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The Quintessence Cycle- The Complete Series

Page 40

by Terry C. Simpson


  “The subject of children reminded me that you and Jemare only ever had Joaquin,” he said.

  “We had trouble conceiving.”

  “Such matters are the Dominion’s will.” The king was tapping his chin with his forefinger again. “For that reason I would have you visit Curate Selentus. The man has certain methods and potions that works wonders for fertility.”

  “You speak from experience?”

  “Yes.”

  “Very well, I agree,” she said. “Let us get on with the game.” She gestured to him, palm up, indicating he should begin. “Your move.”

  “I defer.”

  Lips drawn in a thin line, she made the first move, sending the cycler in front of her dragon king two squares forward. Moving that specific piece first gave one Dracodar the ability to roam the board with its three jumps in any direction as long as another piece of her own did not block its path. It was one of two ways that allowed a Dracodar to leave the castle before the king.

  The move, while exposing and freeing her queen, increased her chances of transforming a cycler into a melder once it crossed the soul cycle line. Melders could leap three squares forward or to the side, but not diagonally or backward, as opposed to a cycler’s one move forward under normal play and one diagonally when capturing an opponent’s piece. Additionally, that converted melder could become a dragon king that was no longer sealed to the castle. Converting a cycler first could cripple the opponent if they did not follow suit or did not capture the piece.

  “Aggressive.” Ainslen nodded, elbow on the table top, a forefinger tapping time on his temple. “And risky.”

  She made a steeple of her fingers. “There is no other way to play for one’s life. All or nothing. Cowering is for cowards.”

  O ut of the T rees

  H oarse roars cut through the drum of rainfall. On the porch beside Keedar, Snow’s ears pricked up. A low growl rumbled deep in her chest. Keedar’s mind instantly shifted to thoughts of Winslow, but the roars originated from the wrong direction.

  Keedar leaned forward in his chair, squinting toward the tree line, trying to see by the meager light offered by the lamps on the porch. He expanded his vision. The trees became clearer, leaves distinct. He could almost count individual raindrops.

  The roars drifted closer. Snarling, Snow bounded to her feet, shoulders even with Keedar’s head, hackles raised.

  Fear for Winslow became a knot in Keedar’s gut. He recalled the day he finished his own trial, the battle and chase that followed. Heart aflutter, he picked up his bow, nocked an arrow, and aimed toward the Treskelin’s shadowy expanse. Snow leaped down the short flight of steps to stand in the center of the clearing.

  As the roars grew louder, their direction changed by slight increments, but always headed toward the cottage. Within moments came the sounds of bodies crashing through brush, branches snapping.

  Through the grey pebbles of rain a form appeared at the edge of the forest. A nimbus of soul waxed and waned around it. The person stumbled forward.

  Winslow.

  Keedar’s breath caught in his throat. If not for his enhanced vision he wouldn’t have recognized his brother. Face overgrown with hair, Winslow looked like a completely different person, his appearance conjuring images of the Wild Kheridisians. His clothes were rags that hung loosely from his body and arms. Winslow had left as a well-built young man and returned a gaunt, emaciated caricature of himself. Winslow took maybe a dozen steps before he collapsed face down in the mud. Keedar made to leap down the stairs when four shaggy shapes burst from the undergrowth.

  Bears. Massive black ones.

  Snow leaped at the first bear, barreling into its side. In a flurry of growls and snarls the two beasts tore at each other.

  Without thinking, Keedar loosed an arrow. It flew true, taking a bear in its neck. The beast shook off the attack, reared up on its hind legs, and bellowed in Keedar’s direction. When it dropped to all fours, the bear charged.

  Trying in vain to calm his shaking hands, Keedar nocked another arrow. The other two bears lumbered toward Winslow’s prone form.

  The slap of a bowstring cut through the animal noises. Two additional arrows jutted from the bear charging Keedar. The creature flopped to the ground, its momentum carrying it another few feet, skidding on its face and belly through a muddy pool.

  A man sprinted through the rain from the direction of the arrows, surrounded by the telltale nimbus of soul magic, blue cloak flapping behind him. The cloak swept past the man, flying against the wind. It continued to stretch, twice, three times its former length.

  Impossible. Keedar gaped.

  The cloak intercepted the bears. They reared up on their hind legs, swatting at the material. As if it were alive, the cloak dodged and then darted in like a snake, coiling around the animals. The man was a few strides behind.

  Flashes of steel and the fight was over. The two bears gave plaintive cries and crashed to the ground inches from Winslow. The cloak uncoiled, and shrank, becoming normal cloth, soaked from the rain, and plastered to the stranger’s back.

  Pitiful mewls broke Keedar from his shock. Snow was latched onto the last bear’s neck and had the animal face down on the ground. The bear gave two final kicks, and then lay still.

  Chest heaving, Keedar rushed to Winslow’s side. Winslow’s eyes were closed, but his chest rose and fell evenly as if he was in a deep sleep. His face was sallow, his hair a tangled black mess, beard and mustache a bush. What had once been muscled arms were sinewy limbs.

  Footsteps squelched through mud and stopped next to Keedar. “I’m Stomir.” The stranger’s voice was gravelly and somehow familiar. “Keshka sent me.” He held out a gloved hand. They clasped arms. Hard blue eyes in a face like polished mahogany peered out from within the hood of his cloak, complementing a defined jaw and a slightly bent nose. Keedar had seen noses like that before, on guild members who often brawled in the Smear’s taverns.

  “Thank you,” Keedar said.

  The shrubbery near the tree line rustled. Keedar froze. Four derins padded out from the undergrowth, two white, two grey. Snow’s pack. A relieved sigh escaped Keedar’s lips. He returned his attention to Winslow.

  “Here, let me give you a hand.” Stomir bent to help.

  They picked up Winslow. Keedar hissed, not only at how little his brother weighed, but also at his stench. Winslow smelled as if he’d bathed in piss and shit. Keedar refused to think of what matted his brother’s hair. They carried Winslow inside the cottage to the bedroom and lay him on the bed. Keedar took a seat in the room’s lone chair while he pondered his next move. He had no experience with this type of situation.

  “He’s used up too much of his soul.” Stomir was squinting at Winslow. He had removed his hood to reveal hair the color of rust, tied in a ponytail that fell past his nape. A half dozen tiny silver or gold loops pierced each earlobe from top to bottom.

  “How can you tell?” Keedar asked.

  “I’m a medico. Healing cyclers and melders is my specialty.” Stomir hovered over Winslow, peering into his ears, inspecting arms and legs that were more bone than flesh, lifting his eyelids, and even checking his mouth. He grimaced several times and flicked his thumb across his nose. “You lack the experience to see it yet, but the flow of soul between his vital points has been disrupted. Whatever he did to escape, he opened them too wide, made too much of his essence flow out. He did not retain enough soul for his body to heal itself.”

  Keedar shivered, recollections of his encounter with the bronze-scaled creature in the forest coming to mind. If Winslow had fought the beast, Keedar understood the desperation that might have driven him. Focusing, Keedar tried to make out the flow of soul around Winslow or to discern Winslow’s vital points. He achieved neither. “Won’t rest fix him?” he asked.

  “Yes and no.” Stomir straightened. “A wound is often best dealt with when it is fresh, so that it can heal properly. Like a broken bone for example. A chirurgeon sets it to make certa
in it knits itself back in the right place. The same with soul. Winslow needs an influx of soul as strong as or stronger than his own. It will force the vital points to close, not completely, but to where they manage themselves as they normally do. Then the act of rest and eating will have their proper effect. Bring a wash basin.” Stomir began to remove the rags Winslow wore. “It’s always best to work on a clean body.”

  Keedar left and returned shortly after with a ceramic pail filled with water from the trough. He also had a thick cloth and a length of the finger-thick Koeleaf with which they bathed. The minty, slimy substance in the Koe’s middle was refreshing, and always cleared his head.

  “Clean him up.” Stomir indicated the bed with a jab of his thumb. “I’ll see about food.”

  Keedar glanced at Winslow and the dark gunk in his hair and winced. “But you said bring the basin.”

  “Yes, for you to clean him up. If there’s to be a nursemaid, you inherited the job.”

  With a groan, Keedar made his way to the bed, nose upturned at the task before him.

  “Soup,” Stomir said from the doorway, “I’ll get some going. He’ll need plenty of fluids to rebuild his strength. And solid food, but we’ll have to crush it first to make it easier to swallow.”

  “Keshka said everything I needed would be in the kitchen cupboards, above the stove.” Keedar dipped the cloth in the water, squeezed a bit of the clear substance from the Koe onto it, and began to rub gingerly at Winslow’s chest.

  “Put your back into,” Stomir said with a chuckle and disappeared into the adjoining room.

  Bathing Winslow took three leaves and five trips to refill the pail. Keedar tried not to think of the brown residue that floated in the water. To combat the stench he’d smeared a bit of the leaf’s slime under his nose. When he completed the task Keedar dried Winslow and covered him with blankets. Not once had his brother shown any sign of consciousness.

  When Keedar entered the kitchen, Stomir was humming to himself, hovering over the stove. Steam rose, filling the air with spices. The man no longer wore his cloak. Keedar found it hanging over the back of a chair, appearing like any other length of cloth. He returned his attention to Stomir.

  The medico was of a height to match Winslow, which made him a few inches over six feet. His loose-fitting garb did little to hide his lithe form. Even cooking, he moved with grace, his boots not once scraping the wooden floor.

  “Where are you from?” Keedar asked. “You could pass for Darshanese or Farish Islander, but unless I miss my mark, that hooked nose of yours isn’t natural, which rules out Darshan. You also lack Islander tattoos unless you’re one of their exiles, which I doubt since there’s no hint of their accent in you.”

  “No tattoos,” Stomir said. “And that’s good observation on your part. I could simply be Kasinian.”

  “You could fit in among the dregs, I suppose,” Keedar mused, attention drawn to Stomir’s bent nose. “But then again, for a person like myself, one who has an eye for people, the way you move speaks of a better upbringing.”

  “I’m Kheridisian.”

  “Ah.” Keedar paused for a moment, the familiarity of Stomir’s voice eating at him. However, the few Kheridisians he met previously had all been women, and each slurred when they spoke Kasinian. Stomir’s speech was flawless. “Do I—Have we …” He stopped himself. He couldn’t have met Stomir. Kheridisian males were outlawed from Kasinia on penalty of death.

  “That day in the Smear.” Stomir stopped stirring the soup and took a sip. “I saved you, Winslow, and the other one.”

  “The man in the blue cloak!” Keedar exclaimed. Stomir nodded once. After a quick glance at the medico’s cloak, Keedar asked, “How does it extend and move like it does?”

  “It’s Alchemy, Magnification, and Casting rolled into one.”

  “You’re a Philodar?” Keedar asked with a frown.

  “I’m a little more than that, actually. I just mentioned three types of melding I used, but I did not say I was limited to only those three. Anyway, to answer your question, through magnification I increase the length, strength, and flexibility of my cloak; I attach a part of my soul to it through my Alchemist abilities; and lastly, I can apply a combination of elements to it.” Stomir smiled wistfully. “It comes in quite handy when I wish to scare the Dominion out of someone.”

  Keedar chuckled. “Thanks again for the help.”

  “It was nothing.” Stomir returned to his soup, adding ingredients stacked on the table near the stove.

  Keedar frowned. Soul spilled in copious amounts from a glass jar filled with red, viscous liquid. He recoiled, consumed by sudden memories of Succession Day and the auction in the secret chambers under Ainslen’s mansion. “Wh-What is that?”

  Stomir picked up a cover, peered at a label, and said, “Keshka’s blood.”

  “What?”

  “Keshka’s blood.”

  “Why would you … why …” Keedar couldn’t bring himself to finish the sentence.

  “Your brother needs soul. This is some of the most potent I’ve come across in years.” Stomir scooped out a spoonful and dropped it in the soup. “Think of it as you would a blood transfusion. Sometimes they’re needed to save a man’s life or can be used to transfer soul, making the receiver a bit stronger.

  “However, in the case of those like us, we’re normally poisonous to our own. Winslow and you are fortunate not to have completed your full transformation, making you both viable for a transfer such as this.”

  “But—”

  “There are no buts. We do as needed to survive.”

  Speechless, Keedar could only watch as Stomir finished the soup and put out the fire in the chamber beneath. Stomir poured the steaming food into a bowl.

  “Here, feed your brother,” the medico said.

  Keedar cringed. “I can’t, not with that.”

  “It must have hurt Keshka greatly to part with this much of his soul. You can either feed it to Winslow or watch him become an invalid or worse. Your choice.” Stomir placed the bowl on the counter, picked up his cloak, and fastened it with a Shipman’s clasp under his neck. “I’ll go snag us a deer or a few rabbits and then keep watch.” He headed outside.

  For a long time Keedar sat, staring at the steaming bowl and the glass jar. He suppressed the need to retch. When he finally stood and picked up the soup, the last bit of the conversation with Stomir repeated. As terrible as feeding the meal to Winslow seemed, as unconscionable as Keshka’s departure had felt, to know the man had thought far enough ahead to prepare for Winslow’s possible injuries, and had suffered greatly in the process, made Keedar regard him in a different light.

  W enches and B lades

  T har slapped the swarthy Darshanese bruiser on the back. Corbant’s hooked nose and bushy eyebrows gave him the appearance of a hawk, an old grizzled one with silver sprinkles in his beard and mustache.

  “What’s new, Corbie?” Thar motioned to the barkeep. “Two cups of mesqa, Marin. The good, clear stuff.”

  “Greetings, Keshka. Damn Farish Islanders causing trouble is what,” Corbant grumbled. “Don’t even know why the king gave ‘em leave to come to Kasandar again. Nothing good will come of it, I tell ya.” Corbant glared at a group of the tattooed men who entered the tavern.

  Almost any Darshanese would repeat Corbie’s sentiments. The two kingdoms no longer warred, but competition was fierce among them for the most lucrative waters, sometimes resulting in small skirmishes between ships. Laughing amongst themselves, the Islanders walked with the swagger of men who had coin to spend. Their cloaks said as much too. They were made of lida hide, the mottled tan, deep brown, and black colors giving them away. Hunting the giant sea worms of the same name had made many a Farish Islander famous and rich. Thar suppressed a shiver at the memory of seeing one of the lidas coiled around several ships in his flotilla during King Tolquan’s failed western expedition.

  “With all the business their seamen bring, it can’t be half bad,” Th
ar said.

  “I say send them back where they belong. They’re spies for the west, mark my words. Can’t be trusted, just ask any Darshanese and he’ll tell ya like it is. ”

  “Your drinks.” Marin placed the two cups between Thar and Corbant.

  “Thank you.” Thar slid five copper bits across the counter. He downed his mesqa in two gulps and asked for two more, grimacing as a sensation like liquid fire sped down his gullet into his stomach. Corbie finished his in one.

  Smoke hung thick in the Cask and Cork: the sickly sweet scent of Bloodleaf and the minty freshness of Calum powder. Both had become popular over the last few decades. In the back, near the tables, a guiser spun a tale of the Crystal Skies and Ilsindin, the last Dracodar king. Raucous laughter erupted as the man detailed Ilsindin’s stunted seed and how Cortens Kasandar had chopped off the king’s balls. Serving girls and courtesans drifted among the patrons, the former in dresses with aprons, trays held high, the latter with as little clothes as the weather allowed. Despite the roaring hearth winter’s breath still chilled the tavern. Thar sat back, relishing the entertainment, and made certain to keep the supply of drinks flowing. They’d spent the better part of two hours drinking and catching up on recent events when the Winds of Time gonged for midnight.

  “So Corbie, why are you bruising down here at the Cork? I thought the Myth and the Maiden hired you to keep their Kheridisian wenches in check?”

  “Watch yer mouth,” Corbie admonished after his fifth cup of mesqa. Thar peered over his own nose before giving up on seeing his mouth. Even a mere glimpse of his top lip proved impossible. “Them Kheridisians are the best ladies in all the River Quarter, in all Kasandar, in fact. Always satisfy their man, even when they beat them a little.”

  “A little?” Thar chuckled. Despite his sarcasm, he had enjoyed the pleasure of the big-boned, voluptuous women a time or three. It was amazing how pain enhanced certain acts.

 

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