The Axe and the Throne (Bounds of Redemption Book 1)

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The Axe and the Throne (Bounds of Redemption Book 1) Page 1

by Ireman, M. D.




  CONTENTS

  TALLOS

  LEONA

  TITON

  DECKER

  TALLOS

  KEETHRO

  LEONA

  TALLOS

  TITON

  LEONA

  TALLOS

  THE SPURNED

  ELISE

  TITON

  DECKER

  ETHEL

  TALLOS

  RED

  CASSEN

  CRELLA

  TITON

  THE SIREN

  KEETHRO

  THE MIDWIFE

  ALTHER

  LYELL

  DECKER

  CASSEN

  ETHEL

  ALTHER

  KEETHRO

  CASSEN

  DERUDIN

  ALTHER

  KEETHRO

  CRELLA

  DERUDIN

  TITON

  TITON

  ALTHER

  ETHEL

  CASSEN

  TITON

  TALLOS

  THE ISLAND GIRL

  ANNORA

  DECKER

  ALTHER

  KEETHRO

  ANNORA

  CRELLA

  TITON

  ETHEL

  DERUDIN

  CASSEN

  TITON

  CRELLA

  THE BLACKSMITH

  DECKER

  KEETHRO

  DERUDIN

  TALLOS

  CASSEN

  ANNORA

  KEETHRO

  DECKER

  CASSEN

  TALLOS

  DERUDIN

  THE WHORE’S BASTARD

  CASSEN

  KEETHRO

  TALLOS

  DERUDIN

  TITON

  CASSEN

  ETHEL

  KEETHRO

  CASSEN

  TALLOS

  KEETHRO

  CASSEN

  DECKER

  KEETHRO

  ALTHER

  TITON

  TALLOS

  TITON

  DERUDIN

  ANNORA

  KEETHRO

  DECKER

  CRELLA

  CASSEN

  TALLOS

  ANNORA

  KEETHRO

  TITON

  DECKER

  CASSEN

  ETHEL

  THE BEGUILED

  TITON

  THE GAZER

  FROM THE AUTHOR

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  DEDICATION

  LEGAL

  Published by JayHenge Publishing KB

  Copyright © 2015 by M. D. Ireman

  All rights reserved.

  eBook ASIN: B00OKZIEGI

  ISBN: 1508621314

  ISBN-13: 978-1508621317

  PUBLISHING HISTORY

  Market Paperback / February 2015

  Paperback Edition / December 2014

  eBook Edition / October 2014

  Cover Illustration © M. D. Ireman

  World Map © M. D. Ireman

  TALLOS

  His height in thickness is the stone

  That guards from eyes a man’s design,

  And though I watch his actions all,

  Hear every tale, see every wrong,

  Were I to damn him ’fore his end,

  ’Twould be I who need atone.

  -Nameless Gazer

  Where are your friends? Tallos wondered, growing restless. These were the first two Northmen Tallos had ever laid eyes on, and he was quite sure they’d not come alone. They clung to the side of a bluff high above, unmoving.

  Tallos’s attempt to swallow was met with little success. His woolen tongue clung to the roof of his mouth, yet his palms were so slick with sweat he feared he’d be unable to grasp his bow when the need arose to use it. This moisture would serve me better were it in my mouth, he thought, wiping his hands again upon the legs of his trousers with slow, deliberate motion.

  He and Lia, his hunting partner and most trusted companion, were no strangers to these northern forests. Normally he would not feel so exposed, confident in his ability to hide his lank frame amongst the brush, but today they’d brought others with them from the village. Tallos stroked the hair upon Lia’s head to give her comfort. Though he did his best not to think of it, it was impossible not to note just how coarse those hairs had become with age. She crouched beside her master, eyeing him with affection, awaiting his command with eager patience.

  They had remained in that same spot hearing the same somber song from an unrelenting sparrow for an hour, perhaps two. Time had an interesting effect on his fear, first causing it to heighten as his anticipation built. Then, as the hours passed with no action, he mellowed. His mind wandered, going mostly to thoughts of his wife. Two days’ travel south, safe in their small home of their small village, he imagined her busying herself drying meats to keep her mind from belaboring the danger he faced. But it was impossible to think of Leona and not be reminded of the state in which he’d left her. I will return to you and earn your forgiveness, thought Tallos. That I promise.

  “They’re already dead.” One of the many men that had gathered in the village center voiced his opinion on the matter at hand. “Northmen don’t take prisoners. They take the dignity of wives and the purity of daughters, forcing the fathers to watch. Then they kill them all. Your boys are dead, Erik.”

  The man’s assertions were met with a mixture of grumbling that sounded mainly of solemn agreement.

  “Northmen have never been seen in our finger of the canyon,” came a younger, less decided voice. “And perhaps this will be the only time they’re seen if we bring the fight to them. I have no wish to have my throat slit while I sleep.”

  “We’re farmers, not warriors. What chance do we stand?”

  “The boy spoke of only four…”

  “And you believed him? The boy was white with fear. Couldn’t tell up from down by the look of him.”

  Tallos had noticed the same. Erik’s boy was near dumb with terror when he’d stumbled home without his two older brothers. “They were four,” was all he muttered in between his spastic sobbing inhalations.

  “Enough.” Greyson’s command cut through the chatter, hushing the crowd. As the town elder and tacit leader, he was the final authority in disputes such as these. “Your boys had no reason to be wandering north. You’ve been told as much before.”

  The father of the boys wore his desperation on his usually amiable face. Erik was not just Tallos’s neighbor. Tallos had called the big bastard friend since childhood, been present for the births of all four of his children, and could not help but feel somewhat responsible for the peril now faced by his two eldest sons.

  “They are but four, and we have over twenty able-bodied men and half again as many dogs,” Erik contested. But Greyson was not alone in vocalizing disapproval of the notion.

  “It is not our way to go looking for trouble,” said one of Greyson’s supporters.

  “We’d not be looking for trouble,” said a different man. “We’d be looking for his sons. And we’d be looking to send a message that our canyon is not to be raided.”

  Tallos saw the division clearly. The older men with sense opposed the action, and the young men with swollen pride wished to puff out their chests, safe in the knowledge that the chance of any rescue being mounted was slim. In any case, Tallos was inclined to agree with the elders. His trips with Lia in the North were difficult enough when the two were by themselves. With a group of unseasoned woodsmen—farmers’ boys with delusions of heroism—the results of an encounter w
ith even four Northmen would be ugly.

  “Tallos, tell them we can do such a thing,” begged a young cousin of Erik’s. “You know the North better than any.”

  “He’s the reason those boys are there in the first place,” grumbled a man hidden in the back.

  To hear it voiced made Tallos tense. Erik’s boys looked to Tallos more than to Erik for what a father should be. They made their hatred for farming known when put to the task, voicing their desire to hunt like their uncle Tallos rather than labor in the soil for the small, deformed produce grown on their father’s farm. As a compromise, Erik let his boys go north to practice hunting with their bows, so long as the three stayed together. He did this against the advice of all, Tallos included.

  Forgive me, Erik, Tallos thought as he looked at his friend, but I warned you this may happen. Be it brawl or town meeting, Tallos could always depend on the man’s support. That he could not give his own in return this day would be a source of shame for years to come.

  “The Northluns are more than simply dangerous,” Tallos began. “Any attempt we’d make would—”

  “It is a fool’s errand,” interrupted Greyson. “As head of the town council I forbid it.”

  Tallos returned Greyson’s chiding look with a scowl of his own. How is it you can be so cross even when we are in agreement?

  “They are my boys, and I will be damned if I am not going after them.” Erik’s voice was strong and set, but his glistening eyes betrayed the uncertainty and fear amidst his determination.

  “You were damned when you let your boys go up there in the first place.” Greyson seethed with indignation. “Perhaps if you were more a father to those blood-betting bastards and imposed some discipline, they would not be off in the woods pretending to be your better.” The elder hurled the insult with enough force to hit all that heard it in the gut, Tallos most of all.

  Tallos envisioned removing his blade and slicing the old man from ear to ear—blood gushing, horrified looks on the faces of the gathered men. Had he actually done such a thing, he would no doubt see nothing but red the moment the blade made contact with skin. It happened to him when he hunted, as soon as his arrow was loosed. He would awake from his blood-visioned trance to an unsavory scene: a deep gash in the deer’s neck where he had finished it with his knife and Lia lapping the blood off his hands, tail wagging as she saw he’d returned to his senses. It must have been some latent mechanism of self-protection which sheltered him from the gory reality of killing.

  The only red he saw now, however, was on Erik. His friend’s fiery mane looked less bright compared with his face, now turned the color of his beetroots. It was likely all Erik could do not to throttle Greyson, who had already begun to walk away.

  “If any of you leave on this hopeless task, you will not be welcomed back,” Greyson shouted over a shoulder. “This whole town will be in danger if you take men with you to go after those disobedient brats, who’d run straight back into the Northluns the first chance they got.”

  On this Tallos did not fully agree. Their town was in a canyon valley bordered on the east and west by massive cliffs. Climbing these was unthinkable, and a fall from the top would give one plenty of time to ponder their foolishness before making a sudden and final impact. The way north was quite narrow, and it would be impossible for the Northmen to pass by them and their dogs undetected to endanger the town.

  Tallos saw the futility pooling in Erik’s eyes, ready to spill over.

  “We will gather those men who are willing and leave at once,” Tallos yelled, hoping Greyson was still close enough to hear his defiance. Foolish though it was, he knew it would not be hard to find more like Erik’s sons, eager to follow him to the Northluns—at the very least for some attempt at revenge. He was unsure of how many would live to make the trip back home, however.

  A branch snapping as if underfoot brought Tallos’s mind back into focus. One of the boys of his group had adjusted his position and now cringed in horror as if he had cost them all their lives. Tallos felt his own face relax from the scowl it bore with a twinge of guilt. He knew most of his anger lay within himself, for he had allowed his thoughts to wander far too long.

  The mist had begun to clear. Tallos usually loved the mist; it both smelled and tasted of the freshest mana and reminded him of his mother, who claimed the mist was mana itself. But now the tiny, floating bits of water only served to help conceal the likely Northman ambush.

  “We should move,” said Jegson, one of the more aggressive young men of the group. He was a nephew of Erik’s wife Megan, and he had a knack for speaking just before Tallos, and too loudly at that. “We’ve been staring at them for half a day.”

  “Lower your voice,” Tallos whispered, not for the first time.

  Tallos glanced upward again at the two figures that clung to the craggy bluff. It did not appear as though they’d moved since they were spotted earlier that morning. Tallos had had their group progress in slow creeps, stopping for hours at a time to listen for danger. He believed they’d avoided detection, but to trek around to the top in broad daylight would make them easy targets for any Northmen waiting above.

  “We could be up there killing them by now.” Though no others voiced it, Tallos guessed Jegson was not alone in his impatience. “They’re Northmen. Savages. That is no trap, and if they were going to attempt rescue they would have done so by now. Those rock-locked men were left to die.”

  “Quiet, boy.” It was perhaps the first thing Erik had said since the town meeting, though he looked the same as he had when they left—like he had been sentenced to death and was eager to get it done with. He would follow Tallos to the underworld and showed no sign of second-guessing his strategy, but Tallos knew he must be in turmoil with the waiting.

  Tallos surveyed his men and animals for signs that they’d be unable to wait another hour for the daylight’s dimming. Of the six men who had come with Tallos and Erik, each had brought one or more dogs, and Jegson, grandson to wealthy breeders, had insisted on bringing three. Almost in unison, the dogs began to sniff at the air, a scent Tallos could not yet detect

  “They smell them,” said Jegson, finally whispering. “The Northmen are near.”

  Tallos did not judge the boy for the fear now present in his voice, though Jegson’s assertion was wrong. Tallos caught the scent; it was simply smoke, and that the wind came from the south made it mean very little. Lia looked at Tallos in a way that implied she understood her master’s frustration with their ill-trained companions.

  “It is just smoke.” Tallos saw the relief in his men when they heard his words. “We move when the Dawnstar crests the trees and we can walk in the shadows.” Even the dogs seemed to relax as if knowing that they did not have to sit there indefinitely.

  As Tallos’s thoughts began once again to drift, a tumult of snapping twigs and branches broke the quiet. The sound rushed at them from the distance, bouncing off the canyon walls, growing louder at an impossible rate. Whatever made that noise travelled faster than any Northman—faster than any creature Tallos knew—and it would soon be upon them.

  LEONA

  Many Years Ago

  “Where do you think you’re off to, girl?”

  The gruff and unexpected voice sent a jolt through her body. Leona had been gathering her things quietly in the hopes of delaying this confrontation. Without turning to face her father, she answered. “I am going to Emie’s for a night or two.”

  “You think I’m a fool?”

  It was another question that would be best answered with a lie. Instead, Leona continued pressing her things into the hempen sack that still smelled of mold and potatoes, determined to fit her every belonging of worth inside the single bag.

  “Answer me when I speak to you,” her father demanded.

  “Yes,” Leona shouted at him. “You must be a fool to think I will remain here with you and mother, washing away other people’s filth, in a cold so fierce the cloth threatens to freeze, along with my hands,
in the washbasin.” Try as she had to explain to him the benefits of having the basin inside the home rather than in the adjoining shed—the one he liked to pretend was plenty warm—her father would not allow it, fearful of a few soapy splashes on the plank floors he was so proud of.

  “It is honest work that you should be thankful for.”

  “And I would be,” Leona snapped, “if the money earned from my chores went to anything of value.”

  Her father took a step forward. He had a new anger in his voice. “Do you think it is easy to keep you and your mother warm and fed during the winter?”

  “I think it would be easier if you did not waste all we had warming your own belly with drink.”

  He grabbed her by the wrist, jerking her away from the wooden box that served as her clothes chest. “You don’t think I know where you’re off to? With that Northman’s bastard? It’s bad enough that you were born with those ears you must hide. How do you expect to ever find a husband of worth when everyone knows what a little whore you are?” The familiar smell of mead was on his breath.

  The air around Leona felt charged with energy, and the faintest breeze blew, within the confines of her small room, pulling her hair forward. “Release me,” she warned, feeling oddly in control.

  Her father made a sound of disgust and let her go.

  “If you think I have any intention of marrying some old man who owns a kennel then you must truly think me a whore.” Leona shoved her last bits of cloth into the bag angrily. “And Tallos’s father came from Rivervale.”

  “Is that what he told you?” grunted her father. “His parentage is the least of your problems. That boy cannot put a roof over your head. He’s no carpenter.”

  She looked at the man before her, the miserable thing that he had become. White and black stubble covered a face her mother said was once fine, now turned to the perpetual frown of self-pity. “And when was the last time you built anything out of wood other than a fire, Father?”

  Her father looked at her with such contempt she feared she may have pushed him too far. “I am warning you, girl. If you leave here, do not come back.”

 

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