by James Wisher
Damien saw no reason to refuse, and even if he did he wouldn’t dare object to her order. He made his shield visible and suddenly the world took on a golden tint. Half his power went flowing down the channels he’d made. All around him stones vibrated, and cracks ran along the floor as the power he didn’t fully contain spilled over. The archmage’s hair and robe blew back from the breeze his power whipped up.
“That’s enough.” She waved her arms like he couldn’t hear her.
He drew his power back in and returned his shield to its original state. “Was that okay, ma’am?”
She smiled and straightened her hair. “Better than okay. You’re stronger than me. I suspect you could take any three of my Crimson Legion in a duel. How about you come work for me?”
“Ma’am?” He had to have heard wrong. There was no way the archmage would want a kid six months out of the tower to serve in her legion.
“I want you to come work for me. The others are too gutless to take you as an apprentice. Well, that’s their loss. You’re far too valuable to waste sitting in The Tower waiting for a mentor. I’ll be your mentor and you’ll answer directly to me. You’ve certainly proven yourself a capable field agent. What do you say?”
Damien didn’t have to think long. “I’d be honored, Master.”
She nodded once. “Excellent. I’ve arranged a room for you in the castle. When I have something I’ll summon you. In the meantime keep practicing and make yourself useful around the grounds. I’m sure you can find something to do.”
Damien blinked and she vanished. He squinted, trying and failing to penetrate her invisibility screen. What an odd woman. He’d assumed the archmage would be more intimidating, but she reminded Damien of a kindly aunt.
Oh well, at least he didn’t have to go around begging for a master anymore. He was working with the archmage. He restrained himself from jumping for joy. After this even the award ceremony would be bearable.
Book Two
Border Betrayal
Chapter 1
Damien St. Cloud leaned against the wall in the back corner of the throne room, the stone rough through his black tunic, and watched the line of peacocks waiting their turn to suck up to Uncle Andy. Silk and lace draped the soft, flabby bodies of thirty of the richest and most powerful people in the kingdom while gold and gems glittered in the light of the glow globes hanging from the ceiling. They’d arrived to present themselves to the king. Probably so, despite his best efforts, he wouldn’t forget they existed.
A slight breeze from the invisible fan he’d conjured blew the overwhelming stink of perfume mingled with sweat away. When he first entered, the stench had about knocked him over. You’d think people that rich could afford a bath. He didn’t know how the regular guards stood it. The warlords used soul force to block their sense of smell. Damien could see the flow of energy that separated their brains from their noses. That had to be how Uncle Andy kept from throwing up.
For his part the king sat on his simple wooden throne, a big, fake smile plastered on his face as he shook the hand of a fat, bald nobleman in acid green silks. Damien couldn’t hear what the fawning fop was saying nor did he care enough to conjure an eavesdropping sphere to listen in. He assumed the man wanted something, the same as the rest of the leeches in line. Rich as they were, you could always count on a noble to want more.
Damien narrowed his focus, curious about the nobles’ soul force. The fat man in green seemed ordinary enough, likewise the woman behind him. The man behind her, one of the few without a giant stomach, had a weak internal soul force. Not strong enough to train as a warlord, but enough to give him an edge over an ordinary person.
He kept scanning. A surprising number of the nobility lacked any significant soul force. Maybe nature made a point of balancing their wealth with a lack of real power. Damien frowned when he reached the second-to-last man in line, a potbellied fellow with oily black hair and watery blue eyes. He had no soul force at all. Which meant he had to be a sorcerer. Curiosity piqued, Damien studied the man even closer. A faint soul force aura surrounded his body. Some kind of illusion maybe.
Why would a noble need an illusion to present himself to the king? Something was wrong. Along the far-side wall stood the captain of the royal guard in his immaculate blue-and-silver tabard over practical mail armor. Damien didn’t know the man well. He’d stood beside Damien’s father when Uncle Andy presented him with the Medal of Valor last week. The captain had a strong internal soul force, nothing compared to Dad, but better than average. Most important, his loyalty to the king was beyond question. He’d know if the nobleman was hiding something.
Damien worked his way around the back of the throne room. The guards all knew him and moved out of his way. A minute later he leaned against the wall beside the guard captain, arms crossed, trying to look casual. “Captain.”
“Damien. Something I can do for you?” The captain pitched his voice low so no one would overhear them.
“The second-to-last man in line, do you know him?”
“Dominic Santen. He’s a merchant prince, bought a title, but doesn’t hold any land. What about him?”
“Is he a sorcerer?”
“No, he’s a weasel, liar, thief, and cheat, but not a sorcerer.”
“Then we have a problem, because that man’s a sorcerer and I suspect he’s using an illusion to look like Mr. Santen.”
The captain eased his hand closer to the well-worn hilt of his sword. “Are you certain?”
“Yeah.” Damien wanted to tap his soul force, but didn’t dare for fear of warning the imposter. “How do you want to handle it?”
“Can you break the illusion so we can see what we’re dealing with?”
The imposter had moved so he stood only ten people from the throne. They needed to act fast, before he got any closer to Uncle Andy. “Sure, but if he’s strong this could get ugly fast. Do you want me to shield the nobles or take down the sorcerer?”
“Take down the sorcerer. I know enough about sorcerers to know my men won’t have much of a chance against him. We’ll deal with the nobles. Blasted Crimson Legion! They were supposed to screen all the guests before they entered the throne room.”
Damien nodded. The captain’s plan made sense. Part of him wanted to defend his new comrades, but he couldn’t think of a good argument. How had the sorcerer snuck into the castle? Damien hoped whoever the imposter was, he was just filling in for the real Dominic Santen and didn’t mean any harm. “Understood. When do you want me to go?”
The captain made several subtle gestures with his off hand and all around the room guards tensed. “Now.”
Damien drew power and sent a stream of it at the imposter. He formed the blast so it would only shatter the illusion, not harm the person under it. The image of an out-of-shape merchant vanished. In his place stood a female figure. Tight gray pants and shirt hugged a curvy figure. A half mask covered her face from the nose down. She wore thin black gloves and heavy leather boots.
Her cold gaze locked with Damien’s. This woman was a killer, he knew it. She leapt toward the throne, a golden blade appearing in her right hand. Damien conjured a wall in her path, but the blade made short work of it. He’d never seen a soul force construct that dense. It looked like she put all her power into it.
Uncle Andy had leapt to his feet and pulled his sword. It appeared he wanted to fight, but his guards were standing in front of him, shielding him from the assassin. Whimpering nobles fled for the exit, royal guards attempting to keep them under control. Damien had no time to worry about them. With his barrier demolished the sorcerer rushed the guards.
They attacked and an instant later found their swords in pieces, only their enhanced speed keeping them from getting gutted. Damien drew half his power and conjured golden chains that wrapped tight around her legs and body. He matched the density of her blade and when she tried to cut the bindings away she only nicked them.
Uncle Andy’s guards hustled him out the back exit. Half a
dozen guardsmen approached the woman as she furiously hacked at the chains. Damien poured more energy into them to repair the damage she was causing.
“Somebody hit her! I can’t keep her bound forever.”
The captain of the guard raced in at warlord speed and brought his pommel down on the back of her head. Her sword vanished and she slumped in Damien’s chains. He studied the flow of her soul force to make certain she wasn’t faking before he let the chains vanish. Two guards caught her before she hit the ground.
Chapter 2
Every castle had a dungeon. Damien felt sure it was a rule. He’d never visited one before so he had no idea how Uncle Andy’s compared to someone else’s. In some of the stories he’d read, the authors described dungeons as dank, smelly places filled with torture chambers and hooded guards that entertained themselves by beating the prisoners. By that standard this dungeon was a pleasant spot.
Cool and dry, without a bit of standing water, the dungeon under the royal castle had a dozen cells outfitted with simple cots and mess buckets. A faint odor of sweat and human waste filtered through the halls, but nothing unbearable. In fact, to Damien, the smell offended less than the nobles’ perfume. Steel doors with small view slits kept the prisoners from wandering off. Ten guards in blue-and-sliver uniforms patrolled the halls, heavy truncheons hanging at their belts.
On their way to the interrogation chamber Damien and the archmage passed three guards on patrol. Was “interrogation chamber” a euphemism for “torture chamber”?
When she heard about the attempt on the king’s life his master had about hit the roof. Damien wouldn’t have wanted to be whichever Crimson Legionnaire had let the assassin sneak into the castle.
“You did well to spot and subdue her, Damien,” the archmage said. “Since you took her alive, hopefully we can find out who hired her.”
“Thank you, Master.” Damien allowed himself a moment to bask in his mentor’s praise. “I’ve never seen anyone who used their soul force like she did.”
“I’m not surprised.” They rounded a corner and found three red-robed sorcerers facing into an open room. Soul force streamed from the sorcerers. Every time the assassin tried to draw power from her core they severed the link and her conjuring collapsed. He wasn't familiar with that technique. Inside the room a fourth sorcerer in identical robes sat at a simple wooden table facing the assassin.
“She’s a member of a group called the Soul Knives,” the archmage said. “Assassins for hire that specialize in creating soul force weapons of great destructive power. They’re based down south in the badlands. Whoever hired her must have a lot of coin as they don’t work cheap.”
They stopped just beyond the interrogation chamber. Someone had removed the assassin’s mask and outer clothes, leaving her wearing nothing but small clothes. Her thin lips were turned down in a sullen frown. Pale, freckled skin covered a lean, wiry body. Several thin scars marred her flat, well-muscled stomach. She might have been attractive but for the flat, emotionless brown eyes; killer’s eyes. Damien’s father had eyes like that when he fought.
The sorcerer in the room slammed his fist on the table. “Who are you working for?”
The assassin’s cool, indifferent gaze raked him over and dismissed him. Damien doubted just asking would be enough to get her to talk. Maybe they’d need a torture chamber after all.
“I don’t think she’s going to tell us anything,” Damien said.
His master smiled, a tiny, evil curl of her lips. “We haven’t begun the interrogation yet. Alden’s just giving her a chance to talk and save herself some pain. I wanted you to see how he proceeds. This isn’t the sort of thing they teach at Sorcery. Pay close attention.”
She whistled two sharp notes. Alden drew a thin stream of power and drove it straight into the assassin’s brain. She tried to conjure a shield to block the probe, but one of the other sorcerers countered her.
The assassin’s back arched and she screamed. Damien recognized the place Alden stabbed: the pain center of the brain. In healing class they’d learned how to block the flow of pain from a wound to that area, like he’d done for Talon last summer. This looked like the exact opposite of that technique. It never occurred to him to do that.
The questioner shifted his probe to another section of her brain and the screaming stopped. “Who hired you?”
She opened her mouth to speak, but no sound came out. Damien glanced at his master.
“She’s trying to lie, but Alden’s blocked her access to that area of her brain. If she wishes to speak she can only tell the truth. This part of the technique is more important than the pain. If you can’t keep them from lying torture does no good.”
Damien winced when Alden switched his probe back to the pain center, drawing another scream. For her sake, killer or not, he hoped she told them what they wanted to know. “Do you think she’ll break?”
“They all break eventually.” Her cold, emotionless tone sent a chill up Damien’s spine.
Chapter 3
Damien sat at the intricately carved mahogany table in the dining room of the royal quarters. Roast pheasant and a variety of sides covered the table. Uncle Andy sat to his left, Princess Karrie across from him, and Queen Audra to his right. After the attack that morning Uncle Andy had insisted he join the family for supper, as a reward or for protection Damien couldn’t say. For his part Damien was glad to have an excuse to escape the marathon torture session in the dungeon.
He’d never considered himself squeamish, but after two hours of listening to that woman scream he had been happy to beg off and get ready for supper. The assassin was tough, he had to give her credit. Alden had to quit after an hour and a half. While he recovered, a stunning young woman—blond hair, blue eyes, and a perfect figure—took his place.
The sight of perhaps the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen after Lizzy, torturing someone without blinking, amazed him. The strangest thing about the whole process was the lack of blood. Aside from a hoarse voice you’d never know anything had happened to the assassin.
“What’s wrong, Damien?” Queen Audra asked. She wore a blue gown, her long dark hair hanging loose down her back. Damien had never been as close to the queen as he was to Uncle Andy. Whenever his family visited the capital she spent most of her time gossiping with her ladies. Uncle Andy liked to play with him and Jen. “Isn’t the pheasant to your liking?”
Damien looked down at his almost untouched plate. Everything tasted like ashes after the torture session. As far as he knew the assassin was still screaming under their feet. Thinking about it soured his stomach.
“Everything’s delicious. I guess after the attack I don’t have much appetite.”
He looked up and found Karrie staring at him with her bright, green eyes. She batted her eyelashes, trying to play the flirt. Since he’d last seen her Karrie had grown into a pretty girl. Straight black hair framed a heart-shaped face and a slim body was just starting to show signs of the woman she’d be. In a couple more years, when she finished filling out, the noble boys would be fighting over her and not just because she stood to inherit the throne.
“It’s a good thing you were there today.” Uncle Andy took a sip of wine. “A lot of people might have gotten hurt otherwise.”
“My master said to make myself useful. Capturing assassins seemed useful.”
Uncle Andy laughed and dug back into his meal, an attempt on his life insufficient to blunt his appetite. Damien nibbled a few more bites. The pheasant really did taste wonderful. To his surprise, five minutes later, he’d cleaned his plate. He fought a yawn and lost. It had been a long day.
“You look all in,” Uncle Andy said. “What do you say we call it a night?”
Before Damien could respond a tremor ran through the room, setting the silverware to rattling. The little quake lasted for maybe five seconds.
“Bloody tremblers,” Uncle Andy said. “I swear, if it’s not one thing it’s another.”
Damien stood and stretc
hed. The tremors were a nuisance, but basically harmless. “I think I’ll head to my room. I’m afraid I wasn’t good company tonight.”
Audra patted his knee. “Don’t give it another thought. Go get some sleep.”
Damien bowed to the queen and shook Uncle Andy’s hand.
“I’ll walk you to your room.” Karrie popped out of her chair.
Damien’s jaw clenched and released. He tried to think of a polite way to refuse, but nothing came to him. The walk only took a couple of minutes. He could tolerate her unwanted attention for that long. It wasn’t that he disliked Karrie, she was a sweet girl, he just didn’t like her the way she wanted him to.
“That’s a good idea, sweetheart,” Uncle Andy said. “You need to spend more time with people your own age.”
Damien glanced at Uncle Andy. Was the king trying to set him up with his daughter? By heaven, he hoped not. Karrie had unreasonable ideas enough without her father encouraging her.
Karrie grabbed his arm and tugged him toward the door. He swallowed a sigh and let her lead him out of the royal apartment. Outside the sumptuous quarters waited the same plain gray halls as everywhere else in the castle. Damien loved visiting Uncle Andy, but it felt good to get back into surroundings he found comfortable. Now if he could just get Karrie to loosen her death grip on his arm so he could walk without tripping on her.
Damien turned right. His quarters sat on the same floor as the royals’, but in the opposite wing. “Could you give me a little space before we fall?”
“Are you sure?” She rubbed her small, firm breasts against his arm.
Damien hesitated a moment before he pulled gently away. He needed this complication right now like he needed to wrestle a demon barehanded. “I’m sure.”
She released his arm and pouted. “Why? There are half a dozen boys that would cut their best friend’s throat to walk with me.”