The Penance of Pride
T.S. Adrian
(Shadyia Ascendant, #2)
Publication date: March 31st 2017
Genres: Adult, Fantasy
Shadyia’s Adventure Continues!
‘I will never leave you, and I will always come for you.’
Shadyia’s vow to her lover is put to the test when the Innocenti rise and envelope the sisterhood she adores.
As the magician she aided hunts for the path to an ancient city, the new madam of the Silver Rose strives to please the evil that has promised, upon its freedom, to make her a queen.
Meanwhile, the advisor to the Innocenti prepares the final stage of his strategy to crush the faith of the old gods. He needs but a bit of magic to carry out his ultimate plan.
Magicians. Zealots. Madams. Whores. It’s all the same to he who waits within the enchanted box. Soon he will unleash his servants, and every horror of the abyss will once again consume humanity.
IN THE SHADOW of the Black Tower, Shadyia nudged the shoulder of
the scruffy, tired woman strolling by her side. When Deresi turned her head,
she offered her a spirited wave. Hello, my sweet friend. They both needed a hot
bath and a good night’s rest, but that hardly mattered. Deresi was alive. They
had each survived the horrors of Mirrikh’s labyrinth with whole skins and sound
minds.
Deresi crossed her eyes and stuck out the tip of her tongue.
Shadyia shifted her attention to the damp street. Yes, I know. I
should stop gawking at you. She couldn’t help it. Her fingers ached to get lost
in the tangles of Deresi’s red curls; her ears yearned for the sounds of
Deresi’s passion, and her skin craved the warmth they had not shared often
enough. I almost lost you. The death they had faced during the past two days
made her crave another night, like the smallest fox in a litter peering at the
last quail egg. Words Shadyia had spoken that morning they lay entwined in
arms, legs and blankets—the morning Deresi had pledged her love—coursed through
Shadyia’s veins and spurred her heart to beat. I will never leave you, and I
will always come for you. Shadyia had never made such a promise to anyone
before.
She yanked her thoughts from the past and listened in on the men
walking a few paces in front of her. Aaron was asking his apprentice what it
had been like to hear Verthandi’s voice in his thoughts.
“I didn’t know it was his voice,” Benjamin replied. “I thought it
was mine.”
Aaron swept a hand through his graying hair and narrowed his gaze
at the young man. “But you had no idea how to open the tower. Didn’t it seem
odd to you that these thoughts were in your head?”
Benjamin shrugged. “It does now. At the time, I thought I was just
guessing, experimenting. Do this, turn that, push, pull—and then the doors
opened. I couldn’t believe it.”
Shadyia seized the pommel of her blacksteel sword. She couldn’t
believe Benjamin had left Janell outside while he bumbled around inside the
Black Tower. Janell may be a fellow sister of the Silver Rose, but for all of
Madam Amrita’s training, she was a mewling kitten lost in a rainstorm.
Anderholm was no city to walk about alone, even for a veteran with a drawn
sword and a stern gaze on every dark alley. Shadyia tamped down her anger. If
Benjamin hadn’t opened the doors of the tower and entered, she, Deresi and
Aaron would now be facing a slow death from thirst and starvation in Mirrikh’s
oubliette, the place the ancient magician had used to forget people who had
angered him.
Aaron led them north. They followed the smooth stones of Queen’s
Way, the scrape of their footfalls the only sounds in the damp streets. Shadyia
glanced around. Too quiet. Today was the second day of Samprina and so the
citizens were either fasting in their homes or visiting relatives in the
country, but the silence didn’t feel right. Anderholm was a city of noise. The
clap of hooves, the roll of wagons, merchants bellowing over one another, armed
guards hollering to clear a path for a snobbish lord on horseback, the squeal
of orphaned children, the bark of dogs—chaos was the lifeblood of Anderholm.
Quiet did not become the trade capitol of the northern realms.
“Here, this way.” Aaron turned them down a long alley between the
Ministry of Art and a pottery warehouse. As Shadyia recalled, the alley ended
at the Rum Barrel Inn near the Bridge of Swans. Aaron’s Featherquill Manor,
packed with the historical books he had written over his many centuries, was a
short walk up a winding road past the other mansions in the Artisan Quarter.
When they arrived, he had promised to treat them to an evening of relaxing and
recovering. Shadyia blew a gust through her lips at the thought. After two days
and a night in the dark, twisting halls of labyrinth, pits of spikes hidden
under false floors and shadow beasts that drained the life from their victims,
she craved a quiet evening in Deresi’s arms more than all the gold in
Anderholm. I just hope Janell made it back there without trouble.
Midway through the alley, a single-horse cart, driven by two
cloaked men, rolled toward them. Shadyia and the others flattened themselves
against the wall. She turned her head as it passed. Some mortified soul lay
wrapped in a heavy cloth in the back of the cart. Likely the men were
gravediggers on their way to—The corpse! Shadyia recognized its white boots.
“Stop that cart!”
The driver snapped his reins against the horse as Aaron grabbed
the air and twisted his fist. The wheels locked and dragged until the cart
screeched to a halt. The driver lashed his reins again, but the horse only
reared. The men, one thin and the other large, jumped back off the bench,
stepped around the wrapped figure and dropped to the street. They threw open
their cloaks and pulled out a pair of long knives. Shadyia drew her blacksteel
sword as she and Aaron met them halfway. Aaron twisted his hands, palms
outward, and the fat one was hurled against the wall by an unseen force. The
other stood dumbfounded until Shadyia knocked the knife out of his hand with a
downward slash and pressed the tip of her sword under his chin.“Over there,
move,” she said, urging the driver, a man with dark lines tattooed on half his
face, to stand next to his fat companion. He lifted his hands in surrender and
complied.
The force holding the large man released, but Shadyia moved the
tip and pricked the fleshy pouch under his chin. “Drop the knife.”
The knife clattered to the street and the fat man lifted his
portly arms.
“Dee, check the cart.”
Deresi snatched the thin man’s knife off the ground and leaped
into the cart. Shadyia heard her cut the ropes. She glanced down the alley to
make sure no others were coming, but only Benjamin stood there, ringing his
hands and looking as if he were not sure what he should do.
Silence from the cart drove Shadyia to risk a glance. Deresi was
sitting back on her heels, her shoulders slumped, staring down at the person
she had partly exposed beneath the cloth. “Dee, who is it? Is it Janell?”
Deresi’s mouth moved but no sound came out. “I…”
What’s wrong with her? “Dee!”
“I can’t tell!” Deresi briefly covered her lips with trembling
fingers. “I think it is.”
Benjamin charged, jolting Shadyia as he passed, and leaped into
the cart.
A freezing wave passed over Shadyia. Deresi couldn’t tell? She
glanced at Aaron, who had remained at her side, then faced the portly man and
jabbed him with the tip. “What did you do to her?”
The fat man’s jaw shuddered and a drop of blood leaked down his
pouch. “She asked to join us.”
Shadyia nearly stabbed him again when Benjamin’s wail echoed along
the alley. “Mentor, please help!”
Aaron rushed the cart as Shadyia coiled back her sword, daring
either man to move. She glanced as Aaron further pulled open the cloth, stained
dark red on the inside, to reveal a naked body. Benjamin wailed anew as Aaron
placed a hand on her forehead. Deresi scooted back into the corner of the cart
and stared at Janell, as motionless as one posing for a sculpture.
Benjamin
sobbed. “What have they done to her?”
“She’s alive,” Aaron said.
Movement from the tattooed man caught Shadyia’s attention. His
hands came down—back!—and she stabbed deep in his shoulder.
He snarled, reeled and fell against the wall, his hand over the
wound. “You bitch.” He checked the blood on his fingers.“Next time it will be
your eye.”
A bellow of anguish tore Shadyia from the men. Aaron fell off the
cart, hit the cobbled stones hard, and rolled on the ground. Benjamin called
his name and jumped down as Deresi stood high on her knees, her face pale.Benjamin
kneeled and grabbed Aaron by the shoulders. “Mentor, what’s wrong, what’s
happened?”Aaron knocked the hands away and rolled on his side, agony twisting
his face. He howled and thrashed as if someone had set fire to his clothing.
Shadyia glared at the men. Had they done something? No. They stood with gaping
mouths and baffled stares.
His hands covering his face, Aaron seemed to bring his torment
under control. He sat up and turned eyes of pure rage on Shadyia’s prisoners.
“Innocenti. They mutilated her,” he said through seething gasps. “That one and
that one. There was a third, but he’s not here. They raped and tortured her for
hours.”
He pushed Benjamin back, rolled to his feet, and brought his hands
up as if he were lifting the end of a table. The men slammed against the wall
and slid up until their feet dangled.
“Vile warlock,” the tattooed one said then spat. “Fate will be
your judge.”
Lowering her sword, Shadyia stepped back from Aaron, the wrath on
his face choking her breath. Never had she seen him so enraged. A pair of sharp
metal rods, twice as long as the men were tall, materialized in the air. With a
clang of metal on rock that made her jolt, the spikes plunged into the stone at
feet of the men.
They drifted forward and hovered over the sharp ends.
Terror filling his eyes, the tattooed one thrashed against the
force that held him. “No, you can’t do that!”
The other pissed himself.
Shadyia reached out her hand. No, Aaron no. Don’t. The men
deserved it, but not at the cost of Aaron’s humanity. She touched his shoulder,
and a force struck away her hand.
Aaron didn’t even look in her direction. “Her name is Janell. Say
it.”
“Janell,” both men said.
“Again.”
“Janell,” they repeated, louder.
Shadyia’s heart hammered as the stance of their feet widened. She
couldn’t stop Aaron any more than grasp a boiling cauldron to stay its heat.
“Good,” Aaron said and pushed down his hands. The men dropped.
The spikes pierced their trousers between their legs. The men
shrieked louder than Shadyia thought a human throat capable. Blood soaked their
leggings as they slowly slid until their boots touched the street. She cringed
before the horror. This had to be an illusion. Aaron had said he couldn’t make
actual things, not without—
The men shrieked once more as the shirts behind their necks
stretched and tore. The spikes reemerged, their tips glistening in blood.
Aaron turned his back on the screaming, flailing men and stepped
into the cart. He pulled the cloth over Janell, leaving her face uncovered.
“I don’t know of a physician in Anderholm who could help her. Do
you have any at the Silver Rose?”
“Yes, we do,” Shadyia replied, unable to stop her trembling. “And
we use jilqu oil.”
He sat in the center of the bench and took the reins of the near
panicked horse. Shadyia returned the blacksteel sword to its sheath and leaped
in next to a pale-faced Deresi. Benjamin quickly joined her and the cart jerked
straight thanks to an unseen force. Aaron tapped the reins.
The cries of the men followed as they rolled along the alley.
Darkness that made Shadyia think of the labyrinth pressed in on
all sides as the wagon made its way along the forest road in Kingsleaf. Every
bump the wagon’s wheels stuck jarred her like men beating her with their fists.
Benjamin lay next to Janell and stroked what remained of her hair. The
Innocenti torturers had hacked most of it off, probably with a knife. Tears
made lines on his cheeks as he called her name. Janell didn’t respond.
Deresi sat with her back to the corner, hugging her knees. She
didn’t speak or look at Janell. She’s as horrified as me, and not just as what
had happened to Janell. Shadyia had never seen men impaled. The practice had
been outlawed in Anderholm more than a century ago. The stories she heard had
always seemed exaggerated. No man could actually survive an injury like that
for more than a few seconds. She no longer believed that.
The rising moon gave them enough light to see the road, but just
barely. Shadyia sighed. Soon they would arrive at the Silver Rose. Makayla will
probably blame me for what happened to Janell. The new madam of the Silver Rose
had commanded Shadyia not to leave the palace without her permission, and now
she was returning in a wagon with a sister near death, a coin she was supposed
to be seducing, his apprentice and Deresi. Fate hates me tonight. Shadyia
chastised herself at the thought. If they had been a moment sooner or later,
she never would have seen the cart and those vile men would likely now be
burying Janell in a shallow grave outside the city. Aaron believed there were
no gods, but at times like this, when events were too grave to be mere
coincidence, Shadyia found it hard to agree with him.
She reached down and touched Janell’s neck. The pulse was there,
but weak. She looked at Aaron, still at the reins. He hadn’t spoken since
driving them out of the city and into the forest. Words formed in her mouth,
but the will to utter them couldn’t cross her throat. The magic Aaron had used
to kill those men wasn’t beautiful and wondrous. It wasn’t butterflies hovering
over his hand or a variety of delicious treats to eat and drink. For the first
time in her life, she feared a man.They cleared the forest and approached the
Dawn Gate. She unbuckled the baldric holding blacksteel sword and hid it as
best she could. If anyone searched the cart they’d likely find it. She didn’t
care.
Aaron stopped the cart and jumped off. He walked to the back,
gathered up Janell and carried her to the gate. Benjamin raced him there and
franticly rang the bell. The minutes that followed passed in a blur of
activity. Guardian sisters escorted them in, calling for Mrs. Amber, the palace
physician. Sisters cried out as they saw Janell. The word spread and soon a
crowd of weeping, angry or shocked women gathered round. Sleepy-eyed Mrs. Amber
appeared and ordered them back. She asked Aaron to carry Janell to the nearest
bed, a pleasure room off the west wing. Allowing only two assistants to follow,
she placed guardians outside the door and told everyone else to wait.
The doors to White Hall flew open and Makayla stormed through with
Thoria—as always—close on her heels.
“Who brought her?” The madam’s voice silenced the chamber.
Aaron stepped forward. “I did.”
The fury drained from Makayla’s face. “I see.” She smoothed her
black dress. “What happened?”
“Innocenti raped and tortured her,” Aaron replied evenly.
Makayla’s long black hair covered half her face as she tilted her
head. “Unfortunate.”
Shadyia’s fists tightened at her side. “Unfortunate? That’s all
you have to say?”
“No, Sister Shadyia, that’s not all I have to say. We will tend to
Sister Janell’s wounds as best we can. In the morning, I will prepare a letter
of complaint against the Innocenti and have it delivered to the magistrate.
They will see those who committed these acts are brought to justice.” Makayla
turned and walked toward the audience, her heels clicking.
Shadyia allowed her a few steps. Not so fast, bitch. “Maybe
they’ll start with you.”
Deresi, the sisters, guardians, Benjamin and Aaron stood as
statues as Makayla halted. She rounded on Shadyia. “Watch your tongue, Sister,
or I will have it removed.”
Shadyia’s rage coiled like a serpent about to strike. If she had
kept the blacksteel sword and not hidden it in the wagon, they’d be cleaning
Makayla’s blood off the walls and floor for a week. “Give that command and I
will kill you and any who try to carry it out.”
Thoria drew her baton and advanced on Shadyia. Aaron rushed
forward and intercepted the blond guardian with his body.
“Madam, please call away your guard.”
“Thoria, step back.”
Her scowl locked on Shadyia, Thoria obeyed.
Makayla put her hands on her hips, her long sleeves hanging down.
“Speak your mind, Sister. Why do you say such a thing?”
“If you hadn’t sent Janell to the Kaolins, she wouldn’t have
sought refuge with the Innocenti.”
“And if she had carried out my command, none of this would have
happened. What sort of fool asks the Innocenti for anything?”
“The sort that cannot see them for what they are,” Shadyia
replied. “The sort that thinks they are knights from a fairy tale. The sort
that talks about joining them—” She leveled her finger. “—as you knew perfectly
well!”Makayla huffed. “You dare accuse me of deliberately driving Janell to
the Innocenti?”
“I do.”
Benjamin spoke up. “She didn’t go to the Innocenti. She came to me
last night.”
Makayla pivoted toward him. “And who are you?”
“I am Aaron’s apprentice, Benjamin.”
Her hazel eyes moved from him to Aaron and back. “So how did she
end up with the Innocenti?”
Benjamin looked to Aaron, who shook his head once.
“We got separated in the city this morning.” The young man dropped
his gaze.
Makayla faced Shadyia. “And do you also blame me for this,
Sister?”
“I do not,” Shadyia replied. Damn the boy and his honesty.
“The hour is late and our nerves are raw,” Aaron said. “Madam, please
take the finest care of Janell. I will personally cover any expense.”
“Consider it done.”
“Madam,” Benjamin said, getting her attention, “may I stay with
Janell?”Makayla sighed. “That will be up to Mrs. Amber, but we will prepare a
room for you in any case.”
“Thank you, Madam.”
Aaron stepped near to Shadyia and lowered his voice. “Why don’t
you and Deresi come with me to Featherquill?”The dying rage in Shadyia still
seethed, but she looked to Deresi. Did she want to visit Featherquill? Deresi
nodded in agreement.
Aaron turned back to Makayla. “Madam, may I have the pleasure of
both Sister Shadyia and Sister Deresi this night?”Makayla raised an eyebrow.
“You wish them both, sir?”
“I have lots to celebrate.”
“These sisters look disheveled and exhausted, sir. May I ask how
they came to be in this state?”Shadyia glanced at Aaron. He mustn’t mention
the labyrinth or—
“It’s my fault, Madam,” Aaron said. “We played a game in some
ruins beyond the forest. I wanted Sister Shadyia to hide and I would search for
her. Sister Deresi was concerned when her friend didn’t return and found us
this morning. I invited her to play and…well, things got out of hand. My
apologies.”
“None needed, Master Aaron. The coin you’ve offered more than pays
for their services. But, do you not wish them bathed, perfumed and properly
dressed before they leave with you?”Aaron glanced at Shadyia and Deresi. “To
be honest, Madam, I rather like them in this state and I’m not yet finished
with them. By your leave, I will take them as they are.”
Makayla arched an eyebrow. “Your vigor will make you a legend,
Aaron of Featherquill.” She grinned. “Very well, but have Sister
Deresi return by noon tomorrow.”
“As you wish.”
An arm around both their hips, Aaron led her and Deresi toward the
main doors. The sisters dispersed, mumbling quietly among themselves. Makayla’s
heels clicked away.
“Wait,” Deresi said as Shadyia put a hand on the outer doors.
“I’ll be right back.”
Aaron watched her run off then turned to Shadyia. “You should
better watch your words around your madam.”
Fuck her! If not for Benjamin’s blundering innocence and Aaron’s
disarming remarks, there would have been a long-overdue fight here. A part of
her still wished for that. “You have no idea how much I hate that woman.”
“I have some idea,” he said, his expression serious.
Maybe he does at that. Aaron had said Verthandi had seduced
Makayla. “Do you still feel his influence on her?”
Aaron pressed his lips and nodded. “More than ever.”
She seized his arm and hushed her voice. “Then let’s deal with
her, here and now. I’ll go with you.”
That infuriating calm crossed his features. “And what of her
guards? And the other sisters? Are you prepared to fight them? And even if we
could turn them to your side, what happens when the Redcloaks find out? From
what you’ve told me, Makayla is the rightful heir to this palace. If we depose
her, we would be criminals in the eyes of the law.”
She scowled. Damn his logic! He was worse than Sybaris.
He leaned close. “We will deal with her eventually, after this
business with the ruby is completed. If Verthandi is released—” He glanced
around at the walls. “—what does any of this matter?”
Shadyia hissed a sigh. “If you say so.” But if she crosses me just
one more time…
Deresi returned carrying a familiar flat, wooden box.
“My dress,” Shadyia said.
“I wanted to see it on you.”
Aaron looked at the elegant box. “You have a dress in there?”
Shadyia took the box, glanced around to make sure they weren’t
observed, and opened the lid with her thumbs.
Aaron whistled. “That is mag-nificent.”
Shadyia snapped closed the lid and kissed Deresi on the cheek.
“Thanks, hon.”
“Where ever did you get that?” Aaron asked. “It must have cost a
fortune.”
Deresi offered her an evil grin. “Go on, tell him.”
Shadyia cringed. “You know the seer in the market? The one posing
as a tailor?”
Aaron nodded slowly. Just before the three of them had descended
into the labyrinth, Aaron had confided that he too had had some dealings with
that mysterious seer. She had prophesized that he must find Æthelmaer’s ruby in
Mirrikh’s labyrinth or Verthandi would walk the world again.
Shadyia tapped the box. “She made this for me.” The seer had also
told Shadyia that Anderholm would burn in a matter of days. More insanity added
to an insane situation.
Aaron brushed his fingers over the flat box. “I have a feeling we
have not seen the last of her. Let’s go to the stables. Our horses must be
kicking the walls down by now.”
Shadyia recovered the blacksteel sword, still in its baldric, from
the wagon. Careful to conceal it with her body from anyone who might be
watching from the palace, she hid the fine weapon deep in the stables then
roused two of the men from their cottage out back. Paying them a silver each,
she asked them to bring out the Ramiero chargers, attach them to a carriage and
drive Aaron, Deresi and herself to Featherquill. Xavier didn’t appreciate being
employed as a carriage horse, but Shadyia rewarded him with a few carrots and
words of praise until he grudgingly accepted the harness.
A swaying lantern flung their shadows along the walls as their
closed carriage returned through the Kingsleaf. The rhythm of the wheels, and
the peace of leaving the palace far behind, pulled Shadyia into blissful rest.
“May I see it?” Deresi asked.
Aaron unfastened the pouch at his side, brought out the ruby, and
placed it in Deresi’s cupped hands.
Light from the lantern passed through the ruby and drew red marks
on Deresi’s face. She made the kind of sound women usually reserve for holding
a kitten. “It’s so beautiful.”
Shadyia forced open her eyes and considered the ruby. On the
surface, it looked like the kind of gem an emperor would wear on his crown, but
Aaron had said its true value lay within the magic it held. The ruby, he told
them, absorbed the knowledge of all the magicians who had ever owned it like a
cloth on spilt wine.
Shadyia leaned over and kissed Deresi’s cheek. “I can’t believe
you picked Mirrikh’s pocket. You amaze me.” When Mirrikh had seized both her
and Aaron in his magic, Deresi had slid to her knees, grabbed his robe, and
begged Mirrikh not to harm them. It must have been in that instant that she had
dipped her hand into his large pocket and fished out the ruby.
Deresi turned the tear-shaped ruby over and examined its base. The
broad end had a shallow, round indention in it. “What is this for?”
“That is where you insert the end of a sagewood staff.”
Shadyia circled her finger inside the indention. Aaron had said if
a staff made from sagewood touched the ruby, it would transform into a
Valkyrise, an artifact of the magi lords. With this wondrous staff, a magician
could triple his power and be immune to all magical attacks. Moreover, if
anyone spent enough time with a Valkyrise, they could eventually learn to use
magic like a magician. That last bit had particularly caught Deresi’s
attention.
“Do you think we could get the sagewood staff from the Asyerian
clerics?”
Aaron shook his head. “I seriously doubt it. Sagewood is as rare
as any treasure in the world. We could be thrown into the Ahmeinian dungeons
just for inquiring about their staff, let alone asking them to let us have it.”
Shadyia thought on that. “What if we were to tell the Asyerians
about Verthandi and the Ashkhan escaping?”
The carriage jolted over a bump, making Aaron hop in his seat
“That would get us tossed into an asylum instead of the dungeon.” He huffed a
laugh and held out his hand in a silent request for the return of the ruby.
“No, I will use this to find out how to travel to Celestrial. The archives
there should have all known information about the prison of the Ashkhan.”
Deresi, her gaze locked on the gem, nodded. “Yeah, that might
work.”
Shadyia nudged Deresi’s side. She had probably not heard anything
Aaron had said. Grinning, he gently pried the ruby from Deresi’s fingers. She
made a small sound of protest, but dropped her hands to her lap.
“Tell me something, please,” Deresi said as Aaron returned the
ruby to his pouch.
“Yes?”
“What’s it like to use magic?”
The carriage tilted around a bend as Aaron seemed to consider his
answer. “When you first feel the ether, it’s like being parched and drinking
from an icy waterfall. It flows over you, refreshes you. You can’t imagine
anything being more wonderful. But you can only drink so much and that feeling,
believe it or not, passes. You want to learn where the water comes from—and you
have this insatiable desire to control the water, make it stop or fall faster.
That’s the trap.”
Deresi blinked. “What do you mean?”
“A wise man once said, there is none so improvised as he who wants
more than he has. Look at this.” Aaron lifted his left hand, palm up, and
passed his right over it. A sphere of blazing flames appeared and hovered just
above his cupped fingers.Deresi’s green eyes widened. “Whoa!” Before Shadyia
could stop her, she reached for the flame. “Ouch!” She snatched her hand away
and put the tips of two fingers in her mouth.
“Are you all right?” Shadyia took Deresi’s hand and inspected it.
Deresi nodded. “It’s fine.”
A wave of heat from the fire above Aaron’s hand brushed Shadyia’s
face. Deresi had probably assumed the flames were an illusion. Maybe they were.
“A little warning next time, if you please.”
He closed his hand and the flames vanished. “What I just did there
was nothing to me. I felt no sense of wonder or accomplishment. If I were a
cruel man, I would delight in hurting Deresi, but I’m not, so I can’t even
enjoy that.”
Deresi glanced at her fingers. “It felt so real.”
“It wasn’t,” Aaron said, and leaned back on his seat.
He had created something to fool their minds—why? Shadyia cupped
her hand over Deresi’s hand. “I still don’t see your point.”
“There was a time
that when I made something like that, I felt like a god. I had created fire. Do
you understand? Fire I knew wasn’t real, but still I would burn my fingers if I
touched it. These days, creating an illusion like that is as easy as breathing.
Imagine going from feeling like a god, to feeling nothing. Every magician who
has ever used magic wants to feel that initial rush again—” Aaron’s hands
became fists. “—craves it.”
Shadyia nodded. “Like breathing the smoke from the black ickrus.”
He stabbed a finger at her. “Exactly. Thankfully, I’ve never tried
ickrus, but from what people have told me, it’s marvelous. You feel as if you
are flying through the clouds. Over time, however, the fumes no longer give the
same sensation, but the memory of that experience drives one to take more and
more until it consumes your every thought.”
Deresi shook her head. “All right, but that’s illusion. You said
there were magicians who could create things for real.”
Aaron rubbed his forehead. “Oh, that’s even worse.”
Deresi yelped in disbelief. “How could it be worse?”
“Imagine if I snapped my fingers and created a necklace of gold
and emeralds. A real one.”
She grinned. “I like that thought.”
He lifted his chin. “Why?”
“Emeralds are beautiful, and you can buy things with them. Castles
and servants and nice dresses.”
“Could I buy a thousand castles if I made a thousand emerald necklaces?”
The carriage creaked and swayed as Deresi chewed her lower lip in
thought. “I guess not. It wouldn’t be worth anything if there were a thousand
of them.”
“Exactly.”
Shadyia drummed her fingers on the leather armrest at her side.
Easy for a king with rooms full of treasure to say gold and gems have no
meaning, but for the rest of the peasants, wealth was still a splendid thing.
“You told me in the castle ruins that no amount of power could thwart fear. Was
that true of Mirrikh? Was he afraid?”
Aaron arched an eyebrow. “Do you even need to ask? He had power I
could only imagine. He once owned a Valkyrise. When we found him, he wore
enchanted artifacts that preserved his life and kept him from all magical harm.
Yet…”
Shadyia nodded. “Yet he hid in a labyrinth for centuries.”
“Precisely. I am certain, despite all that he was and all that he
owned, Mirrikh felt inadequate, paranoid and—yes—afraid.”Shadyia shook her
head against the thought. Would she be the same? If she had the power Mirrikh
possessed, would she only crave more? It was difficult to believe there would
come a time when working magic became as dull as doing the washing. Magic
opened new worlds, new experiences. To grasp the unknown, to entertain the
masses, to conquer the lands of your enemy…
To kill men who delighted in torture.
Shadyia stared at Aaron. Soon they would arrive in Anderholm and
his manor in the Artisan Quarter. If she were to ever understand what had
happened in the alley, now would be the time. “May I ask you about something
difficult?”Aaron turned grim as if he had expected her to breach this matter.
“Go ahead.”
“What happened to you in the alley?” Shadyia asked.
He briefly closed his eyes, took a deep breath, and released it.
“I touched Janell’s mind to learn who was responsible for her injuries.”
“You can do that too?” Deresi asked. “Remarkable.”
“No,” Aaron replied curtly. “Foolish. I acted in haste and didn’t
put up the proper defenses. I felt a portion of what they did to Janell as if
it were done to me. It nearly drove me insane.”
Deresi crossed her fingers over her lips. “You felt what she did?”
He nodded. “Some of it.”
A chill brushed Shadyia’s nape. Some of it. Aaron had writhed on
the ground and screamed in agony. As he had recovered, he had said three
Innocenti had taken turns on Janell. One of those three men was still out
there, but two of them had paid for their acts with pain and humiliation equal,
Shadyia hoped, to what they had done to Janell. Or had they? “Those men in the
wagon, what you did to them, was that real?”
“It was real to them.”
Deresi visibly shuddered. “I wish I hadn’t seen that. I mean, I
know they deserved it, but I can’t get it out of my mind.”Aaron rubbed his
forehead. “For that, I deeply apologize. I acted out of rage with no regard for
you or Shadyia. I should have told you to look away.”
“I wouldn’t have, even if you’d asked.” Shadyia had wanted to see
those vile men die.
The haunted look in Deresi’s eyes told she did not feel the same.
“Will Janell recover?”
Aaron responded with a slight shrug. “I think she’ll survive, but
she won’t be Janell any longer. At least, I don’t think so. She may prove us
wrong.”
When Aaron opened the cloth covering Janell, her chin and neck had
been covered in dry blood, probably form having her tongue cut out. They had
pressed branding irons against her breasts until—Fuck! Shadyia quivered. Stop
thinking about it! “So those men are still alive?” she asked, her tone hot with
anger.
“Oh no.” Aaron shook his head. “In the morning, the city guard
will find two dead men in that alley. There will be no evidence of what killed
them, but to those Innocenti, they were impaled.”
Shadyia clenched the fingers on her thigh into a fist. “Good.”
Deresi soft hand cupped over Shadyia’s fist. She reached across
the cabin and offered her other hand to Aaron. “I know you don’t believe in the
gods, but can we pray for Janell?”
He took her hand. “Certainly.”
Deresi closed her eyes. “Hallowed Luun, goddess of strength, guide
our fallen sister, Janell, back into the light. Let her know she is loved and
we miss her and need her in our lives.”
“May it be so,” Shadyia said, her anger vanishing.
“May it be so,” Aaron repeated.
Shadyia lifted Deresi’s hand and kissed her knuckles. “I’ve never
heard you pray before.”
She shrugged. “Can’t hurt.”
Aaron let go of Deresi’s hand. “We should arrive at my home soon.
So, tell me ladies, how may I reward you for your magnificent service?”
Shadyia yawned. Enough of rewards and magic. “As I said outside
the tower, a bath, a hot meal, and some rest are all I need.”
“There must be more.”
She leaned her head on Deresi’s shoulder and closed her eyes. “At
the moment, I cannot see past that.”
“I know what she wants,” Deresi said.
“Tell me,” Aaron asked.
“She wants to dance at the Crystal Ballroom.”
That snapped Shadyia awake. “I do, eh?”
“Yes, and don’t even deny it.” Deresi bopped the end of Shadyia’s
nose. “I saw how your eyes lit up when I told you how I snuck in there.”
Aaron arched his eyebrows as if impressed. “You did?”
Deresi bobbed her head. “About five years ago.” She pushed a lock
of red hair behind one ear. “I broke in one night with some friends. Just make
sure when you take her, there’s plenty of music. She has no imagination.”
Aaron pursed his lips and nodded. “I’ll see what I can do. And
what about you, Dee? What would you like, besides a servant to polish your
toes?”
Shadyia grinned. To lighten the tension in the labyrinth, Deresi
had joked—had it been a joke?—that she had always wanted to be wealthy enough
to employ someone to polish her toes. Just that and nothing else. Polish her
toes.
“Oh the usual,” Deresi said with a flip of her wrist. “A castle in
the clouds, a dozen flying horses and my own queendom.”
Aaron stared at her a moment then blinked. “That may take a bit
longer, but I’ll get to work on it.”
Deresi exchanged her smirk for a serious look. “You know what I’d
really like?”
“Tell me, please.”
“I’d like to be a magician. I want to do the things you do.” She
wiggled her fingers.
Shadyia rolled her eyes. Oh, just great. Aaron would remind her
that women were never trained as magicians and such power came with a price few
were willing to pay. Deresi would argue and Shadyia would have to mediate.
She’d get no rest on the way to Featherquill.
“I can help you there,” Aaron said with sincerity. “It will take
some time and lots of hard work, but if you’re willing, so am I.”Deresi lifted
her chin. “I am.”
Shadyia silently admonished herself. Aaron wasn’t the type to have
his hands tied by tradition, nor was he a stuffy lord of Anderholm who needed
to dominate the women in his life. But Deresi as a magician? For some reason,
Shadyia pictured a cat with wings. I only hope she doesn’t fly too close to the
sun.
“All right then, but tell me something, both of you. Do you wish
to leave the Silver Rose?”
Shadyia was aware that Deresi was looking at her even before she
turned her head so she could meet her curious green eyes. Leave the Silver
Rose? It had been more than her home for six years; it was her identity. The
money was easy and she loved the work, the games of seduction. She was the
finest of the sisters, a gold belt, envied and respected. Why should I leave?
Even as that question coursed through her mind, she knew the
answer. She had dared to enter a labyrinth of death, fought deadly shadows and
had even driven her sword through Mirrikh’s ghostly face so that her companions
could escape. But it wasn’t just the adventures and terrors under the Black
Tower. Aaron had told her of ancient civilizations and faraway lands.
There was so much to the world she had yet to see, so much she had
yet to experience. Janell needed to be avenged, Makayla needed to be dealt
with—probably with the help of Sybaris—and the sisters needed to be protected
from the Innocenti, but when that was done, the time had come to seek new
horizons and new challenges.
“Yes,” she said.
Deresi touched her knee. “Are you sure, hon?”
Shadyia nodded. “I can’t go back to whoring, not anymore. I think,
maybe, finding Janell closed that door forever. I want to make a difference in
this world. It’s what my foster father would have desired for me.”Somewhere,
beyond the veil where the spirits traveled, she imagined her foster father
smiling. Maybe he didn’t ride celestial horses across the eternal plains of
Eriensym, but Aaron said the spirits of good men continued on past a mortal
death. She hoped so.
“What about the sisterhood?” Deresi asked.
“I’ll find a way to keep them safe from the Innocenti. I don’t
know how just yet, but when that’s done, so am I.”
Deresi discreetly squeezed Shadyia’s thigh. “I’ll follow you
anywhere.”
Shadyia kissed Deresi’s neck, just below the ear. If Aaron hadn’t
been sitting there, it would have been her lips that got kissed, and more.
“You’re both welcome to stay at Featherquill as long as you wish,”
Aaron said. “My home is your home.”
“Thank you, Aaron,” Shadyia said.
Deresi added her gratitude with a sweet smile.
“Listen, when we get there, you won’t see much of me until
tomorrow. I’m going to be in a special room I’ve constructed under the house.”
He patted the bulge in his pouch. “I want to study this as much as I can. I’ll
show you how to contact me if you need to, it’s easy. Just a bell you need to
ring. But please, make sure it’s important before you do.”
“I understand,” Shadyia said. “You need to save the world.”
“And you need to save your sisterhood.”
“And then we will take a long, lovely holiday,” Deresi added.
A long holiday. Shadyia hummed at the thought. That we will do.
Author Bio:
The Shadyia Ascendant Book Series is the kind of fantasy book I wanted to read, but could never find. Sexy, powerful, positive.
The heroes are beaten, but are never broken.
Although this is a medieval setting (more or less 15th century Renaissance), the characters don’t scratch at fleas and trug through the book ass-deap in mud and blood and disease. I’m sure all that is accurate, but I never wanted to read about it.
I wanted magic that is rare, women that are bold and beautiful, mysterious magicians with a hidden agenda, and gods that move mortals about like pieces on a chessboard. That’s the book I wanted.
I was inspired by the fantasy writer David Gemmell in terms of pace. When you read one of his books, you get your money’s worth. He won’t spend eleven chapters with this characters arguing in a castle. The term “I could never put it down” fits a Gemmell book perfectly, and it’s what I have striven to accomplish in the Shadyia Ascendant series.
Get ready for a sexy adventure you won’t soon forget!
A graduate in history, specializing in Central-European history, I'm an avid computer gamer, reader enthusiast, and teacher of English as a foreign language. I'm American and currently reside in Poland.
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