Breaking the Gloaming

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Breaking the Gloaming Page 1

by J. B. Simmons




  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1 - Prologue

  Chapter 2 - Coup In The Underworld

  Chapter 3 - Smuggling Loyalty

  Chapter 4 - A Close Shave

  Chapter 5 - A Leveling Wind

  Chapter 6 - Shining Unseen

  Chapter 7 - Perils Of A Foreign Land

  Chapter 8 - Family Archives

  Chapter 9 - Femmes And Boys

  Chapter 10 - Limited Perspective

  Chapter 11 - The Stranger

  Chapter 12 - Children's Senses

  Chapter 13 - Immersion At Risk

  Chapter 14 - Light From A Smuggler

  Chapter 15 - The End Of A Man

  Chapter 16 - Underworld Dreams

  Chapter 17 - Strained Prayers

  Chapter 18 - Threads Leading To Chaos

  Chapter 19 - War Games

  Chapter 20 - A Boy King's Princess

  Chapter 21 - A Traitor To All

  Chapter 22 - Faith And War

  Chapter 23 - The Three Meet Again

  Chapter 24 - Birth Pains

  Chapter 25 - Breaking Out

  Chapter 26 - Unexpected Unity

  Chapter 27 - Signs Of A Renewed Life

  Chapter 28 - Opportunity In A Stalemate

  Chapter 29 - Dark Reunions

  Chapter 30 - The Duel

  Chapter 31 - The Power Of Last Words

  Chapter 32 - Victory In Defeat

  Chapter 33 - Epilogue

  Quotations Before Chapters

  Author Page

  BREAKING THE GLOAMING

  A Novel

  J.B. SIMMONS

  Copyright © 2014 by J.B. Simmons.

  All rights reserved.

  Names, characters, and incidents in this book are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Resemblance to actual events, locations, or persons is coincidental.

  Cover by Soheil Hamidi Tousi.

  [email protected]

  www.jbsimmons.com

  For my dads

  Chapter 1

  PROLOGUE

  “By its light will the nations walk,

  and the kings of the earth

  will bring their glory into it.”

  Two men and a woman sat in the high tower of an old noble house. The candles in the room had nearly burned down, but the first morning light was shining on the parchment before them.

  They had negotiated over the words through the night. It had been mostly cordial, thanks in part to the wine, but a few threats and bribes had been necessary to find agreement on the stickier points. Now they were done, and each had applied their seals in blood.

  Ravien stood with her hands planted on the table, staring down at the inked words. She had not wanted it to come to this. Andor was supposed to bring her brother back, but her brother was a proud man. He had been wrong to entrust Ramzi with power and wrong to try to dismantle the nobles. Still, Valemidas needed him to lead its army against the coming threat. At least her brother was last seen alive, and this agreement was the best chance of bringing him back. Mailyn had told only her that she carried Tryst’s child. Walking to the window, Ravien looked out over the ocean to the east of Valemidas. The view brought some peace, because it reminded her that she and Wren would be sailing away from this place for a while.

  The old noble, Justus Davosman, paced around the table and the parchment. He had long feared that this day would come. The Lycurgus had been a step in the right direction, a return to the old ways of discipline and fortitude. Valemidas had grown too soft, and a city like that could never stand long against another people hungry for power. This agreement meant it would soon be time to spread the news that only the three in this room knew. If Andor had the courage, that news could save Valemidas. Davosman alone knew Andor’s parents and their lineage, which gave him hope in the restored prince.

  Sebastian leaned back in his chair with a smile. His people, the Sunans, could not lose with this agreement. Either they conquer or they walk away with chests full of this city’s treasures. The infighting of their princes had left them vulnerable, as had generations of peace before Tryst. If his people conquered, no one would be in a better position to be prince than he. This agreement saw to that.

  Chapter 2

  COUP IN THE UNDERWORLD

  “The more I thought about it,

  the more I dug out of my memory

  things I had overlooked or forgotten.

  I realized then that a man

  who had lived only one day

  could easily live for

  a hundred years in prison.

  He would have enough memories

  to keep him from being bored.

  In a way, it was an advantage.”

  The room was dark, and not because of a change in the light. The dim gray light was the same as always, seeping into our city from the top of the wall around us. The room was dark because I was in it, starving and alone.

  I sat cross-legged in the center of the emptiness. This was my perch atop the tallest building in the Gloaming. I stared down at the floor, at the knots of wood twisted over the long lives of long dead trees. I understood knots like these. They were scars from a wounded past.

  My mind reeled through the recent months. It all started when I woke Andor with a sword at his neck. I had stolen his throne, and I had sent him here to rot. There were no emotions in that memory. There was only obedience—obedience to Ramzi, my now-headless advisor, and to my will to power. Once I gained that power, I had gone parading to war.

  But then Andor’s face had appeared again, returned from this city of the lost. I remembered my anger when I saw him in Icaria. I remembered my pain when everyone, even my own sisters, betrayed me for him. I remembered when he cast me down here and followed after me. I came to bring you out, he had said. The words haunted me, for I had denied him and attacked. It ended with a dagger stabbing through my hand, Andor escaping, and me going into a rage against the men who failed to stop him. Then came my solitude in this dark, empty room.

  At least the hole in my hand was starting to heal. Soon after Andor had pierced it, the wound had swollen into a blazing mound of red flesh. The skin around it seemed to suck up all my heat. My body and mind grew feverish, furious.

  I had risked one visit to the floor below, where I had told my strongest man, Cain, to find salt and a clean bit of cloth. Cain was a murderer and a rapist—the kind of man destined to decay in the Gloaming. Still, he had served me well. In little time, he had returned to me with water and a salty cloth. I did not ask about the source of the salt. It was better not to know whether it was sweat wiped from some dying man.

  I had taken the food, cleaned my festering wound, and settled into a fitful sleep. As my body had fought back the infection, Cain maintained order in my place. He was to seek me only if our rule became endangered, but he did not come again. Time passed in quiet. Minutes became hours and maybe days. My hand began to heal, but the dimension of time was lost to me. Everything was pain and darkness, pierced by occasional shouts of men fighting to the death. That was the Gloaming.

  Now that the fever was lifting, my stomach ached with hunger. I was tired of sitting alone with my memories. I rose and staggered down the steps.

  Cain was there, talking with a handful of men. He was a brute, towering over the others. His face was blunt and covered in scars. I did not recognize any of the men behind him. It seemed he had replaced my original group with his own. I glanced at a handsome pile of food in the far corner. Then Cain spotted me.

  “What did I tell you?” Cain jeered at me. “He’s alive. It was just a matter of time before he came groveling for
food.” The brute stepped toward me. “Sword on the ground. Do it now and you might live.”

  I stayed on the stairs, with the prince’s sword Zarathus held in front of me and my other hand hidden behind my back. “You supported me from the beginning,” I said. “I gave you order and a home here. Now you betray me?”

  “This is no home,” Cain answered, moving closer. “This is a battleground. We were loyal to your creed, not to you.” His voice was low and raspy, like a common criminal. “The strong take what they can, the weak suffer what they must.” He said the words that Ramzi and I had loved.

  “You think I am weak, but you are wrong.” I tried to project strength, though I was too weak to fight them all. “Come, test my creed. But before you do, know that you can lay down your arms now, step back, and remain free to rule under me.”

  “I cannot do that.” Cain stepped up the first stair, blade drawn, within range. It was the same blade I had used against Andor. The rust had been removed. “Give me the sword now or die.” He and his men tensed to strike.

  I swung Zarathus down at him. Cain deflected the attack. He pressed forward, his men close behind, and I stepped backwards up the stairs, holding the higher ground.

  I knew I could not stand for long. The men threw pieces of bone and stone at me as Cain hammered away with his blade. He was brutally strong, and my one good arm barely held him back. Zarathus was meant for two hands, and I was distracted trying to dodge whatever the other men hurled at me.

  I saw one thrown rock too late. It slammed into my shoulder and almost knocked my blade to the floor. I turned and fled up the stairs. I ran to the far side of my dark room. There I would have more space to move, more time to think. But there was nowhere to escape.

  Cain charged into the room after me. He slowed as he drew closer, to allow his men to stay close. He still knew better than to fight me by himself.

  I found my back against the wall, with the men forming a net around me. I shouted out in desperation. “Who is with me?”

  My shout made everything pause for an instant.

  Then one man answered, “For Tryst!”

  I dashed toward him, at the corner of the room and the far end of the encircling men. He had young, wild eyes. He pointed with a rusted dagger to the stairs, and turned to run along the edge of the room. The momentary confusion was gone, and men moved to stop us.

  I swept Zarathus low and slashed at the legs of the nearest men. One went down screaming. It gave me space to leap out of their net. I charged after the man who had answered me. Cain and the others stampeded after us.

  My new ally was struggling to fight past a man who was guarding the stairs. I stabbed my blade into the man’s side without slowing. I retreated down the stairs, the ally following after me.

  No one else blocked the way. We bounded down six flights of stairs and were out the door at the bottom of the building before I risked a look back.

  The man with me ran with an odd grace, like a gazelle. I tucked Zarathus under my bad arm and pulled out the last of my daggers. The next man out of the building was Cain. I flung the little blade at his chest.

  He ducked aside too late. The metal sank into his shoulder. He fell to his knees, and the men with him stopped. They were not so brave without their leader, but he would survive, and so would we.

  “Let’s go,” I said to the gazelle. To rebuild my reign, he might be a good man to start with.

  He nodded with a wild edge in his eyes. “Follow me.” He sprinted off a different way.

  I had little choice but to follow. I was weakened and would not live long on my own. The last time a hand reached down to pull me up, my pride had denied it and led to this mess. I would not make the same mistake again.

  Chapter 3

  SMUGGLING LOYALTY

  “Fortune is like the market where,

  many times, if you can stay a little

  the price will fall.”

  The smuggler breathed easier when he sailed into the River Tyne before dawn. A light wind pulled his boat through the calm, brackish water, like it was carving through glass. Men might be more likely to catch him and kill him here, but at least the ocean was behind him.

  In fifty voyages between Sunan and Valemidas, he had never seen tempests like those of the past month. Storm clouds had taken on personality, black and furious. Lightning had struck with such fierceness that he could still feel the thunder reverberating in his head. Waves rose to four times the height of his main sail. Next time he needed a bigger boat, and maybe a crew.

  If this trip succeeded, he could afford that next boat. His services were in high demand. One buyer was a double-crossing spy who wanted information. There was also a pair of greedy merchant brothers who wanted goods for the black market. Who they were or what they wanted did not matter to the smuggler. He would take anyone’s gold. His right to nobler pursuits had been stolen many years past.

  He stayed close to the south bank of the river as he passed Valemidas. The city was asleep and beautiful. He should not have liked the foreign capital more than he liked his own, but its grandeur was undeniable. The buildings grew up at irregular heights, their steep slate roofs pale in the moonlight. No building reached half the height of the palace that arose from a rocky bluff over the river. The towers and spires and walls were uneven but harmonious, in the way a garden grows from straightly planted lines into a jumble that allows each bloom to capture the most light.

  The smuggler pulled his eyes away from the city to monitor the river. Even though his boat was alone on the water, he let down nets to play the part of a fisherman. His first buyer, the spy, had left clear instructions about the precautions, as if the smuggler needed to be reminded of the peril. It was his business to evade detection. No one else had made as many prohibited voyages between the two great cities.

  The sun had just crested over the ocean behind him when he spotted a small outcrop in the distance. This was where he would meet the spy. No other vessels were in sight. Valemidas was safely behind him and a dense forest awaited him. Tall green trees lined both sides of the river, which was still too far across to throw a stone. He veered to the middle of the water, telling himself it was because the wind shifted and pretending that he did not fear trees. What man feared a forest? A man who grew up in a desert, he laughed to himself.

  Once he was even with the rocks protruding from the otherwise flat southern riverbank, he tacked straight toward them. The boat had hardly touched shore when a dark figure leaped aboard and slammed into him. Next thing he knew, a hooded man was holding him over the rail.

  “Where is His Excellency?” The man demanded. The smuggler felt some relief on hearing the cue.

  “His Excellency Ilir sits on the golden throne, but I follow your call like a desert thrush.”

  The man let him loose on the deck and flung back his hood.

  “Some welcome, Sebastian,” the smuggler said as he rose to his feet and smoothed his clothes. “Is that any way to greet an old friend?”

  The spy’s face was stern, marked by the royal tattoo beside his left eye. The tattoo and their place of birth might have been the only things the two men had in common.

  “Are you alone?” Sebastian began searching the tiny boat.

  “Of course I am. No one can abide my smell for long. The woman I brought with me survived only a week before jumping into the sea to rid herself of me.”

  “Were you followed?” The spy ignored the attempt at humor.

  “Does it look like it?” The smuggler shrugged and nodded toward the empty river. The Sebastian he remembered had smiled as a boy. Apparently that boy died sometime after he came to Valemidas.

  The smuggler pulled out a flask and took a drink. “You are too tense, Sebastian. Rum?” He offered him the flask. “Makes for a great breakfast.”

  “I drink only water,” Sebastian said. He pulled out a small bag that jingled with coins. “What messages do you have for me?” At least he seemed satisfied that they were alone. The smug
gler found him boring yet terrifying—a poor mix.

  “I bring two messages, but I expected a bigger bag. A bag of gold for each message?” The smuggler held out his hand.

  To his surprise, Sebastian gave him the bag. He opened it and was surprised again to see silver instead of gold.

  “That is for the message from my father.” Sebastian reached into his cloak for another, slightly larger bag. “This one is for the message from His Excellency. If your words satisfy me, you can leave with both.”

  “A hard bargain.” The smuggler grinned and was met with a blank stare. Boring and terrifying. He figured he had little choice, as not speaking would result in some torture to make him speak. Besides, he wanted the gold.

  “Your father has been raised to the Triumvirate,” the smuggler said. “So until His Excellency reaches eighteen in a few months, your father and the two priests, Malam and Ilias, rule Sunan as its stewards. His Excellency invited your father because he is the only family he has left…except for you.” The words brought the first flinch of emotion to Sebastian’s face, as the smuggler knew they would.

  The smuggler continued, “The two priests lead the competing sects of the faith. Malam wants Sunan to invade, to convert the Valemidans into worshipers of His Excellency, and to kill those who refuse to repent. Ilias comes up with excuses for delay, for peace, for whatever is not war. He says those who believe in our god can coexist with those who believe in the god of Valemidas.”

  “I know all this,” Sebastian interrupted. “What is the message from my father?”

  “Yes, the message from your father.” The smuggler took a swig from his flask to steady himself. The boat felt too still under his sea legs. “Seban says his way and your way are prevailing. He says His Excellency’s mind is young and loyal to the family. His Excellency understands the alignment of faith and politics. He understands the glory to be won here and after death. He understands your role. That’s all of it.”

 

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