The Throne of the Five Winds

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The Throne of the Five Winds Page 1

by S. C. Emmett




  Copyright

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2019 by Lilith Saintcrow

  Excerpt from Hostage of Empire: Book 2 copyright © 2019 by Lilith Saintcrow

  Excerpt from The Rage of Dragons copyright © 2017 by Evan Winter

  Cover design by Lisa Marie Pompilio

  Cover illustration by Miranda Meeks

  Cover copyright © 2019 by Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  Map copyright © 2019 by Charis Loke

  Hachette Book Group supports the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like permission to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

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  First Edition: October 2019

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  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Emmett, S. C., author.

  Title: The throne of the five winds / S.C. Emmett.

  Description: First edition. | New York, NY : Orbit, 2019. | Series: Hostage of empire ; book 1

  Identifiers: LCCN 2019000764 | ISBN 9780316436946 (trade pbk.) | ISBN 9780316558280 (ebook)

  Subjects: GSAFD: Fantasy fiction.

  Classification: LCC PS3619.A3984 T48 2019 | DDC 813/.6—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019000764

  ISBNs: 978-0-316-43694-6 (trade paperback), 978-0-316-55828-0 (ebook)

  E3-20190912-JV-NF-ORI

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Map

  Epigraph

  Translator’s Note

  Little Light

  Concern a Pearl

  This Is My Pride

  A Weighty Obligation

  Remember Your Loyalty

  A Single Blade

  Unwelcome Reminder

  Even a Kind One

  Bears Watching

  Braided Reeds

  To Want to Live

  A Pleasant Occasion

  Above Pettiness

  The Trouble to Learn

  A Coward After All

  A Sign of Delicacy

  Even Familiar Cloth

  Lost in Footwork

  Much Else to Anticipate

  Are Both Uses Possible

  Both Due Respect

  Stitchery

  A Careful Study

  Perhaps Regret

  Let Me Win

  They Weigh upon Me

  Who Is Common

  Wary and Prepared

  This Is Not Well

  A Blade of Higher Quality

  A Delicate Balance

  Attempt to Render More

  Last Fading Flower

  Serve a Paragon

  Predictable Storm

  Red Time

  Insufferable Today

  A Woman’s Battle

  Brushstrokes

  Etiquette of Visiting

  Generous

  Delicate Condition

  Feasible

  Of Service

  Small Pain

  Letters

  Life’s Study

  Second Father

  Enticing Invitation

  An Attentive Son

  Tongues

  Do Not Be Obtuse

  Slow-Rising Bird

  End Is Always Assured

  Sudden Hurry

  A Tranquil Heart

  Such Ideas

  Sign as It Pleases

  An Unwitting Jug

  To Promote Friendship

  A Mighty Ally

  I Suggest Before Lunch

  First Session, Ladies’ Court

  A Natural Betrothal

  Find Other Amusement

  Warrior Wife

  Good Faith

  Spur to a Tired Horse

  A Prize Mare

  Do as You Will

  An Exciting Morning

  Two Small Pearls

  Less Decorative

  Girl-Ring, Sinuous Snake

  Bait, Sweetened

  To Strike a Prince

  Leave It to Me

  A Matter for Hope

  Filthy Little Corner

  Trapped at a Feast

  Speaks a Strategist

  Pool of Deep Ink

  Be Brief

  Loose Ends

  Much Disturbance

  A Festival Dress

  You Wish to Be Complimented

  A Powerful Spark

  Well in Hand

  Metal of Necessity

  Until They Have the Means

  Character and Cleverness

  The Honor of Understanding

  Rare Birds

  A Disagreeable Chore

  Follow Your Example

  Time for Action

  It Only Takes One

  To Sharpen Its Flavor

  Practically Kisses

  The Wrong Note to Strike

  A Distorted Mirror

  Horsekillers

  An Offer, Interrupted

  The Opposite of Luck

  Sister’s Prayer

  Simple Mourning

  In Different Coin

  A Prince of Shan

  Lost Filly

  Burdened with Your Life

  So Much Consideration

  Received the News

  Acknowledgments

  Discover More

  Extras

  Meet the Author

  A Preview of Hostage of Empire: Book Two

  A Preview of The Rage of Dragons

  For Sarah Guan, who knows why.

  And for Miriam Kriss, who does as well.

  Explore book giveaways, sneak peeks, deals, and more.

  Tap here to learn more.

  Tot locis, tot incendis rerum natura terras cremat.

  —Pliny the Elder

  TRANSLATOR’S NOTE

  Like many languages, Zhaon, Khir, Shansian, Anwai-la, and Tabrakkin have many terms and forms of address with no direct equivalent in English. Every effort has been made to indicate, by note or context, when one is being used. Any errors are, of course, the fault of the translator.

  LITTLE LIGHT

  Above the Great Keep of Khir and the smoky bowl of its accreted city, tombs rose upon mountainside terraces. Only the royal and Second Families had the right to cut their names into stone here, and this small stone pailai1 was one of the very oldest. Hard, small pinpoints about to become white or pink blossoms starred the branches of ancient, twisted yeoyans;2 a young woman in blue, her black hair dressed simply but carefully with a single white-shell comb, stood before the newest marker. Incense smoked as she folded her hands for decorous prayer, a well-bred daughter performing a rare unchaperoned du
ty.

  Below, the melt had begun and thin droplets scattered from tiled roofs both scarlet and slate, from almost-budding branches. Here snow still lingered in corners and upon sheltered stones; winter-blasted grass slept underneath. No drip disturbed the silence of the ancestors.

  A booted foot scraped stone. The girl’s head, bowed, did not move. There was only one person who would approach while she propitiated her ancestors, and she greeted him politely. “Your Highness.” But she did not raise her head.

  “None of that, Yala.” The young man, his topknot caged and pierced with gold, wore ceremonial armor before the dead. His narrow-nosed face had paled, perhaps from the cold, and his gaze—grey as a winter sky, grey as any noble blood-pure Khir’s—lingered upon her nape. As usual, he dispensed with pleasantries. “You do not have to go.”

  Of course he would think so. Her chin dropped a little farther. “If I do not, who will?” Other noble daughters, their fathers not so known for rectitude as the lord of Komori, were escaping the honor in droves.

  “Others.” A contemptuous little word. “Servants. There is no shortage.”

  Yala’s cloud-grey eyes opened. She said nothing, watching the gravestone as if she expected a shade to rise. Her offerings were made at her mother’s tomb already, but here was where she lingered. A simple stone marked the latest addition to the shades of her House—fine carving, but not ostentatious. The newly rich might display like fan-tailed baryo,3 but not those who had ridden to war with the Three Kings of the First Dynasty. Or so her father thought, though he did not say it.

  A single tone, or glance, was enough to teach a lesson.

  Ashani Daoyan, Crown Prince of Khir newly legitimized and battlefield-blooded, made a restless movement. Lean but broad-shouldered, with a slight roundness to his cheeks bespeaking his Narikh motherblood, he wore the imperial colors easily; a bastard son, like an unmarried aunt, learned to dress as the weather dictated. Leather creaked slightly, and his breath plumed in the chill. “If your brother were alive—”

  “—I would be married to one of his friends, and perhaps widowed as well.” Now Komor Yala, the only surviving child of General Hai Komori Dasho, moved too, a slight swaying as if she wished to turn and halted just in time. “Please, Daoyan.” The habit of long friendship made it not only possible but necessary to address him so informally. “Not before my Elder Brother.”

  “Yala…” Perhaps Dao’s half-armor, black chased with yellow, was not adequate for this particular encounter. The boy she had known, full of sparkstick4 pride and fierce silence when that pride was balked, had ridden to war; this young man returned in his place.

  Did he regret being dragged from the field to preserve a dynasty while so many others stood and died honorably? She could not ask, merely suspect, so Yala shook her head. Her own words were white clouds, chosen carefully and given to the frigid morning. “Who will care for my princess, if I do not?”

  “You cannot waste your life that way.” A slight sound—gauntlets creaking. Daoyan still clenched his fists. She should warn him against so open a display of emotion, but perhaps in a man it did not matter so much.

  “And yet.” There is no other option, her tone replied, plainly. Not one I am willing to entertain. “I will take great care with your royal sister, Your Highness.”

  Of course he could not leave the battlefield thus, a draw achieved but no victory in sight. “I will offer for you.”

  “You already would have, if you thought your honored father would allow it.” She bowed, a graceful supple bending with her skirts brushing fresh-swept stone. “Please, Daoyan.” Her palms met, and her head dropped even farther when she straightened, the attitude of a filial daughter from a scroll’s illustrations.

  Even a prince dared not interrupt prayers begun before a relative’s tomb. Daoyan turned, finally, boots ringing through thin snow to pavers she had not attended to with her small broom, and left the pailai with long, swinging strides.

  Yala slipped her hands deeper inside her sleeves and regarded the memorial stone. Bai, of course, would have sniffed at the prospect of his little sister marrying a man with an honorless mother, no matter if he had proven himself in war and the Great Rider had legitimized him. Bai would also have forbidden her to accompany Mahara. He was not the clan-head, but since he came of age their father had let him take heavier duties and listened to his counsel. Bai’s refusal would have carried weight, and Yala could have bowed her head to accept it instead of insisting upon her duty as a noble daughter must before a distinguished parent.

  Perhaps that would have been best. Was the cringing, creeping relief she would have felt cowardice? The other noble families were scurrying to keep their daughters from Mahara’s retinue, marriages contracted or health problems discovered with unseemly haste. The Great Rider, weakened as he was by the defeat at Three Rivers and the slow strangling of Khir’s southron trade, could not force noble daughters to accompany his own, he could only… request.

  Other clans and families could treat it as a request, but Komori held to the ancient codes. It was a high honor to attend the princess of Khir, and Yala had done so since childhood. To cease in adversity was unworthy of a Komor daughter.

  Burning incense sent lazy curls of scented smoke heavenward. If her brother was watching, he would have been fuming like the sticks themselves. A slow smolder and a hidden fire, that was Hai Komori Baiyan. She could only hope she was the same, and the conquering Zhaon would not smother her and her princess.

  First things first. You are to pay your respects here, and then to comfort your father.

  As if there could be any comfort to a Khir nobleman whose only son was dead. Hai Komori Dasho would be gladdened to be rid of a daughter and the need to find a dowry, that much was certain. Even if he was not, he would act as if he were, because that was the correct way to regard this situation.

  The Komori, especially the clan heads, were known for their probity.

  Her fingertips worried at her knuckles, and she sighed. “Oh, damoi,5 my much-blessed Bai,” she whispered. It was not quite meet to pronounce the name of the dead, but she could be forgiven a single use of such a precious item. “How I wish you were here.”

  She bent before her brother’s grave one last time, and her fingers found a sharp-edged, triangular pebble among the flat pavers, blasted grass, and iron-cold dirt. They could not plow quite yet, but the monjok6 and yeoyan blossoms were out. Spring would come early this year, but she would not see the swallows returning. The care of the pailai would fall to more distant kin from a junior branch of the clan.

  Yala tucked the pebble in a sleeve-pocket, carefully. She could wrap it with red silken thread, decorate a hairstick with falling beads, and wear a part of both Bai and her homeland daily. A small piece of grit in the conqueror’s court, hopefully accreting nacre instead of dishonor.

  There were none left to care for her father in his aging. Perhaps he would marry again. If Bai were still alive…

  “Stop,” she murmured, and since there were none to see her, Yala’s face could contort under a lash of pain, a horse shying at the whip. “He is not.”

  Khir had ridden to face Zhaon’s great general at Three Rivers, and the eldest son of a proud Second Family would not be left behind. The battle had made Daoyan a hero and Bai a corpse, but it was useless to Khir. The conquerors had dictated their terms; war took its measure, reaping a rich harvest, and Zhaon was the scythe.

  Khir would rise again, certainly, but not soon enough to save a pair of women. Even a cursory study of history showed that a farm could change hands, and he who reaped yesterday might be fertilizer for the next scythe-swinger. There was little comfort in the observation, even if it was meant to ease the pain of the defeated.

  For the last time, Yala bowed before her brother’s stone. If she walked slowly upon her return, the evidence of tears would be erased by the time she reached the foot of the pailai’s smooth-worn stairs and the single maidservant waiting, holding her mistress’s hor
se and bundled against the cold as Yala disdained to be.

  A noblewoman suffered ice without a murmur. Inside, and out.

  Hai Komori’s blackened bulk rested within the walls of the Old City. It frowned in the old style, stone walls and sharply pitched slate-tiled roof; its great hall was high and gloomy. The longtable, crowded with retainers at dinners twice every tenday, was a blackened piece of old wood; it stood empty now, with the lord’s low chair upon the dais watching its oiled, gleaming surface. Mirrorlight drifted, brought through holes in the roof and bounced between polished discs, crisscrossing the high space.

  Dusty cloth rustled overhead, standards and pennons taken in battle. There were many, and their sibilance was the song of a Second Family. The men rode to war, the women to hunt, and between them the whole world was ordered. Or so the classics, both the canonical Hundreds and supplements, said. Strong hunters made strong sons, and Yala had sometimes wondered why her mother, who could whisper a hawk out of the sky, had not given her father more than two. Bai the eldest was ash upon the wind and a name upon a tablet; the second son had not even reached his naming-day.

  And Komor Madwha, a daughter of the Jehng family and high in the regard of the Great Rider and her husband as well, died shortly after her only daughter’s birth.

  Komori Dasho was here instead of in his study. Straight-backed, only a few thin threads of frost woven into his topknot, a vigorous man almost into the status of elder sat upon the dais steps, gazing at the table and the great hearth. When a side door opened and blue silk made its subtle sweet sound, he closed his eyes.

  Yala, as ever, bowed properly to her father though he was not looking. “Your daughter greets you, pai.”

  He acknowledged with a nod. She waited, her hands folded in her sleeves again, faintly uneasy. Her father was a tall man, his shoulders still hard from daily practice with saber and spear; his face was pure Khir. Piercing grey eyes, straight black hair topknotted as a Second Dynasty lord’s, a narrow high prow of a nose, a thin mouth, and bladed cheekbones harsh as the sword-mountains themselves. Age settled more firmly upon him with each passing winter, drawing skin tighter and bone-angles sharper. His house robe was spare and dark, subtly patterned but free of excessive ornamentation.

  He was, in short, the very picture of a Khir noble—except he was not, as usual, straight as an iron reed upon his low backless chair with the standard of their house—the setting sun and the komor flower7—hung behind it.

 

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