The Lords of Blood and Honey
   By
   David Gardner-Martin
   Published by Arganite Bay
   Arganite Bay
   Ilfracombe, Devon, England
   www.arganitebay.com
   First published by Arganite Bay 2017
   Copyright © 2017 David Gardner-Martin
   The moral right of the author has been asserted
   All rights reserved.
   Without limiting the rights under copyright above, no part of this book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
   ‘The Lords of Blood and Honey’ is the first fantasy book by British author David-Gardner-Martin.
   David lives in Devon, England.
   For more information
   facebook.com/davidgardnermartin/
   www.arganitebay.com
   To be informed when David’s next fantasy book in this series,
   ‘The Lords of Blood and Crystal’
   is released, please email: [email protected]
   Cover artwork and design by Hannah Baker
   www.jamface.co.uk
   For my wife, Annette
   Once sweet, now pure
   Once liquid, now ethereal
   Once living, now life giving
   Spoken words of Jasmine Parthanter, Honeyist Martyr
   Character List
   Proletaires
   Punsworth Pooter
   Proprietor, Pooter & Co, Chartered Accounters
   Glarious Pooter
   Pooter's wife
   Punsworth One
   Pooter child, aged 5
   Punsworth Two
   Pooter child, aged 4
   Punsworth Three
   Pooter child, aged 2
   Allacar
   The Pooter’s adopted son, aged 8, Adopted Eject
   John Cabble
   Numberer, Pooter & Co, Chartered Accounters
   Mr Royspark Badger
   Owner, Crastwick Stoneworks
   Mr Nutspat
   Bookkeeper, Crastwick Stoneworks
   Brinth Codswalloper
   Acquaintance of the Pooters
   Seldomly Codswalloper
   Acquaintance of the Pooters
   Hivedom
   Lord Hardknot
   967th Keeper of the Royal Honeybees, Eject
   Duke of Thistlebergh
   966th Keeper of the Royal Honeybees
   Morthern Yule
   Senior Beekeeper
   Hivecarls
   Hardknot's personal bodyguard
   Heldhard
   Hivecarl commander
   Darrius Slate
   Master of the Infusion Chamber
   Drollkeepers
   Breed Drollups in the Deep Hives
   Surrogates
   Female Ejects, taken to the Deep Hives
   Holy Church of Afterwards
   Cardinal Oblong
   Primate of the Holy Church of Afterwards
   Archbishop Intactum
   Principal of the Council of Yesses
   Bishop Henceforth
   Prime Predicate
   Bishop Constantly
   Senior Bishop & Scholar
   Bishop Scrippler
   Senior Bishop
   Relical Pater Bartolamy
   Relical and Mesharist
   Relical Totamus
   Relical
   Forster Culcuth
   Lady Allessia's teacher in Holy Indoctrination
   High Commander Sideswipe
   Commander of the Holy Guard. aka 'Old Two Grins'
   Sisters of St. Salacious
   Order of Sexual Companionship
   Ejects
   Offspring of Sisters of St. Salacious
   Innocents
   Male Ejects taken to the Hellholes
   Surrogates
   Female Ejects taken to Deep Hives
   Nobles
   King Samel
   King
   Queen Camellia
   Queen
   Duke of Westnaine
   Palace Overlord, Noble conspirator
   Lord Chillhide
   Mascone, Noble conspirators Nominate for the crown
   Lord Eaglett Rootsby
   An ageing Noble, recently returned to the City
   Earl Rumball
   Noble conspirator, Lady Allessia’s father
   Lady Rumball
   Lady Allessia’s mother
   Lady Allessia
   The Rumball’s daughter
   Earl Sawstone
   Palace spy for Lord Hardknot
   Baron Pencille
   Mascone, Cardinal Oblong’s Nominate for the crown
   Lord-Marshall Highgate
   Commander of the King's Army
   General Forgewell
   Commander of the Palace Guard
   Sir Horace Underworth
   Commander of the Castell Florret
   Palace
   Annie Rubetter
   King’s Nursekeeper, Eject
   Lasivia
   Femone, Vessel of Prime Integrity
   Yashishi
   Femone
   Olarra
   Femone
   Heather
   Femone
   Lucidity
   Femone
   Mrs Pultroon
   The Rumball’s Cook
   Femones
   Daughters of a King and a Femone
   Mascones
   Sons of a King and a Femone
   Harmones
   Femones, given birth to a Femone or Mascone
   Drollups
   Fatherless offspring of a Queen
   Board of Doings
   Archfrantic Thunderbrow
   Highseat
   Archfrantic Hogstone
   Primary Recorder
   Archfrantic Whiteknees
   Aged Member
   Shufflers
   Ramuth-Pro
   Prince of Dealmakers
   Thum-Print
   Ramuth-Pro's bookkeeper
   Luy-Kawn
   Assistant to Ramuth-Pro
   Shad-Grit
   Gutterscraper
   Other
   Abather
   Pooter's Toothless Grinhound
   Jazpahs
   Created in the Deep Hives
   Vulfkings
   Famed warrior race, mercenary
   Vulfbears
   Vulfking fighting beasts
   Zenjos
   Paid assassins
   Prologue
   The man sensed his ghostly companions as soon as the richness of his cloak became lost beneath a dense canopy of trees. Knowing their heritage, he rested his hand on the hilt of a blade until he cleared the last vestiges of the forest. Such beings would not follow him into daylight.
   He climbed the nearest rise without a backward glance, and on reaching the summit he sat upon a rocky ledge to catch his breath. The combined rays of light from the Green, Red and Blue Suns, brought form to the hills that rose and fell before him like a sea. Beyond them, the Northern Wall of the City stood proud, as if a cliff of granite guarding a distant island.
   The sweet scent came to him upon the breeze, stirring long-forgotten memories. He closed his eyes and breathed in deeply to savour its many gifts. When he opened them again a lone hunting jawbeak flew by, as if guiding his vision to the still familiar skyline. He saw the Dome of St. Vacant’s Cathedral, the heart of the Holy Church of Afterwards, silver in the pure white light. Challenging it for attention, the Grand Hive, towering like a dagger over the Hivedom of the Royal 
Honeybees. And beyond them both, the Palace of the King and Queen, in a monstrous confusion of towers and turrets and vast disordered wings.
   The individuality of more modest buildings was lost in all-pervading greyness, for it had been many years since Cardinal Oblong, driven by his hatred of the outlawed Honeyist faith, had banished all flowers and blossoms from the City. Only the Hivedom of Lord Hardknot, much to Oblong’s rage, was still permitted to cultivate the pollen and nectar necessary for the wellbeing of the Royal Hives. But for how long?
   As for the inhabitants of the sprawling City, be they Noble, Clergy, Proletaire or Downcast, at such a distance their movements could not be seen.
   He stared further still and into a distant haze, imagining the flat grazing lands and grain fields that fed the City. Only those who tended livestock or harvested crops, were ever permitted to visit these furthest boundaries of life.
   This then was the Kingdom; vast, ordered, contained, and utterly self-sufficient. As if a gigantic beehive left within a wilderness for an age of time.
   He drew the air within him once more, the sweet scent now tinged with the unmistakable perfume of Royal Clover. But deep within the beauty, as if a trace of smoke upon a breeze, there came the perception of evil. There was no time to lose.
   The Green Sun fell towards the horizon; her sisters, Red and Blue, painted the sky with ice-cold magenta. He stood, pulled his cloak tight to guard against a stiffening wind, and walked briskly down a roughhewn track. He had been in a different time and place for very many years; now he was returning on a matter of the utmost importance.
   Chapter 1
   By the time Mr Punsworth Pooter forced his way through the carnival atmosphere in Pumpkin Square, the Green Sun could no longer be seen above the Inner-City walls. Brilliant purple streaked the sky, the high cirrus clouds specked with jawbeaks on the lookout for a meal. Several people in the square, mistaking his dress for that of a noble, delayed his progress to inquire after the King’s health. For the first few interruptions Pooter delighted in playing along with the masquerade, even taking it upon himself to provide a brief prognosis of the corporeal presence, but by the fourth such interruption he grew tired of the distraction, and merely stated curtly as he hurried by that; ‘The King is as well as can be expected.’
   ‘And the Queen?’ a voice shouted after him, a question answered only by Pooter’s sparkling blue wig disappearing from view.
   Abather, his Toothless Grinhound, stood guard before his office in Hexagonal Place, a series of friendly gruffs greeting his arrival. Her ferocious bark had softened somewhat of late, whilst her large emerald eyes were now dimmed. A day was approaching when the expenditure on a replacement would have to be endured, guard dogs of such a highly-regarded pedigree being far from cheap. But over the years Pooter had become inordinately fond of Abather, and when the time came to replace her, had already decided she would follow him home to a well-earned retirement.
   ‘Good girl,’ he said, patting her head, a familiar action that brought a predictable wagging of her two long tails.
   Entering the hallway, he noticed an unfamiliar cloak hanging on the hat stand, its rich colours clear to see even in the half-light. No entries had been made in his diary for his day at the Palace, and yet voices echoed from his office. He had an unexpected visitor, and in Pooter’s world of dates and times of appointments, this was most unusual. More than that, it was a further distraction to a day that was already fast disappearing. He removed his irritating formal wig and tight-fitting ceremonial shoes and walked quietly down the hall to the door. One voice was recognisably that of his numberer, John Cabble, whilst the other was not in the least familiar. He pressed his ear to the door but still could hear only an occasional word. With the illness to the King well-known, these were uncertain times, and there was every possibility that an unexpected visitor might wish him harm, financial, physical, or otherwise. He formulated a plan and walked softly back down the hallway.
   Abather furrowed her brow as Pooter closed the door behind him and rang the bell. It was her duty to give all visitors a gentle growl, but her master ringing his own door bell was more than perplexing. Pooter winked, Abather responding in a confusion of growls and wagging of tails.
   As he had hoped, Cabble left the office to answer the door, Pooter pulling him outside with a hand across his mouth to silence any exclamation of surprise.
   ‘Who is in my office?’ whispered Pooter urgently, and then removed his hand.
   ‘I am afraid I do not know, sir,’ replied Cabble, in a similar whisper and evidently relieved that his master had at last returned. ‘The gentleman will not give his name.’ He looked back down the hallway towards Pooter’s office. ‘All he says is that he has to see you, Mr Punsworth Pooter, on “a matter of the utmost importance.”’
   ‘Has he not said anything more on the reason for his visit?’
   ‘No, sir,’ replied Cabble shaking his head, ‘not another word. But he is a most interesting gentleman, for he has told me much about the ancient history of our Kingdom that I never did learn at school. But whenever I tried to get back to my books, as how you had firmly instructed, and suggested he might wish to come back another day, he would say once again in such a voice, “No, I must stay and wait for your master.”’
   ‘What of his dress?’
   ‘Bold shoes cut to the very highest degree, sir, though not the cleanest I have seen. And clothes of the greatest workmanship, though somewhat aged and torn in places. If I was asked, sir, I’d say he was well-travelled of late.’
   ‘But…why is he here?’ asked Pooter, as he tried to imagine who such a man might be.
   ‘He gave no reason for his visit, sir, none at all, other than he has to see you this very day.’
   ‘Is there anything else of note?’
   ‘Indeed there is, sir, for never have I seen a man with such eyes before. One minute as normal as can be, and the next bursting into life with such a display of colours that I can’t hardly describe.’
   A gruff from Abather reminded Pooter that the visitor, whoever he was and whatever he wanted, was still in his office. There was time for no more questions.
   For some strange reason Pooter felt compelled to knock at his own office door before entering. He had donned his wig and ceremonial shoes once more; as a newly Elevated Proletaire he intended to portray every possible advantage; and when he heard a low resonant voice say ‘Enter’, he took a deep breath and opened the door.
   The visitor was standing by the window with his back to the room. Pooter considered his bearing in an instant, such a skill being second nature to a man in his profession. There was now no doubt about it; the person before him, despite the ravages inflicted upon his dress, was clearly of the highest nobility. The dreadful thought struck Pooter that he might have committed some crime against Palace etiquette that very day, many of which had severe penalties, but before he had time to give this any further consideration, the figure at the window turned to face him. As was required from a proletaire when meeting a noble, Pooter gave a deep formal bow.
   ‘Mr Punsworth Pooter,’ he announced to the floor, ‘of Pooter & Co, Chartered Accounters.’
   There was a pause followed by the creak of floorboards as the stranger walked towards him, but no words were spoken. A dark fear fell over Pooter as he saw the shadow approach, but despite an urge to take flight, he knew that no movement from a formal bow could be made before the acknowledgement. Then to his relief, the stranger spoke.
   ‘Mr Pooter,’ they said, in a firm deep voice. ‘Rise and allow yourself to meet me. For I am Lord Eaglett Rootsby, the Seventy-Hundred and Twenty-Third.’
   Pooter’s heart thumped in his chest. No less than a Lord in his office, and one clearly come on a matter of great importance. He straightened, there being no other choice, and looked into the face before him.
   Whilst Lord Rootsby was clearly a man of advanced years, something about him conveyed a sense of extraordinary power. His features, though not severe, deman
ded respect, whilst his bold eyes did indeed seem to shimmer with inner fire. So captured was Pooter by their depth, that he almost forgot to respond to the greeting, and he fell over his words as he finally returned the formality. ‘I am delighted…most delighted…to meet you, My Lord,’ he said. ‘And I deeply regret that you have been waiting for such a time. For I have upon this very day been Elevated, and in attendance at the Palace. At the Ceremony of Approbation.’
   His words died in the air as Rootsby’s eyes bored into his own.
   ‘You are late returning, Mr Pooter,’ said Rootsby.
   ‘I was delayed, My Lord. In, I mean by, the square. The people in it, that is.’
   ‘Ah yes,’ Rootsby acknowledged. ‘Always such curiosity for the affairs of the King.’ He walked back to the window once more. ‘A most uninspiring view, Mr Pooter, is it not?’ he said, and with such statement of fact that Pooter felt unable to reply. He did however feel moved to join the tall figure at the window, and as the pair studied the scene in silence, so Pooter’s heart sank with every passing second. It was true that his office was one of the most elegantly situated in Hexagonal Place, an office that had come with a price that regularly taxed his income, but seeing now as if with newly opened eyes the dull green gardens and drab grey buildings that lay before him, he wondered how he had ever been so excited by such a setting.
   
 
 The Lords of Blood and Honey (The Kingdom of Honey) Page 1