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by Patricia Reding


  Oathtaker

  Select

  Ephemeral and Fleeting

  DEDICATION

  I dedicate Select: The Oathtaker Series, Volume Two, to all the early readers of Oathtaker: The Oathtaker Series, Volume One. You thrilled me with your excitement over it, and with your kind words about it. There were many days over this past year or so, when little more kept me going . . .

  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Chapter Forty-Seven

  Chapter Forty-Eight

  Chapter Forty-Nine

  Chapter Fifty

  Chapter Fifty-One

  THE CAST OF CHARACTERS

  A SYNOPSIS TO REFRESH YOUR MEMORY-OATHTAKER

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  A NOTE ABOUT THE MULTI-AWARD-WINNING

  OATHTAKER: THE OATHTAKER SERIES

  VOLUME ONE

  As is often the case with fantasy series, new portions follow along after the passage of some time. Thus, for your convenience, included at the back of this, Select: The Oathtaker Series, Volume Two, is a full synopsis of Oathtaker: The Oathtaker Series, Volume One. It covers the high points in the order in which they were told and should help to refresh your memory.

  Chapter One

  Hurry. Hurry!

  Stop. Come this way.

  Do you see him there? There, to your left. See? Right there!

  I’ve got him. I’ve got him!

  Stop. No, don’t go. This way. This way! Come with me.

  Watch out! There’s one behind you.

  The shouts and exclamations the Oathtakers communicated to one another magically, and therefore silently, continued as the group that had left their home base earlier to search for a missing compound member, sought to respond to an invasion of their place of refuge. After moving to the camp nearly two decades earlier, the Oathtakers had used magic crystals to fortify most of its perimeter against incursions from the curious and the threatening. But a recent vicious storm knocked down portions of those protections in the surrounding hills and across the wide river that separated one side of their retreat from the outside world. Consequently, encroachments across its borders had increased over the past months, and in recent weeks, had become incrementally more frequent and dangerous.

  I’ve got it, Dixon, Mara said, after peeking around the boulder behind which the two of them hid.

  She pulled a poison-tipped arrow from her quiver, stood, quickly took aim, and then released her shot. Moving easily in her standard Oathtakers’ garb, a half dozen knives hung from sheaths about her waist and boots, and resting in its holder at the back of her neck, ready to be used with the flick of her wrist, she carried Spira, her Oathtaker’s blade, a magic weapon that would never miss its mark.

  Dixon crouched down. His back to Mara, he turned her way, caught her eye momentarily, and then winked. She was the love of his life, and he of hers. It was only due to a unique magic exception that the two had been able to commit to one another even though Mara had a living charge—or charges, as it happened—the twins, Reigna and Eden, the current ranking members of the Select.

  “Charmer,” she whispered, grinning.

  Got you! Ha!

  She spun around to find Velia, who smiled with satisfaction as she sprang out from her place of concealment. Seconds later, her latest target grunted and then fell to the earth.

  Good work, Velia, Basha complimented her cohort.

  Mara offered a silent prayer of gratitude for her friends. Over time, she’d discovered that each of the other Oathtakers and Select who’d sworn a life oath to protect her charges, enjoyed as did she, continued youth from the moment he pledged his vow. None knew if he’d ever age again. Indeed, they preferred not to know, as they surmised that they’d learn the answer to their question only after the death of one, or of both, of the twins. Even so, the phenomenon meant that each remained every bit as strong and vital as he’d been on the day he’d first given his oath. Better yet, as time progressed, each became fortified with the wisdom that came with age, experience, and a continuously improving understanding and appreciation of the Good One’s principles.

  She glanced briefly at her longtime friends, Basha and Velia, then at the two additional Oathtakers who rounded out her troop. She’d chosen Kayson to accompany her on her mission, since his attendant magic included, as did her own, the power to heal. She’d also selected Raman, whose temperament she particularly enjoyed. Since nothing brought the man’s spirits down, he wore a nearly constant smile.

  She peeked around the edge of the boulder. Waves of heat hung in the air, making things in the distance appear distorted. For a moment, she recollected a long ago similarly sweltering day—the day she’d been called to the side of Rowena, the former ranking member of the first family of the Select as she labored to birth her twins.

  She inched closer to Dixon.

  Turning to her, he raised five fingers to designate the number remaining.

  “Ready?” Velia whispered as she sidled nearer.

  When Mara stepped back to make room for her, Dixon restrained her, as from there the ground quickly dropped off.

  Looking down at the treacherous area below, littered with sharp rocks that fell away at a steep slant, Mara nodded her understanding. Then she gestured for the group to divide their attentions. She and Dixon would direct theirs to the left, while Basha, Velia, Kayson, and Raman, would remain focused to the right.

  After retrieving a clear magic crystal from her pocket, she peeked out again.

  Just then, the enemy, apparently also recognizing the Oathtakers’ vulnerable position, advanced in a rush.

  “They’re coming!” she cried.

  Dixon sprang out from the left, with a knife in each hand.

  Kayson, similarly armed, ran out from the right. Basha followed at his heels, holding a bow with an arrow nocked. Behind her came Velia, sporting her Oathtaker’s blade, Justise, at the ready. Finally, Raman headed out, wielding a sword.

  Mara jumped up. She pulled her arm back, preparing to throw her crystal. She needed to toss it sufficiently far that it wouldn’t harm her cohorts when it landed and then exploded.

  At precisely that moment, one of the enemy forces, hidden in a tree, shot an arrow that rushed in at Mara from high on her left side. She tossed her crystal a mere heartbeat in time before the trespasser’s arrow pierced her shoulder.

  Startled, she stepped back, catching her foot on the edge of the drop off. Then, in the space of a single breath, she experienced the shock of finding no earth beneath her.
r />   Tumbling backward, she fell down . . . down . . . down . . .

  The crystal that Mara threw, blew up, killing three of the remaining trespassers. Then Dixon and the other Oathtakers defeated the last of the intruders.

  Dixon turned back. “Where’s Mara?” he asked.

  “She probably traveled magically to come in at the enemy from its other side,” Basha said.

  The Oathtakers waited for a time, but when Mara didn’t reappear, spread out to scout the area.

  Minutes later, Dixon found scuffmarks at the edge of the precipice behind the boulder. He looked down to find her below, unmoving, just as Basha approached his side.

  “Move. Move!” he ordered.

  “Oh, dear Ehyeh!” Basha exclaimed, her eyes following his gaze.

  He brushed past her, then started down the drop-off. A rock loosened beneath his step. Pebbles scattered before him. Not wanting to cause an avalanche of rock, he focused more carefully.

  She has to be all right—she just has to be.

  His foot slipped. He readjusted his weight, found new purchase with his next step, and then continued. The minutes seemed interminably long.

  Finally, just a few feet from where Mara rested, he jumped to the ground and rushed to her side.

  “Is she all right?” Velia cried from above.

  Ignoring her query, he fought to still the rising panic that bubbled up in his stomach.

  He removed brush from over her, careful not to touch the arrow that protruded from her shoulder. He didn’t remove it, reasoning that so long as it remained imbedded, she wouldn’t bleed severely.

  He checked her pulse. She lives!

  Leaning in closer, he whispered, “Mara. Mara, are you all right?” Gently, he turned her face toward himself. He felt blood from a gash decorating the side of her head, warm and sticky against his skin.

  “Is she all right?” Velia called out again, her voice worry-laden.

  He looked up and, swallowing hard, nodded.

  He contemplated how he’d return to the others. He couldn’t carry her back up the rocky wall, but the ground below leveled off before meandering toward the nearby river.

  “I’ll take her that way,” he said, gesturing to his right.

  He put one arm behind Mara’s neck, the other beneath her knees, and then gently lifted her. Her weight was nothing compared to the heaviness of his worry and guilt. He scolded himself for having let her join him in such a precarious place, for not having protected her.

  “Mara,” he whispered, “are you all right? Can you hear me?”

  She remained silent, unmoving.

  He fought his way through the rock and brush that lead to the river. When he arrived at its edge, Basha made her way toward him. Shaking with worry, he pulled Mara closer, then kissed her forehead.

  Basha moved Mara’s hair to the side to reveal the cut on her head. “Put her down, Dixon. Kayson can heal her.”

  Tears misted his eyes. “The cut is not the worst of it,” he said. “It bleeds, but not all that badly. For that matter, her shoulder wound doesn’t seem the primary concern. I’m afraid she’s suffered a concussion. She hasn’t responded to anything. I think we should just hurry back to the compound and then see to healing her there. You know Mara,” he added, then swallowed hard, holding his emotions in check, “if she regains consciousness now, she’ll insist on making her own way back home.”

  Basha watched her fellow Oathtaker closely. Having believed some years past that she’d lost her charge, Therese, when she fell from a cliff during an assassination attempt, she wordlessly conveyed her understanding and sympathy.

  Kayson and Raman drew near.

  “How is she?” Kayson asked.

  Basha glanced his way, then turned back to Dixon. “Why don’t you at least let Kayson remove the arrow and stem the bleeding?”

  Nodding, Dixon dropped to his knees. He placed Mara on the ground.

  Velia stepped up to his side. “Is she all right?”

  “The gash on her head is . . . Well, I’ve seen worse,” Dixon said, through gritted teeth. “Kayson’s going to remove the arrow now, and then I’ll carry her back to the compound. He can see to her other injuries there.”

  “That sounds good.”

  “I’ll keep an eye out,” Raman offered. Contrary to his usual demeanor, he was not smiling.

  Kayson knelt at Mara’s side. He examined her wounds. The arrow hadn’t gone quite through her back. After snapping off the fletching end, he turned her on her side. Then, while Dixon and Basha held her still, he forced the point through. Once done, he slipped out the remaining shaft.

  Blood poured.

  Placing his hands over the wound, Kayson peered into it with his attendant magic and then sent forth a healing stream.

  A long minute passed in silence as Mara’s bleeding slowed. Then, after what seemed an eternity to Dixon, it stopped altogether.

  He glanced at each of his friends in turn, his heart in his eyes, his hands shaking.

  “Dixon, she’s going to be fine,” Velia said, stroking his arm.

  “Let me see to the wound on her head,” Kayson offered.

  “No, it’s not bleeding now,” Dixon said. “Let’s get going.” He took Mara back into his arms.

  “Careful,” Basha cautioned, “her shoulder wound could easily re-open.”

  “Why don’t you let us help carry her at least, Dixon? We could make a stretcher,” Velia suggested.

  He pulled his beloved closer. “No, I’ve got her.”

  “But, Dixon, we’re quite a distance from the compound center.”

  “I’ve got her,” he repeated, his voice soft but emphatic. He would not release his hold.

  “All right then,” Basha said, “we’re through here. Let’s go.”

  Just then, an arrow came flying in. The leaves of the trees overhead rustled as the projectile flew past the Oathtakers.

  “Down!” Kayson cried.

  They dropped to the ground. Dixon gently covered Mara’s body with his own.

  Another arrow came forth, this time just missing Velia.

  Basha looked up. “There!” she shouted, pointing.

  A man, grinning, stood at the top of the crag.

  Her jaw set. Then, as the intruder reached for another arrow, so too did she. She moved so quickly that hers reached the intruder’s chest before he could loose his own.

  The man swayed, then tumbled down.

  “Leave him,” Dixon ordered as he got to his feet and marched off.

  With the river to his right, Velia rushed up to his left. Kayson and Raman took the lead, and Basha, the rear.

  Then they all, but for Dixon, continually scanned the area for possible additional attacks. He, fully intent on his mission, kept his eyes fixed firmly forward.

  Although Kayson and Raman repeatedly asked Dixon if they could carry Mara for a time, he refused any offer of assistance. Rather, each time they approached him, he tightened his hold. All the while, she remained as silent as death in his arms.

  Hours later, the group arrived back at the central compound. When they finally made it to the innermost area, Basha’s charge, Therese, with a handful of guards following, ran out to meet them.

  “I can help,” offered one of the newcomers.

  Dixon shook his head “no.” His arms suffered from the weight he’d carried for so long, but he refused any assistance.

  “Dixon! Dixon!” a woman shouted.

  He looked up.

  Lucy rushed toward him. Her light blue eyes, usually dancing with mischief, portrayed only seriousness now, as they darted from one member of the incoming group, to another.

  “Is she all right?” she cried.

  Basha grabbed her arm and pulled her along. “She’ll be fine,” she said. “She took an arrow in her shoulder and fell, and it seems she’s suffered a concussion.”

  Lucy tapped on Kayson’s shoulder from behind. “Why didn’t you see to her injuries immediately?”

  �
��Because,” Dixon interrupted, his voice hard, “we didn’t want her insisting on making her own way back.”

  “You were right, Dixon, of course.”

  Lucy first established the camp when Rowena still carried Reigna and Eden. Over the years, the compound residents developed it into a place that met nearly all the needs of the numerous Select, along with their Oathtakers, who resided there. In addition, the camp was home to Oathtakers who were trained, but didn’t currently have charges of their own. Most of the residents had sworn life oaths to protect Reigna and Eden.

  The compound afforded the community with their own sanctuary for prayer, separate family living quarters, a common meeting area, a library and place for study, an infirmary, and training grounds. Largely self sufficient, living off the land, hunting the surrounding forest and fishing from the nearby river, the camp residents also kept gardens, tended orchards, and grew their own herbs for both culinary and medicinal purposes.

  Dixon strode past several buildings and gardens, down the center thoroughfare.

  “Make sure a unit is sent out to that section,” he said to no one in particular, “and make sure they’re well armed and relieved regularly.”

  “It’s already been done, Dixon,” Velia said.

  “I don’t know how a group that large made it through all of our sentries before we noticed,” he muttered.

  “We’re looking into it now, Dixon,” said Lucy, the unofficial leader at the compound—in her own eyes, if not in the eyes of the others. Looking just older than Mara, with curly hair and rosy cheeks, she was actually centuries old. She’d been Oathtaker to the last two known female sevenths before Rowena. Years later, she worked with Rowena, planning and orchestrating for her coming children—girl children—down to her seventh pregnancy. The two hoped that the child Rowena bore would be the seventh seventh foretold of in prophecy—the one who might help to usher in a new age.

  Reigna was Rowena’s seventh-born child—a seventh daughter of a seventh daughter. But to the amazement of all, Rowena also bore Reigna’s identical twin, Eden. Until that day, no Select had ever before born more than a single child at a time. Thus, it was not until after the twins’ birth, that Lucy and the others finally made sense of prophecies that theretofore went beyond their understanding. The scripts told of a seventh seventh and of “she who is, but is not.” Eden, born of a seventh pregnancy, was not a seventh-born child. Her birth fulfilled those prophecies.

 

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