Tag: Suilan Lee

  • Blades of Ashes Ch 15-2

    Chapter 15-2

    The Doriel residence felt warm and well-lived in. The great room to the right of the entryway was filled with an assortment of chairs and long couches meant to encourage rest and conversation.

    Alise invited them to take a seat in the great room.

    “I’ll check on arrangements,” Alise said. “Please wait for me.”

    Raithion nodded and moved to sit on one of the closest armchairs with a view of the back of the house. Haedor chose a couch by the windows with a view of the front of the building.

    “What do you think will happen next?” Haedor asked when they were alone.

    “The Sura Clan’s decisions are made within a council,” Raithion said. “I’m sure that is who Alise is working with to arrange a meeting.”

    “Not the angry Prince Azula?” Haedor said with a chuckle.

    Raithion smiled and wondered how Azula had ended up the chieftain of the clan. He’d thought Alise would take over the role because she was the firstborn.

    A woman brought them refreshments: a tray laden with fresh apples, a jug of fruit juice, and another of cold water. Haedor poured a glass of the juice for Raithion, who refused the apples. So, Haedor sat on the couch eating apples with fragrant enthusiasm.

    The wait was long but comfortable. An hour later, a young boy ran in through the front door, full of energy as he sprinted down the wide hallway without a glance at them. The man who followed him smiled in greeting as he followed his charge.

    “What a little whirlwind,” Haedor said, amused. “He looks the same age as Yulin, maybe a little older.”

    Raithion nodded, turning to his left. His chair gave him a clear view of the door at the back of the manor. He saw when Azula walked in, leaving the door open and smiling at someone behind him. His lips curved in a devastating smile that brightened his features. He was still so handsome.

    Then the boy who had come in running rushed Azula, hands open wide. Raithion did not hear what he said, but he heard the tail end of the word: “father!”

    The violent dip that ripped through his heart was a surprise. His pulse froze as he watched Azula lean down and lift the boy with a wide smile. Then Azula kissed the boy on his cheeks, holding him close.

    A son. Raithion forced himself to look away. His chest ached at the reality of Azula already belonging to another. Azula was handsome, a prince, and the Sura Clan always married early. At twenty-five, his family would have insisted on his tying the Gordian knot. What had he been expecting?

    Closing his eyes, Raithion gripped the goblet he held until his knuckles whitened. He forced his mind to stop focusing on the crippling disappointment. He had spent five years nursing a ghost, only to find a man who had long since moved on. He wasn’t here to chase after Azula but to seek an amiable agreement with the Sura Clan. The rest was just his bad luck.

    ****

    Azula carried Ruri into the kitchen to check what the baker had in his oven. Senin followed him into the kitchen, moving to open the drawer holding kitchen knives.

    “I can’t believe you have us dealing with goat meat this late in the afternoon. Had we known, we would have started in the morning,” Senin complained as he found the right knife and hurried outside.

    Azula glanced at Ruri, who was eyeing the baked oatmeal cookies laid out on a baking sheet on the large kitchen table. Azula glanced around the kitchen, and when he was sure there was no one to catch them, he moved closer to the cookies. He grabbed two, handing one to Ruri. He popped the other in his mouth, and they ate with relish, sharing wide smiles. When they were almost done, footsteps sounded behind them.

    “Stop,” Alise said, and they both froze.

    Ruri glanced at Azula with wide eyes; then, he stuffed the remaining bit of his cookie into his mouth.

    “Turn around,” Alise said.

    Azula winced and wiped his mouth, then Ruri’s, as he turned with a guilty smile to find Alise standing a few feet away.

    “Caught you stealing cookies and spoiling your dinner,” Alise said, pointing a finger at them. “Confess, how many did you eat?”

    “None,” Azula said, confident he had wiped their faces efficiently.

    “Are you sure?” Alise asked, her eyes narrowing.

    Azula glanced at Ruri, who was nodding his head. Unfortunately, he had crumbs on the corner of his lips. Azula sighed and grinned at Alise.

    “Are you sticking with your story?” Alise asked as she frowned, her hands on her hips. “One big, one small, what am I going to do with you? No cookies before your evening meal. Agreed?”

    Azula nodded, and so did Ruri, making Alise laugh. She held out her hands and took Ruri from Azula. Getting a handkerchief from her pocket, she wiped Ruri’s mouth.

    “Azu, I brought the Draeya Prince and Lord Haedor to the manor,” Alise said, looking at him for a moment. “Juya has convinced the council to meet him tomorrow morning and have a good talk. I know you’ve been postponing, but we really can’t anymore. Yulin is healed. We can’t let them leave without trying. It’s time.”

    Azula sighed. Were the empires all making a move today? One by one, knocking on the door. Azula shook his head.

    “Trevan is outside helping Senin clean goat meat for the bonfire,” Azula said. “You have a Lyrian Prince in the manor. Are you planning on getting them to meet by force?”

    “Perhaps,” Alise said with a small smile. “We don’t need to force anything. The bonfire is at our home. Our guests can mingle. The council is attending, so they can familiarize themselves with the Draeya Prince. As for Trevan, thank him for his continued business, and send him off. It’s a normal evening on Sura Island. The Lyrians can try our barbecue, too. It’s high time they tried our great food. Right, Ruri?”

    “Right,” Ruri said, looking at Azula with triumphant eyes.

    “See, Ruri agrees,” Alise said.

    “I feel tired just thinking about it. So, I’m not playing,” Azula said, reaching under a counter by the washing area to get a bunch of skewers. “You deal with it with Juya’s help. I’m going to help prepare food and deal with Trevan. You entertain the Lyrians.”

    Azula started to head for the door, but slowed down when Ruri wiggled until his mother let him down. The boy came racing after Azula as they walked out, shouting, “Let’s make barbecue skewers!”

    ****

    Alise let out a soft breath as she stood in the empty kitchen, staring at the open back door. Where did her brother inherit his stubborn attitude from?

    Shaking her head, she turned to look at the oatmeal cookies. Thinking about Azula and Ruri with crumbs on their cheeks, she laughed.

    “Naughty devils,” she said and stole a cookie, too, eating it fast before she headed out to entertain the great Draeya Prince and the Lord General until Azula could gain the courage to take over.

    ****

    The bonfire was held in the back courtyard of the Doriel residence. A large, round fire pit was built upon stone tiles in the middle of the backyard. The fire was lit, and the clan members trickled in, helping with food that was grilled over coals on large grills mounted on the ledges of the stone firepit. There were stone tables all around the courtyard, where platters of food were placed for guests. There was no shortage of seats; if not stone stools or benches, people made do with the stone ledges around flower beds or brought chairs from inside the manor.

    Lamps in holders lined the trees, illuminating the courtyard and the cobbled paths leading to the docks and around the manor.

    Raithion loved the warm atmosphere and the laughter that filled the evening air.

    Alise and Juya accompanied Raithion and Haedor, making sure they had a place to sit, enough food and drink, and steady conversation. Alise talked to him about his work in Lyria, his family, Yulin, and his parents. Raithion found himself sharing about Naeri, Yulin’s health, and why he was wearing mourning clothes.

    Raithion decided then that Alise was a true diplomat. She never once let him feel any tension because of their political differences.

    At one point, Alise excused herself to handle a matter. Juya and Haedor were discussing the merits of the carriage they had used earlier in the day.

    Raithion shifted in his seat and noticed Alvas, who had taken care of Yulin, sitting on a flowerbed ledge a few feet away. She had her back turned to him. A tall man came to sit next to her, holding a plate of beef skewers.

    “Kalas, did Prince Azu get enough to eat?” Alvas asked. “He has a terrible habit of taking care of everyone but forgetting himself.”

    “He’s with Trevan. I sent a platter of grilled meat and vegetables to their table,” Kalas said. “Prince Azu is occupied with sending the general off. We can worry about it when he’s done. I don’t know why he’s so nervous about it today. Their relationship has been very good.”

    “How good can it be when one of them was oblivious the whole time?” Alvas asked, her tone filled with wistfulness. “It’s a good thing we have Ruri. Otherwise, there won’t be a next chieftain if we leave it up to the prince.”

    “Alise and Juya seem to be heading toward a marriage,” Kalas said.

    Raithion’s gaze shifted to Juya, who was almost drawing diagrams for Haedor as he animatedly discussed Sura Clan carriages. Azula’s potential brother-in-law looked very passionate. Raithion smiled and sipped his juice, tuning back to Alvas and Kalas’s conversation, shamelessly listening to the gossip.

    “It will be good if the Princess can find happiness again,” Alvas was saying. “Yemin’s death was hard on her. It was lucky she had to protect Ruri, which gave her the strength to keep fighting.”

    “True,” Kalas said with a heavy sigh. “If the prince hadn’t taken over, she might have miscarried and lost Yemin’s son forever. It would have been a devastating tragedy.”

    “It’s all fate,” Alvas said.

    Raithion’s heart skipped.

    “The prince taking over saved Ruri and his sister, allowed our clan to thrive, and get through,” Kalas said.

    Raithion’s heart didn’t just skip; it seemed to restart, a frantic, thrumming rhythm taking hold in his chest. Yemin’s son. The words echoed in his mind, sweeping away the suffocating weight that had crushed his spirit since he first saw the boy. A wave of profound, dizzying relief crashed over him, so intense it made his hands tremble. Azula was single. He was still unattached, unclaimed, and suddenly, impossibly within reach again. The mourning clothes he wore felt a little less heavy, the evening air a little sweeter. He sat up and scanned the courtyard, searching for Azula, but he couldn’t see him.

    Raithion stood, decided to find him, and get his answers straight from the source.

    *****

    “I’m heading out,” Trevan said as Azula stood by his carriage. The bonfire was still ongoing. “You should head back.”

    “We cooked up a storm for you,” Azula said with a small smile. “You’ve ended up leaving early.”

    “I know. It’s better to be on board as we prepare to cast off,” Trevan said, reaching into his coat pocket. He pulled out a sealed envelope and handed it to Azula. “This is for you. I hope you find what you’re looking for in Lyria. I pray the Sura are always carefree. Let me come visit for a bonfire next time.”

    “It’s a plan,” Azula said, taking the envelope and putting it in his jacket pocket.

    Trevan stepped forward and pulled him into a tight hug. He did not give Azula enough time to think about it. He let Azula go and stepped into the open carriage. Azula blinked, and Trevan was already settled inside.

    “See you,” Trevan said, waving at him as the soldiers escorting him to the docks closed the carriage door.

    “Safe travels,” Azula said as the carriage left.

    Azula stood in the quiet driveway for a minute, his thoughts consumed by Trevan Pearcliff. He felt guilty that he could not reciprocate Trevan’s feelings. Perhaps if he weren’t the clan’s chieftain, he might have chosen to return to the Nerasa Kingdom and live with his master, Yantian, at the Sura Clan workshop at Rewa Port. Maybe in time, he might have loved Trevan and learned to live in Nerasa.

    “What are you thinking about, standing alone?” Alise said, walking up to him. She took his hand and turned him toward a path that led around the house to the back courtyard.

    “I was seeing Trevan off,” Azula said. “We talked. I told him I was sorry for not knowing he liked me. He gave me an agreement that I’ll explain later. Now he’s gone back home, they’ll cast off when the tide’s right, and I feel some guilt toward him.”

    “Guilt is natural,” Alise said, squeezing his arm as they walked slowly. “I can genuinely say that Trevan is a good man, and I hope he will find genuine happiness in Nerasa. He’s a statesman. I trust he will keep to the agreements we have put in place. We can thank Juya for pushing for legal agreements with the Nerasa court.”

    “Yes,” Azula said with a nod, also grateful for Juya’s insightfulness.

    They cleared the length of the house and were now at a fork, with one path leading to the dock by the lake and the other to the back courtyard.

    Azula gave the bench by the dock a wistful look.

    “The bonfire is still going,” Alise said.

    “It is,” Azula said. “I need some time to myself.”

    “Okay,” Alise said as they stopped at the fork. “While you and Trevan were saying your goodbyes, I had a good talk with the Draeya Prince. Raithion’s wife, Naeri, died of the poison his son ingested. Her final act was to save Yulin. He now wears mourning clothes because of her. The fact that she was poisoned at all is enough to tell me that he has not lived an easy life. Perhaps the last five years have been full of strife. Having lived through a rough period ourselves, Azula, perhaps you should hear him out so that we find a solution to our standoff with Lyria.”

    Azula glanced at Alise in the lamplight and smiled at her determined look. “Fine, I’ll listen to you, Princess.”

    Azula kissed her cheek. “Tomorrow. For now, let me spend a few minutes alone.”

    “Okay, I’ll go find Mom and Magnus to arrange a council meeting in the morning,” Alise said, letting go of his arm. She headed toward the courtyard, and he started a stroll to the dock.

    When he reached the bench, he sat down and took a deep breath, letting it out slowly.

    Thinking about Raithion hurt. He could not forget the picture of him kneeling while holding his son. Alise was right. If his wife had died of poison, what would he have lived through in the capital?

    “May I join you?” Raithion asked in a soft voice.

    Azula sat still, not moving or turning to look at him. The bonfire party continued in the courtyard, bursts of laughter filling the air. Azula did not answer.

    Raithion did not wait for an invitation. He walked in front of Azula and sat next to him with a soft sigh. He was still dressed in black, like a haunting ghost. The only color on him was his green eyes and the gold clip holding his dark hair. How pitiful, this glorified Draeya General.

    “Are you happy?” Azula found himself asking.

    After everything that had happened between them, that was the only question he wanted to ask.

    “I—” Raithion started, then let out a soft, dry chuckle. “I haven’t had an answer for that question in five years. But after your mom healed Yulin, I can say that, yes, I’m happy now. Happy that Yulin has survived a disaster and got a chance to live. Happy that I’m here, hoping to make amends to you and your people.”

    “What about before?” Azula asked. “Before the poisoning.”

    “Before, I was just surviving one day to the next,” Raithion answered. “Lost in a thick, dark cloud that I could not escape. I married Gesi Ajai’s daughter. Ajai is a devious courtier who has spent years plotting to gain control of the imperial court. His machinations even resulted in Yulin’s poisoning and the death of my wife. It has been a dark hell. I was not happy, Azula.”

    “Then why did you let any of it happen?” Azula asked, unable to keep his anger from rising. “Why didn’t you stand with our clan back then?”

    “I never got the chance,” Raithion said, his voice filled with a desperate energy. “That evening we arrived in Genad City together was when I discovered I was to marry Naeri. It was a plan made by the Basileus and my father. They said they had negotiated with Ajai that if I married Naeri, your clan could escape unscathed. I had no choice but to follow through to protect you. There was nothing I could do to change what happened to your father. It was already too late by the time I discovered it. So, I’ve lived with the choices made that day for five years, until Naeri was poisoned.”

    Azula sat in silence, staring at the lake; the waters were dark in the moonlight. Strangely, the pain in Raithion’s voice was as dark as the lake’s endless depths.

    “You and I have broken promises between us,” Azula said, his voice soft. He crossed his arms and dug into the tight knot in his heart. “You need to tell me everything that happened after we parted, Draeya General. I have lived with a muddled view of the events that led to my father’s death for five years. I need a clearer mind, so you’re going to help me clear my muddled heart.”

    “Okay,” Raithion said. “First, I have one question for you before we delve into the past.”

    Azula frowned and glanced at him. “What question?”

    “Have you tied the Gordian knot with someone?” Raithion asked.

    Azula stared at him for a minute, then shrugged. “I have not,” Azula said with a sigh. “Unlike you, my hair remains unbraided, without promise to some unfortunate soul to share my grief and struggles.”

    Raithion let out a soft breath and then seemed to relax into the bench as he launched into a tale of his arranged marriage, of years living in a sea of aphrodisiac plots in his manor, which resulted in Yulin and a daughter he called Skye.

    Raithion didn’t just speak; he purged. The words spilled out of him like a confession, raw and jagged with the weight of five years. He spoke of his efforts to clear spies from Basileus Dio’s palace and remove military officers loyal to Gesi Ajai throughout the Lyria kingdom.

    It seemed like Raithion’s life had been trapped between a dangerous, ambitious courtier, an even more ambitious Basileus Dio, and two innocent children who met the wrong parents.

    “I did not love her, and in a way, I feel guilty for that,” Raithion said. “I’m wearing these mourning clothes as a way to repent my choices with Naeri. I don’t know if it is enough—it probably never will be—but mourning her is all I can do for her soul.”

    Azula closed his eyes at the pointless nature of Raithion’s arranged marriage.

    “The Basileus used you to stabilize his throne,” Azula said. “Your family’s military strength became the sword he used to cut away the rot in his palace and within the military ranks. He used your sister to stop Gesi Ajai’s daughter from marrying into the Adertha House. And he traded our clan’s innocence to achieve his goals. We had no chance against all that planning.”

    Raithion stayed silent.

    Azula wiped his hand down his face.

    “Then what happened to the thief we caught together?” Azula asked, turning to face him.

    “Are you asking as the Sura Prince or as Azula?” Raithion asked.

    “I don’t know why you think those are two different people,” Azula said. “I told you I need to clear the confusion in my mind. All I remember of my time in Genad City is a scramble to find my father. I never had the chance to chase after you or see what you did with that thief who was stealing our ore.”

    “Fair enough,” Raithion said. “I have the answers you need. But you can only get them when we meet with your council. What I have to say requires a direct answer that you can give me decisively.”

    “Why?” Azula asked.

    “Because I’m willing to fight with you to reopen the case of the forged silver,” Raithion said. “Reopening that case will exonerate your clan, which is something I have wanted to do since they closed it prematurely.”

    “How can I trust your word?” Azula asked.

    “Don’t trust my word,” Raithion said. “I’ll let my actions prove it. I owe you for saving Yulin.”

    “No, we won’t place such a debt on your life or Yulin’s,” Azula said. “Saving lives is what healers do. It was done fairly, and you know my mother was willing. What I need from you, Raithion, is a meeting with Basileus Dio. As the Sura Prince, I want a face-to-face with the Adertha Basileus.”

    “What about the case?” Raithion asked.

    “If we can open the case, we will find the evidence ourselves,” Azula said, then stood and looked at Raithion. “Alise made the right choice, bringing you to the manor. There is a council meeting in the morning. Plan your answers well. I’m sorry about what you had to live through with your wife. I’m happy for you and Yulin that you’ve managed to make it through. Please, enjoy the view of the lake. I’m sure Alise has arranged a comfortable room for you. I’ll see you at the council meeting.”

    Azula looked at Raithion for another minute, then walked away, heading back toward the glow of the bonfire.

    ****

    Raithion watched Azula walk away with a small smile. His heart felt lighter, as though sharing the jagged truth of the past five years with Azula had finally drained away the festering anger and shame he’d carried like a crippling weight for so long. He felt a dizzying, unfamiliar sense of freedom, as if he had finally stepped out from the shadows and into the light.

    He was elated that Azula was free. It felt like the start of hope. A small start, but he reached out and held on to it tight.

    Settling on the bench, Raithion took a deep breath, appreciating the cool night air, and stared at the quiet lake, feeling like he was finally looking at a fresh start.

    *****

    <<Previous | Blades of ToC | Next>>

  • Blades of Ashes Ch 15-1

    The Case of the Commandery Princess and the Prime Minister’s Narrow Escape

    Chapter 15-1

    The Sura Clan was generous when they decided to be gracious. Raithion could not complain about the quiet, neat rooms assigned to Haedor, Sharian, and Dain. The food was served in a bright dining room on the east side of the building. The platters of food were brought in by two young men who were kind with their greetings but remained tight-lipped about the island.

    “I tried to ask how the rest of the island is doing,” Haedor said to Raithion when Raithion came downstairs for a meal.

    Yulin was in a restless sleep, his temperature controlled though still burning. Lasma had urged Raithion to eat and freshen up.

    When Raithion came downstairs, it was to find Haedor, Sharian, and Dain enjoying a hot meal in the quiet dining hall.

    “What about Azula?” Raithion asked, looking around the empty dining hall.

    “His sister came in with him earlier in the evening,” Haedor said. “It turns out the one named Magnus is Prince Azula’s Godfather. The moment Azula asked people to assign us rooms and prepare meals, they had a small meeting in one of the backrooms. Then a team of four soldiers was assigned to the building, and they left.”

    Raithion nodded and sipped the delicious tea that had come with their food. The liquid warmed him up deep inside. The gnawing worry that had plagued him since Yulin’s poisoning had eased. The tension in his shoulders eased.

    “They’ll watch us for a period,” Raithion said. “It is expected.”

    “How is Prince Yulin?” Sharian asked. “Is the antidote working?”

    “It has,” Raithion nodded. “Lasma knows what she is doing and has communicated everything she has done without hesitation. She wants Yulin to sweat out lingering toxins. She is feeding him herbal medicine made with ginger, lemon balm, and peppermint to help him break the fever. I’m trusting her judgment. We won’t know Yulin’s true condition until morning. Try to keep the peace for now.”

    “I will,” Haedor said, sitting back in his chair and crossing his arms. He looked out the window, which had a beautiful view of a bright garden. “This place makes me want to rest and relax. It’s very peaceful.”

    “Then, let’s take it as a period of rest,” Dain suggested as he looked around.

    “Let’s,” Sharian agreed.

    “What about Princess Skye?” Haedor asked, bringing up Yulin’s little sister.

    “Let her stay with the nanny on the ship for now,” Raithion said. “Have them send in daily reports for now.”

    “Okay,” Haedor said.

    Raithion finished his tea and stood. “I’ll return to Yulin now. Have a good rest, you three.”

    “You too, Lord Raith,” they all called out.

    Raithion returned to Yulin’s room with light steps. The door was open, and the gas light mounted on the walls turned low. Yulin lay on the bed covered with a warm wool blanket. He was clean and dressed in a simple white tunic. Raithion had helped Lasma get him into comfortable trousers and socks after his bath earlier. He was sleeping, and as Raithion sat on the side of the bed, he was glad to feel his hands were no longer deathly cold but warm. His cheeks were not so pale but flushed with pink. Raithion pressed the palm of his right hand to Yulin’s forehead, and almost smiled when he felt the temperature was no longer so burning hot as earlier. It was cooling, though it still needed to drop a bit further. Yulin’s breathing was no longer so shallow that he needed to lean to feel it. He was breathing normally, as he would in deep sleep.

    Raithion closed his eyes and said a thankful prayer to the maker. He had no idea what he would have done had Yulin died; the tragedy was too large to be considered. Thanking the power beyond for the grace of Yulin’s life, he settled in for a night of watching over Yulin.

    Yulin woke up the next morning with a small sound.

    Raithion sat up and watched his son rub his eyes with a lazy, stretching motion, before he sat up and opened his eyes.

    “Papa, I want to go to the toilet,” Yulin said when he saw him.

    Raithion broke into a laugh that brought Alvas rushing into the room to check on him.

    “He’s awake!” Raithion said, standing up to lift Yulin. He pressed his palm to Yulin’s forehead and was glad to discover his temperature was normal. “He’s fine.”

    “Thank goodness,” Alvas said.

    “Papa, I really need to go to the toilet,” Yulin said, leaning his head on Raithion’s shoulder, clutching Raithion’s shirt tight, tugging it to show his urgency.

    “Okay,” Raithion said, elated, squeezing Yulin tight as he turned to the door. “Your Papa will take you to the toilet.”

    Alvas chuckled and led him out of the room to show them where Yulin could go to the toilet.

    An hour later, Raithion watched Lasma check Yulin’s pulse. She sat in silence, her fingers on Yulin’s left wrist. Then she made the boy open his mouth, she checked his mouth, his eyes, and finally his temperature.

    “Alright, the antidote has worked,” Lasma said. “We now need to nourish his health, get him strong again. I’ll ask that you stay for five days to ensure he’s out of the worst of it and no infections start in his weakened state. He’ll take crushed amla fruits mixed with warm water and honey in the morning, and a soup made with astragalus root every lunch. I’ll make the soup for him as the dosage needs absolute control for a boy his age. If he can get out of bed to play, I’ll hand him over to you, and you can go home.”

    Raithion smiled and winked at Yulin, who looked at him with bright, excited eyes at the prospect of going home.

    “Thank you, Lasma,” Raithion said, as she covered Yulin’s hand with the blanket. “You have saved my son.”

    “I’ll take your thanks and urge you not to feel so indebted,” Lasma said, touching Yulin’s mink black hair. It was long to his shoulders and currently unruly after washing up this morning. Lasma turned to Alvas, who stood a few feet away. “Get me a comb from the worktable drawers.”

    Alvas hurried to the table and retrieved a simple wooden comb. She handed it to Lasma, who turned to Raithion seeking permission.

    Raithion nodded, and she got up, adjusting the pillows for Yulin.

    “Sweet boy, you’ve walked through an ordeal,” Lasma said, as she touched Yulin’s cheek gently. “You’re very brave. On our island, elders wish the young ones a brighter future by adding braids in their hair. I see you don’t have them, so I’ll add one, and Alvas will add one for you. Okay, Yulin?”

    Yulin looked up at her and nodded. She smiled and started brushing his hair carefully. Then she sectioned a small part of his left temple and started braiding it. When she was done, she moved away, and Alvas combed the rest of Yulin’s hair straight back, smoothing the strands away from his face. Her motions were just as gentle.

    Then Alvas sectioned off a small piece at his right temple and braided it. She secured the ends of both braids with small gold clamps from her apron pocket, then brought the two delicate side braids to meet at the center. She fastened them together with a third small gold clip, which held the braids firmly in place and controlled the hair to keep the entire style neat and secure. Yulin now looked very cute and neat.

    Alvas stroked Yulin’s cheek. “You’re a very brave boy. May you grow stronger. As strong as your father.”

    She stepped back, and Lasma nodded to Raithion.

    “We made a temporary decision last night. Your people are free to move around this building and its gardens,” Lasma said. “You can use the route we used to get here to visit the beach, but don’t wander to the rest of the island before Prince Azula and the council meet with you. Everything is arranged for you here: food, clothing, if you need it. You can also return to your ship if you so wish. The guard stationed by Prince Azula will remain on the beach where you landed to keep watch. Please don’t antagonize them. We all hope this can be a peaceful process.”

    “Thank you for the hospitality,” Raithion said, standing up. “I’ll make sure my people know to follow your rules.”

    Lasma held his gaze for a moment, as though judging the weight of his promise, then she nodded and headed out. “Don’t forget to eat, Raith. Take care of your health. I don’t want to add a patient after I cured the first one.”

    Raithion smiled at her care as she and Alvas left, and he turned his gaze to Yulin. Yulin looked up at him, and he was surprised to find that the braids on Yulin’s hair looked similar to the ones Azula had once had in his hair years ago.

    “How is it, Papa?” Yulin asked, reaching up to touch the braids. “Did Lasma and Alvas do a good job?”

    “Yes. It looks good,” Raithion said, patting Yulin’s head. “Next time you see them, call them Grandma Lasma and Grandma Alvas. They are like your Grandma at home.”

    “Okay,” Yulin said with a small nod. “When can we go back to see Grandma again? I miss her.”

    “Grandma Lasma says we can go back in five days,” Raithion said, taking Yulin’s hand. “You just got over the worst of the pain. We need to nourish your body so that you can be strong to run after Haedor again.”

    “Where is Uncle Haedor?” Yulin asked.

    “Probably sleeping,” Raithion guessed. “Are you tired? Do you want to rest for a while before your breakfast comes?”

    “No, don’t want to sleep. Can you tell me a story like Mama used to?” Yulin asked, his voice soft. “I miss her.”

    Raithion let out a soft breath at the mention of Naeri. Shifting on the bed until he sat next to Yulin, he pulled his son into his arms and searched his memory for the stories Silveren used to tell him when he was a boy. He held Yulin’s hand tight and started a story about a pirate sailing the unknown oceans.

    ****

    Five days passed by too fast.

    Raithion spent his time with Yulin, who had grown stronger through each day. He could now get out of bed and walk around the healing center, though he still got tired and needed more rest than he was used to.

    “Lord Raith, I’ve brought you a tray,” Haedor said, entering Yulin’s room. He carried a tray laden with a delicious bowl filled with fragrant wild rice porridge, slices of grilled chicken, and a plate with roasted vegetables, along with a kettle filled with steaming tea. Haedor placed the tray on the writing table they had placed near the windows for Raithion’s use.

    Raithion helped Yulin drink the last of his amla tea and then wiped his mouth with a soft handkerchief.

    “Are you used to the taste?” Raithion asked Yulin, who sat leaning on the pillows dressed in a black tunic, a warm jacket, and black trousers brought by Alise. His hair still had the braids Lasma and Alvas had given him. His cheeks were flushed with color, and his green eyes were bright as rain as they met Raithion’s gaze.

    “It’s good, but I hope I don’t have to take it anymore,” Yulin said. “I’ve had enough. I want the sweet milk tea Grandma makes at home.”

    Raithion chuckled and nodded. “Okay, we’ll see if you can go back to drinking your favorite milk tea soon. Rest for a bit before you rush out of here. Grandma Lasma still needs to check your pulse.”

    “Will she bring the sweet berries she brought last time?” Yulin asked.

    “Maybe,” Raithion said.

    “I hope she remembers,” Yulin said with a happy smile. “I like them.”

    “You like anything sweet,’ Raithion said, kissing his forehead.

    “I’ll sit with him, Lord Raith,” Sharian said, standing on the other side of the bed. “You need to eat to keep up your strength.”

    Raithion squeezed Yulin’s left hand, rubbing his own warmth into his son’s hands. It had grown into a habit, a shadow of the harrowing hours he had spent hoping for Yulin’s good health. His heart ached at the memory, though seeing Yulin smile widely at Sharian eased the ache.

    Raithion carried the empty bowl of medicine to the worktable. He washed his hands there and returned to the writing desk, where Haedor was arranging their plates of food.

    “I haven’t seen Prince Azula in the last few days,” Haedor said as Raithion settled into the seat.

    “I heard one of the soldiers at the beach say there are visitors who have arrived on the island. He’s probably dealing with them,” Sharian said from the bed where he was playing hand games with Yulin.

    “Did you eat?” Raithion asked Sharian.

    “Yes,” Sharian said. “The kitchen team cooks early, and they had laid out a very delicious meal in the dining hall. They always have food available in the kitchen when I need it, so I’m full these days. This morning, I had a meal with Dain before he hurried to the ship to take the herbs Alvas gave him yesterday. He’s afraid he’ll leave them here if we have to leave in a hurry.”

    “That’s already a miracle that you’re full,” Haedor teased Sharian. “You’re an endless pit we can’t satisfy usually.”

    Sharian chuckled and ignored his teasing.

    “Any news from the ship?” Raithion asked. “How is Skye?”

    “All is well,” Haedor said. “Dain will come back with any messages that may have been sent from the mainland.”

    “Now that Yulin is doing better,” Raithion said. “We need to repay the Sura Clan’s kindness.”

    “I don’t know how, when no one will approach us,” Haedor said. “Prince Azula was to find you along with his council, but there has been no sign of him. Where do we start?”

    “I’ll ask Lasma when she comes to give Yulin the last of the soup she’s been making for him at lunch,” Raithion said. “In any case, it is time to pay our dues for the antidote.”

    Haedor nodded in understanding and then poured Raithion a full cup of tea.

    “Have breakfast first,” Haedor urged.

    Yulin laughed, and Raithion turned to look at his son and Sharian playing on the bed. He took in a deep, relieved breath and focused on having breakfast.

    As he ate, Raithion could not help wondering how he was going to start a negotiation with Azula Doriel. His handsome Sura Prince had refused to see him for five days. Where was he hiding?

    *****

    Sunlight danced across the shimmering turquoise waters of Port Marius, where a fleet of fishing boats bobbed in a rhythmic lullaby against the docks. The fishing boats belonged to locals and took up one side of the pier, while the other was filled with visiting ships.

    A whitewashed building stood at the dock’s entry point. The Sura soldiers used it to register all visitors who came to the island, and the shipping team used it to track all goods that entered and exited.

    Beyond the building, a road opened into a port town that had grown significantly in the past three years, filled with sun-bleached villas with terracotta roofs built into the emerald hillside. The fronts of the villas housed shops, restaurants, and inns, creating a bustling commercial atmosphere.

    On a small path leading to where the fishermen docked, men and women had laid out their wares for sale in a vibrant sprawl of market umbrellas. The scent of brine, roasted garlic, and grilled delicacies drifted through the air, welcoming every traveler to the coastal sanctuary.

    Azula walked along a cobbled path to a large black gate on the hillside of Port Marius. The gatekeeper opened the door when he saw him and nodded. It was eight in the morning, so Azula clasped his hands behind his back and strolled among the large earthenware pots, filled with growing flowers and trees in the yard.

    The main house ahead was a two-story villa. The head of the family had lived in the Nerasa Kingdom for a year, training in clay works, before he returned to the island to start a pottery business. The family name was Gallea. The only son, Valnor, was thirty-eight this year.

    A stroke of fate struck as the land the Gallea ancestors left their son contained a hidden cave with kaolinite: a soft, earthy white mineral that was perfect for making pottery. When Valnor returned to Sura Island, he was one of the people Azula had supported, helping him build two kilns: one for high-fired wares and the other for low-fired wares, such as everyday earthenware.

    The pottery production had its ups and downs at the start. After all, Valnor was one man, and he had needed skilled labor that did not yet exist on the island. He needed to train and find talent on the island. However, in the past three years, the workshop at the back had grown into a lucrative enterprise that Azula valued as highly as his metal workshop hidden in the mountain.

    Azula did not go to the front door of the villa. Instead, he took a side path that led to the busy workshop at the back. There, Valnor was already hard at work, helping his workers package high-fired vases that had been ordered by the Nerasa Kingdom’s court into large wooden crates.

    Valnor noticed Azula first and left the crate to his assistant to run to him.

    “Prince Azula, you’re here so early,” Valnor said, taking his hand when he offered it. “What brings you here? You could have written a note, and I would have met you at the prince’s manor.”

    “No need,” Azula said with a smile, following Valnor to the packing worktables. “I wanted to see how you’re getting on. This order may seem simple, but it is very important for General Pearcliff. I wanted to ask you to add an extra five vases. I’ll cover the cost of them, just in case.”

    “I’ve already arranged ten extra vases at no cost to you, Prince Azu,” Valnor said. “I know what it is like to ship these things to the Nerasa Kingdom. Luckily, he is using a veteran captain. Otherwise, I would be worried he would sink the shipment at the dock.”

    Azula chuckled at the reference to his first trip to the Nerasa Kingdom. Yes, he had become an example to avoid when approaching their waters.

    “I’m relieved,” Azula said, watching as two men nailed shut a crate filled with two vases resting on thick beds of straw and wrapped in rough white paper. “I’ll send three carriages from the manor to help you transport the crates to the Nerasa ship.”

    “Thank you, Prince Azu,” Valnor said. “Come, I have a gift for you. I’ve been meaning to send it to the manor, but this order has taken up my time.”

    Azula followed Valnor through the packaging section, walking through double doors that were propped open to allow air circulation. The inner workshop had ten potters working at their tables, each specializing in different orders: creating cutlery, basins, or large vases depending on the workshop’s needs. Azula did not disturb them; it was intensive work, and he knew they earned their living based on the number of wares they created. They barely spared him a glance. There was another hidden section of the workshop where potters created sinks and toilet bowls. However, that production was deep in the property.

    Valnor opened a single door on the other end of the workshop, and they entered a large yard where workers were cutting firewood. Valnor’s requirement for fuel was high, so he practically ran a firewood business on the side.

    Azula waved his hands at the workers, who greeted him with enthusiasm.

    “They still haven’t forgotten that the last time you were here, you brought them a feast to celebrate their hard work,” Valnor said as he led the way to a building attached to the villa. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a key to open the lock. Valnor waited for Azula to enter before he followed and locked the door behind them.

    Inside the building were shelves of finished pottery, ranging from common products to expensive wares. Valnor walked to a small table where a red wooden box sat. He opened the lid and smiled at Azula, who came to stand next to him.

    “I don’t know if I’ve ever told you, but your support the year we returned to Sura Island helped my family survive,” Valnor said. “My wife lost family in Lyria, and she was barely functioning when we returned. My oldest daughter had to help with the house. Then, I had to go to Nerasa and leave them alone. She said your family held up the sky, bringing us grain and eggs to eat when we had nothing. Then you helped me build this place when I came back.”

    “It was my duty,” Azula said, placing a hand on Valnor’s shoulder. “I’m happy your family is doing better now. Your wife has opened a shop at the port where she sells your wares, and I see your daughter there helping. All is well now, Valnor.”

    “Yes, thanks to you,” Valnor said, lifting a beautiful white vase with a red rose bush drawn in a vibrant splash on the side. “This is a gift for you. My daughter has been trying her hand at painting the high-fired wares. What do you think?”

    Azula took the vase with a wide smile. He walked to a window and lifted it to the light to see through the fine, translucent porcelain. The rose bush, with its blooming red roses, was like a splash of color on a clear canvas.

    “It’s splendid!” Azula grinned as he admired the piece. “How many of these can you make?”

    “That one is yours and is one of a kind,” Valnor said with a laugh. “The painting process requires a steady hand, and for now, my daughter is the only one who has managed such a beautiful base. The rest can only be sold for daily use.”

    “Ah,” Azula nodded and returned the vase to Valnor, who placed it back in the red box. “Then I’ll take this treasure and show it off to everyone who cares to see. I’ll be happy to send you potential clients when I meet them. Perhaps you can make them as a special order.”

    “We will,” Valnor said with a happy nod. “Are you hungry? There is breakfast in the main house. You’re here so early. Please, allow me to offer you some tea.”

    Azula grinned. “I’d love that very much. We can plan how to get the carriages here so that they can reach the Nerasa ship.”

    Azula spent most of his morning with Valnor. In the hour before lunch, he boarded a carriage with Wolfe and Sennin, leading the way for the three carriages carrying Valnor’s precious vases. They arrived at the dock and stopped where the Nerasa ship was moored. Senin went to get one of the dock soldiers to count and record the vases being boarded onto the ship.

    Azula stood to the side, watching the Nerasa workers collaborate with Valnor’s team to ensure the vases were carried inside with care.

    “How is it going on the other side of the island?” Azula asked Wolfe.

    “It is quiet,” Wolfe said. “The team we have watching the Lyrians says there have been no major movements. The men the Draeya Prince brought occasionally return to the ship to check on things and always return without adding new people. Princess Alise asked me to tell you that you’ll need to formally meet the Draeya Prince soon. It has been five days on the island, and his son is now healed.”

    “I suppose,” Azula said with a sigh. He had kept away from the Healer’s Cove because he had no idea how to proceed. There was so much to discuss, to discover, to fight over. Shaking his head, he started to return to his carriage, but Wolfe stopped him with a hand on his arm.

    Azula followed his gaze when Wolfe nodded toward the Nerasa ship.

    Trevan Pearcliff was walking down, dressed in a simple white tunic, dark trousers, and knee-length boots. His long blonde hair was held in a tight ponytail. He smiled widely as he waved at Azula.

    Azula nodded to Wolfe and changed direction to meet Trevan.

    “I thought you would be on your ship for lunch,” Azula said. “We finished our business yesterday.”

    “The men said you brought the shipment personally,” Trevan said as they started walking along the cobbled path. “I had to come out and talk to you. You’ve been all business these last few days. Now that we’ve finished our business, as you say, I can ask a personal question. Why are you so preoccupied, Azu?”

    “I’m not,” Azula protested, glancing at him with a frown. Trevan chuckled.

    “You are, too,” Trevan said. “I would say you’ve met a problem you can’t solve, but I don’t think that’s right. Any problems regarding things that can be moved, you’ve solved. So, I think you’ve met something that is bothering your soul.”

    “My soul?” Azula could not help but chuckle, too. “Trevan, you’re too much. What could bother my soul, other than you carrying on this ridiculous conversation?”

    “Ridiculous or not, I think your heart is disturbed,” Trevan said. “Which makes me wonder who or what has that kind of power. And… also disappointed because I’m not the one who has such power, as I’d hoped.”

    Azula stopped to look at Trevan. He thought about his mother’s comment that Trevan was in love with him, and he took a deep breath, looking away. He saw that Wolfe had joined Senin, and they were quite alone.

    “Trevan,” Azula started.

    “Don’t say anything,” Trevan said. “I’ve sensed your heart is closed to me for a long time. I don’t think you’re willing to return to the Nerasa Kingdom and live with me, where I can change your heart. I know you belong here on Sura Island, fighting for your people. Still, I can’t say I’m not disappointed that I could never get you to give me a pensive look just because I walked by.”

    “I had no time,” Azula said honestly. “I’ve been consumed with making sure the clan is safe and stable. I’ve not thought beyond that. I’m sorry if my lack of attention has caused you pain, Trevan.”

    Trevan sighed and wiped a hand down his face. “I don’t know what’s worse: you not knowing I liked you, or you apologizing to me for not having even a flicker of affection.”

    “I do like you—as a friend.”

    Trevan pressed a hand to Azula’s lips and shook his head. “Stop. That one is no good either. Oh, Azula Doriel. Walk with me for a minute.”

    Trevan dropped his hand away, gave Azula a wistful look, then turned away.

    Azula watched as Trevan started walking along the path again, his hands in his pockets. He followed because Trevan looked like he was thinking through something, and as always, he did not have to wait too long before Trevan spoke again.

    “I have a solution for your Lyrian problem,” Trevan said. “The court in Nerasa does not want to claim Sura Island. We are occupied with our neighbors and have no time to seek ownership of this island. In time, though, if the island remains without clear ownership, the emperor is happy to take your island as a vassal state.”

    “That would mean our money is no longer the Lyrian denari but the Nerasa Kingdom’s gold,” Azula said.

    “Yes, among other requests,” Trevan said. “The negotiation would include access to the Lyria Kingdom, which would place your people in a conundrum. I know most of them had relatives in the Lyria Kingdom: relatives who still live there, where you have many unresolved issues. So, I hope you take my solution to heart. I don’t want our kingdom to fight over this island. You should find a solution with the dragon you know, rather than try to negotiate with our Nerasa Kingdom.”

    “I’ve come to this conclusion, too,” Azula agreed.

    “Then, I have a gift for you. I’ll give you an agreement that was drafted by my father, the Prime Minister. He said you can read the terms and decide what to negotiate before the emperor thinks too hard about what should happen to your island. This is in case your people decide to join Nerasa,” Trevan said. “Meanwhile, you can take this agreement to the Lyrian Basileus and use it to negotiate for Sura Island.”

    Azula stopped, staring at Trevan. “If I take the agreement to Lyria, it will place you in an awkward position, Trevan. Aren’t you worried about taking your father’s position in time?”

    “No,” Trevan said. “I’m content fighting to keep the Nerasa Kingdom safe as a general. I’m not interested in the complicated political web at court. Besides, Sura Island is too far for them to find and conquer. We have a contentious war with a state in the east of our kingdom, and the emperor is more concerned with conquering there than with your small island.”

    “Or so you’ve made the Nerasa courtiers think,” Azula said with a wide smile.

    “My political clout is useful for something,” Trevan said, facing Azula. “It gives you time to resolve your grievances with the Lyria Kingdom. I hope you’re able to clear your father’s name and gain the right to braid your hair again.”

    Azula stared at Trevan, and because he was grateful, he stepped forward and hugged him tight. Trevan was surprised by the hug, and before he could fully wrap his arms around Azula, Azula stepped back.

    “Thank you, Trevan. It was my luck to meet you on that beach the way I did,” Azula said.

    “I thought it was my luck,” Trevan said, as Azula started walking again and he followed. “You saved my life.”

    “I did,” Azula agreed. “But so did you, save mine and my clan. Tonight, I can only thank you with a bonfire. Are you willing?”

    Trevan laughed. “I’m always willing. Sura Clan bonfires come with the most delicious grilled meat.”

    “Then I’ll feed you a whole goat until you’re full,” Azula declared. “Come on, we’ll take a carriage to the manor and tell Alvas the good news.”

    “What good news?” Trevan asked.

    “That she has to get people to cook a large goat for your crew,” Azula said with a mischievous laugh, making Trevan shake his head.

    “You’re just getting me in trouble,” Trevan said. “Your Alvas is as scary as Alise. I’m not coming with you.”

    “You so are,” Azula said, reaching for Trevan’s hand and leading him to the carriage.

    ****

    At mid-afternoon, the gardens around the Healer’s Cove were awash with bright sun, the flowers heavy with perfume.

    Raithion sat on a low chair on the terrace, watching Sharian and Haedor walk around the garden with Yulin. They each held one of Yulin’s hands, keeping their pace slow as they tried to get him to exercise.

    “He will recover,” Dain said, his tone full of relief. “I was really scared I would fail you, Lord Raith.”

    “I was terrified I would fail him,” Raithion said, crossing his arms against his chest. “As his father, I have too many faults. I’m happy he has given me a chance to be a better one to him.”

    “And Princess Skye,” Dain said.

    “Yes,” Raithion said with a nod, thinking of the little girl still on the ship.

    They still did not have permission from the Sura council to add more people to the island. It was just as well; he did not want to risk his daughter in case there was a dispute.

    “Will you return to the palace after this?” Dain asked.

    “I don’t want to,” Raithion said truthfully. “I talked to my father, and he said I could return to Draeya County and spend time at the family estate for a period. I think it is where Yulin and Skye belong, instead of the capital. What about you, Dain? Do you want to visit Draeya County with me? Or would you rather return to Genad?”

    “Are you kidding me? I want to visit Draeya with you,” Dain said with a wide grin. “On my own, I could never have traveled to Sura Island. You’ve really opened my world, Lord Raith. I hope I get to see even more new scenes. Plus, thanks to our stay here, I’ve collected so many new herbs and learned new techniques from Lady Lasma. I can’t wait to discover what you’re hiding in Draeya. Life is so calm out here.”

    Raithion grinned and shook his head. “Life is always quite calm out of the capital city. I prefer it.”

    “You’re the Basilinna’s brother,” Dain reminded him. “I don’t think you get the choice to ignore the capital.”

    Raithion made a face at him and would have retorted, but then Alise came around the terrace and stopped a few feet away.

    Alise looked different this afternoon. She was dressed more formally in a beautiful dark blue dress decorated with intricate lace designs on the high collar, long sleeves, and long skirt. She wore steady black boots, and her hair was braided tightly with gold pins holding it in place. She smiled at Raithion when he stood up and approached her.

    “Draeya Prince, sorry to interrupt your quiet afternoon,” Alise said. “How is Yulin doing?”

    “He is well; his health has improved thanks to Lady Lasma,” Raithion said with a smile. “I’m very grateful to your people for helping him.”

    “Then that is good news,” Alise said. “I have no other way but to jump right in. Our island has many grievances with the Lyria Kingdom, none of which can be easily resolved. Do we agree?”

    “Yes,” Raithion said.

    “If you’re on this island, it is because you had a solution to these grievances that requires a negotiation,” Alise said, holding his gaze.

    Raithion looked into her green eyes, so different from Azula’s and yet similar, and nodded.

    “Yes, I had a solution, but it may require considerable risk.”

    “Of course,” Alise said with a nod. “If it is what I think, I also believe the solution is very risky. But I don’t have to undertake the risk; it will be my brother. Prince Azula has a past with you that has left him unable to start a conversation. I want to help him and you.”

    Raithion shifted to look at Yulin, who was laughing at something Haedor had said. He returned his attention to Alise and nodded.

    “I’ll do anything you want me to,” Raithion said.

    “That’s good news,” Alise said. “I’ve brought a carriage with me. I would like your party to move to the Prince’s Manor. We are hosting a bonfire party this evening, which provides you with a great opportunity to meet our council members before you present your risky solution to them in a council meeting. Are you willing?”

    Raithion studied her for a minute. “I’m willing, but I have a request.”

    “What request?” Alise asked.

    “Can Yulin return to the ship?” Raithion asked. “He is innocent, after all.”

    “Certainly,” Alise said. “Protect your child as you see fit, Draeya Prince. We can drop off the ones you want to see off at the dock before we head to the Prince’s Manor.”

    “I thank you,” Raithion said.

    “I’ll wait for you outside,” Alise said, then nodded and turned to leave.

    Raithion watched her walk away and felt his blood sing with excitement. He had always known she would be the one to open the door for negotiations. He hurried back to talk to Dain and Haedor. They returned to the room to pack up the meager belongings they had brought.

    “I’ll go back with Yulin and Sharian,” Dain said. “I have the prescriptions Lady Lasma gave us to nourish Yulin’s health from now on. I’ll share them with the ship’s healer, and we’ll wait for you to return.”

    “That frees me to go with you,” Haedor said to Raithion. “Do you think there will be trouble?”

    “I don’t think so,” Raithion said. “As long as our legion officers remain on the ship, there should be no trouble.”

    “I don’t like it,” Haedor said, shaking his head as they left Yulin’s room.

    Raithion held his son tight, happy the boy was lively enough to think they were going on a new adventure.

    “Well, you’re going with Lord Raith; keep him safe,” Dain said as they got outside the Healer’s Cove to find two carriages waiting.

    Alise was not alone; she had three soldiers with her.

    One of the soldiers opened the side doors of the second large black carriage, which reminded Raithion of the carriage he had taken with Azula five years ago. The inside was much more comfortable than the one he had used then. The benches were covered with high-quality leather, and intricate wood paneling on the sides contributed to weatherproofing. The windows had glass and a curtain that was pulled open. The interior was quite spacious; it could fit all three of them plus Yulin with no trouble.

    Alise stopped at the open carriage door.

    “I’ll follow behind you. The driver knows what to do,” Alise said.

    The soldier closed the door, and Raithion settled Yulin on his lap. The carriage started moving, and they all braced for the physical strain of the ride, but there was no such thing. The ride was smooth; it felt like they were sitting on a smooth, gliding car with no jolts.

    “I feel like Basileus Dio,” Dain said with a wide grin. “This must be what he feels like when he rides in his carriage.”

    Haedor chuckled and patted the bench. “The Sura always did have the best things.”

    They arrived at the dock faster than Raithion anticipated.

    Dain and Sharian climbed out of the carriage when the soldiers opened the door.

    Raithion kissed Yulin’s cheek.

    “Yulin, you go to the ship with Uncle Dain and Sharian. I need to thank Lady Lasma for taking care of you. Then I’ll come back to be with you,” Raithion said. “Okay?”

    “Will you be gone a long time?” Yulin asked, clutching Raithion’s black shirt.

    “No,” Raithion said. “I’ll hurry back to the ship before you start to miss me. I promise. Be a good boy and don’t cause trouble for Uncle Dain. Okay?”

    “Okay,” Yulin said, then pressed a kiss on Raithion’s cheek with a wide smile. “Hurry back, Papa.”

    “I will,” Raithion said, then handed the boy to Dain, who was waiting. “See you soon, Yulin.”

    “See you soon,” Yulin said, waving his hand. “See you, Uncle Haedor.”

    “See you,” Haedor said, waving his hand.

    The carriage waited for Dain, Sharian, and Yulin to hurry out of sight, heading to the boat that would take them back to the ship, before it started moving.

    “I’m kind of excited,” Haedor said, moving so that he could look out the window. “I’ve never seen what Sura Island looks like. If the Healer’s Cove is just a small part of it, the rest must be amazing.”

    “Probably,” Raithion said, also moving the curtains so that he could look out.

    At first, there were just tall trees along the road, and in the distance, the shadow of the Sura Mountain. But the deeper they went into the island, the roads became wider and smoother, and the villages more dense and picturesque. They drove by a school where students were running out of the compound with excited energy, then they passed by a neat open market with traders selling vegetables under bright umbrellas and open shops built with stone, which were selling fabric and household items among other things.

    Soon, they were in the middle of a small city where the streets were bustling, and more black carriages filled the roads.

    “Wow,” Haedor said as they drove by an ornate blue carriage parked in a square with a crowd of young Sura teenagers standing around it as a beautiful singer stood on top of the fancy carriage, singing and dancing her heart out. “It’s no different from Genad City.”

    Raithion chuckled as they left the enthusiastic teenagers behind. The carriage came to a stop at an intersection, and Raithion’s eyes widened as they saw a majestic, large, round building with a domed roof and white walls. It looked like the center of administrative responsibilities. There was a massive, coiled horn forged with bronze sitting on a stone pedestal outside the round building. The surface of the horn was carved with traditional Sura clan tribal signs, and a signboard at the front of the building called it simply the Village Hall.

    As they passed the Village Hall, Raithion saw another building similar to the Healer’s Cove, except this one was busier. It looked like the main healing center. Next to this was a large square building labeled Military Office. The soldiers guarding the outside saluted the carriage passing behind them, and Raithion assumed they recognized Alise.

    The carriages kept moving, and soon they were racing along a winding road.

    “There’s a lake,” Haedor said. “I always thought they had enough with a mountain, but there is a lake, and we seem to be heading toward it.”

    Raithion glanced out the windows, hoping to see the lake, but all he saw were handsome homesteads between the trees with well-appointed houses. For a minute, he thought he was driving through Draeya County, especially when the surroundings suddenly gave way to a vast plantation of rice. It was clear that the Sura had done their best to make sure they would be self-sufficient, even fortifying their pantries.

    “Azula has worked hard,” Raithion said as they drove through a thick forest only to enter a pair of gates with stone pillars and snarling gargoyles on top.

    The carriages sped along the long drive; the gardens were filled with blooming flowers and well-trimmed hedges. They entered a circular drive, and their carriage came to a stop.

    Haedor opened the door before the soldiers in charge could reach them. He jumped out and stood staring at the large three-story manor with its intricately carved stone walls and soaring, sun-drenched arched windows. A lush tapestry of vibrant pink and white bougainvillea climbed the façade, flowing along balconies and clinging to walls. The manor spoke of age, having raised generations of Doriel families, and it gleamed with the weight of the family’s ancestry.

    The great front doors opened without a sound; they were well-oiled, and a tall, thin man hurried down the steps to meet them.

    “Welcome to the Prince’s Manor. I’m Juya. It’s good to have you here,” Juya said.

    Alise joined them, and Raithion’s brow rose when Juya took her right hand, holding it tight as though to assure her. Then Juya turned to them.

    “Please, let’s go inside,” Juya said, tucking Alise’s hand into the crook of his arm and leading her up the steps.

    Raithion met Haedor’s questioning look, and he winked as they followed the pair into the majestic Doriel residence.

    *****

    <<Previous | Blades of Ashes ToC | Next>>

  • Blades of Ashes Ch 14

    Azula rode a fast horse from the Old Docks back to the Doriel Manor. At some point in the last year, the Sura people had started calling it the Prince’s Manor. He had no choice but to accept their respect, but at this point, it was the hardest thing he could ever face. Being chieftain of the Sura clan made his heart ache, especially when he had to face a man he’d once thought of as being as strong as a god; a man who, after seeing him for the first time in five years, he still wanted to care for. He still wanted to know him.

    What the hell had happened to the Draeya General? Why was he so thin? Why did he look so sad? Why would he dare to kneel before him without protest? Where was the strong general who had argued with him on a balcony?

    Azula dismounted his horse when he reached the manor’s front gate and raced inside, unsure what to do. He ran up the stairs to the first floor and opened the door to Alise’s reading room before he could think. He stopped when he saw her sitting on a couch by a window, reading one of the little pale blue books that were reports from their merchants in the Nerasa Kingdom. She paused when she saw him, and he crossed the room in fast strides, kneeling on the hardwood floor covered with a woven red carpet. He rested his head on her lap and closed his eyes. His fingers bunched the smooth pink silk of her day dress.

    Alise sighed and sank her fingers into his hair, stroking it gently.

    “Azula, what has you running so hard to hide in my reading room?” Alise asked, her voice gentle and soothing.

    Azula took a deep breath and relaxed on her lap.

    “Lise, will you take this mantle back?” Azula asked. “I have protected the clan. We are not in mourning anymore. Can I give it back now?”

    Alise sighed and rubbed his back, as she usually did to soothe Ruri.

    “I know it’s been hard, but you’ve done so well,” Alise said. “Azu, we’re entering a critical time. Now that someone from the Lyria Kingdom has come, we need to navigate the most dangerous period. I know you say you have no opinion on the matter, but I know what’s in your heart.”

    Azula shifted his head so that he could open his eyes. He stared at the window and the bright sky. The sky was blue and bright, as though mocking his turmoil.

    “What’s in my heart?” he asked, his voice quiet, as he dared not figure out what truly lay there.

    “Many hidden feelings,” Alise said, then stroked his hair some more. “But the lack of braids in your hair is the most obvious clue to it all. You still mourn our father, Azu. Your heart is heavy with thoughts of missing him. I suspect you hope you could discover why he died. You wish for his redemption, and because you do, so does the clan. Am I wrong?”

    Azula closed his eyes, not wanting to see the bright sky.

    “I cannot take the mantle from you yet,” Alise said, her tone soothing. “For your own sake, you need to find a way to lift the weight of grief from your shoulders. You may need to travel to Genad City in the Lyria Kingdom to find out the reason why Marius Doriel had to die; only then will your heart lighten. Little brother, I will wait until then.”

    Azula sighed, thinking about Raithion Maenaer. He had never taken the time to explain what happened during his journey to Genad City five years ago. While Alise was burdened with saving the clan and finding a way to survive, he had never shared what happened with the Draeya General. He had held his tongue for five years, but now… now he needed to tell Alise the truth.

    “The man who has landed on our shores is Draeya Prince,” Azula said, his voice soft. “When I met him at the port city, he was the Draeya General. I was naive then and recruited him to protect our carriage on the journey to Genad City.”

    “You’ve never mentioned this,” Alise said, her hand still rubbing his back.

    “Too many things were happening at once in those days,” Azula said, shifting so that he sat comfortably. Alise patted his back in understanding.

    “What did the Draeya prince do for you?” Alise asked.

    “Nothing,” Azula said. The word was heavy, his tone filled with annoyance.

    Alise’s hand paused, then she tilted her head so that she could look at Azula’s face. He caught her inquiring gaze and closed his eyes.

    “The Draeya Prince caught the thief who stole our ore,” Azula continued with a heavy sigh. “He promised that he would get the thief to the authorities and clear our good name. When we reached Genad City, we separated. I hurried to our manor in the city, only to find you and our parents were in chaos. Later, we found Dad and Yemin. I could not forgive him for failing to save them.”

    Alise gripped Azula’s shoulders and pushed him to sit up and face her.

    “What?” Alise stared at him in shock, her green eyes wide. “What about the thief the Draeya Prince caught?”

    Azula shook his head. “Only the Draeya Prince knows where that thief went.”

    Alise stared at him in shock.

    “Are you saying he framed us?” Alise asked.

    Azula closed his eyes, and then, because he had thought about it for five years, he shook his head.

    “The timeline doesn’t work,” Azula said, his tone solemn. “The night we arrived in the capital, Dad had already been arrested, according to what you’ve told me. We ran around until we found him together late that night. The Draeya Prince came into the city with me. He would not have had time to do the framing. What I suspect is that he knows the truth of that case and who did the framing.”

    “You’ve carried this alone for five years,” Alise said, touching his cheek with trembling hands. “Oh, Azula, why didn’t you share it with me? I would have helped.”

    “We needed to save everyone,” Azula said. “This was not something we needed to deal with at that time. Now, here he is at our shore. We must deal with it. Or Wolfe will start a riot because of his son if we try to make friends, and he is justified in it. I need to be hard on the Draeya Prince as the Sura Prince, to make him clear our clan’s name and give Wolfe and others like him the justice they deserve. Lise, I don’t know if I have the strength to be hard on that man, not when my heart is so torn.”

    Alise studied him for a minute, then her eyes widened again, and she stood up to walk to the window. Her socked feet were silent on the carpet. Her long hair was decorated with braids. Some looked messy because they were made by Ruri, but they all added to her beauty.

    Azula remained seated on the floor, waiting for her to process what she’d seen in his eyes. Then, Alise returned to sit on her chair, meeting his gaze.

    “You,” Alise said. “Has your heart been stolen by a Lyrian prince?”

    “No,” Azula said. “We never got a chance to try, or even see if we could be something. Tragedy descended. I forgot about it.”

    “Until today,” Alise said, leaning in to look into his eyes.

    Azula felt the heavy conflict of his position. He was a prince of a grieving people, but he was also a man who still felt a traitorous pull toward the very person tied to their pain.

    Azula swallowed hard, then looked away because he could not lie to her. He had been shocked to see Raithion so ravaged. And why was he dressed in black while holding such a young child?

    “The Draeya Prince,” Azula said, his voice trembling slightly as he stared at the carpet. “He begged for his son’s life as he knelt on the beach. He wore black clothes from head to toe. Do you know why people in Lyria would wear such black clothes?”

    “Black clothes.” Alise sat back with a surprised expression. “He’s in mourning.”

    “Mourning?” Azula gaped. “What? Do you think something happened to his family? He was keen to tell me that he loved his sisters very much. I…”

    “Azula Doriel,” Alise said, interrupting him.

    Azula glanced at her and let out a soft sigh. “Now you see why you should take the lead.”

    “I won’t,” Alise said, her voice firm yet supportive. “I do worry that he is a man who might have hurt our clan. I worry that you won’t forgive yourself for letting him into your heart when you do. Most of all, I’m glad you’re thinking of coming out from under the cloud of grief.”

    “Azu, you’ll do everything you need to,” Alise said. “If you do choose him for your lifelong promise, you’ll need to win the clan’s support to marry a Lyrian prince after everything we’ve been through. So, you’re going to find a way for the Draeya Prince and the Sura Clan to exist without wanting to fight to the death. It’s the only way you’ll calm your heart, Azu. I will stand by whatever choice you make, but you must make it work for both yourself and our people.”

    Azula stared at Alise for a moment, then he returned to resting his head on her lap again and closed his eyes.

    ****

    Relief flooded Raithion when Lasma returned with another woman named Alvas. Lasma carried a tray laden with containers of herbs, and Alvas carried a large bucket and a stack of clean white towels. Lasma placed the tray on the worktable and moved to stand before Raithion.

    “First, I will explain what we need to do,” Lasma said. “Your family has been touched by poison. So, I know the importance of you knowing what your son is ingesting.”

    Raithion nodded with a small smile, a gratifying sense of ease filling his chest.

    “Now, what I need from you is absolute cooperation,” Lasma continued. “No doubt or hesitation. I need your trust. So, I have a question for you, Draeya Prince Raithion Maenaer. Can you trust me?”

    Raithion stood and held Lasma’s gaze. “Yes.”

    “Good. Then your son can be saved.”

    Lasma turned to Dain. “What do I call you?”

    “Dain.”

    “Dain, please help us carry a large tub into the room,” Lasma said. “Alvas will show you where it is.”

    Dain followed Alvas out of the room, leaving the door open.

    “Draeya Prince, what can I call you that is not so formal?” Lasma asked with a helpless smile.

    “Please call me Raith.”

    “Raith.” Lasma moved to the bed. “Help me strip the boy. What’s his name?”

    “Yulin.”

    “What a lovely name,” Lasma said as she pulled the cover back. Yulin was still shivering, and his breathing was shallow.

    Raithion sat on the bed and lifted Yulin into a sitting position. His hands trembled with a mix of frantic hope and terror as he made short work of the jacket they had put on the boy on the ship. He then removed the trousers and the inner shirt.

    “Let him keep his underwear shorts,” Lasma murmured, her hand pressed to Yulin’s forehead.

    Dain and Alvas returned. Dain carried a large wooden tub, and Alvas carried a large pail of steaming water. They placed the tub near the worktable. Lasma got up from the bed and tested the temperature of the water before she added cool water from the sink. When Alvas returned with enough warm water to fill the tub, they worked together, adjusting the water temperature until it was a safe, comforting warmth.

    Lasma hurried to the worktable to open the herb containers. Alvas brought in a small, lit charcoal burner and placed an earthen kettle filled with clean water on the flame. The bitter scent of medicinal roots began to rise in the air.

    Lasma urged Raithion and Dain closer. She pointed to the herbs in the containers.

    “Silver Malice seems difficult to cure because the Lyria Kingdom does not have the herbs needed readily. The second difficult thing is timing. The herbs we use to make the antidote are sanguine cassia, moon chives, jade blossom, and red lavage.”

    “The red lavage grows wild on our mountain, so the Nerasa Kingdom trades with us as it grows easily on our soil. I’m going to crush the sanguine cassia into a pulp, then add it to the heating water. Once the water and pulp have come to a boil, we’ll add the remaining herbs and let them simmer. Then,” Lasma pulled a shimmering herb from her pocket, “we’ll add this to complete the antidote.”

    Dain and Raithion watched, mesmerized, as Lasma used a mortar and pestle to pound the sanguine cassia. She added the paste to the steaming water, then chopped the remaining herbs and added them to the boiling kettle. When the potion was simmering, the liquid turned green and began to roll with large bubbles. Lasma added the shimmering herb. It dissolved instantly, and the liquid turned perfectly clear.

    “Okay, let’s do a check,” Lasma said. Alvas scooped a small amount of the potion into a white porcelain bowl. Lasma donned a pair of gloves and reached for the teacup containing the Silver Malice.

    “Why do you need the poisoned tea?” Dain asked.

    “To make sure the antidote is the right consistency,” Lasma said.

    She looked at Alvas, who held out the bowl filled with the boiling portion. Lasma poured a single drop of the tea into the clear liquid. She used a silver pin to mix it and waited. The liquid turned a bright, vibrant yellow. Alvas and Lasma both let out relieved sighs. They discarded the poisoned mixtures and thoroughly cleaned the sink.

    “We are ready,” Lasma said. “Carry Yulin and let’s place him in the tub. His body temperature is very low, and it needs to be higher.”

    Raithion nodded and hurried to the bed. He removed his black jacket, rolled his sleeves, and unbuttoned his collar. He lifted Yulin and carried him to the warm water. Yulin whimpered and clutched Raithion’s shirt. Raithion murmured soft, broken comforts as he settled the boy into the tub.

    Lasma pulled a stool from under the worktable. She sat on it and gave Raithion a reassuring smile. “We’re going to feed Yulin the antidote. All of it, until he vomits the toxin sitting in his stomach. You see, Harrow and Mutagen don’t get absorbed into the system. Instead, they stay there and generate toxins that poison the blood system. The herbs in the antidote are for pulling the toxins these poisons are making in the body, and Yulin will have to vomit them out. It is terrible work, but we have to do it so that he can be saved. Are you ready, Raith?”

    Raithion nodded and knelt on the floor to support Yulin’s back. Alvas returned with two large buckets. She placed them next to Lasma, then got a new porcelain bowl. She added some of the antidote and put in three spoons of cold water to reduce the heat, then handed it to Lasma.

    Lasma fed the antidote to Yulin, supporting the back of his neck as she tilted the bowl to the boy’s lips and urged him to drink the potion with soothing tones. Yulin was a quiet boy and followed instructions without fuss, drinking as he was urged, his eyes sliding open for a moment. He panicked when he saw Lasma, but then relaxed when Raithion murmured words of encouragement.

    Once Yulin had drunk three bowls of the antidote, Lasma rubbed his back carefully as the boy trembled in the warm water. Then Yulin heaved, and Lasma lifted one of the buckets, urging him to throw up. When it started, Raithion felt his heart clench at the force of the act and the tears that filled Yulin’s eyes.

    Yulin shook and trembled, clutching Raithion’s hand tight and leaning on him when he got too tired. It was the most difficult thing Raithion had ever done in his life: watching his son suffer so much and being unable to do anything to help him. Tears stung his eyes, blurring the sight of his son’s pale face.

    “We’re almost there,” Lasma murmured at some point as she changed buckets and Dain took over the work of carrying the used bucket away, helping Alvas clean up.

    ****

    Azula followed Alise to the healer’s cove an hour before sunset. He had changed into a simple green tunic and trousers, and a wool coat he wore when he was home. They used a carriage to get to the healing center. Alise climbed out of the carriage first, carrying Ruri. Azula trailed after her, unsure what expression he should use when he faced Raithion again. Alise wanted to get to know Raithion and his men and check on Lasma.

    Azula had followed because he wanted to know more about Raithion’s mourning clothes. Who had died? Why did Raithion look so worn out?

    Shaking his head, he entered the healer’s cove after Alise and paused when he saw his godfather, Magnus, standing in the waiting area with his hands crossed against his chest.

    “Godfather,” Azula said, as Alise moved to kiss Magnus’s cheek before she turned to their guests with a smile. “Welcome to Sura Island.”

    The two men sitting on the chairs by the windows nodded in her direction, and she turned back to Magnus.

    “How is it going?” Alise asked.

    “The worst of it has ended,” Magnus said with a sigh. “Lasma and Alvas are helping them clean up the boy and settle him in a new room where it smells clean and is comfortable.”

    “Okay,” Alise nodded and moved to sit on one of the empty chairs, holding a subdued Ruri on her lap. “We can wait for her here.”

    Azula smiled because he knew Alise hated the smell of sickness; she would wait for as long as it took if it meant not having to enter an active ward.

    Azula had no such qualms.

    “I’ll check on Mom,” he said and headed down the corridor before Magnus could stop him.

    He walked down the corridor and found one of the cleaners working in the first ward, stripping the bed and opening the windows to air it out. The cleaner glanced up, saw Azula, and urged him to keep walking down the corridor to the next ward.

    Azula thanked him and hurried to the second door. He paused at the door when he heard Lasma talking gently to Raithion.

    “You’ve done everything for him, Raith,” Lasma said. “You’re a good father. Don’t doubt that. Now, we’ve cleared the poison, but we won’t know for sure until his temperature reduces. He may burn hot all night, so we’ll feed him some medicine to help break the fever. We’ll hope for the best in the morning. I’ll stay with you, so will Alvas. We’ll be with you through this.”

    “I need to settle my people,” Raithion said, his voice hoarse. “They should get a hot meal and a place to rest.”

    “Oh yes,” Lasma said, sounding tired.

    Azula sighed and knocked on the door to announce his presence. He stepped deeper into the ward and paused when he saw the frail boy sleeping on the bed.

    Lasma sat on one side, while Raithion was crouched on the other. He held the boy’s hand tight, his head bowed as he looked at the sleeping boy.

    Lasma glanced at Azula and smiled. “You came back.”

    “Mm, it’s evening. We need to settle you and plan meals,” Azula said. “I’ve heard your plans. I’ll get Senin and everyone to start a meal here and clean the residential rooms on the third floor for our guests.”

    “Sounds good,” Lasma said, relieved. “I’m glad you’ll handle it. It frees me so that I can concentrate on getting Yulin’s fever to break.”

    Azula’s gaze shifted to a silent Raithion; then he asked Lasma, “W-will he survive?”

    “We are very hopeful,” Lasma said. “Right, Raith?”

    Raithion lifted his gaze to meet Azula’s, his expression filled with a pure, fragile hope that lit him up as a smile curved his lips. It caught Azula off guard.

    “Yes, we are hopeful,” Raithion said. “Thank you for helping to save my son.”

    Azula turned away from Raithion’s handsome smile. With a small scowl on his face, he turned to leave. “That’s good news. I’ll go make arrangements.”

    Once outside the ward, he pressed a hand to his chest and frowned, scolding himself.

    Why are you so happy about him smiling? He means nothing to you. Stupid idiot. So easily moved.

    ****

    <<Previous | Blades of Ashes ToC | Next>>

  • Blades of Ashes Ch 13

    Azula finished crushing nuts for the children, then sat back, his gaze fixed on the ship approaching from the horizon. The mere thought of the clan council debating their stance on the Lyria Kingdom brought on the dull throb of a budding headache. He pressed his index finger to his temple, closed his eyes, and took several measured, calming breaths.

    Who would dare sail for Sura Island? Most Lyrian citizens still blamed the Sura for the economic collapse five years ago, going so far as to boycott the ore from Sura Mountain, or so reports from their friend on the mainland claimed. Unless a particularly daring merchant from the outer lands was aboard, which seemed unlikely, no one from Lyria had visited their small island for trade in years.

    Azula’s scowl deepened, and he opened his eyes. He watched the vessel crawl closer, his jaw tightening. He had been wondering how to engage the damn Lyria Kingdom, and now they were delivering themselves to his doorstep. He took a deep breath, stretching his arms high above his head with a soft sigh. As he lowered his hands, he smiled at Ruri, who was dutifully imitating him, hands resting firmly on his small thighs.

    “Ruri, blow your whistle for your godfather,” Azula said.

    “Okay!” Ruri reached for a silver chain tucked beneath the collar of his green tunic. At the end hung a small gold whistle that Azula had crafted himself. The guards assigned to Ruri were trained to respond to its piercing note regardless of distance or terrain.

    Ruri blew a sharp blast and tucked the gold back into his tunic. Within two minutes, ten men clad in black tactical gear filled the clearing.

    “Daiku greets Your Highness,” the leader said, stepping forward and nodding at Azula.

    “Take Ruri to his mother,” Azula said. “Then, tell Wolfe and General Nuovis to meet me at the old docks, the ones we used back when we still traded with Lyria.”

    “Godfather, I want to come with you!” Ruri protested. He stood tall, hands on his waist in a picture of innocent defiance.

    Azula smiled, reaching out to stroke the boy’s cheek. Ruri’s face was a perfect replica of Yemin’s, softened by Alise’s features. His strawberry-blond hair was tied back in a tight ponytail, and his tiny tunic and trousers made Azula wonder if the boy would ever hit his growth spurt.

    “Ruri, I need you with Daiku. Your job is to protect your mother. Understand?”

    “What about you?” Ruri asked, his brow furrowed. “Who will protect you?”

    “I have Wolfe,” Azula reassured him. “Besides, I’m just going to greet our guests and see if they like macadamia nuts.”

    Azula winked and kissed the boy’s cheeks before lifting him into Daiku’s arms. “Take the boys to their parents. And do not alert anyone outside the council about our newcomers.”

    “As you command,” Daiku said, holding Ruri protectively as he led the team away.

    Azula turned and moved deeper into the forest, taking the mountain slopes toward his workshop. He slipped inside, ignoring Heng, who was busy tutoring apprentices in the back room. At his worktable, Azula rummaged through blueprints and unfinished pieces until he found his latest project: a modified crossbow. It featured a sleek, foldable limb and a custom cartridge holding ten bolts for rapid reloading. He’d used it on rabbits, but never on men.

    He glanced down at his simple tunic and sighed, his eyes falling on the long coat Alise had commissioned for him. She insisted it befitted his station, and though he hated the formality of daily wear, its utility was undeniable. He threw the heavy, midnight-blue coat over his shoulders. The high-quality wool fell to his mid-calf, structured and imposing. He cinched a wide leather belt over the coat, sliding the folded crossbow into a specialized holster at his hip and securing a bronze spyglass into a matching leather casing on his opposite side.

    Now looking the part of a chieftain, Azula waved a silent dismissal at a curious Heng and left the workshop. He took an overgrown path toward the coast.
    He reached the old docks first. While the clan had shifted its commerce toward the Nerasa Kingdom to the northeast, the village elders had kept these western docks in good repair. The wood was sturdy and free of rot, though the shifting rocks beneath the waves remained a nightmare for any captain unfamiliar with the approach.

    The beach was eerily quiet. Normally, the white sands would be teeming with families, but with the children in school, the docks were deserted.

    Azula climbed to a high stone vantage point and unfurled his spyglass. He ignored the snap of the white sails, searching instead for the colors. He hissed a curse. Flying in the wind was a black flag emblazoned with a gold crest. It was the mark of an Imperial official. He collapsed the spyglass with a sharp clack.

    At the thought of the Lyria Kingdom, his mind flashed to the political entanglements that led to his father’s death and the face of Draeya Prince. The suppressed frustration of years of isolation bubbled up; he didn’t vent it with a cry, but with a sharp, violent kick to a loose stone. It skittered down the gentle slope to the white beach sands, a singular outlet for the anger he couldn’t show at will anymore. By the time Wolfe and Tanya arrived, his face was a mask of the Sura Prince who stood for every member of the Sura Clan.

    Tanya leveled her own spyglass at the ship and sighed. “An Imperial ship. The Basileus has sent a messenger. I suppose I should have known he wouldn’t forget us.”

    “Who do you think is on board?” Wolfe asked.

    “Draeya Prince,” Tanya replied grimly. “He oversees the imperial commandery. He wouldn’t overlook this island; it’s the perfect defensive position for a war against Nerasa.”

    Azula’s expression didn’t flicker. He had processed the irritation; now, there was only the mission. “We will receive them exactly as we would the Nerasa royalty.”

    “If that is your wish,” Tanya said. “I’ll summon a troop to provide a proper escort.”

    Wolfe looked at the approaching ship, his hand resting on his sword hilt. “Are you sure about this?”

    “I’m not sure of anything,” Azula said, his voice steady as he looked Wolfe in the eye. “The council wanted a solution to our standoff with Lyria. Here it is. At best, we negotiate a peace. At worst, Draeya Prince will make an excellent hostage.”

    Wolfe grinned, the tension breaking at the prospect of a fight. He nodded to Azula and hurried off with Tanya to deploy the soldiers for their guests’ arrival.

    *****

    Raithion paced the length of his cabin, the walls feeling tighter with every league the ship gained on Sura Island. A cold knot of anxiety twisted in his gut, a sensation he hadn’t felt since his first border skirmish at seventeen. Back then, the battle-hardened men defending the Lyria Kingdom from invaders had been so brutal in their vengeance that the sight had made him retch. He never imagined he would one day wield a blade with the same grim precision. Now he was a Draeya Prince with thousands of men at his command, unafraid of combat, yet he felt as though he wanted to crawl into a dark closet rather than face the people on Sura Island.

    He stopped at the window, took a jagged breath, and turned back toward the door.

    “You’re making us all dizzy,” Haedor remarked from the table, casually biting into a meat-filled bun. Sharian and Dain sat beside him, eating with a calm that bordered on indifference. “You should eat something before we disembark. The Sura may not want to feed us.”

    “I’m not hungry,” Raithion said, pivoting his path. He approached the table and retrieved the sealed envelope from Basileus Dio. For days, he had stared at it, trying to script a way to negotiate with the Sura Chief. Every draft failed. He tucked the letter into the inner pocket of his heavy black coat. The dark clothes served as a reminder of the three-month mourning period he was still observing.

    He didn’t dare look at his face in the mirror. He had to keep his focus: he was here to beg and bargain for his son’s life, not to seek out Azula Doriel. As he turned away from the table, Raithion frowned as a thought filled his mind.

    What if Azula had married? Five years was an eternity. The Sura were known for marrying young; the old chieftain used to host mass weddings at his manor in the capital every rest day. The image of Azula with a Sura spouse, a man or woman who shared his life, his bed, and his secrets, ignited a dizzying, suffocating, bitter wave of jealousy.

    Why do you care? He scolded himself, his heart hammering against his ribs. You were married. You have two children. Azula owes you nothing.

    Raithion sighed, resuming his restless march. He had lost Azula the moment they parted in Genad City. Every choice since that moment, from helping his father and Basileus Dio suppress the evidence Azula needed, the subsequent death of Azula’s kin, and the desperate race to the port as the Sura escaped, had been a betrayal. He had no right to expect anything but Azula’s unadulterated anger and disdain. And yet, a hopeful part of him whispered that Azula might still be single, that there might be a sliver of a chance to fight for that spark he had felt on the carriage while they played a game of chess. He hoped fiercely.

    A sharp knock broke his reverie. A legion officer opened the door and saluted. “We’ve arrived, Draeya Prince. We’ll need a skiff to reach the shore. Who will be joining you?”

    The anxiety didn’t vanish, but it settled into a heavy, resolute calm. The time for pacing was over.

    “Dain, Yulin, Haedor, and Sharian,” Raithion commanded.

    “You need a proper guard,” Haedor argued, standing up.

    “Not here,” Raithion said firmly. “I must step onto Sura Island as a desperate father, not a conquering prince. No matter what happens, no one draws a weapon. We follow their lead until I can negotiate.”

    Haedor muttered a curse, but the officer nodded. Sharian and Dain moved quickly to wrap young Yulin for the excursion, leaving the nanny on the main ship to care for little Skye.

    As Haedor rowed the small boat toward the beach, Raithion held Yulin close. The docks were empty, but Raithion doubted the silence of the island. It felt more like a trap than a welcome.

    “Do you think they’ll ambush us?” Haedor asked, his eyes scanning the treeline.

    “Yes,” Raithion said with absolute certainty.

    “You’re far too calm for a man about to face a losing battle,” Dain noted from the back of the boat.

    “I lost everything that mattered a long time ago,” Raithion said softly, tightening his grip on his son. All he had left was a plea for mercy.

    When the boat scraped the sand, Haedor leaped out into the surf. They had bypassed the wooden docks, opting for a stretch of pristine white beach. Haedor steadied Raithion as he stepped out, the weight of a feverish, sleeping Yulin heavy in his arms. Dain and Sharian followed, but they hadn’t taken five steps before a cloud of arrows hissed through the air, thudding into the sand just inches from their boots.

    “Don’t move!” Raithion barked, his eyes darting to Haedor. “Do not draw your sword.”

    Haedor’s fists were white-knuckled at his sides as he stepped in front of Raithion, shielding him with his body. They turned toward the slope overlooking the beach.

    Raithion’s breath hitched. A formidable line of nearly a hundred soldiers stood along the ridge, dressed in uniforms he didn’t recognize. They wore sharp, double-breasted black overcoats with silver buttons and structured military collars accented in gold. Burgundy patches marked their shoulders, and their black trousers were tucked into polished combat boots. Each man carried a sword and a notched crossbow, their strawberry-blond hair pulled into identical, disciplined ponytails. They moved as one, a cohesive, lethal machine. They were well-trained.

    Raithion took in a deep breath and let it out slowly. He waited for the head of this army to arrive, and he wasn’t disappointed. On a sandy path to his right, four figures started a slow, leisurely descent to the beach.

    The first was a massive, imposing man in a crisp white shirt and black trousers, with a wide leather belt around his hips. His hair was intricately braided and pinned back with a heavy leather clip. Beside him walked a woman in a white dress with a voluminous skirt embroidered with gold filigree. Her short sleeves revealed ancient Sanskrit-style prayer lines tattooed in dark ink along her upper arms. Her long hair was in a neat, tight braid down her back. She moved with a regal grace, gold bracelets clinking softly.

    Behind them walked a lean man in a deep burgundy variation of the soldier’s uniform. His military jacket had three gold lines circling his wrists, a clear mark of high rank compared to the rank-and-file soldiers.

    Next to him walked a fourth person whom Raithion could not see clearly. Still, Raithion’s heart skipped a beat at the possibility. It was strange, but he always remembered Azula’s hair decorated with two braids that held the long strands in place.

    He was sure this was not Azula, as his hair was long and brushed straight with no braid in sight. Instead, his hair was brushed straight back to his shoulder blades, held by a simple clip to keep the long strands from his face. He wore a midnight-blue, high-collared greatcoat that looked both elegant and weathered. Its structured torso featured patterned bronze lapels and heavy, sealed pauldrons on the shoulders, while the long tails of the coat were split to allow for easy movement. A layered, embossed leather utility belt cinched his waist, housing metallic-accented holsters and scabbards that looked weathered from actual use. Raithion caught a glimpse of weathered black boots and dark trousers as they approached.

    And then, the group of four people shifted, and Raithion’s breath caught as he recognized Azula as the man with no braids in his hair. He looked so handsome; Raithion forgot how to breathe for a moment.

    Intense brown eyes stared at him. Raithion took in the stunning face that had grown only more so with time. Raithion took in every detail with devotion, from the perfect, slightly square chin and clean-shaven jaw to the defined nose, high cheekbones, and the perfect curve of his lips, even though they were now set in a grim line.
    Suddenly, Raithion wished for the Azula who had laughed easily with his eyes sparkling with mischief.

    Now, as Azula closed the distance between them, there was no sign of the playful young man he had first met in an inn five years ago. Instead, a hardened man stared at him with a challenge.

    Raithion took in a jagged, rugged breath as Azula stopped an arm’s length away.

    Azula’s right hand rose with terrifying fluidity. In a heartbeat, he was leveling a modified crossbow directly at Raithion’s chest, the bolt already notched.
    Azula met Raithion’s surprised gaze.

    “Master of the Blades of Ashes,” Azula greeted. “Unless your ship is sinking, I see no reason for you to be on my shore. State your business quickly so we can see you off. Sura Island is an independent territory. We no longer bow to the Lyria Kingdom.”

    Raithion breathed out, grappling with the indifferent look in Azula’s eyes. He cleared his throat, his heart hammering against his ribs in a fine blend of tragic affection.

    “Azula…”

    “You are addressing the Chieftain of our clan,” the imposing man in the white shirt and dark trousers interrupted, stepping up to Azula’s left. “He is Prince Azula Doriel. You will address him as Prince Azula, Chief Azula, or His Highness. We are an independent nation. Show your respect to our leaders.”

    Raithion didn’t look away from Azula. He simply nodded, acknowledging the title.

    Raithion held Azula’s gaze, refusing to believe Azula would really shoot him with an arrow. Taking a slow, deliberate step past Haedor’s protective stance, Raithion adjusted his grip on the sick child and began to sink to the sand.

    Azula’s expression didn’t flicker. His hand remained rock-steady, the tip of the crossbow tracking Raithion’s movement until it was pointed directly between Raithion’s eyes as Raithion knelt in the sand.

    Haedor hissed a curse, but seeing Raithion on his knees, he, Dain, and Sharian followed suit.

    “Prince Azula,” Raithion said, letting his raw desperation bleed into his voice. “Our ship is fine. I haven’t come for politics or war. I have come to beg. My son, Yulin, was poisoned with Silver Malice in the capital. I seek your clan’s legendary skill for an antidote. Without it, he will die.”

    Azula stared at Raithion, unflinching and unmoving. His hand remained steady as he pointed the crossbow at Raithion’s head.

    Raithion stared at the arrow notched in the crossbow.

    If Azula pulled the trigger, the arrow would go straight between his eyes, and it would be over in a second. Raithion watched him, silent and vulnerable, trusting the ghost of the man he had known five years ago.

    “Why should we show you mercy?” Azula asked after a long, suffocating silence.

    “I have no answer that can heal what Lyria did to you,” Raithion admitted, looking up at him. “I am at your mercy. I can only offer a solemn promise: I will do anything you ask. I will pay any price. Just save my son.”

    Azula scoffed, a bitter sound. “I’ve heard that promise before.”

    “Please,” Raithion whispered. “The boy is innocent. You have the antidote. If you help him, I’ll do anything you want, Your Highness.”

    Azula flinched almost imperceptibly at the title “Your Highness,” or perhaps at the weight of the plea.

    Then, a hand adorned with gold bracelets reached out, resting gently on the frame of Azula’s crossbow.

    “The child is innocent,” the woman said softly. She looked at Raithion with a flicker of pity. “We are not heartless people here. My name is Lasma Doriel, and I am a healer.” She turned to Azula. “We protect the innocent, regardless of the sins of their fathers.”

    Azula’s jaw tightened. “If that is what you wish, then so be it.” He lowered the crossbow, though the tension in his shoulders didn’t fade. “We will treat the child. But the moment he is stable, I want you and your people off this island.”

    Azula looked at Raithion one last time, a gaze that felt like a door slamming shut, before turning on his heel.

    “Leave fifty men on the beach!” Azula shouted to his generals as he walked away. “Monitor the Lyrians. Report any movement that isn’t strictly necessary for the boy’s care.”

    “Yes, Your Highness!” the soldiers barked in unison.

    Raithion remained on his knees in the white sand, trembling with a mixture of crushing relief and the agonizing realization that while his son might live, the Azula he met so long ago was gone.

    *****

    Lasma was the one who stepped forward, her touch gentle but firm as she urged Raithion to his feet. She pressed a hand to Yulin’s forehead, her brow furrowing the moment she felt the heat radiating from his skin.

    “Oh, he’s burning up,” she murmured. “Come. I’ll lead you to our nearest healing center; it’s a short walk from here. You will need to explain everything you’ve done to keep him alive since he ingested the poison.”

    Raithion exhaled a jagged breath of relief. He followed Lasma as she veered onto a path that skirted the wooden docks. Two Sura soldiers trailed them closely, their hands never far from their weapons, while the hulking man who had corrected Raithion’s address of Azula shadowed their every move.

    “Magnus, I’ll be fine,” Lasma said over her shoulder. “Go check on Azu.”

    “I’m staying with you,” Magnus grunted, his pace unyielding. He shot Raithion a look of pure irritation as they reached the main thoroughfare.

    Raithion, however, hardly noticed the scowl. He was too busy staring. Expecting a village crippled by five years of trade isolation, he was instead met with a picture of serene prosperity. A wide, well-maintained road led into a settlement of beautiful whitewashed houses, their porches framed by lush trees and vibrant, carefully tended gardens. He caught Haedor’s eye, seeing his own shock reflected there.

    There was no sign of the destitution Lyria had expected to inflict upon the Sura Clan. Instead, the people they passed appeared healthy and content, moving with a purposeful ease that spoke of a thriving society. The air itself felt different, cleaner, lighter, and wholly carefree.

    Lasma led them toward a modest three-story building nestled within a small grove. A hand-painted sign out front read Healer’s Cove. Lasma didn’t hesitate, pushing through the open doors with the air of someone who owned the space.

    A young woman in a crisp white dress, accented by a single gold stripe running from shoulder to hem, hurried to meet them. A modest scarf covered her hair, and her movements were quick and efficient.

    “Lady Lasma, what brings you to the Cove?” she asked, her eyes widening. “Are you injured?”

    “Not me, Hana,” Lasma said, taking the girl’s hand briefly to calm her. “There is a boy in need of urgent care. They claim it’s Silver Malice. I need you to fetch Alvas from the Prince’s Manor immediately.”

    “Right away,” Hana said, casting a wary, lingering glance at Raithion and his people before vanishing down a hallway.

    Lasma turned back to Raithion. “This way. You may lay the boy down in a private ward. Only one of you may stay with him; the rest will wait here.”

    She pointed to a sun-drenched sitting area by the windows. Magnus stepped into the center of the room, crossing his arms to ensure Haedor, Sharian, and Dain didn’t move an inch further.

    “Wait,” Raithion said, adjusting Yulin’s weight in his arms. He gestured toward Dain. “This is Dain. He has been managing Yulin’s treatment since the beginning.”
    Lasma glanced at Magnus, who looked ready to protest, then sighed. “Fine. He may come. The rest of you, stay put.”

    Raithion gave Haedor and Sharian a sharp, reassuring nod and followed Lasma down a quiet, sterile corridor. She swung open a white door, ushering them into a room bathed in natural light. Whimsical red and white flowers were painted across the walls, lending the space a warmth that masked its clinical purpose. The bed was draped in bleached linens that looked incredibly soft.

    Lasma pulled back the sheets and signaled Raithion to settle Yulin. She adjusted a flat pillow beneath the boy’s head with practiced tenderness, then sat on the edge of the bed. Taking Yulin’s left wrist, she went silent, her index finger pressed to his pulse point as she timed his heartbeats. After a tense minute, she looked up at Dain.

    “You’ve worked tirelessly,” she noted, her voice softening. “His pulse is stable, but he is teetering on the edge of a total system failure. Are you certain it was Silver Malice?”

    “I am,” Raithion answered for him, gesturing to the sealed leather bag Dain carried. The bag held the teapot Rasa had used and its contents, along with the two cups Naeri and Yulin had used.

    Lasma rose and led them to a large workstation against the far wall. It was a table equipped with various medical instruments.

    Raithion’s eyes widened at the sight of a porcelain sink fitted with a polished brass tap. When Lasma turned the handle, clear, pressurized water flowed freely. It was a level of advanced plumbing rare even in the Lyrian capital.

    Lasma washed her hands, pulled a pair of white cloth gloves from a shelf, and set a silver tray on the table. Taking the bag from Dain, she retrieved the teapot and emptied its contents on the tray with clinical precision. Then, she studied the dregs of the teapot and the stained leaves within. Her examination was silent and agonizingly thorough. Finally, she let out a long, heavy sigh.

    “It is indeed Silver Malice,” she confirmed, glancing back at Yulin. Raithion had already returned to his son’s side, clutching the boy’s small, clammy hand. “It’s a miracle he’s still breathing. How much did he take?”

    Dain produced a small ceramic cup from the bag. “His mother filled this, but he only took a single sip before he collapsed.”

    “He’s lucky,” Lasma said grimly. “A second swallow would have been fatal. The concentration in this tea was intended to kill instantly. Now, tell me exactly what you’ve administered.”

    “I’ve kept him on a strict regimen of activated charcoal for the last three days during our voyage from Lyria,” Dain explained. “The two weeks before that, I also used aloe and ginger for the gastric pain, and brewed turmeric and cotton plant to stave off the nerve-related tremors. I’ve been soothing the transitions with goat’s milk.”

    Lasma nodded approvingly. “You focused on the datura base of the poison.”

    “It was the only component I could identify before we understood the full scope of the toxin,” Dain admitted.

    “You did well,” Lasma said. She filled the cup with a sample of the poisoned tea, then emptied the rest of the pot into the sink and rinsed the tray with soap and water. “This teapot is contaminated beyond repair. I’ll have it incinerated. Anything brewed in it from now on would be lethal.”

    “I trust your judgment,” Dain said, his eyes fixed on the lone cup of tea she had set aside.

    “I’ll go fetch the antidote,” Lasma said, stripping off her gloves and tossing them into a laundry basket. She washed her hands, then crossed the room for one final check of Yulin’s pupils and temperature. “We don’t have much time left, but we have enough. Stay here. Rest.”

    “Don’t you need the tea for the cure?” Dain asked as he moved toward Raithion.

    Lasma offered a small, knowing smile. “We do. Watch over it until I return.”

    As the door clicked shut behind her, Raithion felt a wave of profound gratitude wash over him, so thick it nearly choked him. He didn’t care why the Sura had a cure ready for such a deadly poison or how they had become so much more advanced than his own kingdom. He could not bring himself to ask too many questions. All that mattered was that Lasma had spoken with the certainty of a woman who could snatch his son back from the grave. He wiped a hand over his tired face, watching Yulin’s fluttering eyelids.

    “Prince Azula,” Dain said quietly, leaning against the wall with his arms crossed. “He seems to harbor quite a bit of hatred for you. Why did he call you the ‘Master of the Blades of Ashes’?”

    Raithion closed his eyes, the memory of Azula’s face years ago, bright and hopeful, flashing through his mind. “Because I broke a promise to him. I was meant to protect what he held dear. Instead, I let it burn.”

    “Must have been a hell of a promise,” Dain sighed. “The Sura have clearly flourished without us. That crossbow he was carrying? I’ve never seen a mechanism like that. Our engineers are decades behind.”

    “He was always innovative,” Raithion whispered.

    “So, how do you plan on befriending a man who wants to put a bolt through your head?” Dain asked. “They’ve got us bottled up in a healer’s center so close to shore. They could toss us back into the sea in five minutes.”

    Raithion let out a short, dry chuckle. “Azula was always petty when he felt slighted. He once told me off at an inn for pushing him too far. I’m not taking his anger lightly, especially considering what Lyria did to his people. We’ll take it moment by moment. First, we save Yulin. The rest…the rest I’ll spend the rest of my life fighting for.”

    “If you say so,” Dain said, pushing off the wall. He headed back to the sink and started fiddling with the brass tap. “Do you think they’d let me see the drainage schematics for this place? I’ve been trying to overhaul the palace morgue, and the budget just got approved.”

    Raithion shot him a look of pure annoyance. “Could you please not discuss your morgue budget while my son is fighting for his life?”

    “It’s not my fault you brought a coroner to do a healer’s job,” Dain shot back with a smirk. “Besides, Lady Lasma liked my work. I can claim credit for keeping Yulin alive. That gives me leverage to ask you for more gold denaris for my morgue budget.”

    “Shut up, Dain,” Raithion grumbled, though the familiar bickering took some of the sting out of the room’s tension.

    “But, Lord Raithion, the ventilation alone…”

    ****

    <<Previous | Blades of Ashes ToC | Next>>

  • Blades of Ashes Ch 12-2

    Mornings were beautiful on Sura Island. Azula loved watching the sunrise over the lake. He had taken to swimming early, before Alise and Ruri woke up. They worried too much when he was out in the lake during the day. Azula pulled himself up on the dock and sat on a bench to watch the beauty of the sun as it painted the sky with light.

    He could not believe five years had passed in this quiet, strange way. He wondered what their dad would say about all their progress on the island. Would Marius be happy, excited, and want to hold ten weddings at the same time?

    Azula chuckled at the thought and imagined his father would probably hold a hundred weddings at once. Marius Doriel always thought a flourishing clan meant marriages and children.

    Oh, how he missed that old man.

    Shaking his head, Azula grabbed the towel he had brought with him and put it over his head as he got up to walk to the house. He was met by Senin, who was waiting for him at the front entrance of the main house. Wiping his hair with the towel, he smiled at Senin.

    “What brings you out here so early?” Azula asked as he entered the foyer and crossed the great room to the staircase. Senin kept up with him, which made him realize Senin had something to say.

    “Azula, I came to tell you that there is a council meeting you can’t miss today,” Senin said as they reached the second floor.

    Azula’s room was the same one he had used since childhood, though the decor had changed with time. It started out as a boy’s room; now, it was a man’s room. It was decorated with utility-based furniture: a long couch and a comfortable bed. The closet was filled with work clothes and ceremonial clothes for when he needed to appear as the clan’s chieftain. The only thing that remained from his youthful days was a large worktable where Azula liked to tinker with joints.

    The worktable was by the large windows on the east side of the room, and the chair before it was modified to allow for comfortable sitting for when he got lost in his work. Azula turned toward the bathroom on the west side of the room, sliding the door open to enter the spacious bath. He turned on the water in the large copper bathtub, adjusted the temperature on the taps, and leaned on the counter where he kept his shaving items. Senin took a bowl from the counter, filled it with some of the water pouring into the bathtub, and brought it to the counter.

    Azula finished with the towel and placed it on the counter. He touched his chin and smiled when Senin pushed the chair by the counter closer to him.

    “Sit. I’ll help you shave,” Senin said, as he got a clean, small cloth from a shelf and busied himself finding the razor, the brush, the shaving oil, and the soap.

    “You’re spoiling me this morning,” Azula said as he settled in the chair, pulling the towel he had discarded around his shoulders.

    “I haven’t seen you for days,” Senin said. “The old miners are grateful you’ve been minding their health. The rail carts have reduced the strenuous work of carrying the mined ore from the top to the warehouse. Others enjoy taking the rail carts to the top mountain. There have been many gratitude vegetable baskets delivered to the kitchen downstairs. Alise believes you’re being courted by the younger ones.”

    “I’m happy the carts are of use,” Azula said, ignoring the remark about his marriage. He had no idea when he would face a decision on marriage with a clear mind.  He tilted his head back and closed his eyes as Senin covered his face with a warm towel. Azula sank into the anticipation of a clean shave as Senin prepared his tools.

    “What’s so special about today’s council?” Azula asked, as Senin took back the towel and started lathering his jaw.

    “We have two pressing issues,” Senin said with a sigh. “There is a girl named Laine who had a mishap at school. The council members can’t seem to agree on what they should do with her. Her mother asked me to ask you to listen to the case. Maybe you can intervene.”

    “Mm,” Azula said. “I’ll listen to the case. Is that the only reason you want me there?”

    Senin touched his shoulder to let him know to be still as he started shaving. Senin was fast in his movements. “The council members each have an opinion on the future of Sura Island. With Nerasa Kingdom offering us membership into their kingdom, there are those who have doubts. We need to find a lasting solution. I don’t think we can join Nerasa Kingdom so easily. We still need to worry about the Lyria Kingdom. The council needs you to mediate. Tempers run too high when they start discussing the future, especially between Juya and Wolfe Silverberry when they can’t agree on Lyria.”

    Azula winced at the mention of Wolfe. There was no way to console Wolfe. His son was gone, and perhaps the only way was to go to Lyria Kingdom, find the boy’s body, and give him a burial. But it would not heal the raw, jagged wound that Wolfe carried around. Letting out a soft sigh, he waited until Senin finished his shave. He cleaned up after, and Azula went to turn off the water in the tub. It had filled, and Azula was eager for a bath.

    “I don’t have the answers for Lyria Kingdom,” Azula said, looking at Senin. “I’ll come to the council meeting, but maybe we should all think about engaging the Lyria Kingdom for a resolution.”

    “Your mother told you not to seek revenge,” Senin said.

    “She did,” Azula said with a nod. “It doesn’t mean that we’re not owed answers. Maybe we can find a way to get them together. I’ll make sure to attend the council.”

    “Thank you, Azula,” Senin said, and turned to the counter as Azula stepped out of his trousers and sank into the copper bath. Senin cleaned the brush he used to soap Azula’s jaw and the blade. He put away everything and took the dirty water in the bowl with him. “I’ll see you at the council room in the village hall at ten today.”

    Azula relaxed in the bathtub with his eyes closed, and then, just as he was drifting into a doze, a face he hadn’t thought about in so long filled his mind’s eye. It was Raithion Maenaer, Draeya General… no, Draeya Prince now. It was that day on the balcony at an inn in Port City.

    Draeya General… Azula hesitated over the thought, then shrugged.

    Draeya General had looked at him with amusement and exasperation. How handsome he had looked, his green eyes so vibrant and painfully difficult to ignore. His heart ached at the memory because he sometimes wished he had not stepped out to meet Draeya General. Maybe then his father would have survived.

    Shaking his head, Azula sat up and concentrated on bathing seriously, using the soap Alvas made with frankincense and tea tree. When he was clean from head to toe, he drained and rinsed the tub before he grabbed a freshbath towel and stepped into his room to dress.

    He ate breakfast with his mother, Alise, and Ruri. After breakfast, he hurried to the workshop to check on the last of the rails he was forging to finish the final stretch of the tracks. He was just getting into the rhythm of the work when Ruri came running into the workshop accompanied by one of the school teachers.

    “Godfather, Mom is looking for you,” Ruri said, taking his hand and leading him out of the workshop. The teacher smiled in greeting.

    “Ms. Alise sent us up here to remind you of the council meeting,” the teacher said.

    Azula laughed at Alise’s gentle demand for his time and allowed Ruri to lead him outside to one of the rail carts. He lifted the boy into the cart and they sat on the bench. The teacher sat in the second rail cart, and Azula gave her a polite nod before he shifted the forward lever, and the rail carts started moving along the rails, heading down to the village center, where the hall was located. 

    Ruri let out excited squeals as they sped along the rail, winding down the mountain side until they reached the village center. Azula stopped the cart and held on to Ruri as he climbed out of the rail cart. Carrying his nephew, Azula walked toward the village hall.

    Everyone they met greeted Azula with wide smiles and nods. Azula responded to each one, getting help from Ruri.

    “Morning, Your Highness.”

    “Morning,” Ruri would say at the same time as Azula.

    “Hope your day is good, Your Highness.”

    “You too,” Ruri and Azula said, making people chuckle.

    “Is Ruri my little parrot this morning?” Azula asked as they entered the hall.

    “Mom says I need to learn how to be kind,” Ruri said.

    “But you’re the kindest,” Azula said as they headed to the council room. 

    The village hall had morphed in the past years and now housed different government offices as well as the council office where the clan’s council met on business.

    Alvas met him before he entered the hall and took Ruri from him. Azula kissed the boy’s cheeks and entered the council room to find most of the members waiting for him. Everyone stood to greet him and, for a moment, the sense of ceremony stunned him. He was twenty-five this year and somehow, in the past five years, he had gained the respect of all the council members; he could not stop them from standing when he walked into a room. It was humbling and frightening at the same time.

    Azula sat at the head chair of the long rectangular table in the room. When everyone arrived, the council meeting started and the men and women who helped manage the clan began a lively discussion.

    Azula watched them discuss shipments to Nerasa, harvesting plans for the rice fields that had grown in the past five years, and the recruiting process of new warriors. Then, Senin met his gaze when they started discussing a student who had hurt her fellow students while mixing chemicals in the smelting workshops at school.

    So many troubles. Azula sighed and listened to the case with a sense of amusement.

    “Your Highness, what do we do about Laine?” Lasma asked, turning to look at him with expectation. The fact that she used his title was enough to tell him that she wanted him to give this issue his all. “She’s hurt other children. The children’s parents want an answer or…”

    “Retribution against a child,” Azula cut in. “I don’t know what to say to that. Does she want to keep mixing chemicals?”

    “What does that have to do with anything?” Juya asked. “She’s dangerous. She should stay away from the chemicals in the workshop at school if she can’t observe safety precautions.”

    “Does she like it or hate it?” Azula persisted, looking at Alvas, who managed all the education cases that came to the clan council.

    “She seems to enjoy it and has been depressed by the idea of not being able to go to the school smelting workshop,” Alvas said.

    “Then send her to my workshop to work with Heng. He smelts metal for the rail tracks. She can help, learn, and test as much as she wants. If the work interests her, let her get a job there,” Azula said. “It will pull Laine out of the school workshop. The parents won’t worry about an accident and Laine can test her abilities. What do you think?”

    Alvas smiled and nodded while Juya spoke up.

    “You’re rewarding her wrongs,” Juya said.

    “No. I’m redirecting her talent,” Azula said, meeting Juya’s gaze. “Was anyone damaged by the accident she caused?”

    “No,” Alvas said. “The kids ran off when the mixture she made exploded. The only thing that was damaged was the worktable.”

    “Then,” Azula grinned, “she can work with Heng in the workshop to repay the school for the worktable. Maybe Heng can teach her how not to have an accident.”

    “Sounds good,” Lasma said in agreement.

    Juya grumbled, but he nodded his agreement.

    “Now that Laine’s matter is resolved, we need to discuss the Nerasa Kingdom,” Tanya Nuovis, the primary Sura General, said. “Their ships have been patrolling closer to our waters. Are we planning on changing our allegiance to the Nerasa Kingdom?”

    Azula settled in for a discussion he had been avoiding for days.

    “Everyone in the council has an opinion on the future of this island,” Azula said. “Why don’t we all share our thoughts? I’ll pose the question: Should we allow the Nerasa Kingdom’s gentle annexation or find a way to renew our ties with the Lyria Kingdom to stop Nerasa?”

    “There are scars that need a sane explanation,” Alvas said without prompting, looking around the long table. “Families lost their loved ones. Some are still missing. None of us know if they are alive or dead. We have not had the courage to venture into Lyria Kingdom for answers. Perhaps we should try to visit Lyria and see if we can find the answers.”

    “I second Madam Alvas’s opinion,” Wolfe Silverberry said, meeting Azula’s gaze. “I run your security when you’re traveling in Nerasa, Your Highness. I have helped General Tanya strengthen our defenses. The work is good, but I have not forgotten what happened five years ago. It is good that Sura Island has grown strong, but… I still hope I can bring my son home daily.”

    Azula nodded, understanding Wolfe’s loss would need true closure.

    “There are questions we never got answers to,” Senin said, his tone gentle. “I have many requests from family members who lost people in Lyria. They want answers I don’t have. We should try to formally close these requests. Perhaps we can send an envoy to Lyria for answers.”

    “Lyria Kingdom is a dream,” Juya said, shaking his head, his gaze on Alise. “It wasn’t easy getting out of there. How can we send people there in good conscience? They murdered us like dogs on the streets. There is no guarantee that the Lyria Kingdom’s government has changed its stance.”

    “I agree with Juya,” Alise said, her voice soft, laden with sadness, her thoughts clearly on Yemin and their father, Marius. “There is no guarantee that they won’t murder us on sight.”

    “We don’t need to go as our true selves,” Kalas said. “We can choose a team to disguise themselves and land on Lyria Kingdom as though we are from Nerasa Kingdom. It would be easy to find the answers.”

    “Perhaps,” Magnus said, finally speaking, his fingers tapping on the table. “I don’t know that it is the right way to approach this. The clan seeks redemption. They no longer have to worry about surviving; now, they have time to think about the injustice. A covert infiltration won’t heal the scars. We need a formal engagement with the Basileus for any meaningful closure.”

    Azula glanced at Lasma. His mother gave him a helpless glance and smiled. “I have my own reservations about facing off with the nobles of Lyria Kingdom, but… the clan needs answers. I—I think that Magnus is right. we should seek a formal engagement with the Basileus.”

    Azula stared at his mother for a full moment before he let out a soft, uncertain breath. “Now that everyone has stated their concerns, I would like to ask you all to think on how we would engage with Basileus for answers. It’s not an easy project. I don’t think we can decide it in a day. So, talk to everyone; maybe they’ll have a solution. I can’t think of one at the moment.”

    “Oh, you have no opinion on Lyria Kingdom?” Alise asked, looking at him.

    Azula made a face at her. “I do not have a civil opinion on the matter, and I promised mom to think three times before I act on any Lyria Kingdom plans.”

    “Well, the sea must be running still if you’re thinking thrice about something,” Alise said with a laugh.

    Azula winked at her and let out a soft sigh. “Well, if we’re done here, I’m going to collect macadamia nuts with the kids.”

    “Azula,” Lasma started, but Azula pushed his chair back and got up.

    “Don’t forget to send Laine to Heng. He’s been bugging me about an assistant. I’ve finally found him an interesting one,” Azula said as he ran out of the council meeting room.

    ****

    <<Previous| Blades of Ashes ToC | Next>>

  • Blades of Ashes – Ch 12-1

    Raithion dressed in formal clothing for his official visit to the palace. It was a day after the funeral, and the city was awash with gossip of Naeri’s death. The scribes had published the story of Naeri’s death at the hands of her most trusted lady-in-waiting. Gesi Ajai was busy trying to control the narrative, but there was no way to hide the truth. Raithion had insisted that the coroner share the details of the poison used on his wife and child in case an antidote could be found sooner.

    “Ajai will try to divert the attention to his family,” Kailu guessed, watching Raithion don a heavy black long coat.

    Raithion moved to the mirror at the vanity table as he buttoned the coat. His shirt and trousers were black, and the formal long coat was also black, though the wrists were embellished with gold lines to mark his station as the Commandery Prince. He fastened the gold buttons and sat down at the vanity. Sharian tied his hair with a gold clip and trimmed the beard Raithion had refused to shave.

    “The attention will not end easily,” Raithion said. “Push the printers to publish morning and evening. I want everyone in Genad City to know about Silver Malice. If possible, push the news beyond the capital to the various states.”

    “I have someone working on it,” Kailu said.

    Raithion nodded, pulled on his fine leather boots to match his formal attire, and shifted to look at Kailu.

    “Don’t you think it’s time to take on your true station?” Raithion asked. He had known Kailu a long time. When they were younger, and Raithion was free of the constraints of marriage, he was happy to keep Kailu’s secrets and let him play to his fullest among the Maenaer Legion officers.

    Now, his life was rubble filled with a dead wife, a poisoned son, and an infant daughter. He could not focus on anything else but bringing his life under control. Shaking his head, he gave Kailu a wan smile.

    “Things are at this point,” Raithion said, pointing to his black clothes. “I’m about to enter the palace and seek time away from the capital. My father will take over the Commandery Office in the palace. However, he is a true general—ambitious, but not as perceptive with the common people as he should be. He has a tendency to lean into the political ideas that interest him. Kailu, your cousin, is also ambitious, and now that he has gained full control of the city’s defenses, thanks to you and me, he will want to fight Gesi Ajai and the Prime Minister for more political control. So, I can only ask you to protect my sisters and mother while I’m away. What do you say?”

    “Raith,” Kailu started, only to sigh. “You’re quite smart, reaching out to me when I can’t refuse you.”

    “Your mother has done a great job protecting Little Bird in the palace. She’ll be happy to see you returning to your true self. I’m relying on you, Prince Kailu Adertha.”

    Kailu smiled at the mention of Princess Sanan. The princess married her trusted guard when she turned twenty-one and gave birth to a son. Her mother and Basileus Rokas all insisted on her remaining in the Adertha Palace and named Kailu a prince.

    Prince Kailu had run out of the palace when he was sixteen and joined the army, where he met Raithion. They had looked after each other since.

    “What do you plan to do when you get to Sura Island?” Kailu asked.

    Raithion’s gaze shifted to the blades Azula gifted him five years ago. They were resting on a stand. The handle that clipped the two blades together had started to malfunction. He had taken to keeping the blades separate. He missed the weighted feel of the double blades when they snapped together.

    “I don’t have a plan,” Raithion said with a sigh, thinking of Azula’s angry expression when he last stood face-to-face with him. “Azula was very angry when we last met. It was understandable, as his clan was decimated in the Sura cleanse. There’s nothing I can say that could dissolve his anger. So, I will just show up.”

    “I suppose that is a plan,” Kailu said. “I hope Haedor protects you well in the face of Azula’s anger.”

    “Me too,” Raithion said with a weary smile as he got up. He gave the broken blades one last glance before he started heading out. “Let’s go, Your Highness. We have a lot of work to do today.”

    Kailu let out another sigh, then followed him out of the bedroom.

    ****

    Raithion met Dio in his office. Dio stood when Raithion walked in and came around his desk to give him a short hug.

    “The funeral went smoothly,” Dio said. “You handled the ceremony quite well. It must have been difficult, but you were very strong. I could only support you from behind. Do you need anything now?”

    “Yes,” Raithion said with a nod. Dio pushed him to sit in a chair before the desk and then leaned against his desk. “I need permission to leave the capital. I have an opportunity to find a cure for Yulin. I have to take it. It means I have to travel out of Genad City. I don’t know how long it will take me, so my absence will be indefinite.”

    Dio closed his eyes and folded his arms against his chest. Raithion sat still in his chair and watched Dio until the Basileus took a deep breath and pushed off the desk. He moved around the desk to the main seat and sat down with a sigh.

    “You want to leave us alone in the capital,” Dio started.

    “You won’t be alone,” Raithion said. “My father is here, and so is Kailu.”

    “Kailu—” Dio said, but Raithion interrupted him right away.

    “He is your cousin, My Lord. He will return home and take on his title,” Raithion said. “He knows all my duties and will protect you and Little Bird. I trust him with your lives.”

    “I don’t doubt that you do, but it’s not the same when you’re not in the capital,” Dio said, shaking his head. “We’re in a good place, military-wise. But now we’re about to take on the political wall the Libert and Populi have in my court. We can’t do it without you.”

    “My son is dying,” Raithion said, his tone cold. “Gesi Ajai had someone poison him in my house. I can’t watch him die without finding a solution. I need to leave the capital.”

    “Prince Raithion,” Dio started, but Raithion slammed his palm on the desk, letting his anger color his voice.

    “You owe me,” Raithion said, his teeth gritted. “Don’t think I don’t know how I ended up married to Naeri Ajai. I allowed your plans because it is what you were owed. It is what your father was owed. I lived through everything Naeri put me through, including her devious plots to rob me of my free will so she could conceive two children. Two children I did not know how to love until she died in my great room and left them with only me as a parent. So, you need to release me from the burden of this palace. I need to go fight for Yulin and Skye now, so that I can find some peace after five years of this hell.”

    Dio stared at him in silence. They sat staring at each other for five minutes before Dio nodded.

    “Do you know that is the first time you have ever dared to tell me what you’re thinking?” Dio said with a sigh. “You’ve always kept to discussions about your duty as the Commandery Prince and your protection of Soriel. Never once have you dared to speak your mind. I’m very happy, Raith.”

    Raithion stared at him, then turned away to look out the window. His jaw clenched for a minute before he stared at his hands in his lap.

    “Forgive me,” Raithion started.

    “No, you don’t get to take back that tirade,” Dio said with a small smile. “Will you tell me where you’re going? Are you sure the imperial healers cannot come up with the cure?”

    “Dain.”

    “The coroner?” Dio asked.

    “Don’t judge him for his work; he is very good at discovering what ails people,” Raithion said. “He says the antidote for Silver Malice needs an expert. Someone who will know the precise dosage to give to Yulin. The only known expert is on Sura Island.”

    Dio sucked in air at the mention of the Sura.

    “Are you sure they will help?” Dio asked.

    “I don’t have a choice but to seek them out,” Raithion said. “I’ll have to deliver myself to the Sura Clan and see if they will help.”

    Dio sat in silence for a moment, then reached for a fresh sheet of paper from a holder on his desk. He picked up his fountain pen and started writing. When he finished, he picked up his official seal and stamped the letter with red ink before he handed it to Raithion.

    “I cannot undo what happened to them during the forged silver case,” Dio said. “But I can promise justice and the right to reopen the case to find the truth. You already have the Doriel Manor under your control. You have the right to give it to them as you will. This is the most I can do for you now. This is a warrant of retrial. You can hand it to the new Sura Chief on behalf of my court.”

    Raithion took the edict and read it. Dio had stated simply that he would grant the Sura Clan the mandate to seek a fresh retrial of their case and the right to seek fresh evidence to clear the clan’s name in court.

    “Thank you,” Raithion said with a small smile, knowing Azula would be happy to see the warrant, if not him.

    Dio got up and found an envelope from his drawers. He walked around the table and took the paper from him, folding it neatly before sealing it in an envelope and stamping the closed edge with his ring.

    “I am grateful to you, Raith,” Dio said, meeting Raithion’s gaze. “I have noted everything you have done for my family and me since you joined this palace. Every step you have taken to protect Soriel and me, I have written it in my heart. I promise not to interfere with your family matters anymore. If you do ever meet someone you’re willing to make a partner, I will stand for you and your lover for the rest of my days. That is my promise. Go, leave the palace to your father, Soriel, and me.”

    “And Kailu,” Raithion reminded him. “Let him help; otherwise, he will run back to my Maenaer residence for sanctuary and never return. Princess Sanan won’t forgive you.”

    Dio scoffed and shook his head. “Fine, and Prince Kailu.”

    “Good.” Raithion got up. “Then I’ll leave without worry.”

    “Good luck with the Sura,” Dio said as Raithion took the sealed envelope and headed to the door.

    “Yeah,” Raithion said, sure he would need a miracle to get Azula to look at him.

    That day, two things surprised the courtiers in the imperial court. One was that the Draeya Prince was leaving the capital to handle matters in Draeya County in the Naga State. Most people understood his need to return to his home county after all the tragedy in his home. The commoners wished him well and hoped that his son would find a cure soon. It was sad to imagine him planning a second funeral so soon.

    The second news was the arrival of Duke Maenaer at the court as he took over the Draeya Prince’s Commandery Office. He would be supported by Princess Sanan’s elusive son, Prince Kailu Adertha—Prince Kailu, who had not been seen for ages. The court was in an uproar over the news.

    That evening, Noriel, Soriel, Silveren, and Thanir all gathered at the gates as they watched Raithion’s private legion guard pack up and secure the carriages carrying Skye and Yulin with their nanny. Raithion’s butler, Daron, ensured they had everything, and all that was left was a quiet goodbye.

    “Take care of yourself,” Silveren said as she held on to Raithion’s right hand. “Don’t forget to eat on time. Don’t think about home too much. We can manage. You focus on finding a cure for Yulin.”

    “I will,” Raithion said, pulling her into a tight hug. She kissed his cheeks and stepped back to let Soriel and Noriel hug him. He held his sisters tight and promised to return with good news.

    Then he was standing before Thanir.

    “The Sura have a lot to gain from an agreement with the Lyria Kingdom,” Thanir said, holding his right hand tight. “There have been rumors that they have grown their island and changed their power structure. The Nerasa Kingdom is sniffing around them and may attempt a soft annexation. However, Sura Island is still part of Lyria; any annexation by the Nerasa Kingdom would trigger a war. It is not something the Sura would want. Lean on that when you meet the new Sura Chieftain.”

    “I’ll remember,” Raithion nodded, thinking of Alise, Azula’s sister. She was the next chieftain. He hoped she would be easy to talk to; at the very least, she might be willing to negotiate.

    “Yulin will be cured,” Thanir said with confidence.

    It was a confidence that filled Raithion up inside, and he nodded before he hugged his father tight, then turned to mount his horse, followed closely by Haedor, who was leading the convoy of three carriages heading to Draeya County.

    Raithion gave his family one last glance before he turned his horse and left the capital, his heart pounding with the anticipation of seeing Azula Doriel again.

    ****

    <<Previous | Blades of Ashes ToC | Next>>

  • Blades of Ashes Ch 11-2

    A wild period began in the Maenaer Manor, especially once Benira saw her daughter in the grand coffin Silveren had found for her daughter-in-law. It was painted black and inlaid with gold designs. Naeri was dressed in a fine red ceremonial dress to mark her station as the Commandery Princess. Gold hairpins were in her hair, with matching gold jewelry at her neck and gold nail guards on her fingers. She looked majestic in death, and the sight triggered Benira into endless grieving. The coffin was then placed in an ice room constructed at the back of the property.

    Benira then sat in the front courtyard of the main house and wailed for all visitors to see her grief.

    Silveren ignored her antics but made sure Benira had food when she needed it, a comfortable room to rest, and people to attend to her needs.

    Noriel helped her mother manage the house and deal with the team of investigators who overturned the manor and interrogated all the staff living in the manor.

    Soriel tried her best to penetrate the mental wall Raithion had put up as he sat on a chair by his son’s bed, while the healers did their best to save Yulin. But Raithion allowed nothing else to disturb him. Not even reports that Haedor had finally found Rasa, Naeri’s attendant, who had been trying to escape the manor in a rice supply cart at the service gates.

    “We are holding her in the firewood shed at the back of the manor,” Kailu said. “Should we call Lord Raith?”

    “No,” Soriel said. She stood outside Yulin’s chamber, watching her brother through the open doors.

    Inside, the curtains were open to allow light into the sickroom.

    Yulin lay on the right side of the large bed. Raithion sat on a chair holding Yulin’s right hand, rubbing his son’s fingers between his as though to warm them. The healers were grinding herbs at a table in the corner, their murmurs low in order not to disturb Raithion or Yulin.

    Her brother was dressed in a loose white shirt and wool trousers, his feet bare. His hair was down and uncombed. A dark, unkempt beard covered his jaw. Soriel could not remember the last time she had seen her brother so disheveled.

    Daron, her brother’s trusted butler, hurried down the hallway.

    “Do you have food for him?” Soriel asked.

    “Yes,” Daron said, glancing into the room to find Raithion resting his head on his clasped hands where he held Yulin’s limp, pale hand.

    “Try to get him to eat a few spoonfuls. If he won’t eat, give him soup,” Soriel said. “He’ll get sick sitting by his son’s bed.”

    “I’ll try,” Daron said, then entered the room to see if the healers needed any new supplies.

    Soriel sighed as she watched Raithion a moment longer, then turned to Kailu.

    “Let’s go talk to this Rasa. Mom says the funeral is in two days. We can open the doors now that we’ve found the missing link,” Soriel said. “Let visitors come in. It might stop Benira’s incessant wailing.”

    “I don’t think anything will stop that,” Kailu said, shaking his head.

    Soriel tried not to smile at Kailu’s skeptical tone as she followed him downstairs. As if on cue, Benira’s loud cries reached them as they walked to the back of Raithion’s house. Soriel sighed and prayed for grace from a higher power.

    In the firewood shed, she was surprised to find that she recognized the young woman Kailu and Haedor held in custody. She was dressed in pale green. Her hair was tied in a tight ponytail. She wore no makeup, but her face was striking. She was a beautiful girl. Soriel had seen her walking behind Naeri every time they met for family gatherings.

    “Why would you try to leave the manor while we’re mourning your mistress?” Soriel asked as Miera arranged a chair for her in front of Rasa.

    The firewood was packed in neat stacks on wall-length shelves. The roof was weatherproof to ensure the wood stayed dry. The floors were clean. Raithion’s people did not like clutter. Rasa sat on a mat with a tall shelf behind her back. She was not tied, but she looked disheveled. Her eyes were red from unshed tears.

    Soriel frowned as she studied the younger woman. Miera invited her to sit and she did, facing Rasa.

    “Your mistress has died,” Soriel said, and watched the tears spill from Rasa’s eyes. The girl was sad about Naeri’s death, but not enough to be remorseful. Soriel frowned. Not good. “Naeri was poisoned. A poison the healers cannot find a cure for. For the sake of Yulin, tell me who gave your mistress the poisoned tea.”

    Rasa cried a few more moments, then wiped her tears and met Soriel’s gaze. “If you can prove who did it, I’ll answer all your questions. But I will only talk to Lord Raith about it.”

    “Ha!” Soriel pointed a finger at her and got up. “Then, Kailu, Haedor, your work is cut out for you. Bring all the evidence you can find in this residence. I don’t believe we can’t get this one to talk.”

    ****

    A day before the funeral, Raithion woke up with a start. He sat by Yulin’s bed, his head resting on the covers. Yulin was still asleep. Raithion took his hand, and a pang of panic shifted through him when the boy’s skin felt too cold.

    He got up from his chair and leaned over the boy to check that he was still breathing. A sigh of relief escaped when he felt Yulin’s shallow breath against his cheek. Raithion pressed his palm over Yulin’s forehead, brushing away strands of damp hair before he turned to find Dain hurrying in with a bowl of warm medicine.

    “How is he this morning?” Raithion asked, as he watched Dain move closer and start feeding Yulin the medicine.

    “He’s holding steady. There is no fever. It tells me we have controlled the worst of the poison’s attack. But we still need the antidote,” Dain said. “Your Highness, forgive my forwardness, but staying in this room delays those efforts. Everyone in your residence is lost without you. Please, get out there and find me the antidote. I promise if you bring it, I will save his life.”

    Raithion stepped back from the bed, his gaze on Yulin, who was barely conscious. He had been in this room for three days now. Three days of prayers and hope. He closed his eyes and ran a hand through his hair, caught between helplessness and anger. For all of Naeri’s faults, this was the hardest trial she had ever put him through, and it wasn’t even her doing.

    Shaking his head, Raithion met Dain’s expectant gaze and then turned and left Yulin’s chambers.

    His attendant, Sharian, met him in the hallway.

    “Update me,” Raithion said.

    “I have moved your belongings to the master bedroom in this residence,” Sharian said. “The hot water is ready for your bath. As for the rest of the house, the funeral is tomorrow. The Spiritual Priest arrives this afternoon to start the funeral rituals. Your mother has arranged accommodations for your in-laws in the main house, which is why we had to move you here. Lord and Lady Ajai are staying there. They are seeking justice for their daughter’s death with every word. Your father arrived late last night. The Basilinna has been helping Kailu and Haedor with investigations. She stepped out of the manor early this morning to return to the palace. She said she would be back for the funeral. Lady Draug is helping your mother with the arrangements. Between them, they are looking after young Princess Skye.”

    “Okay,” Raithion said, suddenly so grateful his family members were strong enough to keep the ship moving when he couldn’t. “I’ll have a bath and dress for the day. Let Haedor find me to update me on the case.”

    “Right away,” Sharian said, opening the door to the master bedroom. The room had been stripped of all items belonging to Naeri.

    His butler, Daron, was quite efficient in the management of the house. He had restored the room to how it looked before Raithion got married.

    Raithion headed to the bathroom, which was tucked in a corner of the master bedroom. The sunken bath was clean and peaceful. Raithion stripped out of his clothes as Sharian opened the large copper taps to let it fill with hot water from the tanks in the kitchen.

    Sharian made sure the water temperature was right by turning on the cold water. Then, when the bath was filled, he left Raithion to his bath. Raithion sank into the hot water and cleaned himself until his mind was clear.

    Refreshed, he got out of the bath wrapped in a white bath cloth. By the bed, he stared at the black clothes, without any form of adornment, waiting for him. He was a widower now. Obligated to mourn his wife, a wife he had fought every single day of their marriage.

    Raithion pushed away the reality of his marriage and focused on dressing: underwear, black trousers, black tunic, and a black leather jacket with silver buttons. He pulled on socks and black leather boots and then sat at the vanity table.

    Sharian brushed his hair into a ponytail, then wrapped it with a black ribbon.

    Raithion did not bother shaving. He thanked Sharian for his help and left the master bedroom. Downstairs, he headed to the dining room where Haedor was already waiting, also dressed in black.

    “Lord Raith,” Haedor said. “I’m glad you’ve come down. We have made progress on the case. There are things we have uncovered that need a delicate hand.”

    “What things?” Raithion asked, accepting a cup of tea from Haedor. Aryn and Sira hurried in with bowls of hot food for the morning meal. Raithion filled his plate without reservation. He felt he needed to eat well to face the coming hours.

    “We found Rasa, who dared us to find evidence and said only then will she talk to you,” Haedor said. “Kailu and I have had all the investigators following up on Rasa’s whereabouts these last few days. My Lord, this lady-in-waiting is suspicious. The more we uncover, the more we find that she is an informant who was dropped into our manor. There are strong indications that she works for Gesi Ajai.”

    “Works for Gesi Ajai,” Raithion repeated as he ate his sweet corn on the cob. An informant working for Gesi Ajai in his manor was not news; what would be insane was if she had caused Naeri’s death. He scoffed. “Wouldn’t he have shot himself in the foot with this if his own people murdered his daughter? Naeri had something she wanted to tell me before she drank her tea.”

    “The carriage Naeri took to her parents belongs to us,” Haedor said. “The driver insists that her ladyship left in the company of her two attendants in the morning, but when she was coming back to the manor, she was running and left Rasa behind, only bringing Callie.”

    “Oh.” Raithion frowned.

    “Kailu will uncover what happened at the Ajai estate,” Haedor said. “For now, I’m focusing on Rasa and what happened when Naeri came back. We’ll have answers by the end of the day.”

    “That’s good news,” Raithion said, sipping his green tea. “It will be good to know what happened before the funeral tomorrow. I need to focus on getting an antidote for Yulin.”

    Haedor let out a sigh at the mention of Yulin, and the weight of it settled on Raithion’s heart.

    “We all hope the little prince can be saved,” Haedor said.

    Then, Thanir Maenaer walked in and Raithion and Haedor stood up.

    “I’ll give you some time alone.” Haedor picked up his teacup and plate and walked out of the dining room.

    Raithion met his father’s gaze, and his resolve fractured when Thanir opened his arms wide. He sank into his father’s embrace and cried, the tears coming even before he could think to fight them. Thanir held him tight, patting his back until he was back in control, then led him to a chair.

    “It’s good to get it out,” Thanir said, handing Raithion a cup of cool water. Raithion drank it in one go, glad for the distraction.

    “Yulin is not doing well,” Raithion said, shaking his head as he placed the cup on the table. “I need to find an antidote.”

    “I heard you have a coroner looking after him.”

    “Dain is the only one I can trust,” Raithion said, shaking his head. “Ajai has had too many spies in this residence. I can’t let healers from the street into the house.”

    “Okay,” Thanir said, then sat down. “These two days will be difficult. Ajai is in the main residence, and half the time he is pushing for us to fight the Prime Minister. I don’t know why he thinks this is something we’re interested in, but you are his focus.”

    “I know,” Raithion said with a nod, wiping a hand down his face.

    “Keep your cool,” Thanir said, “and take the hard line with him. You’re the head of your household. Everything should go as you want it to; don’t let them interfere. The Basileus may attend the funeral after all.”

    “I know,” Raithion said. “Soriel has helped with the investigations. I should thank her for it.”

    “No,” Thanir said. “You’ve been her family’s support; it’s only natural that she is yours, Raith. Don’t think of it.”

    “Dad.”

    “Yes, son,” Thanir said.

    “After the funeral, I need time away from the palace,” Raithion said. “Time to spend with Yulin and Skye. I—I was not happy with how they came about, but now I’m all they’ve got. I need to find a way in my head to be straight with that. I can’t do it if I’m caught up with the palace.”

    “I know,” Thanir said. “I will take over your office, and you can go hold the fort in Draeya.”

    Raithion met Thanir’s gaze and nodded.

    “Don’t worry about Yulin. We’ll do everything we can to find a cure,” Thanir said. “He’s a Maenaer. We look after our own.”

    Thanir studied him for a moment longer then reached out and squeezed his shoulder. “It’s almost over, this thing with Ajai. We’ve got your back. From now on, your personal life is yours, Raith. I won’t interfere again.”

    “What about what we owe Basileus Dio’s father?” Raithion asked.

    “You’ve paid it back tenfold,” Thanir said. “It’s enough for you, Raith. I’ll do the rest if it is needed. Now, let’s eat. I heard you weren’t having enough. You need your strength, son.”

    Raithion nodded, and picked up his fork to eat the eggs on his plate. Thanir called out for a plate and cup and Sharian came in to serve him.

    They ate their meal in silence.

    Then a difficult day started.

    Raithion met his in-laws, and it took everything in him not to scream at Benira when she started crying after one look at him. Gesi Ajai, on the other hand, sat in an armchair in his parents’ great room and glared at Raithion.

    “Your wife was murdered in your house,” Gesi said. “Aren’t you going to seek retribution? The Prime Minister has been fighting my party for years. This is retaliation for our latest disagreements in court. Draeya Prince, are you going to take this sitting down?”

    Raithion wanted to protest Gesi Ajai’s accusation, but then he met his father’s gaze and held his tongue because Thanir shook his head.

    “We are doing all we can to find the culprit,” Haedor answered for Raithion. “We will bring them to justice. Please be patient.”

    “You’ve said that for the last three days. When will the justice start?” Benira asked. “When?”

    “When we’re ready,” Haedor said.

    Raithion sat in an armchair as Benira launched into an hour-long lament about her daughter’s death and how Raithion didn’t love Naeri enough. He could not blame her, and strangely, he felt her tirade was deserved. Then the spiritual priest arrived, and Raithion was glad to immerse himself in the preparation for the funeral rites.

    ****

    As the sun went down on the eve of Naeri’s funeral, Raithion stood by the spiritual priest, who was praying for his wife’s soul. He listened with a blank mind, hoping the heavens would turn their grace to Yulin. The boy was too young to face the consequences of his grandfather’s machinations.

    The spiritual priest finished his prayers for the day and turned to Raithion with kind eyes.

    “The ceremony of burial will start in the morning. Now that all the preparations are ready, it should go smoothly,” he said. “The gravesite is already blessed. Rest well this evening, as it will be a long day, but I promise I’ll get you through it.”

    “Thank you for your efforts, Priest Suner,” Raithion said.

    “I know this is not easy,” Priest Suner said. “This is a difficult moment for you and your children, but with faith giving you strength, you’ll get to the other side. Be strong, Lord Raith.”

    “Thank you,” Raithion said, then turned to his butler, Daron. “Make sure the priest has a warm meal and a place to rest.”

    “We’ve prepared it,” Daron said. “Please, follow me.”

    Raithion waited for the priest to leave, following his butler with his eyes before he turned his attention to his in-laws, who sat in chairs to the left of the large hall, and his own relatives, who filled the chairs to the right.

    Gesi Ajai glared at Thanir Maenaer and had been doing so since the guest lists were finalized for the funeral earlier in the day.

    Raithion held his emotions in check and sat on the chair Haedor turned to face the room. Behind him was the altar where Naeri’s painting stood among flowers arranged in wild abandon by her mother and Silveren. Candles burned day and night, to be extinguished tomorrow after the funeral ended. Naeri’s body was already in a coffin, resting in the ice room at the back of the residence. The carriage that would carry her to the city’s private cemetery was waiting in front.

    “Now that the priest has begun the rites, this family must move as one in the morning,” Raithion said. “There will be no fights during the funeral. I will not allow it.”

    “You won’t allow it, but I will,” Gesi said, his tone abrasive. “My daughter has been poisoned and my grandson is ill. Your family is then planning to entertain the culprit at her funeral tomorrow. It is outrageous.”

    “Who do you think is the culprit?” Noriel asked. She sat next to Silveren in the front row facing the Ajai clan. Beside her was her husband, and she looked every inch the head of the household as she faced Gesi.

    “The Prime Minister,” Gesi Ajai said. “He cannot be allowed to attend my daughter’s funeral.”

    “The accusation is heard, but it is difficult to uphold,” Noriel said. “Lord Ajai, I understand you’re my brother’s father-in-law and the Minister of Finance. But making such an unsolicited accusation will have consequences for the family. It is so wrong that it is unreasonable.”

    “Why does Lady Draug dare to meddle in my daughter’s funeral matters? Don’t you even want to show me some respect?” Gesi Ajai asked, his gaze unkind when he looked at Noriel.

    “You need evidence before you make such a deadly accusation,” Noriel said, her tone firm and unshaken.

    “Speaking of evidence,” Raithion spoke up in support of his sister. “Lord and Lady Ajai have filled this manor with complaints for three days. The more noise we managed, the harder it was to control gossip about Naeri, making this mourning period turn into a circus.”

    Raithion shifted in his chair and rested his hands on the armrests.

    “Naeri is gone. She and I had many disagreements, but if I didn’t think she deserved a cup of poison, no one else had the right,” Raithion said, meeting Gesi Ajai’s gaze. “After all, she sinned most against me. No one here can refute that truth.”

    Benira gasped and covered her mouth with a handkerchief.

    Raithion ignored her dramatics and let out a sigh.

    “While you’ve been coming up with false accusations, we’ve found the villain who has brought black banners to my house,” Raithion said. “Kailu and Haedor, you finish the work.”

    “Yes, Your Highness,” Kailu said, stepping out from behind Raithion’s chair.

    A commotion began at the entrance to the large hall as the officers under Kailu and Haedor dragged in Naeri’s attendants. The three women Naeri brought into the manor were dressed in their daily uniform: purple skirts and white blouses. Their hair was held in tight ponytails. They were crying as Kailu and Haedor made them stand in the space left between the aisles of chairs.

    “What’s the meaning of this?” Benira asked, pointing at the attendants who came from her house. “Why are you harming the ladies who took care of Naeri and the children of this house? Son-in-law, what do you mean by this?”

    Raithion nodded at Kailu, letting him handle the matter.

    “Lady Ajai, please calm down,” Kailu said. “The manor was locked down the moment Her Highness took a sip of her tea and fell in pain. Every servant was thoroughly vetted with the help of the palace guard. Not even a rat was spared in the search. Every person’s whereabouts were accounted for except for two of these ladies.”

    Kailu pointed at the three attendants standing and facing Gesi Ajai, his wife, and the Ajai clan.

    “I’ll ask them for you where they were, as their mistress and the eldest young master of the house drank poison,” Kailu said. He stopped before the first young attendant. “This is Miss Aria. She has been with Her Highness since she entered the Maenaer residence. She has helped raise Yulin and Skye since birth. Where were you when your lady was drinking poisoned tea?”

    “Her Highness left the manor to visit her mother for a period. I was left at home caring for the young Princess Skye. I didn’t know her ladyship was back until an alert was sounded to lock the gates. That’s when I found out Her Highness was poisoned.”

    “Who was with you?” Kailu asked.

    “When her ladyship leaves the residence, I usually take the baby to the main house to spend time with Duchess Maenaer. I was with the staff from Duchess Maenaer’s house in the nursery.”

    “What about your companions?”

    Aria glanced at the two women standing next to her, then sighed. “Rasa and Callie went out with her ladyship. I did not see them again until your officers brought us here.”

    “Thank you, Aria,” Kailu nodded to one of his officers, who led Aria out of the hall. Kailu stopped before the second attendant, who was shaking with nerves. “Your name and what you do.”

    “Callie. I work—worked—for her ladyship.”

    “Where were you when Her Highness was poisoned?” Kailu asked.

    Callie sniffled. “I was in the kitchen in Draeya Prince’s residence. I helped prepare the evening meal. Her Ladyship asked me to help as the residence has been busy with repair work and there was a lot of food to prepare for the extra staff.”

    “Who made the tea Her Ladyship drank?” Kailu asked, and Callie closed her eyes, trembling so hard she almost fell. “Just answer the question the best you can.”

    “I made the tea, my lord,” Callie said, her voice shaking. “But I did not serve it. R-Rasa asked to take the tea to Her Ladyship.”

    “And what kind of tea did you brew?” Kailu asked.

    “It was lemon green tea,” Callie said. “Her Ladyship had been suffering a sore throat of late. I blended the tea myself often to help ease the discomfort. This was obviously because I cared for her. I would never harm her or the young prince. You must believe me. I don’t know how the lemon green tea turned into poison.”

    “You don’t know, but others do,” Kailu said, shaking his head. “The person to prove Callie’s words is a mason who was fixing the window ledges on the hallway from the kitchen to the great room. Call him in.”

    The mason walked into the hall, wearing a clean white tunic and dark trousers. His hair was gathered into a low ponytail, a rough man hoping to shine in a roomful of nobles. He was mildly nervous, but he stood next to Kailu with confidence.

    “State your name.” Kailu’s tone was kind even as it carried the weight of authority.

    “I’m Jaxon. The mason in charge of the hallway leading to the great room from the kitchen. I worked with two helpers. We were working the afternoon of her ladyship’s poisoning. A commotion started between two attendants near the kitchen entrance. One tripped the other, and the tea kettle on a tray fell and spilled the contents. Then this one,” Jaxon pointed to Rasa, “she came from outside and solved the problem with a new pot, asking one of my men to throw away the broken tea kettle. Instead of throwing away the pieces, we kept them because the porcelain from the tea kettle is expensive and can be used to decorate things. My Lord, I have already handed over the teapot shards to you.”

    Kailu raised his right hand, and two of his attendants brought two trays. One carried the shards of the broken porcelain teapot; the other carried the remnants of the tea Callie made still in a silver tea kettle.

    “Callie, you were lucky the remaining lemon green tea was still in the kitchen after the accident. We found the last of it in the silver tea kettle you used to make the original batch. Your testimony is true, but your tea never made it to the great room. Instead, it was changed into the tea of death by Rasa.” Kailu turned to the door and nodded.

    The coroner walked in with the teapot and the two cups Naeri used on the day she died.

    “I’m a direct person,” Kailu said when the coroner stood next to him.

    Kailu dismissed Callie and the mason from the room with a nod then turned to Gesi Ajai’s family.

    “Explaining the point of poisoned teapots and cups, I will do it with a few words. A trusted attendant dared to bring poison into Lord Raith’s residence and fed it to her mistress and the residence’s heir,” Kailu said. “It is simply said, but the problem is too complex because of who Lord Raith is and who Her Highness was. So, I can only bring out the coroner before you so he can tell you what plagues Prince Yulin, keeping him to his bed on the edge of life. Perhaps Rasa will offer a solution to the poison. Coroner, you start. What is in the tea?”

    “My lord, the tea has datura, or what we call the devil’s trumpet, and a blend of exotic herbs. There are two I suspect are from the Nerasa Kingdom, and all of them are toxic,” Dain said. “We have given Prince Yulin activated charcoal to fight the worst of the poison attack, but we need an antidote. If the Prince stays in his current state longer, he will die.”

    Benira started crying, painful sobs that were difficult to ignore.

    Raithion closed his eyes, fighting the urge to take over Kailu’s job. He gripped the armchair handles tight and took a deep breath, letting it out slowly.

    “Lady Ajai,” Raithion said, his voice low, barely above a growl. “If you keep sobbing, when will Kailu gain the answers he seeks for the justice you want for your daughter? Will you shut up for a period?”

    The hall went quiet, and Benira stared at him with shocked, wide eyes.

    “Kailu, finish it,” Raithion said, ignoring the accusations in Benira’s eyes.

    “Yes, Your Highness,” Kailu said and turned to Rasa. “Lady Rasa, Her Highness put all her trust in you. When she married into the Maenaer residence, no one here would object if you were to be called her sister. She gave you that respect and forced us all who live under the Maenaer name to afford you the same. Do you agree?”

    “I agree,” Rasa said in a soft, defeated voice.

    “Why would you harm Her Highness?” Kailu asked. “Why would you feed her poisoned tea?”

    Rasa shook her head, looking at Gesi Ajai, then at Benira, then, to everyone’s surprise, she turned and rushed toward Raithion with a desperate energy. Kailu caught her shoulder just as she reached Raithion.

    Kailu forced her to her knees, and Raithion stayed still, not having moved an inch.

    “Your Highness, please, you must take me in. I did all this for you,” Rasa said. “For you, Your Highness!”

    “For me?” Raithion asked with a small chuckle. “How is it for me when I have to plan a funeral and deal with my in-laws’ wrath? How is it for me when Yulin is poisoned and dying in his bed?”

    “I’ll marry you and give you a new heir,” Rasa said, her eyes bright with hope and a madness Raithion had not expected from her. “I’ve helped Naeri run this house for five years since she entered it. I watched her trick you to gain heirs one after the other. I even helped spike the bathwater for her to get Skye. But you, your heart never opened to her. You were kind to me. Always nice, looking for me to tell me what you wanted from her. I know everything about you, Your Highness. You weren’t happy with her. I know I can change it all. I’ll be better than her. I’ll be your Commandery Princess. Choose me, Lord Raith.” Rasa smiled wide. “All the people you truly care for call you Lord Raith.”

    “What poison did you give them?” Raithion asked. “If you tell me what it is, I can listen to more of your plans. Quick, tell me what kind of treasure you found for Naeri?”

    “You’ll never guess,” Rasa chuckled. “But you’re so handsome, Lord Raith. I couldn’t stand her touching you. Your eyes, your face, your kisses, she didn’t deserve them. I’ll tell you because I know you like to know the truth before you give anyone a chance. You have to give me one now. It was Silver Malice. So difficult to put together because the herbs are hard to get.”

    The coroner gasped, and Raithion forced himself to keep his gaze on Rasa, not wanting to lose her attention.

    “Is there an antidote?” Raithion asked, his voice gentle, careful, a lover’s caress.

    “I’m sure the Nerasa Kingdom has one,” Rasa said with a shrug. “But it’s not easy to brew. You need a skilled healer for it. I was never concerned with the antidote. I just wanted it for my own purpose. I was tired of serving Naeri. She was like a baby who needed to be guided through every step of her life. It was exhausting.”

    Raithion stood then, grabbed her by her collar, and pulled her to Gesi Ajai, throwing her with one swift move.

    “Here is the reason why we’re mourning,” Raithion said, glaring at Gesi Ajai and Benira. “The culprit is from your house. You take responsibility for what happens to her. I can’t be bothered. My orders stand. The funeral will continue as planned. No one will fight tomorrow, and I don’t want to hear one accusation against the Prime Minister again.”

    Benira’s sobs broke out and Raithion was done with it. He left the large hall with Kailu, Haedor, and the coroner following him. Outside in the corridor, Raithion turned to the coroner.

    “What the hell is Silver Malice?” Raithion asked.

    Dain still held the tray with the poisoned tea. His expression grim as he faced Raithion.

    “A poison found in the Nerasa Kingdom,” Dain said. “I read about it in my master’s library. It’s a blend of deadly herbs called harrow, mutagen, and datura. It’s a good thing we saved the tea, because the antidote needs part of that tea. I don’t know how to make it. We need an expert. You won’t like to hear this, but there is an apothecary in the business district who may know how to do it.”

    “Find the apothecary. Bring him or her here,” Raithion said. “Hurry.”

    “Yes, Your Highness,” Dain said and ran out of the house, followed by two officers assigned by Haedor.

    “Rasa.” Raithion shook his head. “A snake slithering in my house and making up a play.”

    “You shouldn’t have given her over to Gesi Ajai,” Kailu said.

    “It was on purpose. Gesi Ajai has no choice but to deal with her after she’s killed his daughter. Following what happens to her is something we can use. We still need information on why Naeri came running home,” Raithion said, leading the way out of the main house. “Assign a team of ten luckless men to the Ajai property. I want to know what he is eating for his midnight snack and the temperature of his bathwater before it happens.”

    “Yes, My Lord.” Kailu left him, and Raithion stopped on the path to his residence, suddenly afraid.

    Rasa’s gaze as she said she hadn’t cared about the antidote worried him. His son’s life

    “We’ll get the cure,” Haedor said, placing a hand on his right shoulder as though to steady him. “We’ll find it and Yulin will be saved.”

    Raithion closed his eyes, nodded, then continued his walk into the house, hurrying upstairs to check on Yulin. He had been away too long.

    ****

    The next morning, the gates at the Maenaer Manor opened early. Guests arrived at eight in the morning; those who were to be seated were shone into the great hall, others into the many sitting areas arranged in the courtyard.

    The spiritual priest started the funeral rites. Raithion, his parents and Naeri’s parents all stood at the front dressed in black.

    When the rites ended, six legion officers led by Haedor and Kailu carried the casket out to the carriage, and a procession began to the outskirts of the city, where the private cemetery was located. The burial lasted the whole afternoon, and by the time Raithion returned to the manor, he was mentally and physically exhausted. He wanted to close the doors and shut out the world, but he could not do that, the guests needed to be fed, his colleagues wanted to sit and drink with him.

    At around ten in the night, Dain brought the apothecary he had been searching for, and Raithion got a moment to escape the visitors.

    Dain led the apothecary to a private office in Raithion’s house.

    “What does the apothecary need to create an antidote?” Raithion asked, glancing at the old man seated on a chair in his office. “If you tell us, we’ll get it.”

    “The antidote herbs are easy to get for a man of your means,” the apothecary said. “It’s the method that is the problem. The only person I’ve heard skilled enough to make an antidote lived on the Sura Clan’s island.”

    Dain and Haedor both sucked in air at the mention of the Sura Clan Island. No one had talked about the Sura in the capital after five years.

    Raithion crouched before the apothecary, looking into his eyes, searching for deception, but the old man was honest, and held his gaze without flinching.

    “Silver Malice is deadly,” the apothecary said. “Even a small amount will drain your energy and keep harming your organs until you can’t wake up again. The healer from the Sura Clan had some experience because they traded with the Nerasa Kingdom. I don’t know what became of them, but you will need to find a Sura Clan member to tell you what to do.”

    “What is the name of this healer from the Sura?” Haedor asked.

    “Lasma,” the apothecary said. “She was a healer’s daughter.”

    “And the Chieftain’s wife,” Raithion said, his voice low. Azula’s mother.

    “What do we do now?” Haedor asked Raithion.

    “I need to visit the Basileus in the morning. I’ll get his permission to travel to the Sura Island,” Raithion said.

    “Do you think the Sura will be willing to help?” Haedor asked, his tone skeptical.

    Raithion smiled at the old apothecary and rose to his feet. “If they don’t want to, I’ll have to find a way to persuade them.”

    ****

    <<Previous | Blades of Ashes ToC | Next>>

  • Blades of Ashes Ch 11-1

    Soriel entered Basileus Dio’s office in the afternoon with a joyous wave for his staff.

    Dio stopped reading the reports from the military office and gave her his full attention. His wife looked radiant in a pink dress that whispered and shimmered with every step. Her long black hair fell down her back, pinned with butterfly clips that caught the light when she moved. She approached his desk with a smile meant only for him.

    He pushed his chair back, and pleasure spread through him when she perched on his lap and wrapped an arm around his shoulders as she settled. The scent of roses filled his senses. He buried his nose into her shoulder and closed his eyes, savoring her warmth.

    No wonder his mother said Soriel had bewitched him. He could not argue with the truth of it.

    His heartbeat belonged to Soriel Maenaer. Her love was uncomplicated, fearless, and sure, an anchoring certainty in a world of shifting alliances. She had given him a son in the five years they had been married, but she had also given him something rarer: a partnership that did not bend. If he was bewitched, then he hoped to stay lost.

    “My love,” Soriel said softly, stroking her fingers through his hair. “I want to go home tomorrow. There is news that my brother has returned from the border, and I want to see him at his house.”

    “Your brother is back. He can come visit us in the palace,” Dio said, wrapping his arms around Soriel and holding her close, as though his body could make her change her mind. “I haven’t seen him in months.”

    “I’m sure he’ll come to report to you,” Soriel said. “But I want to talk to him about his wife, Naeri. They have become too estranged. Mom says they are not doing well. It will hurt the children if they don’t find a solution. A while back, I thought I should bring Yulin to the palace so he could play with our son, but we have problems of our own with Mother-in-law.”

    Soriel let out a sigh and rested her weight against him. Dio felt her worry, her responsibility, the way she carried family as though it were both shield and crown.

    “Well.” Dio raised his head from her shoulder and leaned back to meet Soriel’s troubled gaze when she sat up. “What do you think they should do?”

    “I don’t know,” Soriel said, shaking her head. “Naeri is not an easy sister-in-law. She won’t talk to Noriel or me. She only leans on our mother when she thinks it will force Raithion to do something. I’m at a loss, Dio. Mom thinks she should send Raithion’s children to our ancestral home in Draeya. I think it’s a good idea, but it is cruel to separate children from their mother. What do you think?”

    Dio wished he had an easy solution for Soriel. He felt responsible for Raithion’s current predicament. He had heard the stories of Noriel’s attempts to secure her position in Raithion’s home: using potent aphrodisiac drugs to push Raithion into compliance so she could give birth to a Maenaer heir. Raithion’s reaction to his wife’s actions was extreme. He escaped the city in favor of border inspections, vanishing into duty.

    It made Dio wonder if he had broken something in Raithion’s life when he chose what the kingdom demanded over what a man might have wanted.

    “Soriel,” Dio said quietly, taking her right hand and turning it in his own as he played with the red jade ring on her index finger.

    He had given her the ring during their wedding, making her his wife and the Basilinna of the Kingdom of Lyria. The smile on her face that day still lived in him, bright as a vow, sharp as a promise. Raithion’s toast for his sister’s happiness also lingered in his thoughts, refusing to fade.

    What had Raithion said?

    Soriel, may you always be happy with your chosen love…”

    Chosen love, Dio thought with a frown, the words turning in his mind like a blade.

    “Do you think your brother had someone he loved before his engagement to Lady Naeri?” Dio asked, meeting Soriel’s worried gaze.

    She studied him for a minute, then her gaze drifted to their clasped hands.

    “I once thought so,” Soriel said, her voice low, as though afraid the people beyond Dio’s office door would hear. “Especially when he came back after the Sura purge, but there are no clues.”

    “No clues don’t mean one doesn’t exist,” Dio said with a sigh. “I’ve wronged your big brother for the sake of our family.”

    “Does this mean you’ll let me see him?” Soriel asked. “Yulin and Skye need help. I’m their auntie. There’s nothing to do but find a way for them to grow up happy.”

    “I know,” Dio said. “You can visit him. But he should also come to see his Basileus when he manages his affairs at home. Tell him I want to see him.”

    Soriel kissed his cheek, and Dio smiled, softened in a way he allowed only her to witness. “I’ll tell him. I’ll take Rane with me so he can play with his grandmother and cousin. It will be good for Yulin. You make sure to eat on time. If you can’t stand being at a table with Mother-in-law, go visit Auntie Sanan and Dowager Grandmother. She is always eager to feed you.”

    “I feel like you’re planning to leave me for many days,” Dio complained, tightening his arms around Soriel. The words were petulant, but the truth beneath them was not. “Won’t you miss me in your bed? How about I sneak into the Maenaer manor…” His voice trailed off as he leaned in to kiss her cheeks, angling for her lips.

    “Dio,” Soriel said. “Behave yourself. We are in your office. Your attendants could walk in at any minute. And I’d like to see you sneak into a house with my brother and father there.”

    “I’m not worried. I married you fair and square,” Dio complained, and finally he kissed her lips, smiling against her mouth as he swallowed Soriel’s soft chuckle. Her laughter always felt like victory, sweet, private, and entirely his.

    A knock on the door interrupted their kiss, and Dio sighed when Soriel hid her face in his shoulder as though it might hide her blush.

    “Yes,” Dio said, lifting his gaze. He was surprised to find Theod Dorn, head of the palace guard, standing at his door with a panicked expression. “What is it, Theod?”

    “There’s been a development at the Maenaer Manor,” Theod said, making Soriel sit up to look at him despite her blush-stained cheeks.

    “What development?” Soriel asked.

    “Um.” Theod hesitated, then entered the office and held out a note to Dio.

    Soriel grabbed it first and unrolled it. It took her a moment before she jumped off Dio’s lap in alarm and handed the note to Dio.

    Dio read the note aloud. “Commandery Princess poisoned. Draeya Prince has locked down the manor.”

    “I have to go home,” Soriel said, already turning to leave.

    “Wait. I’ll go with you,” Dio said, dropping the note on his desk as he started after her.

    “No.” Soriel stopped him with a gentle hand on his chest when he reached her. She looked at Theod, then let out a controlled breath. “This is not as simple as it sounds. My brother has returned home, and now his wife is poisoned. We have been dealing with Lord Gesi Ajai’s machinations in the court for the last six months as he finds a way to weaken our bond and the traction we’ve built in the court. Raithion’s wife is Gesi Ajai’s daughter. This is not so simple.”

    “The Basilinna is right,” Theod said, giving Dio a firm nod.

    “You stay,” Soriel said. “Look after our son. Let him stay with Princess Sanan and Dowager Grandmother if you need to go to court. I’ll manage my brother’s house.”

    “What if it’s dangerous?” Dio asked, pulling Soriel into his arms.

    “I have guards to protect me,” Soriel said, her voice steady. She did not flinch from danger. “Don’t worry.”

    She leaned up and kissed him on his lips, a sweet kiss that had Theod turning away at once, offering them the dignity of privacy.

    “Gesi Ajai has been unable to hurt us,” Soriel said, the certainty in her tone making Dio’s chest tighten with pride and unease in equal measure. “So, he’s gone after my brother. I’ll go help Raith however I can. After all, thanks to him, we’ve become a bit stronger.”

    “You’re right,” Dio said, hugging Soriel tight for a moment, as though he could lend her his strength through skin and breath. “All right. Call me if you need help. Keep me updated.”

    “I will,” Soriel said and rushed out of Dio’s office.

    Theod watched her leave with admiration, then turned to Dio.

    “Draeya Prince and Gesi Ajai are about to lock horns,” Theod said. “Are you satisfied?”

    “I’m apprehensive,” Dio said, moving to look out the windows at the bright garden. He caught sight of Soriel running along a path toward Rose Hall so she could change for her trip out of the palace. Even hurried, she moved with purpose, like a woman born to command.

    “My wife is very attached to her family. I’ve tried to win her brother’s confidence, but Raithion has been closed off for five years. He marches to orders without question, and my tenure as Basileus has gained strength thanks to his efforts,” Dio said with a sigh. “Raithion’s determination to clean out military ranks within the capital city, Genad, and at the border has left Gesi Ajai without a route to manipulate cases in court, the economy he almost ruined, and even my palace staff.”

    “Draeya Prince has held up the front against Gesi Ajai,” Theod said. “It has left his family life open to Gesi Ajai.”

    “We are now in a critical moment,” Dio said. “I can only hope Raithion makes it to the other side, and whatever Gesi Ajai does will not rob him of more.” His voice lowered. “I have sinned, Theod. Do you think Raithion will ever forgive me?”

    “That’s up to fate,” Theod said.

    Dio nodded once.

    “Tell the silent guard to support Draeya Prince and the Basilinna however they can,” Dio said. “I want this resolved as fast as possible.”

    “I’ll tell them,” Theod said.

    ****

    Soriel rode her horse hard, followed by Meira and Vanya and the formal guard from the palace as they headed for her parents’ manor. She was dressed in black, a dark veil with gold embroidery covering her hair and part of her face to keep interested eyes from lingering too long. Nervous energy coursed through her veins as she thought about her brother and his estranged wife, Naeri. What bad fate had Raith triggered to have so many problems at home?

    She turned onto the affluent street that led to their manor and slowed when a ruckus met them like a wall. A woman was wailing loudly, calling out to the gathering crowd with the practiced desperation of someone who knew exactly where shame landed hardest.

    “They have poisoned my daughter to death and won’t let me enter to see her. Look what they have done. She was fine this morning. We had a lovely meal together, and now they say she is poisoned. What kind of in-laws are these? They won’t let me see my daughter.” Her voice broke, then sharpened again. “What about my grandchildren? How can I be sure they are fine in a place where their mother was poisoned?”

    The wailing woman stared at the closed gates as if grief alone should force them open. She cried louder, dragging the crowd into her pain until the murmurs turned into demands. Voices rose. Insults snapped against the closed wooden gates like thrown stones.

    Vanya got off her horse, handed the reins to one of her sisters, and hurried ahead, melting into the crowd. Soriel dismounted, followed by Meira. The team of ten guards did the same and waited by a low wall until Vanya returned.

    Vanya came back minutes later, shaking her head.

    “It is Lady Benira,” Vanya said. “The Commandery Princess’s mother. She has been here for an hour. The manor doors were already locked when they arrived. Draeya Prince’s guard won’t open without an order from him. She is making a ruckus to force the doors open.”

    “So petty,” Soriel said, though her eyes hardened as she watched the crowd swell with borrowed outrage. Raithion likely had his hands full with his wife inside the manor. The locked doors would be a security measure. Soriel’s mouth tightened. “Has my sister arrived?”

    “Yes. Lady Draug is already inside,” Vanya said with a wince. “She is part of the reason Lady Benira is causing a fuss. Apparently, the guards allowed Lady Draug in without much issue, but they won’t let Lady Benira inside. She thinks it is because Lady Draug is a Maenaer and she is not.”

    “Grinding gossip to make our family look bad,” Soriel said, adjusting her gloves with deliberate care. She looked to Meira. “Let’s go deal with this one. Vanya, I’ll leave you to manage the crowd. Clear this place after we enter and send anyone who wants to make a scene to the side entrance.”

    “Yes, my lady,” Vanya said.

    Soriel steadied herself and stepped into the clamoring crowd that was now shouting insults at her family’s main gates. Meira flanked Soriel, watchful and ready, while Vanya and her team guarded the rear.

    “How dare a noble family keep a mother away from her child when she is in trouble?” someone called out. “Worse than dogs.”

    “Duchess Maenaer,” Benira called out, her voice dripping with tears. “Let me see my daughter. How can you keep me away from her like this? Is it because we come from a lowly family? I will kneel down to beg you to open the door. Do you dare see me beg?”

    “And why can’t she dare to see you beg?” Soriel asked, her voice cold as she stepped out to face Benira Ajai. “What do you think she is guilty of, that she doesn’t dare to face you?”

    Benira turned eyes red and gleaming, and snapped as though Soriel were only another obstacle.

    “And who are you to meddle where you know nothing?” Benira asked.

    Her gaze flicked over Soriel’s veil and black attire with contempt.

    “Lady Noriel walked into the manor not thirty minutes ago, and no one dared stop her. What of me? Where is their recognition of my place as the Commandery Princess’s mother? Are they looking down on me? Don’t I have a right to demand attention from my son-in-law?” Her voice rose, aimed at the crowd as much as Soriel. “Who are you to question me?”

    Soriel narrowed her gaze as she took in the crowd of attendants clustered behind Benira, five visible at Benira’s shoulders, and more pressing at the edges of the crowd. Then, with a soft scoff, Soriel pushed the veil back to reveal her face.

    The shift was immediate.

    Benira’s breath caught. Her expression faltered as recognition struck. She gasped.

    “I am the youngest daughter in the Maenaer clan,” Soriel said, her smile small and controlled. “Am I not allowed to question you when you slander my mother in front of such a large crowd?”

    “Your Majesty,” Benira said at once, pressing her right hand to her chest and bowing her head.

    The crowd quieted as if a hand had closed around their throats. Then, as if waking, they followed Benira’s lead: bows, murmurs, whispers threaded with excitement.

    “Your Majesty,” they repeated, the words spreading through them like sudden fear.

    Benira glanced up with apprehension, even as she pressed a handkerchief to her eye as though to wipe away tears. The performance did not stop, but it changed.

    Soriel smirked and climbed two steps so she could face the onlookers Benira had gathered at the Maenaer front gate.

    “My brother’s wife has been poisoned,” Soriel said, her voice carrying the weight of authority. “I, too, have received a message and have come to see how I can help. We do not know how or why this happened, but I can imagine the Draeya Prince has locked the manor doors to capture the culprit.” Her gaze swept the crowd, steady, unafraid of their earlier insults. “Anyone would move quickly to discover who has harmed a member of their family. I beg you not to speculate until more information is provided.”

    “What about Lady Benira?” someone called out. “Why not let her in?”

    “Look. She came to call on my mother’s house with over ten attendants. If I were investigating a crime, I would want to clear those inside first before I had to clear the ten attendants coming along with others,” Soriel said, and she did not soften her voice. She let the truth stand like stone. Her eyes slid to Benira and the attendants hovering behind her. “Surely one or two will be fine. It is not like the Draeya Prince can’t afford attendants in his house. We all want the culprit caught.” Soriel’s gaze sharpened, pinning Benira where she stood. “Or isn’t that what you want, Lady Benira?”

    “I-I—” Benira began, then stopped, caught between the crowd and the Basilinna, her mouth suddenly unable to keep pace with her scheme.

    “Her Majesty speaks sense,” someone in the crowd said. “Surely you’d want the investigator to catch the culprit in time. Adding more people will delay the work.”

    “That’s true.”

    “But why did Lady Draug enter?”

    “She brought one attendant,” someone else answered, “a girl who is from the Maenaer home to begin with. They know them.”

    “Mm, that makes sense. Even Her Majesty has only brought one attendant with her. What’s with Lady Benira’s horde of attendants?”

    Soriel raised her hand slightly, and the crowd’s noise dipped, as if they were conditioned to obey without realizing it.

    “Okay,” Soriel said. “I’ll vouch for Lady Benira to enter the manor with me, but I can only take one attendant of hers inside. We need to cooperate with my brother’s efforts to catch the culprit.” She looked directly at Benira, leaving no room for argument. “Isn’t that right, Lady Benira?”

    “Yes,” Benira said, her voice suddenly small.

    “Let’s all wait for news,” Soriel told the crowd. “I’ll make sure the truth is laid out to everyone in a clean manner. I, too, want to know who would dare harm our family members.”

    Soriel turned to the guard standing at the Maenaer front gates and produced her entry token. The guard nodded and knocked on the gate.

    Soriel was not surprised to see Kailu and Haedor waiting for them as the gates opened.

    “Your Majesty, we were just about to open for Lady Benira when she started the ruckus,” Kailu said.

    “Don’t worry about it,” Soriel said, keenly aware of Lady Benira hurrying behind her with one attendant while the others were held back by Vanya and her team. Soriel’s voice stayed level, but her pace did not slow. “How is my brother’s family?”

    The gates closed behind them, sealing out the noise, and Kailu let out a soft sigh.

    “I’m sorry, Your Majesty,” Kailu said. “It is bad news. Her Highness has been poisoned to death. Prince Yulin is poisoned, too. The healers are inside working to save him. Lady Silveren has started preparing the Commandery Princess’s funeral.”

    Benira let out a grief-stricken scream, sharp enough to scrape the air. Her attendant held her tight as she swayed, suddenly a mother again instead of a woman wielding scandal as a weapon.

    Soriel winced at the tragedy and closed her eyes for a heartbeat, one breath to feel it, one breath to set it aside, because a Basilinna could mourn later.

    “Haedor,” Soriel said, opening her eyes, calm and commanding, “lead Lady Benira into the house to see my mother.”

    Haedor nodded to Benira’s attendant, who led the grieving woman to follow him into the main house.

    Soriel’s gaze shifted to Kailu, then to the house, to the unseen corridors where her brother waited. “Where is my brother?”

    “He is with Prince Yulin,” Haedor said. “He has asked Kailu and me to find the culprit. Lady Silveren is busy with the funeral arrangements, while Noriel is assisting her. We need someone to report to as we find clues.”

    “I’ll take over,” Soriel said, and the words landed like a decree. She glanced at Meira. “Send a message to Lord Ajai and to my husband about the Commandery Princess’s fate.”

    Meira nodded and hurried away to find the manor’s aviary to send a message.

    Soriel turned to Kailu. “I’ll see my brother first, then you can report your findings to me.” Her eyes hardened with purpose. “We need to close this case before the funeral if my brother is to have peace from his in-laws. Let’s get it done.”

    “Yes, Your Majesty,” Kailu said, leading her to Raithion’s house.

    <<Previous | Blades of Ashes ToC | Next>>

  • Blades of Ashes – Ch 10

    Arc 3: The Case of the Commandery Princess and the Prime Minister’s Narrow Escape

    Chapter 10

    Five years was a lifetime that passed by in a wave of burning ambition. For the Basileus, his young Basilinna, and Gesi Ajai, who worked at collecting money using the acquired Sura Clan workshops like a sandstorm devouring the landscape. His daughter, Naeri, now a Commandery Princess, turned into a desperate wife in the Maenaer residence that belonged to her husband. Faced with a cold husband and a nagging father who demanded rights and power, she reached for dirty old wives’ ways that almost broke her unwilling husband. Sending Raithion into a deep rebellion of wives and the so-called “warmth of a home.”

    It was a month before spring. Raithion stood on a high walkway watching legion officers train in the early morning at the barracks in Ninid State on the northwest border of the Lyria Kingdom.

    Haedor helped one of the training soldiers adjust his stance and his grip on a long spear as he made his practice movements. Raithion took in a deep breath, appreciating the loud calls the men gave as they trained.

    Kailu stepped up on the walkway from the main general’s office.

    “Commander, the border is finally peaceful. The information we have received from our spies in the Lavos Nation is that they are busy managing floods in the west of their kingdom. They will be too preoccupied to think about our border for the next while.”

    “That is good news for us,” Raithion said. “It also means I can return to the capital without worry.”

    “Not that you’ve been in a hurry,” Kailu noted with a sly smile. “You’ve lingered here longer than in the other states. I suspect it is because it is as far as you can get from the capital. Will you ever forgive your wife?”

    Raithion could not help the recoil of anger that filled him at the mention of Naeri.

    “No.” Raithion shook his head, bile rising. There were crimes committed against a person’s conscience that could not be forgiven, no matter the amount of time that passed. “I don’t want to talk about it. Let’s prepare to depart. It’s been a year and a half of travel. I’m eager to discover how the commandery office is doing.”

    “Commander,” Kailu started, then stopped. “Never mind, you’re right. I’ll get the Draeya legion officers to start getting ready for the trip home.”

    “Kailu,” Raithion said, glancing at his best friend.

    “Yes, Raith,” Kailu said.

    “It’s-it’s easier for me not to think about what she’s done,” Raithion said. “Somehow it gives me back control not having to dwell on it.”

    “But for how long?” Kailu asked.

    Raithion held his best friend’s gaze for a long moment, then shrugged. “As long as I need not to think about it.”

    “As long as it helps you sleep at night,” Kailu said. “I’ll pack the cotton you collected. Your mom has great weavers. They can make use of the raw cotton and make you a warm blanket to hide your head under.”

    Raithion chuckled. “I’ll leave the planning to you.”

    Kailu headed down the steps going to the warehouse where he would sort out supplies for their trip back to Genad City. Raithion watched his best friend leave for a few minutes, then glanced at the ring on his left ring finger. It was a Maenaer ring that also symbolized his marriage to Naeri. It sat calmly on his left ring finger and the urge to fling it across the practice yard was great. The rage that burned with a bright fire lingered in his gut. He reached for the blades he always wore in the scabbards at his waist and touched the intricate handles.

    “What are you up to now, Azula?” Raithion wondered.

    ****

    In the capital, the scent of mint toffee filled the afternoon air in the Maenaer compound. The sun was high, the peach trees were showing signs of blooming, though the weather had not let up yet. The courtyard was filled with activity, the groundskeepers trimmed decorative bushes, and the roses that Silveren had grown for the last five years.

    A young lady swept the path leading to Raithion’s residence. At the entrance, two children sat on a clean mat playing with toys. A maid watched over them with careful dedication.

    Beyond the open doors of Raithion’s residence was a great hall arranged for comfort and gathering. In the evening, Lady Naeri Maenaer and her children would always be found sitting on the comfortable couches, playing games, sometimes Naeri would read stories to the eldest son. Other times, she would hum songs to the children. A large armchair was placed in the living room at the most honorable and prominent spot, but it was rarely used by its owner.

    Naeri often sighed when looking at the large empty armchair.

    It was the end of the month, a day before the weekend. Usually, Raithion returned to the residence on Fridays when he was working in the capital city. He came to deal with pressing issues in the household during the weekend. However, his shadow had not crossed the gate for a year and a half. Naeri’s sighs had not stopped since he left, and they were likely never to stop until Raithion arrived. Everyone in the manor knew the reasons why but tried not to mention the reasons why.

    ***

    On Sura Island, in a cave Azula regarded as his second home, a grinding, metallic, noise filled the cavernous space, followed by a curse and the sound of falling tools.

    “Godfather dropped the gears.” A young boy’s voice reached Azula. “Here.”

    “Thank you, Ruri,” Azula said, taking the small gears from cute little fingers. He shifted on the platform he lay on to look at his little nephew.

    Ruri’s name was given to him by Lasma. She wrote it as “Ruairidh,” but she was the only one who did; the rest of the clan wrote it as Ruri. Ruri was a cute little copy of his father, Yemin, with a dash of Alise. The kid had the same pointed chin as Alise, but his expressive wide eyes were similar to Yemin, or so Alise and Lasma said. Ruri was a beautiful boy. He was four years and some months old. His baby strawberry hair was held in a ponytail with tight braids made by his mother. He wore a bright green tunic with gold embroidery on the collar and a dark pair of trousers, his small feet in small, cute black boots made by Senin. Azula smiled as he stared at the curious little boy. Ruri followed Azula everywhere, which usually got them in trouble often.

    Azula grinned because Ruri’s face was currently covered with smudges of the dark grease they usually obtained from Nerasa. He reached out to make a perfect dot on Ruri’s forehead with his index finger.

    “I can see you’re going to be a gear expert like your godfather in the future,” Azula said.

    “Gear expert,” Ruri clapped when Azula took the gears from him.

    “That’s right,” Azula said, then adjusted the gears he held and concentrated on making them fit into their designated spots. He fit the gears in and nodded when they settled in perfectly.

    “Ruri, my little ancestor, go sit on the long stick on the carriage for godfather,” Azula said, pointing to a long handle near where Ruri was standing. The carriage base was not complete, so Ruri climbed on the carriage floor with ease, his short legs pumping hard to climb up. Ruri then skipped to the handle, and, with some maneuvering, he sat on the long handle and held on to the sides of the handle with a pleased grin.

    “Now what, Godfather?” Ruri asked.

    “Now,” Azula watched the lever come down slowly with Ruri’s weight.

    The gears he had worked on for days started moving, each one doing its share of work to keep the cogs moving. Azula grinned as the gears picked up speed. Azula slid out from where he was lying and wiped a hand over his face to get rid of sweat. He noticed he still had dark grease on his hands too late.

    Ruri giggled as he looked up at him.

    “Godfather has dirt on his face too,” Ruri said between childish giggles.

    Azula stepped away from the rough prototype he had created. It wasn’t complete, but at least his idea was coming together. His thoughts had been on the efficiency of transporting the ore to the clan’s workshops in the village center for a while. The men who oversaw the ore transportation were getting on in age, and carrying large bundles of ore out to cargo carriages was backbreaking work and time-consuming.

    Azula wanted to create a cart that could carry a sizeable bundle and then move it with a simple lever. The lever Ruri was sitting on only needed to be shifted, and the cart would move down the rails Azula had been having the men lay down from the mine exit to the village center.

    Ruri clapped with excitement as the gears kept moving, and he lost his balance, almost falling off the lever.

    Azula lifted the boy off the lever and turned off the mechanism.

    “Ruri, we did it,” Azula said, lifting Ruri up and placing him on his shoulders.

    “We did it!” Ruri echoed, his hands clinging to the thick black hair clip that held Azula’s long strawberry hair. Hair that held no braid to this day. He was still considered a mourning chief in the clan.

    Azula ran around the open space of the workshop, making Ruri clap with glee.

    “What are we celebrating? Ruri is so happy,” Lasma said, as she entered the workshop.

    “Godfather made gears move,” Ruri said, clapping with joy. “He made me sit on the lever, and it was like magic. They went up and down, click, click, click.”

    “Like magic,” Lasma grinned. “Your godfather knows how to give you a great time. Goodness, your faces are full of dark grease. You both need a bath.”

    “We need a bath!” Ruri said.

    “Only knows how to repeat things,” Lasma chuckled. “Come, we need to head back home now. Azula, I came to find you because the council has requested a meeting this evening.”

    “Why?” Azula asked with a groan. “All they do is talk and impose regulations on me. I’m exhausted and would rather be laying tracks on a cliff on the mountain. Have Juya stand in for me.”

    Lasma bit back a chuckle at Azula’s unwillingness for politics.

    “Will you have Juya attend all your council meetings then?” Lasma asked.

    “He’s great at explaining what those people want after they ramble on for hours,” Azula said as they left his workshop. The path outside was well-paved and led from the relative quiet of the foot of the mountain to the back gardens of the Doriel family home.

    “Mom, how long do you think it will take Alise to notice that Juya is in love with her?” Azula asked.

    Lasma clasped her hands behind her back as they walked.

    “I don’t know,” Lasma said, looking up at Ruri, who was enjoying his ride on Azula’s shoulders. “Perhaps, you should be asked the same question, Azu. When will you notice the golden-haired general, Trevan of Nerasa, is in love with you. Everyone has noticed that he is the only reason you’ve managed to keep our island from an annexation battle with Nerasa Kingdom. He is protecting Sura Island.”

    “He is protecting us politically,” Azula said. “But that’s not the reason we are still free of the Nerasa Kingdom’s pressure. We technically still belong to the Lyria Kingdom. Trevan is wary of the Lyria Kingdom’s legions. He knows a war between them would devastate trade and this island. So, Nerasa is hesitating. It is to our advantage that they keep hesitating, but it won’t last. This must be what the council wants to discuss.”

    “Yes,” Lasma confirmed as they approached the back courtyard of the Doriel home.

    The scent of cooking filled the air, the women in charge of the kitchen were busy making the midday meal. The Doriel Manor fed almost fifty people daily; workers in the workshop where Azula liked to manufacture his blueprints. His master had long left the crafting to him and moved to the yard controlled by the Sura in the Nerasa Kingdom. Azula visited him when he could extricate himself from the yoke of governing the thriving Sura Island.

    “Azula,” Lasma said, her tone somber as they slowed their walk. “Our island has grown under your guidance. Our people have stable livelihoods, the farms are filled with harvest, the children are going to school and have hope for their futures and careers. The eldest of our people are well taken care of.” Lasma smiled. “Perhaps this is what your father dreamed of creating when he tried to have the clan thrive in Genad City. You have made it happen on our island despite being a chief appointed in a time of great tragedy.”

    “There are cracks in the barrel,” Azula reminded his mother, pausing by a stone outdoor table. He lifted Ruri from his shoulders, kissed the boy’s cheeks as he set him on the table.

    “Be careful,” Lasma said as Ruri jumped off the table and ran into the house with great enthusiasm. “Look at him, running wilder than you when you were a toddler.”

    Lasma sighed, then turned to look at Azula.

    “What cracks are you talking about?”

    “Our people are comfortable, no longer worried about surviving,” Azula said, then met Lasma’s gaze. “They have time to think about what happened five years ago. The questions have been whispered often around me.”

    “You think our people wonder about their loved ones who died in Lyria,” Lasma said.

    “I don’t wonder, I know,” Azula said, crossing his arms against his chest. He tried not to think about the Lyria Kingdom. If he tried to spend a minute thinking about it, he might abandon his promises to his mother and set out on a revenge spree. He still wanted to know why his clan, his father, had to endure such betrayal in the capital. Closing his eyes, he forced the negative feelings under control and focused on the present.

    “Mom, Sura Island is doing well now,” Azula said. “While we don’t need the mainland, we still need to navigate a path into full independence. We need to find a way to escape if Nerasa Kingdom brings up annexation.”

    “It’s good that you know that you can’t string along the golden-haired general for another five years,” Lasma said with a chuckle. “You’re also right, while our people wonder about the past, I pray that the Lyria Kingdom does not remember us and our ability to pay taxes. I can only imagine what kind of demands they will make on us should they land on our shores.”

    Azula dropped his arms to his sides and shook his head. “Okay, I’m getting a headache discussing this situation. Can we continue later and deal with it when it is absolutely necessary?”

    “You’ve said that for a year,” Lasma said as Azula started walking to the door. “We’re already at the absolutely necessary juncture. We need to find a solution soon. I’m telling you that is what the council will push for.”

    Azula sighed. “Ask Juya and Alise to think on it and figure out what to do next.”

    “Don’t think I don’t see what you’re doing when you say that,” Lasma said in exasperation.

    “Mom, sometimes, I’m just letting you know that I’m a very lazy demon and would rather be smearing grease on my face in my workshop than figure out political games.”

    Azula entered the kitchen and grinned when the women all greeted him with enthusiasm. They forced him to wash his hands and face in a large basin filled with hot water, before offering him a plate of food. Now this was the right kind of problem to manage, he thought as he received a plate filled with roasted sweet and sour chicken.

    ***

    In the grand palace in the imperial capital, Genad City, two boys sat on a clean, colorful mat playing with toys in the bright sun-filled greeting room of Rose Hall.

    Basilinna Soriel was hosting the noble and notable ladies of Genad City to celebrate the warmer weather. They were having afternoon tea and pastries made by the skilled palace baker and an exciting reading by a popular romance writer.

    Soriel moved around the room talking to the women and building bonds. She provided help and support on any reasonable requests. It was her small way of winning support for her husband in the imperial court. She was winning the wives’ hearts to soften the husbands’ goals, wielding soft power to win the hard hearts of the power-mongering courtiers.

    Soriel finished a conversation with the prime minister’s wife, who wanted her to attend her daughter’s birthday. She went to join her mother and Noriel who sat on a couch by the windows showing off the rose garden at Rose Hall.

    Soriel sat next to Noriel and let out a soft, tired sigh. Meira, Soriel’s silent guard, moved a few of the attendants to block the view of the three women from the rest of the room. Soriel accepted the cup of orange juice Noriel gave her and drank it in one go. Placing the cup on the table, she sighed when she met her mother’s amused gaze.

    “Your gift of gab has only grown these five years. It surely should tire you,” Silveren said. “All these ladies have received a kind word this afternoon. Your husband may not be happy with your burgeoning social calendar.”

    “He will have to appreciate it. The relationships I’ve been cultivating have grown strong enough to rival Olneth’s authority,” Soriel said, her gaze shifting to the two boys playing on a mat a few feet away. “Our son depends on my husband gaining more strength. So does Raith’s son. Speaking of which, why didn’t Naeri come with you today?”

    ***

    Silveren sighed. She looked at the rest of the hall and was glad to notice the visiting ladies had tacitly moved to the other end of the large room and were busy tasting pastries and talking about the story the writer had read earlier. The weather had stopped snowing and the ground was thawing, the flowers beginning to bloom, while the farmers prepared for planting.

    It was a time of renewal.

    Silveren hoped her son, Raithion, would find it in his heart to forgive his wife soon.

    “Word came from the Commandery Office this morning,” Silveren said, her gaze on the four-year-old boy sitting a few feet away.

    His name was Yulin Maenaer. He was Raithion’s heir, a child born by Naeri after she drugged Raithion using an unknown aphrodisiac at a party in her parents’ home. Naeri’s apothecary was skilled. She got pregnant with the first try and to a boy no less. While Raithion could not forgive her first betrayal, Silveren could not fault Naeri for helping to stabilize their family’s future. With an heir, both Thanir and Raithion’s titles were secure. Still, Silveren had no idea how to heal the planet-sized rift that had grown between Naeri and Raithion.

    “Raith is supposedly heading to the capital. He should be arriving today or tomorrow,” Silveren said, looking away from the children to meet Soriel’s knowing gaze.

    “It’s good that he is coming back,” Noriel said, her gaze shifting to Yulin. “His son should spend more time with him. At this rate, Yulin will start thinking our father is his father.”

    Soriel sighed. “Naeri stayed home to prepare for him, I guess.”

    “Mm,” Silveren said. “She’s cooking and cleaning and arranging for new clothes for the children and Raith.”

    “He will end up here in the palace,” Soriel predicted with disturbing accuracy.

    Silveren smiled because her youngest daughter knew her eldest son best.

    “Raith stays in the commandery prince quarters or at the barracks with his soldiers when he is in the capital. He has done that since Naeri drugged him the second time to get Skye.”

    “The girl is a year and a half, so cute and cuddly,” Noriel said. “How does brother stay so angry at his wife?”

    “Your marriage is loving, sister,” Soriel said, sipping a second cup of orange juice. “Your husband has not done anything to betray your trust since you married. Your son, Leisha, is happy and running around in a loving family. What has Naeri done all this time in our Maenaer home but fill it with aphrodisiac poison plots,” Soriel scoffed. “Which of us has dealt with such frightening things?”

    Noriel sighed and reached for her teacup and took a slow sip.

    “Mom, you’ll have to take care of Yulin and Skye,” Noriel said after a period of silence. “Don’t let them learn bad things from their mother. Naeri’s methods are too cunning for our straightforward home.”

    “I know,” Silveren said with a nod. “In any case, the children are our blood, regardless of how they came into existence. I’ll have Jaguar start teaching Yulin when he turns five years old.”

    “That’s good,” Soriel and Noriel both agreed.

    Jaguar was a scholar who the Maenaer family had sponsored in Draeya County. He had taught all the Maenaer children, and his school was based in the family home in Draeya County.

    “Isn’t five years old too soon to take a child from his mother?” Noriel asked after a moment.

    “When your mother is as scary as Naeri, who is advised and hounded by Gesi Ajai,” Soriel said, shaking her head. “I think this child should leave the kingdom and go to a foreign land until we can subdue his father. Since that is not an option, and he is of our blood, we must get him to choose our Maenaer values.”

    “Little bird is right,” Silveren nodded in approval, her gaze shifting back to Raithion’s son.

    Yulin got up on the mat, followed closely by his cousin, Rane, the Basileus’s heir, and the boys raced to Silveren’s side.

    “Grandma, a gift,” Rane said, holding a bright green feather that had probably escaped a flower pin worn by one of the ladies and had fallen on their mat.

    Silveren chuckled and took the bright green feather. “Rane and Yulin are so cute. They brought me a feather. What should I give you in return?”

    “A peach,” Yulin said, his eyes so green and bright just like his father’s, sparkled with hope at this age.

    “A jade,” Rane said, also looking at her with Soriel’s brown eyes.

    Silveren sighed. Her children had given birth to replicas of themselves. Yulin, the four-year-old boy, only ever wanted to eat good things, play to his heart’s content, and sleep, just like his father when he was young.

    Rane, on the other hand, was truly a prince. He played with expensive jade and gold, but his heart was pure, and he loved his cousin.

    Silveren reached for a peach slice on the table and gave it to Rane. Rane turned and gave it to Yulin without hesitation, making sure his cousin held it well before he smiled wide. Yulin took a bite of the fruit and Rane clapped.

    Silveren wished life was just as easy as Rane and Yulin’s cute relationship. She wished there was an easy way to heal Raithion’s heart. She stroked Rane’s dark hair and reached out to caress Yulin’s cheek before she looked at Soriel.

    “If Raithion comes to the commandery office, tell him I’m looking for him. There is a repair list for the manor’s defenses that needs his attention.”

    “I’ll tell him,” Soriel said.

    “Tell him he doesn’t need to sleep in his residence. Our main house has many rooms,” Silveren said with a sigh. “I’ll let him use as many as he wants.”

    Noriel grinned. “It’s almost the Spring Festival. I’ll visit to make him the mint toffee he likes to eat.”

    Soriel chuckled. “Everyone in this city remembers how much he loves your mint toffee.”

    Silveren smiled as her daughters laughed at the happy memory.

    ****

    Naeri arranged a blanket over her daughter in the rocking bassinet. They were in the great room, sitting on the long couches near sunny windows. Her gaze shifted to the large armchair that she always hoped Raithion could use but never did, and her heart ached.

    She pricked her finger with the needle she held and brought her left index finger to her mouth to suck the welling blood. The dark cloak she held had an intricate white-lion embroidery she was trying to finish on the hem. She wanted to gift it to Raithion when he came home, that is, if he would even accept it.

    Sitting on a stool opposite her was Rassa, her closest attendant. Rassa was finishing up the work on one side of the cloak with the help of a young lady.

    Raithion’s housekeepers, two sisters named Aryn and Sira, had gone with Silveren to the palace. The butler was busy managing the daily needs of the manor, and the last of Raithion’s trusted attendants, a young man named Sharian, had gone with Raithion on his expedition to the border.

    The rest of the attendants who ran the residence were loyal to Thanir and Silveren and often left with them when the couple was not around. Which meant the manor was quite peaceful for the moment, with only Rassa and the young girl from Naeri’s household.

    Naeri had declined Basilinna Soriel’s invitation as she wanted to make sure their residence was neat in case Raithion arrived home. She had not seen him for a year and a half. In truth, she had not seen him since she gave birth to their daughter, Skye. The girl was already born, but her husband could not forgive her misdeeds.

    Naeri let out a soft sigh and reached over to hold the handle of the rocking bassinet. She moved it from side to side, her gaze on the cute little girl who had dark hair like her father and brown eyes to match Naeri’s.

    Raithion gave beautiful children. It was a pity she would only get two from him. He now treated her worse than a leper. She was not to be touched, like a terrible illness.

    “What do you think can change Raithion’s attitude toward me?” Naeri asked Rassa. “He is so set against me. I don’t have a place to start with him. Surely, five years have passed. Others look at us like we are an old married couple. If they knew that he can’t stand to drink a glass of water near me, let alone look at our children, wouldn’t it be a joke.”

    Shaking her head, Naeri lamented her strange fate.

    “Give him another year,” Rassa said. “Perhaps when the children are running around and voicing their opinions, there will be a way to soften his heart.”

    “But,” Naeri started, then stopped, staring at the orange jade ring she wore on her left ring finger. She had clearly stood in the large Maenaer hall, watched as the Basileus officiated their marriage in person, only to face a cold husband in the side residence. Draeya Commandery Prince Raithion Maenaer did not try even once to give her a chance. He had been cold and unyielding from the start.

    Faced with her father’s constant nagging to get an heir, she had no choice but to seek help from the apothecary who had taken care of her since childhood. She had thought that once their first child was born, Raithion would soften toward her, but he’d only grown more distant. Then, two and a half years ago, in a fit of desperation and selfishness, she used the apothecary’s drug in Raithion’s bathwater. It resulted in Skye, but a clear break emerged in her marriage.

    Raithion moved out of their residence and went to live in the Commandery Office full time. No amount of pleading, threats, or requests would change his mind. A year ago, he had left the capital to patrol the state’s armies and the kingdom’s borders on behalf of the Basileus.

    The heartache of loneliness was something Naeri could not describe to Raithion’s happily married sisters and mother. Not even the powerful Basilinna, who had all of Raithion’s support, could understand.

    Naeri was well aware that she was quite pitiful as a wife. She could only rely on Silveren and Thanir’s parental power to control Raithion. His parents were the only people who could summon their son home. She had no power over Raithion, and it was the saddest thing in the world.

    Naeri sighed again.

    “Well, let’s get the cloak done,” she said, picking up her needle. “Lady Silveren got a list from Butler Daron asking my husband to help fix the back wall of our residence. The defenses have deteriorated. He is now powerful in the capital, and his enemies grow every day. I know he will come to help fortify the walls. At the very least, he will finally put eyes on Skye, poor girl has never seen her father.”

    “Don’t worry, My Lady,” Rassa said, smiling as they both looked at Skye, who was sleeping peacefully in her bassinet.

    ****

    It was raining hard when Raithion finally arrived at the Maenaer Manor in the capital. It was almost midnight. Daron got the guards to open the gates and light the lamps.

    “Lord Raith, welcome home,” Daron said as Raithion dismounted his horse and handed the reins to the waiting stable steward.

    “How is everyone in the house?” Raithion asked Daron as he entered the main house.

    “His Grace, your father, is in Draeya County inspecting the planting season at the estate,” Daron said. “Lady Silveren visited the palace today. She returned an hour ago and has gone to sleep. The Commandery Princess has retired to the side residence.”

    “Don’t wake them,” Raithion said, then nodded to the three cargo carriages waiting. “The legion officers will offload the supplies we need for the repair lists. There are packages put together by Kailu and Sharian. Sharian collected gifts for everyone in the house. Distribute them as you wish.”

    “I’ll make sure everything is arranged,” Daron said with a pleased smile. “I had Aryn and Sira arrange your quarters on the first floor of the main house. No one has had access to them other than me, Aryn, and Sira. We have not told the side residence where you will sleep.”

    “Thank you,” Raithion said, entering his parents’ house. He greeted Aryn and Sira, who were waiting for him at the stairs. His clothes were soaking wet after his hectic ride in the rain. The girls first led him to a hot bath, then upstairs to his rooms, where he changed into comfortable clothes and fell on his bed into a deep sleep.

    The next morning, Raithion dressed for a day spent working at home in a soft white tunic, dark trousers, and boots. He had no need for weapons at home, but he did keep daggers in his boot. It was Saturday, and his mother’s list weighed on his mind.

    He went downstairs to the dining room and was eating grilled chicken slices, tomatoes, and slices of bread spread with soft cheese when his mother came down.

    “The birds must be flying upside down this morning,” Silveren said as she sat at the round dining table. She accepted a cup of warm water from Aryn and drank it with a small smile.

    “Daron,” Silveren said when the butler came in, carrying a kettle filled with hot water for tea. “Can you look out the windows to make sure the birds are up the right way? My son is sitting at my dining table. I must be dreaming.”

    “You’re not dreaming, Lady Maenaer,” Daron said, amused. “Lord Raith came home late last night. He did not want to wake you after a tiresome day.”

    “Mm, how good he is to his mother,” Silveren said, then glanced at Raithion, who was watching her quietly. “Are you injured?”

    “No,” Raithion said.

    “Would you tell me if you were?” Silveren asked.

    “No,” Raithion said.

    Silveren scowled at him.

    “I don’t want to worry you unnecessarily,” Raithion said.

    “Then, aren’t you concerned that I would miss you if you were gone for a year?” Silveren asked. “What good things are at the border that you stayed so long?”

    “The border is secure. I’m not worried about war breaking out soon after the work we’ve completed,” Raithion said.

    “I’m so happy for you,” Silveren said. “Meanwhile, I’m worried the cold front that is raging in your house will turn my flowers frigid.”

    “Then, Daron, start the fireplace in the great room and warm up my mother’s flowers so that they don’t freeze,” Raithion said.

    “Do you think we’re discussing peonies?” Silveren asked, sipping the steaming tea Aryn served her.

    “Then what would we be discussing?” Raithion asked as he finished his food. He pushed his plate aside and poured himself a second cup of hot tea, sipping it with a contented smile.

    “How long will you keep up a cold front with your wife?” Silveren asked.

    “I can’t trust her with my clothes, food, bedding, bathing water, hell, the first time she drugged me with wine at someone else’s home during an event. You tell me, Mother, where should I start?”

    Silveren stared at him for a long moment, then nodded. “Then, Yulin and Skye, where should you, their father, start with them? They are yours.”

    “She takes care of them—”

    “I’m not done,” Silveren cut in. “Those children are innocent. They are Maenaer, born in these halls. They are part of the future you’re working so hard to protect. As their father, where should you start? Holding such a long grudge, you will end up hurting them.”

    “My grudges shall be resolved by me when I’m good and ready to do so,” Raithion said. “As for the innocent, Mom, I can only entrust them to you. If you leave them to me, I will poison them with anger and hate.”

    “Raith,” Silveren said, her eyes suddenly filled with tears.

    “This is the most I can do at the moment,” Raithion said honestly. He had had a year to think about his current predicament with Naeri. His heart was not resolved to the betrayals she had placed on him. If she wanted children, she should have agreed to discuss it with him. Perhaps they would have found a way, but to force him… he shook his head and met his mother’s gaze.

    “Give me time,” Raithion said. “Let me work at finding peace to deal with this in my own way. Call Jaguar and have him start training the boy early. Let the child leave this place and go run in the wilds of our Draeya County. He will be able to stay open and carefree for a while longer before he learns the truth of his father and mother.”

    Raithion got up then, pushing his chair back.

    “Today, I’ll fix the walls and the defenses as you’ve asked. I’ve tasked Kailu with rotating the guards in the manor,” Raithion said. “I’ll head back to the Commandery Office tomorrow morning.”

    “Raith,” Silveren cried out in protest.

    “Dad has everything he wanted in place,” Raithion said, his voice hard. “The power, the titles, a future heir, a powerful Basilinna, and his alliance with the Basileus is assured. How I’m living now is the best way for me to survive all this joy he has worked for. Don’t judge me for it. I’ll be outside if you need me.”

    ****

    Saturday morning, Naeri left the Maenaer Manor early without telling Silveren. She wanted to get butter from her mother’s workshop. She had discovered that their house made very good butter. Raithion was partial to mint toffee, and while she could not make it the way he liked it, Silveren appreciated fresh butter. So Naeri tried to get a fresh batch from her family when Raithion was around.

    Her mother was excited to see her when she arrived. She got a scolding for having left the children at home, but she was in a hurry to get back. Naeri had only brought Rassa with her. Benira Ajai was still adamant about feeding her a cup of tea, so they sat on the patio at the back of the house and ate pineapple pastries.

    Naeri found herself relaxing as she listened to her mother discuss their neighborhood’s gossip: who had a new baby, which daughter was caught seeing a man she shouldn’t, which family had gained or lost wealth. It felt nice to sit around and listen to gossip.

    Suddenly, Naeri realized the Maenaer women did not gossip like Benira. No, Silveren, Noriel, and Soriel discussed the harvest, planned parties with dignitaries to achieve specific goals, and managed war supplies for their brother and Thanir Maenaer.

    Here in her mother’s courtyard, the conversation was simple, down-to-earth, and easy. Naeri smiled as her mother reached up to help her fix a flower pin that was askew.

    “I heard that Raithion is back in the capital,” Benira said. “The girls went out to fetch fresh milk from the dairy, and they saw his right-hand man riding into town. He must have arrived very late last night.”

    “Mm,” Naeri said, though it was news to her. No one in the manor had alerted her that Raithion was already home. She had left the house early, thinking he would be arriving later. Her heart skipped a beat. She needed to get back home fast. Raithion was like a fast wind. He came and went in the blink of an eye.

    “I should take the butter home. My husband is always so busy,” Naeri said, placing her cup down. “I want them to use the butter from our workshop for the mint toffee he likes.”

    “Okay, I’ll go hurry the steward. You should say hello to your father before you go. He’s in the greenhouse,” Benira said as she got up. “I’ll have the butter ready by the time you get back.”

    “Thanks, Mom,” Naeri said, getting up and tidying her skirts. She hurried to a path that would lead her to the back of the mansion. She was in a hurry as she walked down the path to her father’s greenhouse. She only realized her father had guests when she was close to the door, and it was almost too late. There were three bushy mulberries near the greenhouse entrance, so Naeri ducked behind one of them to avoid disturbing her father. He got very angry if he was interrupted. Patting her chest for thinking fast, she let out a relieved breath and settled down to wait for her father to finish.

    Then her father’s voice drifted to her. He was angry, raging…

    “…the Prime Minister has gained support these last two years. Basilinna Soriel has made quite an effort in helping her husband gain the support of Libert ministers. She holds soft power, which she understands how to use, thanks to her brother’s backing. These siblings have made it nearly impossible to go against her and her support for the Prime Minister. We are at an impasse. Our Populi party cannot shake the Prime Minister’s position,” Gesi Ajai kicked something and let out a growl. “I need something to shift this deadlock. Otherwise, we’ll never win more leverage at court.”

    “What about the plan Rosner gave up?” Sazama asked. “It’s still viable. Rassa is here too.”

    Naeri clamped a hand over her mouth, wondering what her closest attendant was doing with her father.

    “I’m here, but what does that have to do with Rosner?” Rassa’s voice drifted to Naeri.

    Naeri’s eyes widened as she realized her closest attendant worked for her father. No wonder, she thought, as fear bloomed in her heart. No wonder it was so easy to get the apothecary’s aphrodisiac when she needed it.

    Of course, Rassa would have been the one to tell Gesi that Raithion was cold toward her. Then he would have pushed for the apothecary to make the formula that she had given Raithion. It had happened so easily, so fast.

    “The Draeya Prince is around,” Rassa said with confidence. “I can keep an ear out and see if he will host the Prime Minister at the manor. Sazama can handle it if the Prime Minister doesn’t visit. I would prefer it, as it reduces the risk for me. The Draeya Prince is very strict with security.”

    “Do you have it?” Gesi asked. “Sazama?”

    “I have it,” Sazama said. “I’ll give a portion to Rassa. She will know how to brew it in tea. One big sip and we will not have to worry about the Prime Minister.”

    “That is if Rassa is able to act when he visits the Maenaer,” Gesi said.

    Naeri gasped and could not hold back the sound in time. Fear propelled her into a run, and she took off at a fast sprint, heading back to the patio where her mother had served tea. She did not look back as she ran to see whether her father’s accomplices had seen her. Her heart pounded so hard in her ears she could not think.

    ****

    “Damn it, it’s Lady Naeri,” Sazama said, coming back to the greenhouse after going out to investigate the foreign sound. “I just saw her running back to the main house.”

    Gesi cursed under his breath. “This girl is going to drive me crazy. Rassa, I need you to manage her. Find a way to convince her about our plan. If you can get her help, it will be even better. The faster she realizes her husband is a liability, the better.”

    Rassa nodded. “I will convince her. Besides, I can also get her to believe she misheard you. Don’t worry about it.”

    “I’ll trust you with this,” Gesi said. “It’s hard enough with everything that’s going on.”

    “I’ll handle it,” Rassa promised.

    ***

    Naeri forgot the butter she was collecting from her mother. She ran out of her parents’ home and into her carriage and urged the driver to go back to the Maenaer residence. Her heart raced with cold fear as she tried to decipher what Rassa, Sazama, and her father were discussing.

    It sounded like an assassination attempt on the Prime Minister, sickening to imagine. She worried about her husband. Despite their endless cold war, Raithion was the father of her children. Her future and the children’s future depended on his well-being. So, a Prime Minister dead or poisoned in their home would utterly make their world end.

    Shaking her head, she was glad when the carriage came to a stop outside the main gate. She exited too fast and hurried up the steps to the front door, only to be met by a smiling Silveren.

    “Naeri, where did you go? I was looking for you. It’s already afternoon, Child. Your husband is in the main hall of your residence,” Silveren said, taking Naeri’s hand and guiding her into the house. “Why do you look so pale? Are you ill?”

    Naeri felt tears prick the backs of her eyes as Silveren stopped and pressed the back of her hand over Naeri’s forehead.

    “Mm, your temperature feels okay,” Silveren continued. “Come on, I think you should rest for a while, then find your husband. Try to mend what is broken. Slowly, okay? Don’t lose hope.”

    “Thank you, Mother,” Naeri said, her voice soft, her heart still pounding in her chest. It was a wonder that Silveren could not hear it. Silveren led her to the back exit of the main house. The door opened to a short path that led into the courtyard and the house Naeri lived in.

    Silveren let her proceed alone. Naeri took in the men hard at work on the perimeter walls in the distance. There were also two men on the roof, mending leaks she had not gotten to amid the multitude of tasks she had to perform.

    It felt nice to have someone else take up the repairs. Removing her overcoat, she stepped into the great room and paused when she saw Raithion sitting in the large armchair arranged for him, just as she had dreamed when she placed it there.

    How many times had she watched and waited, hoping he would come home and occupy the armchair? Now, seeing him sift through invoices and talk to Daron, paying invoices and signing household expense requests felt so right.

    Naeri could not stop the tears that filled her eyes. She had to tell Raithion what she had heard. Maybe it would bring them closer, perhaps… it would make up for all the wrongs she had done to her husband.

    ****

    After a marathon of repair work, Raithion sat in the armchair in his great room to authorize monthly repairs. It was his fault he had neglected the care of the residence, as the funds came from his personal accounts.

    “Daron, if there is any urgent problem with the house, send Sharian to the barracks or the Commandery Office. Don’t let it get to the point of disrepair,” Raithion said.

    “I understand,” Daron said as he watched Raithion set aside money for the invoice that would help the manor guards replenish arrows used on mounted bows on the perimeter walls from the imperial warehouse.

    “These are invoices from the tailor. The Commandery Princess had clothes made for the children,” Daron said.

    “Mm.” Raithion signed the invoice and set aside money for the expense. The amount was usual for clothes tailored for the people in the house. He just had never needed to make such a payment before.

    “I’ll excuse myself,” Daron said after a moment. “I’ll leave these invoices with you.” He placed the stack of five invoices on the stool next to Raithion’s chair.

    Raithion glanced up, wanting to ask why Daron was leaving, only to see Naeri coming to sit on the couch to the left of Raithion’s armchair. She looked nervous. She wore a beautiful pale blue dress with a fitted bodice and long silk skirts. Her blonde hair was tied in an intricate style, held together in a convoluted manner by pins.

    Naeri looked at him with worried brown eyes, and Raithion felt a punch in his gut, the kind he hated, as he wondered what plot she was spinning. It annoyed him that she could not be trusted.

    “My Lord,” Naeri started. “It’s good to see you home. It’s been a long time.”

    “It has been,” Raithion said, thinking it was not long enough.

    Every time he looked at Naeri, he could not help remembering the endless burning sensation of the poison she put in his drink at that party, or in the bathwater. He had endured an excruciating burning that could only be relieved by bedding her endlessly, caught in an inescapable lust that made him feel both pleasure and disgust. He closed his eyes and let out a small breath.

    “Is there something you need to tell me?” Raithion asked, as he forced his focus on the remaining invoices on the table in front of him.

    “I—” Naeri started, then paused when one of her attendants brought a kettle and two cups.

    The young lady was followed by Yulin, who glanced at Raithion with a shy, hopeful innocent smile before he leaned on his mother’s lap.

    The attendant left. Naeri, knowing Raithion would not drink tea she had poured, made herself a cup and kept the teapot closest to her.

    “Mom,” Yulin said. “I want tea.”

    Naeri gave Raithion a nervous glance, but she took the second cup and poured Yulin half a cup of the tea, then blew on it to make sure it was not too hot. Naeri placed it on the side for their son, then picked up her cup and took a few sips, as though to fortify herself.

    “My Lord, there is something I must tell you. I went to see my mother this morning and—” Naeri broke off, pressing her right hand to her stomach with a small frown. She shrugged and continued. “I know you don’t like to hear much about my family, but—”

    Yulin took his cup and sipped it, but then Naeri gasped and hit the cup their son held, spilling the tea on the floor.

    Raithion frowned as Naeri turned to him with wide eyes.

    “I—” Naeri started as she stood up, her hands pressed to her stomach, her expression twisting with pain. “I’m sorry.”

    Raithion got up as Naeri started to fall to the floor, as Yulin broke into painful cries.

    “Daron!” Raithion called out as he caught Naeri. He lifted her and carried her to one of the long couches in the great room, arranging a pillow under her head. He started to move away to get Yulin, but she gripped his right wrist.

    “Wait,” Naeri said, coughing, and Raithion frowned as he noticed the blood coloring her teeth. “I—I’m sorry for everything. I—I didn’t know. M-my father—”

    Naeri broke into a coughing fit just as Daron, Sharian, Aryn, and Sira entered the great room.

    “Lock down the manor,” Raithion ordered, but his voice sounded distant, as if it belonged to someone else. “Get a healer here, and, Daron, guard that tea kettle and the teacup with your life. Sharian, ride to the palace and get Volker to send the imperial coroner, Dain. He will know what to look for in the tea. Send for an imperial healer.”

    “Yes, Your Grace.” Sharian, Aryn, and Sira ran out of the room to make sure Raithion’s orders were followed. The healer who lived in the manor came running in, and Raithion moved away to give her space to check on Naeri.

    “Lord Raith,” Daron said, and Raithion turned to find him holding an unconscious Yulin.

    Raithion crossed the distance in three numb strides and gathered the boy from Daron’s arms. He frowned when he saw Yulin had blood on his lips too.

    Yulin’s weight was too light. His small hands were cool. A cold rush went through Raithion’s chest like water, shocking and blinding, filling him with helplessness. He laid Yulin on the couch next to the one with his mother and arranged him carefully. He smoothed his palm over the child’s dark hair, felt the slight dampness of sweat, the too-still breath. Something tore in him, low and unfamiliar, raw as ripped cloth.

    Raithion sighed and turned to see what the healer was doing by Naeri’s side.

    “Raithion,” Naeri’s whisper had him getting up. Raithion moved to the other side of the long couch and found Naeri watching for him with wide, bloodshot eyes.

    “Don’t panic, I’ve called for a healer from the palace. They will have an antidote,” Raithion said.

    Naeri let out a soft chuckle and shook her head, then motioned for him to lean closer. She took in a deep breath when Raithion bent down close to hear what she was saying.

    “I-it’s too late. S-save Yulin. Fi-ind R-Rassa,” Naeri’s voice faded.

    When he straightened, her gaze did not follow. The healer checked her, and Raithion frowned when, after a moment, she shook her head, indicating that his wife had passed. The room went suddenly quiet, except for Yulin’s unsteady breath.

    ****

    The gates of the Maenaer Manor were locked and sealed. No one inside the manor grounds could leave. The imperial healer arrived first and rechecked Naeri, confirming that she was already dead. She had been killed by the poison in the tea she had drunk.

    Silveren ran into Raithion’s house in a panic and stared at Naeri, who was still lying on the long couch. The healers were now focused on Yulin, who lay near his mother, alive but unconscious. The two healers were trying to identify the poison used in order to give the right antidote. Sharian had yet to arrive with Dain.

    “Who could have done this?” Silveren asked in shock. “She was fine when she walked in earlier. How could this happen? Raith?”

    “The manor is locked down. We’ll find out soon,” Raithion said, his voice low. Inside he felt hollowed out, as if something had scooped him clean. “She wanted to tell me something, something about her father. Then she drank the tea and fell to the ground. It was too fast. She asked me to find someone named Rassa. Who is that?”

    “Her closest attendant,” Silveren said.

    “Why did she leave this morning?” Raithion asked.

    Silveren shook her head. “I give her freedom to live her life. She’s free to visit her maternal home as she wills.” Silveren sighed. “She heard you were coming home and probably wanted to get butter. Naeri claims… claimed the butter from her family brought out the mint toffee best.”

    “Did she bring any butter?” Raithion asked.

    Silveren shook her head. “I don’t know. We’ll have to check with the main kitchen.”

    Raithion nodded and turned to face the front door, where there was a commotion. Sharian had returned with Dain, the imperial coroner. Kailu and Haedor followed them in. They all wore the same shocked expressions when they saw Naeri lying on the long couch.

    Dain did not hesitate. Taking the kettle from Daron, he got to work immediately. Aryn and Sira brought him any utensils he asked for, and within minutes he poured the tea into a large bowl and began investigating the dregs.

    “There are seeds here,” Dain said, lifting one with a small pin. “They look like they are from the devil’s trumpet. Use activated charcoal on the boy.”

    The imperial healer mixed a vial of activated charcoal into a bowl, and with Aryn’s help they got Yulin to swallow most of it. The child coughed and swallowed, limp and obedient.

    “The rest will need time,” Dain said. “Whoever made this poison has layered different herbs.”

    “Is Yulin safe?” Silveren asked, moving to perch on the edge of the long couch where Yulin was.

    “We’ll have to watch over him and treat his symptoms as they come, for now,” the imperial healer said.

    Silveren let out a soft cry and reached for Yulin’s hand, holding it tight.

    Raithion stepped to Naeri’s couch and looked down. Her eyes were closed. Blood had dried at the corner of her mouth. The cage of pins held her hair perfectly. He placed her hands over her stomach and touched the orange jade ring on her left hand. He straightened her skirts, then stepped back, helpless, at a loss for what else a man should do for the wife he had not learned how to forgive and now would never see again.

    A knot formed in his chest. He did not know whether it was grief or guilt. Perhaps both. He had stayed away. He told himself he was protecting what remained of his self-respect. Now, what did that self-respect stand for?

    Raithion turned to Yulin. The boy’s lashes trembled against his cheeks. Raithion felt the pain sharpen, clean and unbearable. Suddenly the four-year-old boy was not an heir described on paper, not the consequence of a crime, but a breathing child who carried his blood.

    “Raith,” Silveren said softly. “We should begin to plan a funeral.”

    Raithion nodded and looked to Daron. “Treat her funeral as befits the lady of the manor. Give her all the rights of the Commandery Princess. Report it to the palace.”

    Daron bowed and hurried away.

    Raithion lifted Yulin. The boy’s weight settled against his chest. Too light. Too warm at the forehead, too-cold tiny hands.

    “I will take him to his room,” Raithion said. “Imperial Healer, I hope you can find a cure soon. Aryn and Sira will make sure you have everything you need.”

    “Thank you, Your Highness,” the imperial healer said.

    Raithion glanced at Kailu and Haedor. “Find the assassin. Naeri mentioned Rassa. Find her and discover what’s going on.”

    He held his son closer, feeling the small thud of Yulin’s heart against his own, and carried him upstairs.

    ****

    <<Previous | Blades of Ashes TOC | Next>>

  • Blades of Ashes – Ch 9

    Ch 9

    On Sura Island, at the foot of Mount Sura, Azula sat in his boat in the middle of the lake, staring at the letter delivered by Vandra, Teba Inn’s owner in the port city. He was the only one willing to show them kindness, and he sent them messages by pigeon. Magnus claimed that Vandra owed him a favor for saving his daughter from a bandit, so their ties could not be easily severed. Still, they had to be careful not to place Vandra’s livelihood in danger, so they would not rely on him too heavily.

    Azula stared at three letters in total, Vandra’s that had arrived in the morning, one he had been hauling around like a dark talisman, and a third from his mother.

    Azula wished he could ignore them all, wary of the sense of crisis and anger filling his heart. Life on Sura Island was full of growing pains. They were building homes for newcomers and finding ways to restock the dwindling grain in their communal warehouses. There were school-age children who needed a place to study, craftsmen out of work who needed a new way to earn an income, and the sick who needed skilled healers. Azula was overwhelmed.

    He reached for the first letter and frowned as he read. The letter was the magistrate’s order, signed and stamped to make it official, an order asking the Draeya general to find the thieves plaguing the Sura and bring them to justice. Azula scoffed every time he reread it. What a performance the general had staged.

    He stabbed the letter in the middle with a dagger, holding it in place on the wooden bench of his boat. He would keep it until he met that master of ashes again for answers.

    Azula reached for Vandra’s letter. It was a listed account of events that had happened since the Sura Clan had been expelled from the capital.

    The first news was that all Sura Workshops in Genad City were seized by the finance ministry. Their tools and products were confiscated by the imperial court. Azula scoffed at the greed of the imperial court officials. Their livelihood had been taken over as if it were a common product.

    The next item on the list was the fate of any Sura Clan members who were discovered still in the city. Azula bit his bottom lip when he read the list of nearly twenty of their people who were murdered by rogue mercenaries on their way to the port. There was no mercy in the Kingdom of Lyria.

    Wiping away tears, Azula read on.

    The minister named Gesi Ajai had landed a windfall by becoming the new minister of finance and leaving his ministry of agriculture to a subordinate. Azula frowned; somehow, that felt important, but he could not fit it into his clan’s misfortune. His attention was pulled instead to a note on marriages.

    The first was that the Draeya general’s little sister had been named the new Basilinna, which elevated her family’s status. Marquis Draeya was now a duke, while his son had become a commandery prince.

    Raithion was now a glorified general who could command all His Majesty’s armies. Along with the new station, the Draeya prince had married Gesi Ajai’s daughter, making her a commandery princess.

    Azula sneered. Gifts and rewards all around after betraying his people. Vandra had finished the letter by attaching a notice he had found on the streets. It read, “The Commandery Prince Draeya has seized and sealed the Sura Clan Chief’s Manor. None shall be allowed to enter or own it.”

    Azula felt pain strike deep in his heart. His father’s house in the capital was no longer theirs. He had not even gotten a chance to sift through it. What did the Master of Ashes want with it?

    Crumpling the letter with a force of anger, he dropped it on the bottom of the boat and stepped on it. He then reached for the neatly folded paper his mother had given him the day before. It was a letter from his father. She claimed Marius had written it before he left the manor with the legion officers who captured him.

    Azula had no courage to open it when his mother gave the letter to him. His father’s death felt like a cruel joke. Every morning for the last two weeks, since the funeral and the tattoo on his back, he had opened his eyes and hoped he had escaped the nightmare. Alas, hopes and dreams could only fill his imagination. Reality was far more punishing.

    Breaking the seal Marius had placed on the thick letter with green beeswax, Azula unfolded the letter.

    “Azula, Don’t make that face full of grievance. I’m eternally disappointed that I won’t get to scold you when you arrive in the capital. Don’t be sad, little demon. Whatever you find, know that I’m forever happy to have been your father. I’m very proud of you. Your dad is proud to have called you a son. Take care of my wife for me, let her smile often, and even though Alise is always so strong, be a place she can come to complain and lean on. How short life is. Azula, live a long, fun one and be as wild as you have always been. I love you. Dad.”

    Azula could barely read the “Dad” Marius had signed at the bottom. His eyes filled with tears. The grief he had been fighting for days as he planned a funeral, managed the clan’s needs, and settled their people broke through.

    A harsh sob escaped his lips, followed by a second. A deep, cavernous pain opened in his chest. He sobbed and cried loud and rough, shouting as much as he could as the pain filled him up. In the middle of the lake he so loved, only the fish and creatures in the deepest part could hear his grief. So, he let it rule his soul for a while.

    ****

    Alise sat on a bench outside, taking in the cool fresh air before she had to go back to bed for rest. A thick cloak was wrapped around her. The comfortable seat afforded her a beautiful view of the lake where Azula liked to swim. An hour ago, she had watched her brother push his boat out, saying he needed some time to take in the quiet of the lake. She wanted to enter the house when he was safely back on solid ground, so she watched his boat in the middle of the water.

    She was absentmindedly staring at the figure on the boat when she noticed Azula dive into the lake. She counted minutes, waiting for him to resurface beside the boat, but he never did.

    “No.” Alise stood, dropping the cloak on the ground. “No! Azula!” She started running down the short path to the end of the dock where Azula’s boat was usually tied. “Azula! Azula!”

    She screamed his name, hoping he would resurface, but she could not see him.

    “Azula!” she screamed again, hysterical, tears filling her eyes. What if he had drowned? What would they do? “Azula—”

    “Alise.” Magnus, their uncle, wrapped his arms around her. “What’s wrong?”

    Alise gripped his jacket, pointing to Azula’s empty boat. “He went into the water and hasn’t surfaced. We have to go get him. Let’s go! What if something has happened to him? Uncle, hurry.”

    “It’s okay,” Magnus soothed, pulling her into his arms.

    Alise tried to see Azula’s boat, she turned to see her mother running down to join them, followed by Alvas, Kalas, and Senin.

    “Go get him,” Magnus told Kalas. “Tell him his sister is worried.”

    “They have to get to him fast,” Alise said, pulling away from Magnus. She started to follow Kalas to the large boat that the boatman had brought to the dock. “I’ll go—”

    “No.” Lasma reached for her, while Alvas wrapped her shawl around Alise’s shoulders. “You’re still healing, child. Let Kalas and Senin go. Stay here with us.”

    ****

    Azula treaded water, letting the weight of it heal the worst of his grief and wash away the tears he had shed until his eyes felt swollen. He held his breath a moment longer, enjoying the tunnel of light that shimmered through the surface to light the water, until ripples filled the surface and he saw an oar waving above. He sighed and swam up, wondering if Alvas had arrived again to threaten to empty the lake.

    He was surprised to find an anxious Kalas and Senin leaning over the larger boat.

    Pushing his hair back, he wiped water from his eyes and frowned.

    “What happened?” Azula asked.

    “Alise saw you jump into the lake,” Kalas said. “You didn’t come up in time, so she panicked and started screaming. She is convinced you have drowned. Come on. If we don’t get back to shore soon, she will come out here herself.”

    Azula reached for Kalas’s hand and let him pull him up into the smaller boat.

    “Did she forget I can swim underwater?” Azula asked as he gathered his letters and put them in the pocket of his coat. Kalas tethered the small boat to the big one, and Azula joined him in the larger one, where he started changing into dry clothes.

    Senin helped the boatman row back home at top speed.

    “Your is stressed,” Kalas said. “You’re her only brother. She just lost her father and her husband. She’s a little raw right now. Everyone in the clan is, you know.”

    Azula sighed and pulled on a dry white tunic and his wool trousers. He wore his socks and barely had time to put his boots on when they arrived at the dock.

    “Where is he?” Alise called out, her voice shaking with fear. “Did you find him?”

    Azula, hating the sound of her fear, climbed out of the boat. “Alise. I’m okay. Wh—”

    She did not give him a chance to complete his sentence. She ran into his arms and burst into hard sobs, her body shaking. Azula wrapped his arms around her and stared at his mother and Magnus in shock.

    “I thought you drowned,” Alise said between her sobs. “I can’t lose you too, Azula. You have to be okay. Do you hear me? You’re all we have left. You have to be fine.”

    Azula closed his eyes and buried his face in her hair, holding her gently as he tried his best to soothe her. He let her cry it out. Then, when she was depleted, he carried her into the house, taking her straight to her bed. He left Alise’s side when she fell into a deep sleep at dusk.

    Heading downstairs to the great room, he found Magnus and Lasma talking with the council members. The Sura Clan had suffered too many losses. The council members sitting in their Doriel house were all new, save for Juya, Magnus, and Lasma. All the others had been caught in the massacre as they tried to help people to safety.

    Juya was still running the clan’s communal finances. Magnus and Lasma were managing the community’s social welfare. Kalas was in charge of the mining of ore and the logistics to the warehouses. Alvas oversaw schooling the young ones, while Lasma and Juya managed the older children’s schooling needs.

    Senin had taken on the role of trying to help clan members set up any economic activities they needed, while Azula needed to find a way to sell their goods as the island adjusted to a new world.

    They had gained two people who had been based in the capital.

    Tanya Nuovis, a woman skilled with blades and knives. She could fight off the strongest man. Juya insisted she had protected him when he was on his way from his house to find Alise after Marius’s arrest. Tanya oversaw the training of the first batch of Sura Clan warriors. She was to be helped by the second person Azula did not know, Wolfe Silverberry.

    Wolfe Silverberry was a warrior who had trained in the city’s garrison. He was quite skilled with a sword. He had the build of a warlord and the temperament of a wolf. His anger was hard to manage. His son was the boy who was lynched outside an exchange bureau. His wife had died years before, and his son was his only remaining family. Now he burned with an anger Azula was sure would not end quickly. He could only pray that anger would not consume Wolfe.

    Azula watched the group of people now responsible for the clan for a moment longer before he fully entered the great room. Alvas noticed him first. She stood up and moved to a table where she filled a mug of hot green tea for him.

    Azula accepted the mug with a grateful smile and sat in the closest armchair.

    “How is Alise?” Lasma asked.

    “She’s asleep,” Azula said. “I didn’t know she would get that worried about me going out for a dive.”

    “You jumped into the lake,” Magnus said. “Anyone who doesn’t know about your strange hobbies will think you’ve decided to end it for good. Don’t do that anymore when she’s around.”

    “Mm,” Azula said with a sigh, sipping his green tea. “Juya, how is the grain holding up?”

    “We need a refill of stock in eight weeks,” Juya said. “The only healer we have also says we need to supplement our meals with meat and start finding healing herbs. While we can hunt in the forest, we need to find a way to sustain our consumption. Someone in the farms on the other side of the mountain suggested farming chicken and ducks.”

    “We should get the hatching eggs from the mainland,” Tanya said.

    Azula thought about the letter from Vandra. “I got a letter from the innkeeper today. Anyone from the Sura Clan on the mainland is dead. Mercenaries got to them on their way to the port. We can’t risk an excursion into Lyria Kingdom.”

    The room filled with silence as they thought about the families waiting on news of their missing loved ones.

    “Then,” Magnus said, breaking the silence, “the northeast is our only path now. We should consider how we’re going to approach trading with the Nerasa Kingdom and their Rewa Port.”

    “Yes,” Lasma agreed. “Everyone should write a list of immediate needs. Juya, let us know where we are financially. The Lyria Kingdom denaris may need exchanging for Nerasa gold.”

    “I’ll tally what can be used,” Juya said.

    “Let’s not forget that we’re changing how we manage our administration offices,” Lasma said. “We need more accountants to help Juya, skilled ones to help Tanya and Wolfe, and teachers…there are so many spots to be filled.”

    “Even as we restructure our leadership, our immediate issue is finding a way to sustain our island’s food supply,” Azula said. “Mom, you find a way to convert more of the fertile lands. See if we can farm rice, and vegetables.”

    “I’ll talk to the women,” Lasma said.

    “I have modified a cargo ship,” Azula said, meeting Magnus’s gaze. “I have a tentative plan on how we can approach the Nerasa Kingdom, but it will need some statecraft.”

    “I can’t go with you,” Magnus said, his gaze shifting to Lasma. “While you travel, you’ll need me and Kalas here to manage the day-to-day.”

    “That’s okay,” Azula said with a quick smile. “I want to suggest bringing Juya with me. He’s been in the capital and helped Dad and Alise navigate the politics in Genad.”

    “I can’t,” Juya started to protest, but Azula grinned at him.

    “Don’t you want to discover if there are more amazing precious stones in the world?” Azula teased. “You’ve already appraised the ones Lyria Kingdom could offer. Surely Nerasa has new types you can exploit.”

    “You’re so sly, preying on my habits. I’m half worried about sinking in a ship you’ve modified,” Juya said, shaking his head.

    “Hey, my skill is very good. Even if it sinks it will because we made a navigation mistake,” Azula said. “I need you to be very confident in my skill because that’s what we’re going to build our reputation on in the Nerasa Kingdom.”

    “What do you mean?” Lasma asked, her worried gaze resting on Azula.

    “We will not sell ore to Nerasa. We will sell them finished products and negotiate the sale of blueprints for trade rights,” Azula said.

    “Would that work?” Wolfe asked.

    “It could,” Juya said. “Meaning we won’t need to open workshops in their territory, just sell skilled workshops the know-how. In some cases, we’ll need to approach high-level officials to work in small cities, but in larger ones we can offer to train artisans in well-known workshops. If they agree, the Sura Clan gets money, and we can do with it what we will.”

    “Mm,” Azula said. “See, Juya knows what he’s talking about, even though I’m just guessing at it. Once we have enough money, we bring it back and build what we need here and figure it out as we go.”

    Lasma sighed, while Magnus grinned.

    “Well, I guess the first thing to do is to test your modified cargo ship,” Magnus said. “If it is seaworthy, then we can plan the first trip to the Nerasa Kingdom. Let’s hope Juya can refine this plan of yours.”

    “It will work,” Azula said, confident in his crafting skill. He had no idea about building a nation, but he certainly knew how to make things people wanted to use. The more they wanted to use them, the more money they could make, and with money, Sura Island would survive. “Okay, let’s start planning…”

    ***

    As plans went, it wasn’t the most brilliant, and there were too many variables that affected the result. Some of which included an unforeseen life-changing storm that capsized Azula’s modified cargo ship. Thankfully the ship was close to land, and even though the crew barely survived, they landed on the shores of the Nerasa Kingdom relatively in one piece. There were no losses of life, but they had little to no money to implement Azula’s economic ideas. Azula, Wolfe, Sennin and Juya and a small crew of five men all decided to find work first, then figure out how to send grain supplies to the island by the end of the month.

    The Nerasa Kingdom was bustling, the port vibrant and a melting port of culture. No one wondered about the Sura Clan’s strange hair color because the Nerasa people had more outrageous colors, there were even people with white and green hair. So, the port of Rewa welcomed a shabby crew of Sura Clan members who worked on the docks to gain money for sustenance.

    One night, two weeks after their arrival in Nerasa, Azula was sitting by the beach, mourning the fate of his capsized ship, when he spotted a man drowning in the ocean. Afraid of watching a life being lost, Azula ran to save the drowning man. Once he pulled the heavy, tall man with unusual flaxen hair out of the water, he sat next to him at a loss.

    The man was dressed in a Nerasa army uniform that declared him a general.

    Azula wondered what kind of fate he had, meeting so many generals in a lifetime. He got up, ready to walk away, but the Nerasa general held on to his ankle and looked at him with startling blue eyes.

    Afraid of losses, as previously experienced under the Master of Ashes in the Lyria Kingdom, Azula kicked away the hold of the golden-haired general and ran back to the inn where his people were staying temporarily. He fell asleep, endured dreams of Alise giving birth to a son who turned into a mischievous urchin, then woke up to find their inn filled with Nerasa soldiers. The general had come to find him.

    Thankfully, their lackluster luck changed that day.

    The golden-haired general turned out to be the son of the prime minister. He had fallen into the water from a cliff at his residence. Azula had no interest in asking why the General was walking so close to the edge of a cliff. In any case, the general’s name was Trevan Pearcliff.

    Trevan was staying at the port of Rewa, hoping to find a way to transport sand from a nearby lake to the capital of the Nerasa Kingdom. It looked like a test given to him by his superiors.

    Juya was quick-witted and managed to attract the general’s attention with a blueprint of Azula’s cargo carriage. The golden-haired general commissioned three large cargo carriages from the clan and found them a yard to work in at the port.

    Azula, Wolfe, Senin, and even frail Juya along with their crew of five men worked hard, day and night, conscious of the two-week deadline at home. They managed to make the three cargo carriages and were paid once the sand was filled in the carriages without mishaps.

    Elated with their work, Trevan commissioned five more carriages, which gave them enough money to buy grain and send it with two of their crew to the Sura Island.

    With Juya’s help, Azula negotiated with Trevan and managed to get the golden-haired general to sell them the plot of land where they were working. Trevan helped them acquire a trade permit, helping them establish a small presence in Rewa Port.

    From there, the Sura Clan established a strong sustainable trade with the Nerasa Kingdom. Azula discovered that the currents into Nerasa Kingdom needed experience and know-how. So, he set to understanding the maritime navigation rules of entering Nerasa waters and built two more cargo ships. Once the ships were completed, the island focused on export trade.

    All their products were made and forged on the island and sold from the yard at Rewa Port. The only thing they created on Nerasa soil was the cargo carriage, and Azula took great effort to train the Nerasa metal crafters Trevan brought to him. He showed them how to make the cargo carriage to avoid conflict with the region’s trade rulebooks.

    On the island, the Sura council used the money Azula brought back to build homes, administration buildings, three schools and a healing center. They sent Sura scholars to Nerasa to train as teachers, healers, builders, as Nerasa had a vast sea of knowledge in building buildings. Some of the Sura Clan members made good friends, and soon merchants interested in Sura products brought their ships to the north of the island.

    Magnus and Lasma built a trading port on the north side of the island that traded with ships on the way to other lands and provided a resting stop for travelers. The port was protected by the soldiers Tanya trained, and she was soon referred to as General Tanya by all her recruits. In time, Sura Island established itself as an island nation.

    In the blink of an eye, five years passed, and Azula was already acknowledged by the people in the Nerasa Kingdom and beyond as the prince of the Sura Nation.

    ****

    <<Previous | Blades of Ashes TOC | Next>>