There is almost no distinction here between civilians and soldiers, Koyee thought. Barely any shade between peace and bloodshed.
It was a city built for a single purpose: warfare. That both chilled her and kindled hope within her breast.
A growl sounded ahead, and Koyee nearly stopped in her tracks. She drew in breath with a hiss and clutched her sword. Behind her, she heard Torin curse.
"A shadow panther," she whispered.
The beast prowled ahead, crossing the road. Koyee had seen the stray cats that had come upon the Timandrian ships, slinking creatures that lurked in shadows. The creature ahead looked like a black cat the size of a nightwolf. Its eyes gleamed, two golden plates, and its fangs shone. It moved with the grace of wafting smoke. Upon its back rode a soldier, a whip in his hand. Both beast and rider turned to stare at Koyee, and her heart nearly stopped. She was sure the creature would lunge and tear out her neck; its claws were like swords. She was about to draw her own blade when the rider cracked his whip. The panther hissed and bristled, then padded onto another road.
Koyee let out a breath of relief and released her hilt. They kept moving through the city.
They walked for two or three miles, moving up and down the sloping streets. Finally they reached a long, wide road lined with torches in iron sconces. It coiled up a hill like a rotten tongue, leading toward a castle upon the hilltop. A pagoda of black bricks, the castle rose six tiers tall, its roofs tiled blood-red. A great flame burned upon its crest, taller than a man, shrieking in the wind. Koyee had seen the fabled palaces of Pahmey, yet this castle dwarfed them; it was the largest structure she had ever seen, a monument more befitting a god than an empress.
"It looks like a demon's lair," Torin said, walking behind her.
She glared over her shoulder at him. "Hush!"
She gave the rope a tug. Grumbling, he followed silently.
They began to climb the road. Troops lined the roadsides, standing between the torches. Their armor seemed so bulky and heavy—lacquered plates like the shells of beetles—that Koyee wondered how they remained standing. Their helmets, shaped as twisted iron masks, all seemed to leer. Leashed panthers growled at their sides, eyes golden like more torches, fangs bared and black fur bristling.
It was a long climb to the castle. The road alternated between stairs and cobblestones. Koyee's knees ached and her breath burned when they finally reached the gates of Asharo Castle, Hall of Ilar's Dark Empress.
Two panthers framed the gates, clawing the flagstones beneath them. A dozen guards stood between the cats, swords drawn. The gatekeeper who had led Koyee here spoke with them. Koyee expected to be turned aside, ushered into an antechamber for moons of waiting, or even slain on the spot. In Pahmey she had waited for moons to speak to city elders, and here she came seeking an empress. To her surprise, the guards nodded grimly, and the towering doors of the palace—carved of stone and inlaid with golden flame sigils—opened.
As Koyee entered the castle, she thought, Who would have imagined that a village girl would someday enter the hall of an empress?
She found herself in a dark chamber full of soldiers, their helmets the twisted masks of mocking spirits. Banners hung from the walls and torches crackled. A mosaic of a chained, beaten man sprawled across the floor; the figure's mouth was open in anguish and arrows and blades tore into his flesh. Living prisoners stood chained to columns, stripped down to their underclothes, the sigils of their Timandrian kingdoms—scorpions, elephants, and crocodiles—etched into their chests with bleeding cuts. Leashed panthers growled at the prisoners, close enough to claw at skin. The smell of blood, burnt flesh, and embers filled the hall.
Koyee took several steps forward, moving through the smoke of the torches and braziers. When she saw the throne of the empress, she gasped and had to struggle not to draw her blade.
"Stars of my home . . ." she said.
A dragon slithered ahead—not a statue like the thousands across Eloria, but a living beast of black scales, red eyes like smelters, and white fangs as long as her sword. The great serpent regarded her, smoke pluming from his mouth. His red beard and mustache crackled, the tips lit with fire, and his grin spoke of hunger for flesh.
"Tianlong," Koyee whispered. "The last dragon of Ilar."
The dragon coiled around a dais like a snake around an egg. Upon the block of stone rose a throne, all jagged black spikes like blades, its rubies glittering like droplets of blood. It seemed to Koyee more like a torture device than a seat. Upon this hunk of steel and gems sat Empress Hikari, Mistress of Ilar. She was long-limbed and powerfully built, a woman not unlike the panthers who prowled her hall. She wore plate armor, the steel lacquered black, gleaming with crimson gems and bristly with tassels. A mane of white hair cascaded across her shoulders, and her eyes gleamed red, two lanterns in her feline face. A crown of gilded bones sat atop her head, and steel claws grew from her fingers.
Koyee came to stand before the empress and her dragon. She knelt, tugging down Torin to kneel behind her.
"Your Highness, Empress Hikari, Mistress of Night!" Koyee called out. "Tianlong, great beast of fire! I am Koyee, a daughter of Qaelin. I bring with me a prisoner from our war . . . and the allegiance of my people."
Of course, Koyee could not speak for all of Qaelin—perhaps not even for the Chanku Pack, only one of her empire's peoples. Yet the empress did not need to know that.
Empress Hikari stared down at her, fingering a drawn katana that lay upon her lap; fresh blood stained the blade. She slung one leg across the throne's armrest and snickered.
"Qaelin!" said the empress, voice thick with mockery. The word echoed across her hall, and sneers rose among her guards. Even Tianlong the dragon snickered, smoke blasting from his nostrils.
Koyee nodded and rose to her feet. "Qaelin is your ally. Qaelin too fights against the day. Qaeli—"
"Kneel before me, Qaelish worm!" shrieked the empress. "Kneel lest my dragon bites off your soft head. Down!"
Stifling a growl, Koyee knelt again. She stared up at the empress. "You've seen the threat of the day. Let our two empires fight together. Let—"
The empress laughed, the sound of a demon laughing before a meal of man-flesh. "Two empires? Last I heard, the miserable backwater your folk call Qaelin cannot even protect its borders. Tianlong has flown over your darkness, and he saw cities in ruin, soldiers lying torn apart, piles of dead and dying. Qaelin? It is no empire; it is a graveyard for the weak. You could not defeat Ilar with your cowardly assault thirty years ago; now you cannot defeat the day. Yet Ilar still stands strong, proud, and noble." The empress rose to her feet and raised her sword. "We are fire!"
Across the hall, her guards raised their own swords, shouting out the cry. "We are fire!"
Koyee remained kneeling, but she dared to stare at the empress. "Fire? We are the night! Those are the words of all Elorians. We are one people. We are—"
The empress howled and sliced the air with her sword. "You will not spew your poison here! Tianlong will enjoy feasting upon you. One people? We share none of your Qaelish blood. The Ilari are strong, proud, and cruel. Your people are weak and decadent, crumbling into shadow." Hikari thrust her sword into a burning torch, then brought the blade to her mouth and licked the bubbling blood. "But our fire will always burn."
Koyee would not remove her eyes from the empress. "I walked outside your city. I saw the ruins of several sunlit ships. I saw a few hundred Timandrians dead, a few hundred more enslaved. Yes, Ilar defeated a small force in a small skirmish." She clenched her fists. "Half a million Timandrians now march to Yintao, capital of Qaelin. If they sack that city, they will turn their eyes south. Ilar will follow. You won one battle—can you defeat the entire horde of sunlight?"
The empress stared down at Koyee—a stare of loathing, of mockery, of bloodlust. She nodded once then left her throne. The dragon coiling around her dais loosened his grip, allowing the empress to walk down a flight of steps. She stepped onto the mosaic and cam
e to stand before Koyee.
"A skirmish?" the empress said softly. "Rise, child. Stand and follow. I will show you the most beautiful thing your eyes have seen . . . before I gouge them out."
The empress spun and began walking to the back of her hall, moving around the throne. Her armor clattered and her boots thumped.
Koyee looked over her shoulder at Torin. He stared back, eyes dark.
I will get you out of here alive, Torin, she swore to him silently. We will not fail. We cannot.
She rose to her feet. Dragging Torin with her, she followed the empress. As she walked around the throne, Tianlong the dragon reared above her, chuckling. Smoke blasted between his teeth down onto Koyee, and his saliva dripped. Grimacing, Koyee walked beneath the black dragon, climbed over his tail, and reached the empress at the back of the hall.
A strange light in her eyes, Empress Hikari grabbed a sliding door and pulled.
Firelight flooded the throne room.
"Come, Qaelish worm," said Hikari. "Come see the might of Ilar's flame."
The empress stepped through the doorway and into the red light. Koyee followed, holding Torin's tether. She found herself upon a balcony overlooking a waking nightmare. Her breath died.
A river flowed south of the castle, its waters red with firelight and blood. A dam of stone and steel rose like a fortress. In the shallow waters, thousands of slaves toiled—naked, chained, their backs whipped, their bodies bloodied. Most were Timandrians, beaten into wretches. They hauled metal, clay, and tallow, bustling in the water like flies in blood. Metal ribs rose around them, tall as houses.
"It's a shipyard," Koyee whispered. "They're building ships."
Empress Hikari smiled thinly. "And forging swords and armor." She pointed to the river's southern bank where slaves toiled over cauldrons and anvils. "And serving as archery targets." She pointed to a hill where slaves stood chained to posts, pierced with arrows as Ilari archers stood before them. "A skirmish, you said? Twenty thousand Timandrians attacked our coast. Some lie dead. The others are building Ilar the greatest army it's ever known. That, child, is why we are strong and you are weak. When the Qaelish meet an enemy, they flee, die, or beg for aid. When the enemy attacks me . . ." She clenched her fist. "I crush it."
Koyee turned toward the taller, older woman. "Then fight the enemy in the north. If Qaelin is truly but a backwater, let it be a battleground for your might. Show the enemy that Ilar will not cower on its island, content to fight behind its walls. Use these ships! Sail north along the Yin River and join the great battle at Yintao. It will be the greatest battle in the history of the night. Let your flame burn there."
The empress raised an eyebrow. "You speak well for a Qaelish worm. You have either learned to mimic our customs, or some Ilari blood burns within your veins. There is fire in you." The empress tapped her chin. "My soldiers have often raided the Qaelish coast, planting their seed in the wombs of your women; perhaps some ended up in you."
Koyee swallowed down the rage those words kindled within her. "Fight with us, Empress Hikari. The enemy marches along Sage's Road to Yintao. Fight at our side."
Hikari turned to regard Torin. She stepped toward him, reached out, and trailed a steel claw across his cheek. Blood beaded. Torin winced but did not move. The empress brought the claw to her lips and tasted the blood.
"He tastes of fear." She spat. "This one is weak. His flesh would serve to test swords and arrows."
Koyee shook her head. "That one is mine, not yours to claim. He is my prisoner of war. You will not take him."
The empress laughed, turning back toward her. "Fire indeed! I will offer you this, Koyee of Qaelin. You've proven that you can speak our words. Yet can you fight with our strength? I will test your might. You'll fight a champion I choose. If you win the battle, you'll have proven yourself a warrior, and I will fight by your side. Yet if you fail . . ." The empress smiled. "I will cut out your heart and feed it to my dragon, and your prisoner will feed the fires of our forges."
Koyee stared back, chin raised, and though her innards trembled and her arm blazed with renewed pain, she managed to speak in a steady voice. "Send me your champion. Flame or death."
CHAPTER NINETEEN:
THE BEAR MASQUERADE
Cam and Linee wandered the streets of Eeshan, dressed in furs, war hammers hanging across their backs.
"Camlin . . . I . . ." Linee wobbled at his side. "This hammer is too heavy and this fur stinks."
He turned to glare at her. "Hush! Don't speak Ardish here." He glanced around nervously at the countless Verilish soldiers, broad and bearded, who wandered the streets, tankards of ale in hand, belches fluttering their lips. "Just try to blend in."
She blinked, looking ready for tears. "How can I blend into this place?" Her voice rose louder. "Am I to grow a beard and belch like a barbarian? I'm a queen and—"
Cam grabbed her arm and leaned in closer. "Linee! Be quiet! Like it or not, the forces of Verilon occupy this city. They might be fellow people of sunlight, but I doubt they love the Queen of Arden very much. Our kingdom did after all burn down half their forests a generation ago."
Tears filled her eyes. In her oversized Verilish disguise—crude iron plates strapped over patches of fur and leather—she seemed like a child drowning in her father's clothes. The cut Suntai had given her had faded into a pale, pink line on her cheek; tears now streamed down the groove.
"I didn't burn anything," she said. "I wasn't even born then. Please, Camlin, can we go back to Suntai and the wolves? I promise I'll be good. I won't cry anymore or be afraid. But please can we go back? It wasn't as bad outside on the plains."
Suntai, along with their two remaining nightwolves, was hiding outside the city; these streets were too dangerous for them. At first, Cam had wanted to leave Linee in the dark too, but—after her altercation with Suntai—the dethroned queen had insisted on donning a disguise and joining Cam.
He shook his head. "Too late; you're already here. We'll go back to Suntai once we hire a ship. You know we have to sail north to Leen and find aid."
She nodded and lowered her head, lip wobbling. "I don't even want to go to Leen anymore."
"It was never about what you wanted, don't you get it?" Cam wanted to throttle her. "Leen has an army. They can help Qaelin fight."
She rubbed her eyes. "Who's this Qaelin person anyway?"
Cam groaned. "Linee! By Idar's beard! It's not a person. How could you not know this by now?" He stamped his foot. "This is Qaelin—the Elorian empire we're in. The one you've been traveling across for a month."
She pouted. "I don't know all these names. This whole place is just Nightside to me. As far as I'm concerned, all the dark places are the same."
"As far as I'm concerned, your brain is the same as a rock. Now please be quiet and don't draw attention."
Grumbling under his breath, Cam looked around the street again, hoping nobody heard the argument. Fortunately, the Verilish soldiers who walked here all seemed too drunken to pay Linee and him any heed. Cam was thankful. Linee and he wore Verilish furs and armor—relics of their battle along the road—but they stood a good foot shorter than everyone else. The Verilish, dwellers of the snowy pine forests north of Arden, were a towering folk, their shoulders broad and their bellies ample. They wore breastplates over fur, and their wooden shields bore paintings of bears. Most were men, their beards brown and bushy, but women moved among them too, nearly as broad and powerful, their cheeks round and red, their laughter raucous. Like the men, these bear-maidens drank from tankards of ale, and war hammers hung across their backs; they too towered over Cam.
"Sheep's droppings, it's a wonder Torin's father ever survived a war against these people," he mumbled under his breath. He had heard the old soldier speak of Arden's invasion of Verilon; Cam had always thought the stories of giants riding bears mere tall tales for the fireside.
A bear lolloped down the street ahead, grunting with every step. The rider atop the beast—a woman with
hair as brown and shaggy as her mount's—shouted down at him.
"Move, dwarves! Out of my way."
Cam and Linee leaped aside, landing in a puddle. The bear rambled on.
"Come on, Linee," Cam said softly. "Let's keep walking. The port must be around here somewhere."
They made their way through the crowd of soldiers, stepping between wandering bears, drunken warriors boasting of their kills, and the odd pile of bear droppings. The city of Eeshan, located on the northern coast of Qaelin, bore little resemblance to the fallen city of Pahmey. Cam saw no crystal towers here, only rows of squat brick homes, their green roofs curling up at the corners like sneering lips. Lanterns lined the cobbled streets, the tin shaped as fish. A few pagodas rose here and there, and public fireplaces belched out heat and light, but he saw no grand castles or temples. This seemed to have once been a city of traders and merchants; he saw many workshops with pottery, candles, silks, and other goods in the windows.
It was a smaller city than Pahmey—Cam guessed that perhaps twenty thousand people lived here—though he saw few of its denizens. The Elorians hid inside their homes; Cam caught only brief glimpses of their large, bright eyes peering from windows before disappearing into shadows. Only once did he see an Elorian outside on the street; the poor man was a prisoner of war, naked and chained, a Verilish soldier tugging him along.
Empires of Moth (The Moth Saga, Book 2) Page 20