Magic, Myth & Majesty: 7 Fantasy Novels

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Magic, Myth & Majesty: 7 Fantasy Novels Page 52

by David Dalglish


  She’s not going to promote me, Tilla suddenly thought, and fear washed her. She still remembers how Leresy touched me. She’s still jealous. She’s going to pull out her punisher and hurt me—right here before the emperor. Oh stars…

  “Tilla Roper,” Nairi said slowly, nodding.

  Tilla’s belly clenched with fear; Nairi was among the most powerful women in Requiem, and after tonight’s wedding, she would only rise in status.

  She could kill me here in this courtyard, Tilla knew, and nobody would bat an eyelash.

  “Yes, Commander!” Tilla replied.

  Nairi tilted her head, examining her quizzically. “You think you are a soldier, Roper?”

  Tilla raised her chin high. “I will fight for the red spiral, Commander.”

  “Will you now?” Nairi leaned close and whispered. “Or will you just spread your legs for my husband?”

  Tilla’s heart thrashed. Sweat trickled down her back.

  “I…” She stiffened and whispered back, “No, Commander! He is yours. You are a great leader, a woman of nobility and strength. I am but a lowly servant of the empire.”

  “You are my servant,” Nairi said, teeth bared. “Do not think—not for an instant—that you are free of me today, Tilla Roper. You will remain in my phalanx. I commanded you in training; I will command you in battle. You will be mine for the rest of your service.” She clutched her punisher and its tip flared. “If I see you near him, Roper, your last punishment will seem merciful. I will drive this punisher against you all night until you beg for death. Do you understand me?”

  Tilla felt herself blanch. She took a shuddering breath.

  “Yes, Commander,” she whispered.

  Nairi all but slammed the bands onto Tilla’s arms, tightening them so hard it hurt.

  “I promote you to Periva Tilla Roper!” she shouted, teeth still bared. “Hail the red spiral!”

  “Hail the red spiral!” Tilla shouted in return, then stepped back into her formation.

  Bloody stars, she thought. Her breath shuddered. She had thought that, after the wedding, she would be rid of Nairi. Wouldn’t a princess of Requiem command entire battalions, not a humble phalanx of only a hundred troops? When Tilla had heard of the wedding, she had rejoiced, thinking that Nairi would leave her.

  How will I fight under her heel? Tilla thought. Is there any hope for me to ever leave the Black Rose?

  When all the troops had received their rank, Frey Cadigus raised his fist and shouted for the red spiral. The troops returned his call, three thousand new warriors of the empire.

  Prince Leresy paced the courtyard and cried to the troops.

  “Today you are warriors! I have trained you well. As my gift to you, you may stay to celebrate my wedding. You will feast with me! Today you will dine upon fresh meat and wine.” Leresy raised his fist in salute. “Tomorrow you will fly to war, soldiers of Requiem. Hail the red spiral!”

  25

  LERESY

  “Everything changes today,” he whispered, perched upon the fortress walls in dragon form. “Today Leresy Cadigus rises.”

  He snorted fire from his nostrils. Below him in the courtyard, tables were set out in the open air. Winter was ending; the day was crisp but sunny. Smoke was pumping from the kitchen chimneys, and when Leresy sniffed, he could smell his wedding feast cooking. There would be roasted fowl, wild boar, lambs cooked in mint, and hundreds of pies and loaves.

  It was a small feast, of course, compared to the splendor of the capital. Had he chosen to wed in Nova Vita, the Fire of the North, the entire city—a million souls—would feast with him. Banners of gold and crimson would flap from every roof. Ten thousand dragons would fly overhead, roaring for him. Troops would march down hundreds of streets, blowing horns and chanting his name.

  Here in the south there would be none of that. Here in Castra Luna there would be some food, some drink, but mostly power. And power was what Leresy craved even more than splendor.

  This is my domain, he thought and blasted smoke from his nostrils. Here is my fortress, my rule, my home. Here I will form this great alliance, and from here my wrath will descend upon the capital.

  His troops stood upon the walls around him, all in human forms. Some faced the forests, keeping watch upon the horizons. Others faced the courtyard below; they would witness the glory of his wedding.

  Again Leresy’s eyes sought out Tilla. He saw her upon the eastern wall. She stood with her back to him, keeping vigil upon the woods. She held the banner of the Black Rose, a ring of iron upon a wooden pole—Nairi’s sigil.

  Strangely, seeing Tilla holding the sigil of his betrothed only made her more intoxicating. Tilla’s hair blew in the wind, revealing her pale neck. She was a tall, noble warrior, yet so fragile, so afraid, so weak compared to his might. Leresy had always wanted to break her, to hurt her, to hear her scream, yet now he felt a strange need to comfort her.

  What if he flew toward her, grabbed her, and carried her into the wilderness? What if they found some distant land to dwell in, just him and her? No more Shari plotting to kill him. No more Frey belittling him. No more Nairi craving his power and planning her ascent.

  I could protect you from all that, Tilla, he thought. I could shield you from all the pain in the world. I would hold you in the dark and we would feel warm.

  He looked away, grimacing.

  No, he thought. He had worked too hard for this. He could not give up his ambitions, not so close to seizing his prize. He would have to play this game a little longer, to tolerate his family for a few more moons or years. But then… then he would strike. Then the throne would be his—and so would Tilla Roper.

  Below in the courtyard, Frey Cadigus waited, clad in a burgundy robe and holding his scepter of power. Shari stood at his right side, Lord Herin Blackrose at his left. Before them, all across the cobblestones, five hundred axehands stood in formation—the men whom Leresy would soon rule.

  “It’s time,” he whispered.

  He took flight and dived toward the courtyard.

  From the clock tower above, an iron dragon flew—Nairi Blackrose—and landed beside him. The two dragons, red and gray, stood in the courtyard before the emperor. Plumes of smoke rose between their teeth. They shifted together and stood in human forms, clad in black steel, awaiting their union.

  Leresy looked at his father. He looked at the grooved face, the cold eyes, the thin lips. He looked upon this man and he hated him.

  He looked aside at Lord Herin Blackrose, soon to be his father-in-law, and shivered.

  Like all men of his order, Lord Herin wore black robes, and his left arm ended with an axehead instead of a hand. But unlike the others, Herin Blackrose—as their commander—wore no iron mask. Leresy thought it a pity; if anyone needed to hide his face, it was Herin. The man looked like a dying, furless cat. Herin was completely hairless; not merely bald, but lacking eyebrows and eyelashes too. He had no more teeth than hair; when his lips parted, they revealed bare gums. Wrinkles and boils covered his skin. Leresy could barely believe such a monster had fathered the beautiful Nairi. Lord Herin was a diseased freak, Leresy thought, but he was strong. His eyes blazed like steel in smelters. After the emperor, he was the strongest man in Requiem.

  Finally Leresy looked at Shari, his older sister. She smirked at him, her eyes mocking, and gave him the slightest of winks. He knew what that wink meant. I will kill you, Leresy, she was saying, and he clenched his jaw.

  Not if I kill you first, he thought.

  He wondered where his twin lurked on this day. Was Kaelyn hiding in some tunnel, filthy and stinking? Did she run through some forest, dreaming of the day she could strike the capital? Was she bedding that vagabond Valien, the disgraced knight?

  One day I will kill you too, Kaelyn, he swore. One day I will kill you all—everyone in this damn, foul world.

  Emperor Frey raised his scepter, a rod of gold topped with a red spiral. He called out to the crowd.

  “Today we join two great h
ouses!” he said. “Today House Cadigus and House Blackrose become one. Today Requiem grows strong!”

  The wedding began.

  26

  TILLA

  She stood on the walls, her insignia upon her arms and her banner in hand—a soldier defending her emperor.

  The forests rolled into the east, trees still bare, but spring began this day in Requiem, and spring had come to her life. She had arrived in Castra Luna in winter’s cold, shivering and pale in a cart, no better than cattle. She had been frightened, weak, and lonely, yet now she stood in steel, armed with her sword.

  I’m no longer that old Tilla, the one who was always so afraid, she thought. I am a periva now. I am a soldier. And I am strong.

  Behind her in the courtyard the wedding began. Tilla could hear Emperor Cadigus speak of the union, joining two mighty houses. Tilla had been ordered to defend the walls and watch the eastern sky; she could not view the wedding, which pleased her. She had no wish to see Nairi’s power grow. Watching the forest, defending these walls, was the task of a true soldier.

  “Bloody Abyss,” Erry muttered at her side. The girl clutched the hilt of her sword. “I was sure we were rid of that gutter stain Nairi. Is she really going to keep commanding us now in battle?”

  Mae stood at Tilla’s other side, her pale cheeks pinched pink in the cold. Her lips quivered, and she nervously tugged her golden braid.

  “But I don’t want to fight battles,” she said. “Now that we’re real soldiers, can’t we just… guard walls? Standing here isn’t so bad. I want to be a guard, not a fighter.”

  Erry snorted. “Wobble Lips, you want to spend your five years of service standing on a wall? Not me. I’m going to fight. I’m going straight to the front line to kill those bloody resistors.” She snarled. “I’m going to burn them good.”

  “Hush!” Tilla whispered; the conversation was growing too loud, and she worried the sound would carry to the courtyard. If it did, they wouldn’t have to worry about any battles; they’d be hanged after the wedding.

  She returned her eyes to the east. The forests rolled into distant mist. Many called Castra Luna the most isolated fort in the empire, a single light shining in the wilderness. Tilla wondered where the next five years would take her, and whether she would see Cadport again before her service ended.

  And will I see you again, Rune? And if I do see you, will you recognize the woman I’ve become?

  Movement on the horizon caught her eyes.

  Her thoughts died and Tilla squinted.

  Thousands of shapes fluttered in the distant mist like a flock of birds.

  “Nairi Blackrose!” the emperor’s voice rose below. “Step forward and hail the red spiral.”

  Tilla squinted and leaned forward. Those were no birds. They were too large, too many. She could barely see them through the mist.

  “Erry, you’d last maybe five minutes in battle!” Mae was saying, incurring curses from the shorter girl.

  Tilla clutched her sword. Fear washed her belly. Whatever was flying ahead was moving fast. She thought she saw orange sparks rise among them. A few of the shapes glinted as if clad in armor.

  “Leresy Cadigus!” The emperor’s voice rose from the courtyard. “Step forward, hail the red spiral, and turn toward Nairi.”

  Tilla’s fingers trembled around her hilt.

  Stars no, stars, it can’t be.

  “Wobble Lips, maybe you’ll die,” Erry was saying, “but I’m a warrior. I’m going to kill.”

  We’re all alone here, Tilla thought. Alone in the wilderness. The emperor. The prince and princess. And us upon the wall.

  The horde flew from the east, and Tilla heard their distant cries.

  “Dragons,” she whispered, voice shaking. “Thousands of them. The Resistance.”

  “Exactly!” Erry said. “Tilla understands. I’m going to kill thousands of Resistance dragons, and—” The young woman gasped. “Stars, Tilla, what the Abyss is that in the east?”

  “Your chance for battle,” Tilla whispered.

  The eastern dragons roared, and vaguely upon the wind, Tilla thought she could hear their words, just a hint of sound: For Aeternum! Death to Cadigus!

  “Join hands!” Frey announced below. “Nairi Blackrose and Leresy Cadigus, I now—”

  Tilla spun around toward the courtyard, raised her standard high, and shouted over the emperor’s words.

  “Dragons! Dragons fly from the east!” She waved her standard. “The Resistance attacks!”

  27

  LERESY

  Leresy stood frozen, holding his new wife’s hands.

  “The Resistance!” Tilla was shouting from the walls, waving her arms. “We’re under attack!”

  Leresy blinked. He could not move.

  He looked up. His father met his eyes, then shifted into a golden dragon and flew. Shari too took flight, a blue dragon blowing fire. The axehands shifted as well, and hundreds of dragons rose. Roars and thuds of wings filled the air.

  Leresy could not move. He only stood, clutching Nairi’s hands.

  “Are we… married yet?” he said.

  Nairi snarled and pulled her hands free.

  “Damn it, Leresy!” she shouted, shifted into a dragon, and took flight.

  “The Resistance attacks!” Lord Herin Blackrose was shrieking, circling above the courtyard, a wrinkled dragon with no scales. “Axehand—battle formations, surround the emperor!”

  Leresy looked to his right. Nairi was flying above the walls, shouting for her phalanx.

  “Black Rose—behind me! Assault formation, shift, fly!”

  The hundred soldiers of her phalanx, Tilla among them, took flight as dragons. Thousands of the other legionaries were doing the same, grouping around their own commanders.

  Leresy cursed, shifted too, and flew.

  He had no phalanx of his own. He was not sure where to go. He soared higher than the others, so high that the thin air spun his head, and stared east. He saw the enemy there, and he snarled.

  “The Resistance,” he hissed.

  Thousands of them flew from the east, roaring and blasting fire. They wore no dragonhelms or armor. They were feral beasts, unwashed and wild. They flew in no formations, but as a single rabble, howling and wreathed in flame.

  Fear—stabbing, pulsing, all-consuming—washed over Leresy.

  “Death to Cadigus!” the resistors were howling. “Slay the emperor and his children!”

  They’re coming to kill me, Leresy thought, staring at the horde. His wings shook. His smoke blasted uncontrollably. Oh stars, they’re coming to slay me upon the walls of my fort.

  Tears stung his eyes, and fire flared inside him, and Leresy soared higher.

  “Into the barracks!” he howled at his troops. “Retreat! Retreat into the halls, lock the doors, man the walls! Defend this cast—”

  His father roared, soared from below, and slammed into him.

  The blow knocked the breath out of Leresy. He tumbled, and his father cudgeled him with his tail. Lersey spun in the air, fell a hundred feet, and barely righted himself.

  “Assault formations!” Frey Cadigus shouted to the troops around him, his voice deep and steady. “Axehand—man the walls and await my orders. Dragon Legions—prepare for aerial battle. I will lead the charge.”

  The phalanxes began to take formation. These dragons had been soldiers for only several hours, but had trained well enough to form ranks quickly. Frey flew to their lead, then looked over his shoulder at Leresy. Disgust filled the emperor’s eyes.

  “Go defend your castle,” he said, then turned and began flying east. “To war! To glory! Dragon Legions, fly!”

  Thousands of dragons howled and flew behind the emperor. Shari flew at her father’s side, roaring flames. Nairi flew ahead of her phalanx, shouting orders. They charged over the forests toward the Resistance.

  Leresy hovered in midair, panting and trembling.

  Before him in the east, the two armies crashed with exploding
fire and blood.

  Leresy stared, jaw open.

  He had never seen so much blood.

  One of the resistors, a burly beast of chipped scales, flamed a young periva. The dragon screamed and returned to human form, flesh peeling. Another resistor, a black demon with flaming eyes, lashed his claws at another dragon; this dragon too returned to human form, clutched spilling entrails, and tumbled to the forest below.

  Do you fly here too, Kaelyn? Twin sister, do you howl with this mob? Leresy’s eyes stung. I always protected you, Kaelyn! When Father beat you, I always comforted you! Now you come to kill me?

  Leresy could not breathe. He could barely flap his wings. He let out a howl—he meant it to be a battle cry, but it sounded more like a wail.

  “The prince!” roared a burly, silver dragon missing his left horn. “Leresy Cadigus, there! Slay the prince!”

  Hundreds of resistors looked up, eyes blazing and fire burning, and began to fly his way.

  Leresy screamed, spun around, and began to flee.

  “Axehand!” he shouted as he flew. “Into the barracks! Into the hall! Defend the gates—defend your prince!”

  The sky burned. Howls shook the walls. Leresy screamed and panted and landed in the courtyard. He shifted into human form and ran, arms pumping, into the grand hall of Castra Luna.

  “Axehand! Into the hall—defend your prince!” His voice cracked. “That is an order!”

  Outside the doors, fires blazed, and thousands of wings hid the sky.

  Leresy panted, fell backward, and felt warm liquid trickle down his leg.

  28

  TILLA

  Blood, smoke, and fire raged around her.

  Thousands of dragons, soldiers and rebels of Requiem, covered the sky. Claws slashed. Fangs bit. Jets of fire howled. Dragons burned and bled all around. In death, their magic left them; they tumbled to the forest as humans, armor shattered, flesh charred, and limbs torn.

  Terror. Terror clutched Tilla like claws. Her head spun. Ice filled her belly. Her wings could barely flap.

 

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