother heard and said it wasn’t appropriate for young princes to say balls. Bears were my work-around. The word still slips out at times.”
That story did little to change Maldynado’s mind that Sespian might be a tad soft for the position of emperor. “Do yourself a favor and don’t say things like that around military men, Sire.”
The flush deepened.
“The tracks end over there,” Sicarius said from behind and to the side of them.
Surprised by his soundless return, Maldynado nearly spat a, “Bloody bears,” himself.
“Lokdon was walking, hemmed in by soldiers,” Sicarius said. “The tracks disappear fifteen feet from the shelf.” He pointed at the foot-deep depression ringing the circle. “The boundary marks the hull of the craft, presumably.”
“How’d they get inside?” Sespian asked. “A ramp?”
“Unknown.”
“So, they have her.” Maldynado sank into a crouch, his elbows on his knees. Curse his dumb ancestors, why hadn’t he done better at piloting that dirigible? If he’d gone straight ahead toward Sunders City at top speed instead of trying to lose their pursuers in the wetlands, they might have made it. The enemy might have broken away to keep from being seen by outlying residents. “We have to go after her.”
Sicarius had moved away from Maldynado and Sespian and stood on the compacted earth, his gaze toward the south. The direction the craft had gone.
“How will your team find her?” Sespian asked.
Your team, he said, not we. Of course. What did some outlaw mercenary leader matter to him?
Maldynado caught himself before he said something snide. The emperor’s own mission called to him, that was all. And that mission might threaten the entire empire. Sespian couldn’t cast it aside to chase after one person.
“I don’t know, but we will. Somehow–” Maldynado snapped his fingers and spun toward Sicarius. “That map. Is that what you were doing? Figuring out where they’re taking Amaranthe and where they might land?”
“Books was right,” Sicarius said without looking at him. “There’s no way to tell if they’ll continue in a straight line or if their destination is within the satrapy.”
“Of course they’re going somewhere in the satrapy,” Maldynado said. “We think Forge people are flying that thing, right? Well, if we’re figuring right, Forge’s priority is the capital. They’re trying to back the next heir to the empire–no offense, Sire–right? If they’re acting soon, they’re not going to suddenly decide to take a vacation on some tropical beach down south. Maybe they’re not going far at all.”
For the first time, Sicarius met Maldynado’s eyes and seemed to be interested in what he had to say.
“We can catch them,” Maldynado insisted. He had to believe that. “What cities were near the line you drew?”
“Markworth and Deerlick Wood lie along the bearing I calculated.”
Erg, Markworth was over three hundred miles away and Deerlick Wood, at the edge of the satrapy, even farther. Deerlick Wood was a derelict mining town and Markworth a resort town on Lake Seventy-three, a spot where wealthy warrior-caste families vacationed, extending their summers when the weather grew cooler up north. Maldynado’s family had property in the area. He’d even visited as a kid, but that didn’t help him come up with a reason for Forge to go there. As far as he knew, there weren’t any natural resources, manufacturing facilities, or business opportunities. It was a destination for fun, that was it. Forge didn’t seem to be all that interested in fun.
“Even if they’re not going to those towns,” Maldynado said, “they were heading south along the river, right? The river is populated all up and down in that area, so people would be likely to see that monstrosity flying overhead. People like to talk. They’d mention something like that, and we could tell if we were on the right track.”
Sicarius had stopped listening, or at least he wasn’t looking at Maldynado. His eyes had turned toward Sespian, who, to his credit, wasn’t squirming under the attention. Maldynado always felt like a schoolchild being taken to task when Sicarius gave him a look that lasted more than two seconds.
“You will go to Sunders City next?” Sicarius asked.
“I must, yes,” Sespian said.
“Your absence in the capital will allow schemers to strike.”
“I must know what exactly Forge plans. There is someone traveling through Sunders City that I… must find.”
“You could send someone else,” Sicarius said.
“There’s no one else I trust.”
“You sought our team out.”
“Because of her.” Sespian waved toward the sky in the direction the aircraft had flown. “If she’s gone now…” His voice cracked, and he cleared his throat. That surprised Maldynado. Did the emperor care about Amaranthe? Why would that be? “Your team has done all that I requested. I thank you, but I’ll go my own way now. You need to find your missing comrade.”
“Your mission,” Sicarius said, as if Sespian hadn’t spoken at all. “It will be dangerous? A risk to your life?”
Sespian lifted his hands, palms up. “Probably. That doesn’t change anything. I’m prepared to go on my own.”
Insects droned in the wetlands. A second frog joined the first, starting up a croaking chorus. Sicarius looked to the south again. He had the appearance of a man facing a hard choice, though Maldynado couldn’t understand why. They had to go after the boss.
Finally, Sicarius said, “I will get her. Sire, Maldynado and the others will accompany you to Sunders City and act as your bodyguards, or lackeys if that is what you need. They will protect you.”
“I don’t need lackeys or bodyguards,” Sespian said at the same time as Maldynado lifted his hands and said, “Wait, I’m going after the boss too.”
“You will accompany the emperor.” As he spoke, Sicarius issued his favorite dark glare, the one that could make a man’s love apples shrivel up faster than a nude streak into the snow on Solstice Day.
Maldynado usually avoided that stare, but this time he crossed his arms over his chest and stared back. “I’m going too.”
Maldynado knew that Sespian’s safety should be his first priority–disowned or not, he was a son of the warrior-caste, and thus sworn to defend and protect the emperor and empire–but he wouldn’t turn his back on Amaranthe. Besides, Sespian was standing in front of them, safe for the moment. Amaranthe was the one who’d been captured by some torture-loving goon with a passion for molesting people. Maldynado didn’t trust Sicarius to go after her alone. He might do some obligatory hunting, but he didn’t care about Amaranthe the way the rest of the team did. He didn’t care about anyone.
In the face of Maldynado’s stubborn response, Sicarius strode across the field toward him, each step firm and deliberate. Maldynado prepared to defend himself, even if it meant ending up compacted into the earth alongside the smashed trees, but Sicarius stopped a pace away.
“Amaranthe would wish the majority of the team to help the emperor,” he said. “That is what we came down here to do.”
The argument surprised Maldynado–Sicarius didn’t have a history of using words to sway people–and he almost caught himself nodding. He turned the head movement into a shake and a scowl. “That was before she got captured. She’d–”
“Want the team to help the emperor,” Sicarius repeated. “I will go after her. I can travel faster on my own.”
Maldynado wanted to deny the statement, but he knew Sicarius spoke the truth. If he gave it his full effort, Sicarius could go farther and faster than anyone.
“I’ll get her,” Sicarius repeated softly. There was a determined intensity to his eyes that Maldynado hadn’t noticed before. He was always so pragmatic and seemed indifferent to feelings and emotions, but that look in his eyes…
“Fine,” Maldynado sighed. “If you promise to do everything possible to find her and not give up.”
Sespian cleared his throat. “While it’s nice that you two are in agreement, I never said I’d take any of your people with me. The security and continuation of the empire as we know it is at stake. I’m not willing to bring untested mercenaries along.”
“Untested?” Maldynado touched his chest. “Untested? I’ve been tested by swords, rifles, bows, giant krakens, man-eating makarovi, and don’t forget all the man-slaying machines powered by wizard magic. That’s just in the last six months.”
Sicarius and Sespian were eying each other and ignoring Maldynado. Nothing new there.
“You promised payment,” Sicarius said.
“What?” Sespian asked.
“In your note. You promised payment for your kidnapping. You said the money is in Sunders City.”
“Corporal Lokdon said she’s not interested in payment.”
“She’s not here,” Sicarius said, his tone hard.
If Maldynado hadn’t known him–and known money was even less likely to sway him than an eyelash-batting from a girl–he would have believed Sicarius wanted the coin.
“I see,” Sespian said, his jaw tight. “Very well.”
Maldynado wondered if Sicarius had chosen the best method for ensuring the team got to accompany Sespian. Wouldn’t they be better served by Sespian believing they were in this for altruistic reasons? Or at least reasons that weren’t as shallow as craving coin?
Sicarius pulled out his black knife and strode toward Sespian. The young man tensed but stood his ground.
Seeing them face-to-face gave Maldynado a start. For one thing, he hadn’t realized they were the same height. Sicarius always seemed taller than his six feet while Sespian, lacking the ever-present glare and body full of lean ropy muscle, seemed smaller. What really struck him though was the similarity of the determined, mulish expressions they each sported. Huh.
Sicarius flipped the knife and extended it, hilt first, to Sespian.
“What do I do with that?” Sespian looked at it, as if he thought he was supposed to examine it for some secret about the otherworldly technology.
“Take it,” Sicarius said.
Sespian grasped the hilt, though he simply held it out, brow furrowed in askance.
“I have often found its properties useful,” Sicarius said. “You may find the same.”
Standing a few feet away, Maldynado could only gape. Sicarius was giving up his knife? His favorite knife? He didn’t even let Amaranthe use that.
If Sespian knew the magnitude of the gift he’d been given, he didn’t show it. In fact, he continued to hold it out, as if he were thinking of rejecting the gift.
Sicarius spoke again without giving him a chance. “Maldynado and the others will accompany you to pick up the money. I’ve delayed long enough.” He glanced toward the southern sky again, then started past Maldynado, apparently intending to head off in that direction immediately. He didn’t even have any supplies beyond the knives he wore and whatever was in his rucksack.
Sicarius halted beside Maldynado long enough to say, for his ears alone, “Make yourself indispensable, so he chooses to keep the team around. If I return with Lokdon and find you’ve lost the emperor…” Sicarius’s eyes had never been fuller of threat when he said, “Don’t lose him.”
Oh Lindsay, you’re killing me! It will be even more difficult to wait now! Still, I’m glad for the preview, so thank you.(:Come on Sespian, can’t you see he loves you?!? Sigh…
So…you’re posting the next scene in twenty minutes because you don’t want me to go fangirl crazy on you, right? It was fantastic! Thank you.
What can I say, you’ve got me teased. I am so excited I can wait for the book to be released. Thanks for the taste September can’t come too soon!
oh, wow! Maldy KNOWS! ohh ohhh can’t wait!
Squee!
Poor Sicarius! He so very much wants to tell Sespian that he can trust him, wants to keep him safe…and still uses his direct efficiency at manipulating people into short-term cooperation.
Should be “we could waive” (note the “i”).
Thanks, got it! 🙂
It’s possible that I’m now in a worse state than before I read Ch.1. The only cure is Ch.2.
Please?
Marvelous! I’m itching to see what’s happening on Amaranth’s side now. Thanks for sharing more Lindsay 🙂
I can’t wait to read the whole thing!!! I’ll probably be up all night once I get it!
Am I the only one that is sad that it stops at six books? I crave more!!
Every friend I have with a smart phone now has a Kindle app and the first book in this series on it! I’m prodding them all to get the rest of the series.
Thanks for the prodding, Michele! Well, six books will finish the current story arc. There’s always a possibility for more down the line… 😉
That was soooo delicious 🙂 I’m happy to see that Mal is finally putting two and two together. Can’t wait for September 1st. It will be September 1st right? Pleaase 🙂
PLEASE tell me the release is Sept.1?!! I think I might have to take the day off work when this book comes out so I can read it all day.Thank you for the first chapter is was great!
Probably right after Labor Day weekend here in the U.S. 🙂
Thank you for the appetizer. Looking forward to the main course.
Awww poor Sicarius! Having to choose between his son and Amaranthe! Thanks for the teaser, I’m with the others in that I cannot wait for more!
Not to be nitpicky but:
**“I wonder if Ravido always had an interesting in ruling,” Sespian said.**
Shouldn’t it be interest instead of interesting?
Thanks, Laura. It’s off to the editor now, so she should catch most of those things. 🙂
So so good! Maldynado’s pov is going to be so much fun. Thank you for the preview!!
Well done! Perfect first chapter:) Very glad that September is right around the corner!! Thanks again for sharing!
Thanks for the sneak peek!! I can’t wait to dig my myself into this!! September isnt coming fast enough!!
I was in *so* much suspense for book 5, and now I’m dying of it!!!
Thank you so much for all your work Lindsay, I love the series!
Errr.. Lindsay. I gotta know what’s happening with Amaranthe. STAT. Will we have to wait for Labor Day? *sad, teary, puppy face that you can’t resist*
So ready for the next book! This teaser is killing me!