Fox's Bride

Home > Science > Fox's Bride > Page 1
Fox's Bride Page 1

by Marling, A. E.




  by

  Copyright © 2012 A.E. Marling

  Cover illustration by Eva Soulu

  Graphic design by Raymond Chun

  Editor: Heather G Coman

  Special thanks to the Reading Vanguard:

  Christina, Stephanie, Corey, Vylar, Laurel, Zed, Lisa, and Robin.

  First electronic publication: October, 2012

  First Edition eBook

  Meet the humble scribe:

  On Twitter: @AEMarling

  Facebook: AEMarling

  and

  http://aemarling.com/

  for my parents,

  who love spending the evening

  reading the same book

  together

  Contents:

  Chapter 1: The Fox’s Proposal

  Chapter 2: God or Beast

  Chapter 3: First Trader’s Inn

  Chapter 4: Sky Streams

  Chapter 5: Escaping Paradise

  Chapter 6: Land Ships

  Chapter 7: Edict and Whim

  Chapter 8: Bleak Wells

  Chapter 9: Tomb Tower

  Chapter 10: Gilded Trap

  Chapter 11: Blood Judgment

  Chapter 12: Kenneled

  Chapter 13: Furry Pandemonium

  Chapter 14: Sky Luncheon

  Chapter 15: Downsky

  Chapter 16: Oasis Dragon

  Chapter 17: Sealed

  Chapter 18: Flying Fox

  Chapter 19: Jewel Piercings

  Chapter 20: The Ceremony

  Chapter 21: Corruption

  Chapter 22: Gemstone Volley

  Chapter 23: Mind Maze

  Chapter 24: Goddess’ Wrath

  Chapter 25: Homage to the Night

  Chapter 26: The Bargain

  Chapter 27: Grave Bride

  Chapter 28: Tomb Dance

  Chapter 29: Riot the Dead

  Epilogue

  Enchantress Hiresha made a point of falling asleep at all the best parties. Her peculiar condition no longer embarrassed her, and she rather thought it a luxury to close her eyes and wallow through the lullaby conversations of the desert empire's dignitaries. They had to invite her back regardless.

  Scarabs of lapis lazuli adorned necks, their wings crafted of red-agate tiles. Scented wax melted down glistening skin. Women wore headdresses of flowers. Guards lofted gemstone-studded axes and sickle swords, the weapons ignored with an edge of scorn by merchant princes and scribe lords. A tribal headman stooped to speak into the ear of a fine-boned native of the desert, and all of them respected the court fashions by wearing wigs of braided black and linen of gossamer white.

  Hiresha wore a defiance of purple. Amethysts in her gown glittered in spirals. Ladies and lords averted their eyes from her then snuck further glances.

  A noblewoman dropped a folded cloth near Hiresha. While the lady waited for a servant to replace it, she spoke in a whisper. “The gods work through you, Elder Enchantress. Our daughter sees with two eyes because of you.”

  Hiresha was neither so young nor so old that she enjoyed her title of “elder,” but relief passed through her to learn of her enchantment's success. Regenerating eyes often confounded her.

  “Excellent.” Hiresha could not remember the client's name through her drowsiness. “Do the eyes match? In color.”

  “Both a wonderful amber.” Red filaments of spider lilies curved from the lady's wig and bounced. She straightened as a lord limped near enough to overhear. Her tone of voice changed, and she took a step away. “And that hue of dress is so, ah, bold.”

  Hiresha narrowed her eyes. She could excuse the wish among nobility to hide their ailments, even if it meant snubbing the enchantress who cured them. However, Hiresha had designed the dress herself and chosen amethysts because of her love for the color, and she would not allow a narrow mind to condescend to her.

  The noblewoman said, “Not to say that purple is a mistake, but have you thought of undyed silk and diamonds? Do promise to send my tailor the patterns for the dress.”

  “Only if you promise never to wear it.”

  Hiresha worried she should not have said that. Words had a habit of gallivanting out before her fatigue-soaked mind could close the doors of propriety. Weariness flowed like sand around her, each step harder and harder when all she wanted to do was lean back and let the soothing heat carry her off to comfort and peace. She swayed and blinked on the brink of dozing. Her slippered feet trod over pink and white flower petals, strewn down the center of the throne room as thick as a carpet.

  She forced her eyes open to admire the quality of enchantments within the palace architecture. Magic pulled water upward within crystal columns and transparent walls. The blueness gushed overhead, spinning up a glass dome in an upside-down whirlpool to cascade from a central skylight to a pool in the floor. The sound of rushing water accompanied the tinkling of wine poured into glazed bowls and the ruckus of merchant lords.

  Hiresha glanced over her shoulder to see her guard, Spellsword Chandur. He wore a vest of scale armor and a purple velvet coat to match her gown. His eyes reminded her of tiger-gemstones, and wonder stretched them wide as he gazed at the Water Palace, at the gushing water underfoot, at the baskets on pedestals holding rainbows of fruits and monuments of sliced meats. The enchantress enjoyed having Spellsword Chandur nearby. Seeing his amazement informed her what she too might be feeling if fate had not blunted her emotions with fatigue.

  “Chandur,” she began, but a glimpse of another guest caused her throat to catch. She turned away from her bodyguard, inch by inch.

  Her blood surged, tingling sensations zigzagging up from her fingertips to her shoulders. Recognition of a man’s voice wakened her like teeth grazing her throat, his tones of disinterest hiding a playful wickedness.

  “I adore walking on water,” the lord said.

  His collar jutted with crimson feathers from a man-eating bird. After the local fashion, he had painted his eyes with the insignia of a god: two scorpion tails curved upward over his cheeks. Hiresha would have mistaken him for a common nobleman except she knew the secret of his magic. Of all the guests, Hiresha suspected only she knew him as the Lord of the Feast.

  “You have the sense,” the Lord of the Feast said, “you could plunge through the floor and drown in a suffocating, lungs-bursting death. All parties could use such enlivenment.”

  A lady slid a hand over the gold wings of a scarab necklace to touch her throat. “I never thought of it like that.”

  A nobleman backed from the transparent floor onto a flower carpet. “There's no place I'd rather be than in the Water Palace. May the Oasis Empire rule for ten thousand years.”

  “Yes...drowning.” The Lord of the Feast smacked his lips as if sampling a delicacy. “The pharaohs had excellent taste. Can't have your petitioners too comfortable.”

  The Lord of the Feast winked at Enchantress Hiresha. She slid her gaze away, touching two fingers to her chest. Her bodyguard, Chandur, had appeared to have missed the wink, and she hoped no one had seen it.

  Hiresha had spent the last year trying not to think of the Lord of the Feast. People who indulged in Feasting magic were punished with nails driven through leg, neck, and heart. It is only right, she thought. Too much power, too little control. Hiresha had watched the Lord of the Feast slaughter men with that magic. Images wracked her mind of his fingers stretching into fangs, of his arms coiling in the air like a dance of snakes. He had killed to save her life.

  “Enchantress Hiresha?” Chandur's voice was concerned.

  “The heat is affecting me. I—I must return to the inn.” There she could await commissions sent in sealed notes by ailing nobles. “We should go and leave and be gone.”

  She navigated around lords arguing about how to purify salt. Pr
iests in blue robes joined the debate, their bald heads shining. One held a small fox with a jeweled collar and an earring. The fox squeaked at her.

  Hiresha strode down the flower carpet toward the great glass arch of the palace's entrance. The door framed a sky of rippling blue.

  The Lord of the Feast stepped between her and her freedom. His arms stayed motionless at his sides, seemingly paralyzed, as he walked closer.

  She changed course, passing the vizier. A scribe crouched before him, holding a tray stacked with papyrus. The vizier scrawled with a quill, and in the other hand he held a staff mounted with a baboon carved from an opal, an effigy of the deity of knowledge and enchantment. Hiresha made a silent promise to her goddess that she would not dishonor her profession and her life's plans merely because she desired an acquaintance with a Feaster.

  Hiresha considered warning the vizier that one of the pharaoh's lords was also a master of forbidden magics. The vizier would then demand how she knew him to be the Lord of the Feast. She could lie, but as the royal guards led him to his execution, he could tell of Hiresha's unfortunate but necessary association with him to save her city. They could search her and find a red diamond he had once given her.

  She hated to think of him betraying her. The thought of doing the same to him disgusted her as much.

  Perhaps he does not pose a threat to the gathering, she told herself. The accounts of him using his magic in the daytime are likely exaggerated. The brightness shimmering through the glass ceiling would dissolve his illusion spells.

  The vizier never looked up from his writing. She returned the lack of acknowledgement with aplomb.

  Hiresha had lost sight of the Lord of the Feast but thought that he had to want to speak to her, perhaps as much as Hiresha desired to talk to him. That scared her more than anything. She worried he would catch her while she navigated between servants waving palm fans.

  A man holding a folded cloth to mark him as a noble stepped into her path. “Enchantress Hiresha, I assume you know whom I am.”

  Since he felt himself too important for a simple “who,” she guessed him from a long line of preening peacocks. “Your pardon, yet I'm—”

  “In an awkward position, I know.” The nobleman shifted his girth to better block her way. His turquoise-plated belt was like a barricade. “I don't judge people by their low birth, and I say you deserve land titles.”

  “Actually, I bought a few tracks around Morimound. Now if you'll excuse—”

  “But no plots of the royal salt fields. No influence here, at the heart of the Lands of Loam.” He shook his head. “Disgraceful, when the gods of wealth and fortune have blessed you more than any other unmarried woman in the empire.”

  “These conversations tend to go only one way. Let us skip to the end,” Hiresha said. The human blockade had delayed her too long, and she worried the Lord of the Feast would catch up to her any moment. “No, I will not marry you, your sons, or any other debtors of rank you hoped to thrust upon me.”

  “'Debtors?' I'll have you know that my dealings….”

  As she edged around the noble, a thorn of apprehension traced over the skin of her back. Some shred of instinct in the man with the gemstone belt must have warned him to silence. The Lord of the Feast stalked into view from behind a pair of tribal kings.

  “Hiresha.” He bowed, arms hanging to the glass floor. “My memory must be failing. Or were you this beautiful when we last met?”

  Her blood seared her face, pulsing in her neck in bursts of unwanted delight. She reminded herself that she should give no encouragement to the Lord of the Feast. Best for me to ignore him. She could have no future with a Feaster. He would destroy her life's plan.

  “My heart,” the Lord of the Feast said to Hiresha, “you must be less loud with your silence. People are beginning to stare.”

  A yelp drew the court’s attention from her to the group of priests. The Lord of the Feast glanced toward the men in blue robes, and one winced and stuck the side of his hand in his mouth. The crowd rippled outward from him, and noblemen pointed toward the ground and murmured.

  “The Golden Scoundrel!”

  “The fennec.”

  “It's a sign. The Incarnate runs toward the door. The price of salt will go down.”

  “No, you fool! It means it'll go up.”

  Hiresha used the distraction to skirt around the Lord of the Feast. A path opened between the guests and down the flower carpet toward the door. She thought she might escape.

  The fox with the jeweled earring and collar strutted onto the carpet of pink petals. Each of his ears were bigger than his head, and Hiresha had a disturbing feeling that the tiny predator trotted forward to meet her. Her back prickled as she sensed the human hunter also closing in from behind.

  Men and women bowed before the fox's black-tipped tail. The enchantress did not. The gems in his collar are only emeralds, after all. Neither would she walk over the kitten-sized creature. If she understood the matter, this was more than a royal pet.

  “Chandur,” Hiresha said, turning her chin to the side to glance at her guard, “why is this pygmy staring up at me?”

  “I believe...” Tendons tightened in Spellsword Chandur's neck. His lips whitened when they pinched together. “...this fox is their god.”

  A single amethyst from the enchantress' gown would have satisfied Inannis. Just one of the purple gems plucked by his hands and defiled. Her riches came from divine will. Stealing from her would be one more chance to spite the immortals who had cursed him.

  Chills skittered over his skin, under his robes. His mouth was hot with fever, his tongue swollen. The urge to cough ground in his chest, but he steadied his breathing. No one looking at his calm face and priest robes would guess they hid a blighted body, an enemy of the gods.

  Thoughts of stealing the jewel twirled in his mind in sweet pangs of anticipation, but he braced himself against them. Won't risk for a trinket, Inannis thought, with a trove within reach. A life other than his uncertain one depended on his success.

  The details of his intended sacrilege turned over in his mind. On the last theft, his partner had been caught. This heist had to be perfect. Inannis hoped both to wound the pride of a god and break free his partner, before her execution. She deserves better than a death of public amusement.

  A few minutes before, when the enchantress' gown had passed within knifing distance, the fennec fox squeaked a yip. The priest holding the Incarnate of the Golden Scoundrel nodded to her. The fennec's furry ears rotated at the sound of her guard's thudding boots, the two cones full of white hairs on the animal's head moving in unison. The emerald stud in one ear taunted Inannis with its nearness.

  His palms itched, but he stilled himself. Patience was his strongest muscle.

  The enchantress walked toward the palace doors. Inannis wanted to weep at the sight of her jewels escaping. One day, he promised himself.

  “Ah!” The priest holding the fennec jerked. The god had dug his sharp teeth into the flesh of the man's palm. With a flick of tail, the fennec leaped from the priest's grasp.

  Inannis reached to catch the fox. The thief too had been caught by surprise since the furry god usually gave a muffled bark before struggling loose of his keepers. Inannis’ hands grazed the fennec's collar and shoulder but could not close in time.

  Lunging, Inannis intended to snatch the fennec out of the air on his next leap. The fox always jumped again after freeing himself, a vaulting spring that would carry him out of reach. Inannis had developed a habit of anticipating him and took particular pleasure in outsmarting the small god.

  The fennec did not jump this time. He trotted away between gilded sandals and manicured feet.

  “Son Inannis,” another priest said to him, “why have you neglected your duties? And on Gods Week.”

  Inannis gazed at his empty hands. This is good, he told himself. Now he knew not to depend on the fox’s habits. When it mattered, he would leave nothing to chance.

  “Th
e divine teeth are sharp.” The other priest sucked on the blood from his hand wound.

  The priests pursued their god, Inannis behind them. They spotted the fennec marching around the enchantress, whitish gold tail rigid in the air.

  “He's such an adorable god,” one lady said.

  “Ooo! Look at his cute tail.”

  A priest held out his hands. “Behold! He chooses.”

  The fennec walked around the enchantress a second time. Inannis noted the god's gait was restrained, almost stiff, and for once he had given up his chattering noises for solemnity. Inannis had studied the theology of the Golden Scoundrel enough to pass as a priest, and he feared he knew what was happening here.

  Don't you walk around her again, he thought, don't think claiming her will protect you. An itching built in his chest into a greasy ball of flame that would burn him until he coughed. His teeth clenched even as he tried to hold muscles in his face slack.

  The enchantress' gaze lagged behind the fennec. “I cannot possibly see what interest this fox has in me.”

  She took two steps toward the door. The fox ran around her a third time.

  Well played, Inannis thought, you big-eared ball of immortal fur and shit. But you'll need better. You won't stop me unless you make me hack out my heart.

  A spasm from his chest bent Inannis over. A cough scratched its way up his throat. His eyes watered, face reddened.

  The fennec rested one fore paw over the other and laid his white chin atop them as if bowing to the enchantress.

  The priest swung his hands into the air. “The Golden Scoundrel has chosen his bride. All praise the god of family and fortune! All praise his betrothed!”

  “Praise them! Praise them!”

  The rich men lifted their ebony staves and their folded cloths. The women cupped hands to mouths.

  “Oh! Now the year is perfect.”

  “Why couldn't he have chosen me?”

  “If only I had her dress.”

  “...and with only four days left to the Newborn Year.”

  “This is a good sign for the empire markets, a good sign.”

  Inannis pretended to bow while coughing into the crook of his arm. No one could have heard him amid the shouting. A drop of blood landed on the blueness of his robes, but he sucked as much as he could back through his lips. If people knew a priest smuggled so much corruption inside him, they would kill him. If they found out he was no true priest—was as far from devout as a man could be—he would join his partner in a celebration of public gore. An execution is one time she won't appreciate my company.

 

‹ Prev