Tag: worldwide

  • 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 8

    Raithion entered the palace but did not go to find Soriel first. He went to the commandery offices and found Haedor having a meeting with the team of legion inspectors responsible for investigating the case in the palace.

    “Your Highness,” Haedor said in greeting. The legion inspectors all saluted Raithion when he entered the large office.

    “At ease,” Raithion said and moved to take the chair behind the desk. “Give me an update.”

    “Two days ago, Princess Soriel found a dead palace maid in her closet,” Haedor said. “She was fast in her thinking. She sealed her room and called Lord Maenaer. It allowed us to take over the scene and the body.”

    “What have you found?” Raithion asked, his fists clenched into fists at the thought of the shock Soriel had faced.

    “The palace maid died of poisoning,” Haedor said. “Lieutenant Volker followed up with the coroner at the palace morgue. The poison used was belladonna.”

    “Belladonna is a forbidden herb within the palace walls,” Raithion said.

    “Yes,” Haedor agreed. “Someone must have smuggled it in.”

    Raithion shook his head and sat back, staring at his legion officers.

    “Where was the palace maid assigned to work?” Raithion asked.

    “She is not on any roster,” Volker said. “We have combed through the month’s list ledgers and cannot find her usual post.”

    “Every attendant in the palace has a task to complete. Otherwise, they are not meant to be in the palace,” Raithion said, holding Volker’s gaze. “It is not that she is not on the list ledger. It is that the list she is on is missing. Find the missing ledger.”

    “Yes, Your Highness,” Volker said, tapping his partner on the shoulder. They left the office to complete the task.

    “What else?” Raithion asked.

    “The girl’s family has scattered,” Haedor said. “I have two legion officers on the task, but we may need more.”

    “The poison could have originated from their residence,” Raithion said. “Add in four more.”

    Haedor pointed to four legion officers who got up and left after a swift salute.

    “Where is Kailu?” Raithion asked.

    “He is working on the inside of the palace,” Haedor said. “I had him join Princess Soriel’s guard. Your father gave him a token from Basileus Dio that allows him to move around the palace without restriction. He will reach out if he discovers something new.”

    Raithion nodded, satisfied that most of the work was half done.

    “I want to see this girl,” Raithion said, standing up. “Then I’ll visit Soriel.”

    “I’ll take you to the morgue,” Haedor said, leaving the commandery office. “Did you succeed?”

    “Yes,” Raithion said as they walked along the vast corridors of the palace, headed to the back buildings where the morgue was located. “It wasn’t easy, but he is safe.”

    “For now,” Haedor said.

    “Yes,” Raithion nodded. “I’ve set safeguards to help protect him in case of trouble.”

    “What happened to him was a tragedy,” Haedor said.

    “No, it was a betrayal orchestrated by my father,” Raithion said, self-loathing filling his heart. “I was unable to do anything for him. I owe him for a broken promise.”

    Haedor sighed and did not comment.

    They stepped outside and found themselves in the back gardens of the palace. The palace morgue was built in the farthest corner of the vast imperial property. They needed horses to get there. Haedor’s assistant met them with a pair of horses. The ride to the morgue was fast.

    The head coroner received them with a solemn face. He saluted Raithion, acknowledging his new status in the palace.

    “Report your findings to His Highness,” Haedor said when they stood before the dead girl’s corpse. She was wrapped in a white shroud and lying on a slab of ice. Her body was clean and ready for burial as soon as Raithion ended the investigation.

    “We have meticulously documented everything we found on her. I’ll state the obvious first,” the head coroner said. “She died of poisoning. The contents of her stomach include a peach blossom cake. Our poison tests show that this peach blossom cake is the source of the poison.”

    “How long have you worked in the palace?” Raithion asked the coroner. He looked older, already in his fifties.

    “Fifteen years,” the head coroner answered.

    “Do you recognize her?” Raithion asked.

    “No,” the head coroner said. “But that is not unusual. My place of work is not auspicious. I run into palace maids who work in the outer wings of the palace or in the kitchen where we get our meals.”

    “So, would you say she is someone who works in the inner palace?” Haedor asked.

    “Yes,” the head coroner said, touching her folded uniform. “The fabric of this uniform is the answer. Expensive silk and embroidery accents are found on palace maids working in the inner palace.”

    “She is not on any roster,” Haedor said.

    “Then, she works for someone with enough authority to make her existence disappear,” Raithion guessed.

    “Don’t burden me with such information, I like my head on my shoulders,” the coroner said. “Let me finish my report.”

    Raithion hid a smile at the head coroner’s will to survive. He spent most of his morning hours listening to updates from the head coroner, who documented all the palace maid’s injuries before and after death.

    ***

    Raithion visited Soriel in the afternoon. He needed to change and dress in a formal uniform to enter the inner palace and meet with the soon-to-be Basilinna. The process allowed him to clear his thoughts. The case facing them was simple yet complex.

    On the surface, a girl was poisoned with belladonna, and her body was hidden in Soriel’s chambers. The palace guard commandery should solve the crime and bring the culprit to face justice.

    Hidden, in this case, was the girl’s true identity. Her clothes belonged to the inner palace, which meant she was under the control of the Dowager Basilinna Olneth, Dio’s mother. He doubted Dio’s grandmother and aunt would want to harm Dio’s bride. Still, perhaps someone in their households worked for Olneth.

    Why Olneth? Raithion frowned.

    His father had evidence that the Dowager Basilinna wanted the power to control the throne. Which meant taking control of the newest Basilinna. She had tried to get Gesi Ajai’s daughter in place, but since that failed, she wanted a way to control Soriel by placing Soriel in the middle of a murder case.

    Raithion smirked. Let’s see you try to control a Maenaer.

    An attendant led Raithion to Rose Hall, Soriel’s residence when he was ready. He was not surprised to find Dio waiting with Soriel when he arrived.

    Soriel looked beautiful in a long gold dress, the skirts shimmering in the sunlight. Her hair was brushed to perfection and restrained by golden leaves in the form of a crown. She looked lovely in her royal clothes. She sat in an armchair, her hands resting on her lap.

    Raithion noted how hard she had to work at not running to hug him. She visibly clenched her hands on her lap and smiled at him.

    “Your Highness,” she said with a demure tone, her gaze shifting to Dio before she smiled at Raithion. “You have returned.”

    “Yes, and I received your message,” Raithion said. “Are you alright?”

    “Of course she’s alright,” Dio said, getting up from the couch to stand next to Soriel. “Why wouldn’t she be?”

    Raithion held his sister’s gaze, ignoring Dio’s comment.

    Soriel’s brown eyes were filled with mischief. Her lips twitched, fighting a smile as she held his gaze and he sighed in relief. At least they had not broken his sister’s spirit. It would be a tragedy if Soriel turned into an uppity highborn lady.

    “How long are you going to keep pretending?” Raithion asked.

    Soriel scowled at him, then to Dio’s surprise, she bolted out of the chair and raced to hug Raithion. Jumping on him with her usual energy, she kissed his left cheek and wrapped her arms around his neck.

    Raithion held her tight, hugging her back.

    “What took you so long? Lord Haedor would not tell me where you were,” Soriel complained. “Everyone in this place wants me to start calling you Your Highness. Even Pa keeps repeating the same things. It’s been so difficult. Are you really a Commandery Prince?”

    “I will always be Raith to you, Little Bird,” Raithion said.

    “Oh, thank the fates,” Soriel said with relief. She held on for a moment longer, then let go and he set her on her feet. “Where did you go?”

    “To fulfill a promise,” Raithion said, adjusting Soriel’s crown on her head. It was askew. “I like your crown, Basilinna Soriel.”

    Soriel turned to glance at Dio who had taken her seat. She shrugged and looked at Raithion.

    “He’s a good man,” Soriel said, her voice low. “I like him and want him to be my husband. Will you accept him the way you took in Nori’s Hujan?”

    “I think he has to take us in,” Raithion said, pressing his index finger into her right cheek. “He’s the Basileus.”

    “What a powerless position,” Soriel said, shaking her head. “He’s in trouble in this place. Someone dared to plot against us with a dead girl. It’s disgusting. He helped me escape the worst.”

    “Did he?” Raithion’s brow rose in surprise and glanced at Dio, who watched them with avid interest.

    “Yes,” Soriel said, taking his right hand. She squeezed it and smiled at him. “He sent his aunt to neutralize the Dowager Basilinna’s lecture. She saved me from an investigation.”

    Soriel tugged at his hand, her expression full of expectation and pleading. She was talking for her new husband and it irked him.

    Raithion fought a scowl and tightened his hold on Soriel’s hand. He led her to the couch and made her sit next to him.

    “Raith,” Soriel started.

    “I’ve heard it,” Raithion said, squeezing her hand. “Now, it’s my turn. There’s more to agree on before I commit.”

    Soriel nodded and remained obediently next to him.

    Satisfied with Soriel’s response, Raithion met Dio’s gaze and felt a wide chasm of anger and frustration open up inside him.

    “I’m angry with you, Basileus Dio. I can’t explain what your machinations with my father cost me,” Raithion said. “You’ve made me break a promise to someone important, and now I have no way to restore the break.”

    Soriel squeezed his left arm, but he ignored her.

    Raithion met Dio’s gaze. “I always keep my word, and you made me break it.”

    “Is this about the Sura?” Dio asked, his tone solemn to match.

    Raithion clenched his jaw, his hands in fists on his knees.

    “They did not deserve such a betrayal,” Raithion gritted out.

    “I agree,” Dio said. “I feel the same guilt you do, Raithion. But I have no power to protect them.”

    “You’re the Basileus.”

    “One with fractured wings,” Dio said. “I wish I could spread them and envelope everyone in my kingdom with protection, but I can’t. I have constraints placed upon me by court ministers with more power than I. I would save the Sura if I could. It pains me to have no power to change this truth.”

    “If you cannot protect others, how do you plan to protect Soriel?” Raithion asked.

    Dio fell silent and it was his turn to clench his fists on his lap.

    “No harm will come to her on my watch,” Dio said.

    “You can’t make that promise,” Raithion shook his head. “A dead body in her chambers is already enough of a threat. It could have been her.”

    Soriel gasped beside him, and Raithion sighed as he realized she had not thought of it.

    Dio’s gaze remained on Soriel for another minute, then he stared at the floor, his jaw clenched.

    Soriel squeezed Raithion’s left arm, she moved, getting up and walking over to Dio’s side. Raithion frowned when she turned and faced him, turning them into a unit. His little sister had grown up and dared to love a powerless Basileus.

    Raithion sighed.

    “Raithion,” Dio said. “I will do my best to protect Soriel. I will do everything to ensure nothing happens to her in my palace, including moving into Rose Hall. I’m begging for your support.”

    Raithion frowned at the plea.

    “No need to beg, little bird is by your side,” Raithion said, meeting Soriel’s hopeful gaze. “I have no choice but to give you support to make sure she survives. But, before I agree to help, I need a promise.”

    “Raith,” Soriel started to protest.

    “No,” Dio said, taking Soriel’s hand. “I will give the promise.”

    “You don’t know what kind of promise,” Soriel said.

    “It will be reasonable,” Dio said, smiling at Raithion. “Go ahead.”

    “The Sura Clan,” Raithion said. “I want to protect them. I also want the chance to clear their reputation when the time comes.”

    “Why?” Dio asked.

    “That is my business,” Raithion said. “But if you must know, count it as helping me fulfill the promise you made me break.”

    Dio held Raithion’s gaze for a moment longer, then nodded.

    “You’ll have full rights over the forged silver coin case when it is time. The Sura Clan is your burden.”

    “Good,” Raithion said, standing up, eager to leave. “I’ll take control of their manor in the capital and hold it under the Commandery Prince’s authority.”

    Dio nodded without protest.

    “What about the belladonna poisoned palace maid? ” Dio asked.

    “You received the reports from the morgue,” Raithion said, standing in the middle of the room. His gaze was on Soriel. “How many enemies can you have in this palace, Basileus Dio? The one you had to defend my sister from is the culprit.”

    Dio scoffed.

    “Of course, you would know the truth with one glance. I have to say the Maenaer family is not easy to manage. What do you plan to do? My aunt placed the work of bringing this case to court on your shoulders.”

    “Well, since we all know the culprit, we’ll have to play the entertaining drama she has planned. Don’t worry. I will make sure no one ever thinks of framing my sister with poison again.”

    “Somehow, hearing you say that relieves me,” Dio said with a grin.

    “I have to go,” Raithion said, turning to leave.

    “Raith,” Soriel said, drawing his attention.

    Raithion paused, turning to look at her. She still stood next to Dio.

    They made an interesting picture.

    Soriel with her sweet beauty, jet black hair long to her waist, and a royal gold dress that shimmered in the afternoon light. Dio dressed in a long white royal coat with gold embroidery sat in an armchair facing Raithion. They looked perfect together, but their union was weak. Dio needed more strength to protect his new wife.

    “Visit us often,” Soriel said. “I missed you these last few days.”

    “I’ll try,” Raithion said, winked at her then left.

    He was in a rush to seal the home Marius Doriel used to call home. He Raithion watched Haedor seal the gates of the Doriel Manor. His trusted legion officers had searched it thoroughly, making sure no one was inside. They left everything untouched, even the food was as just as Azula’s family had left it. Haedor supervised the officers nailing the gates shut and then painted the new Draeya Commandery Prince seal on the gates. A white lion’s head with the name Maener under it. Raithion stared at it with mixed feelings.

    The first time his father told him about the title, he hated it, but if it allowed him to protect Azula’s family, then he would use it to the fullest. Soft gasps from the spectators walking by caught his attention, though he did not turn to see who watched. Instead, he stood still, arms crossed, facing Haedor and the two legion officers as they worked on the door. Four legion officers guarded their horses a few feet away near the fence. The road was free for passersby, and a small crowd had gathered to watch Haedor and the legion officer work. It was only four o’clock in the afternoon.

    “Prince Draeya has taken control of the Sura home. I wonder if they found more evidence of the silver forging.”

    “I heard a palace maid died in the new Basilinna’s chambers.”

    Raithion’s attention focused on this comment. He had only been back hours in the capital. The case in the palace was ongoing, and he had not released any information on it. So, any stories on the streets were hearsay, or…someone wanting to complete their stage.

    “The Sura Clan may have tried to retaliate for their misfortune by hurting Her Majesty. She’s related to the Maenaer family after all. No wonder Prince Draeya has taken control of the Sura home.”

    Raithion frowned but he made no comment to the gossip. The case of the poisoned palace maid was complicated. Haedor finished with the seal and approached Raithion.

    “Should I follow up on these rumors?” Haedor asked.

    “No.” Raithion dropped his hands to the sides and turned to take in the curious crowd. He did not see anyone who stood out. “The Dowager Basilinna is trying to create a path for our investigation. Claiming the Sura Clan sent an assassin to retaliate against the Maenaer family for the clan’s betrayal. She’s trying to push the negative impact of the Sura Clan’s betrayal on our family.”

    Thinking about Azula’s anger when he last saw him, Raithion could almost agree with the Dowager Basilinna’s plan. However, she was not going to win this fight. Azula was not so vicious. Raithion also understood the young Sura Prince would not be bothered with revenge for the moment. Azula was probably absorbed with finding a way for the clan to survive on Sura Island. After all, all their grain came from the Lyria Kingdom. If the clan could not sail to the mainland to trade, they needed a new supplier for their grain.

    Shaking his head, Raithion gave the sealed door one last glance, then urged Haedor to their horses. The team of legion officers who now followed Raithion also mounted their horses.

    “Where to, Your Highness?” Haedor asked.

    “We’ll need to conclude the case of the belladonna-poisoned palace maid fast. I need to control the inner palace to protect Little Bird. Get everyone working, through the night if we have to,” Raithion said.

    ***

    Back in the commandery offices, Raithion looked around the large rectangular office and at his massive desk, which left no place for anyone to sit. He motioned to Haedor, and they got to work rearranging furniture. The massive desk was taken out and replaced with a long worktable that Raithion placed against a wall near the windows. He left the large chair in place and added a smaller desk where he could work on reports. A secondary table was moved in, along with six chairs and a bench, which was placed at the large worktable.

    Satisfied with the office, Raithion began reviewing the reports already waiting for him. The Commandery operated under the Palace Military Office. Raithion called in the owners of the reports and listened to multiple briefings on cases in Genad City. Some small and straightforward, others larger and tied to influential people in the capital.

    Raithion frowned. It looked like his father had placed him in an intelligence hub. The Palace Military Office was more powerful than the minister of defense’s office. It had information about everything that happened within the capital.

    It looked like Dio had prepared himself in the fight against his court officials. Unfortunately, without a powerful ally and force to back him, he could not execute his ideas without turning into a tyrant. His luck was good as he had then met Thanir Maenaer, delivered with convenience by the old Basileus. Yet, Raithion could only think that his father had quite a keen fighting spirit.

    His father was truly cunning, Raithion decided.

    “Your Highness.”

    Raithion looked up from the last report to find Lieutenant Volker from this morning standing at the door. Raithion urged him into the room with a nod.

    Volker came in, followed by three of his colleagues. They had three people in custody. Two women, one young in her teens and the other older in her sixties; the third person was a man dressed in palace guard uniform.

    “Continue,” Raithion said to Volker, who urged the three people to stand before Raithion’s desk.

    “The girl and her mother are relatives of the girl who died,” Volker said, and Raithion noticed the young girl wince and the mother bite back a sob. The palace guard placed a comforting arm on the older woman, his jaw gritted as though enduring the worst.

    “What is the girl’s name?” Raithion asked, nodding to a scribe, who was sorting out reports at the worktable, to move closer with a pen and start a new report.

    “The palace maid’s name is Eden Kata. She is the daughter of Deni and Lois Kata. The older lady is Lois. Her husband, Deni, died seven years ago. Eden is the older sister of Cherry Kata. The girl is Cherry.” Volker turned to the palace guard. “Eden was engaged to Palace Guard Fidias Pallas. Eden entered the palace four days ago. Cherry, you tell His Highness what you told me.”

    The girl held on to her mother’s hand as she faced Raithion and spoke in a trembling voice.

    “Eden was training to be a lady-in-waiting for Lady Naeri Ajai. The Dowager Basilinna even had her learn all of Lady Naeri’s favorite foods. Eden said that the Dowager Basilinna thought Lady Naeri would be the next Basilinna,” Cherry said. “Eden was disappointed when Lady Naeri was said to be marrying into the Commandery Prince’s household. Four days ago, she entered the palace to report to the Dowager Basilinna. She hoped to be allowed to leave the palace and return home.”

    “Why?” Raithion asked. “Just because she trained for Lady Naeri doesn’t mean she couldn’t serve Princess Soriel.”

    Cherry glanced at her mother, then at Fidias.

    Fidias dropped to his knees before the desk. Raithion sighed and urged Volker to help him up, but Fidias refused.

    “Your Highness, Eden and I were promised to marry. She was twenty and had agreed to marry me and start a family. We planned to leave the capital in a month and live on my plot in Naga State, where my family grows rice. She died before we had the chance. Your Highness, please help us seek justice.”

    Raithion nodded and signaled Volker to help Fidias stand. “We are working on it. Now, what time did she enter the palace?”

    “In the morning, the day before Princess Soriel moved into Rose Hall,” Fidias said. “She was to meet the Head of the Palace Maids to get her state registration and a release from palace employ. We planned to meet in the afternoon, but I was called to guard Princess Soriel at the Maenaer Manor. I left Eden a message at the gate. Princess Soriel moved into the palace the next day.”

    Fidias thought for a moment, then continued. “I went to her mother’s place after work to plan our move to Naga State. We didn’t know it was Eden who died until the Commandery legion officers came looking for a missing palace maid.”

    Raithion nodded and looked up to see Haedor returning. “Ask someone to bring the Head of the Palace Maids. I have questions for her,” Raithion said to Haedor, who left the office.

    “Mr. Pallas, did you check with the palace gates if Eden received your message?” Raithion asked.

    “No,” Fidias said. “I left the Maenaer Manor and went home. Today, Lieutenant Volker brought us in a hurry. I did not stop to ask at the palace gates.”

    “Volker, go see if the message is still there,” Raithion said.

    Volker hurried out. Raithion invited Eden’s family to sit at the table with six chairs, and a scribe brought them cups of water. Thirty minutes later, Volker returned with Fidias’s message still sealed in its envelope.

    “Should we open it?” the scribe asked.

    “No,” Raithion said. “Keep it sealed and record the officer who handed it to Volker.”

    Haedor returned with the Head of the Palace Maids soon after. She was a tall woman, dressed in a deep blue uniform of long skirts and a fitted bodice with intricate silver embroidery on the wrists and collar. A leather belt was tied at her waist, where a round silver medallion hung identifying her station. She nodded her head in greeting when she stood before Raithion.

    “Palace Head Chalia greets Commandery Prince Draeya,” she said, her tone full of authority.

    “Did you meet Eden in the morning two days before she was discovered dead?” Raithion asked, studying her expression.

    “Yes, Your Highness,” Chalia said.

    “What did you discuss?”

    “She wanted to leave the palace and gain a withdrawal from her contract,” Chalia answered.

    “Did you grant her the withdrawal?” Raithion asked.

    Chalia clasped her hands tight and took a small step back. She bit her lip, and Raithion narrowed his gaze.

    “Did you allow her to withdraw?” Raithion asked again.

    “Y-yes, Your Highness,” Chalia said, the anxiety in her voice unmistakable.

    Haedor led a team of palace scribes into the commandery office. They each held a pile of ledgers with lists of the palace maids. They got to work arranging the ledgers on the worktable and sorting them with unparalleled efficiency.

    “Lady Chalia,” Raithion said evenly, “I will warn you once. Lying to me is the same as helping the culprit. Eden was murdered with belladonna. If you killed her or helped the person who did, I’ll arrest you regardless of whom you serve in the inner palace.”

    Chalia gasped and took two steps back. Volker stopped her with a hand on her shoulder and pushed her into a chair as the scribes combed through the records. Finally, one found the ledger recording withdrawals and the issuance of certificates of leave and settlements for service.

    “Your Highness, there is a record of Eden being issued a certificate of leave,” the scribe reported, bringing the ledger to Raithion. The scribe arranged the ledger on the table and pointed at the column with the date. It was written the day after Soriel found Eden in her chambers. The last column was signed “Chalia Leas, Head of the Palace Maids.”

    Raithion thanked the scribe and placed the ledger with the letter from the gate.

    “Lady Chalia, why would you sign the certificate of leave two days after Eden had died?” Raithion asked, finding Chalia watching him warily.

    “Because…” Chalia began, then stopped. “I—I thought I’d get in trouble for refusing her leave until the end of the year. So… I—”

    “Why would you refuse to give Eden her leave until the end of the year?” Raithion asked, noting Fidias’s angry expression at the side table.

    “You seem to have no answers for me,” Raithion said, as he lifted the ledger on the table. “There was no reason to sign this ledger if you wanted to wait until the end of the year.”

    Raithion looked at Haedor. “Find Kailu in the inner palace. Search Lady Chalia’s quarters. Bring everything you think is of interest in her quarters. Have Kailu detain anyone who works close with Lady Chalia.”

    Haedor left, and in minutes, his team started bringing in items from Chalia’s quarters. Soon, the scribes needed to move the ledgers away as the worktable filled with boxes from Chalia’s quarters.

    Raithion got up from his chair, noting Chalia’s wary gaze as he walked by her and started perusing the items on the table.

    He paused by three sturdy wooden boxes. He opened them, one by one, and found a considerable stash of gold denaris. He lifted one gold denari and studied the imperial stamp on its surface before he turned to look at Chalia.

    “Quite a fortune for a palace maid, even one so high-ranked,” the recording scribe murmured beside him. “Strange, but these denari are only given to palace staff who have left service. Why so many?”

    Raithion smirked as he held on to one gold denari and sealed the three boxes. He asked the scribe to move them to his desk, next to the ledger and Fidias’s letter. He kept walking down and found a box filled with a wide collection of jewelry, including an array of hairpins with decorative flowers.

    Raithion turned to look at Chalia again. She wore her palace uniform, but her dark hair was held in a secure ponytail, and a pink hairpin with an elaborate array of flowers. She looked like she enjoyed decorative hairpins.

    “Fidias, bring Cherry closer,” Raithion said, turning to Eden’s family. He opened the box with jewelry wide and stepped away, as Fidias, Cherry, and Eden’s mother came to stand by the worktable. “Look at these and tell me if you recognize anything.”

    Raithion studied Chalia, who was wringing her hands on her lap. She sat with her shoulders squared; save for the wringing of her hands, there was no other outward indication that this moment was bothering her.

    A soft gasp from Cherry was all he needed to confirm his suspicion. He turned to find Cherry holding a hairpin.

    “This belongs to my big sister. She wore it the morning she left home,” Cherry said, tears filling her eyes.

    “Are you sure?” Raithion asked. “There could be duplicates, and she might have bought a similar one in the market.”

    “I can’t mistake it,” Cherry said, offering the hairpin with both hands. “The pin has my sister’s name engraved on the back. I saw it when I helped her put it on that day.”

    Raithion nodded and took the hairpin and studied it. Sure enough, Cherry was right. Eden’s name was engraved on the inner side of the bronze pin.

    “You were never going to let Eden leave, were you, Chalia?” Raithion asked, turning to the Head of the Palace Maids. Clasping his hands behind his back, he glanced at the boxes with gold on his desk. “In fact, I’m afraid all the maids who wanted a certificate of leave have ended up the same way as Eden.”

    “Your Highness, I don’t understand why you want to frame me,” Chalia spoke up, her eyes filled with anger.

    “Oh,” Raithion said with a soft chuckle. “We’ll see. Haedor, call the doctor from the healing clinic in the palace, the coroner, and…” Raithion studied Chalia, who was now watching him with wary eyes. “The baker in the palace. The one who makes pastry for the inner palace. Meet us in the main court. Tell Kailu to take the ones close to Chalia there too.”

    “Yes, Your Highness,” Haedor said, and left to complete the task.

    “Lieutenant Volker, I have a task for you. It involves meeting the Basileus. Can you do it?” Raithion asked.

    Volker swallowed hard and then saluted with determination.

    “Yes, sir.”

    “Good man. Ask the Basileus to call a court meeting in the Imperial Hall. Invite the Dowager Basilinna and Princess Sanan, as well as the heads of all ministries.”

    Volker nodded and turned to leave.

    Raithion smiled at Chalia.

    “I only have one more question for you,” Raithion said. “What happens to you when the palace ushers in a new Basilinna?”

    Chalia shivered, and her fingers tightened on her lap. She would not meet Raithion’s gaze, so he turned to the scribe, who stepped forward to answer the question.

    “The appointment of a new Basilinna brings a change in the Palace Maid Office,” the scribe said. “The Basilinna is expected to audit and reshuffle staff according to performance. The only exceptions are the two palace maids under the Dowager Basilinna and the Grand Dowager Basilinna. Everyone else rotates or moves to new imperial residences. Some may even leave palace service.”

    “So, Lady Chalia was likely to lose her position,” Raithion said.

    “Perhaps,” the scribe replied. “The palace runs on merit. Anyone who performs well is rewarded.”

    “Of course.” Raithion nodded. “Thank you. Have your team move all the evidence on the worktable to the main court hall.”

    ***

    Gesi Ajai entered the Imperial Hall with a yawn. It was almost nine o’clock at night. He had no idea what madness had seized Basileus Dio to summon the court so late. He walked down the aisle formed by tables and chairs arranged for the ministers, passed the Ministry of Agriculture’s position, and took the empty table where the Minister of Finance used to sit, at the front right of the hall.

    Gesi sat, his gaze landing on Raithion Maenaer, Commandery Prince Draeya, who sat on the chairs reserved for the Palace Military Office at the very front, near the throne dais. Raithion wore a long dark coat; his dark trousers disappeared into heavy boots. His dark shirt bore silver and gold embroidery at the collar. Raithion shifted, and Gesi froze when he caught sight of the cuffs of the long dark coat. The cuffs were encircled with an intricate white lion embroidery, the new seal granted to the Draeya Prince.

    Gesi was caught between awe and jealousy. His house had no crest or title. Yet, the Maenaer family now had a Basilinna and a prince who would later take on his father’s marquis title. No, he frowned. Thanir Maenaer would be made a duke when his daughter married Dio. Shaking his head, Gesi let out a soft sigh. Some people woke up with the sun shining straight into their eyes, no struggle needed.

    Behind Raithion stood a tall, bulky man with an intimidating aura. Gesi wondered if Raithion collected such men to appear formidable.

    The table before Raithion was laden with items, including ledgers and wooden boxes.

    Gesi wondered what the new Commandery Prince was doing in the imperial court in the middle of the night, just hours after arriving in the city. It was telling that the room was filled with ministers; no one had refused the Basileus’s summons.

    Soon, the hall’s administrative scribes called for order. Gesi was shocked when Dio entered with Princess Soriel beside him, followed by Dio’s grandmother and Princess Sanan, with Dowager Basilinna Olneth behind them.

    Raithion stood, a fluid movement without a wasted gesture, as he greeted Dio with respect. His right hand pressed to his chest. The scribes waited for Dio and his family to settle, then turned to Raithion with varying levels of acknowledgment.

    Dio stood and smiled briefly at Raithion, then addressed the ministers.

    “We have called this meeting at the request of Commandery Prince Draeya. Proceed,” Dio said, and settled in his chair.

    Beside him, Princess Soriel sat with all the grace of a noblewoman, though her gaze watched her brother with interest.

    “Draeya Prince, why call a court meeting so late in the evening?” Firo Briale, the Imperial Tutor, asked, irritably.

    Raithion rose and, ignoring Briale, turned to Princess Sanan. “Two days ago, Princess Sanan asked General Haedor to find who murdered the palace maid found in Princess Soriel’s chambers. You asked me to bring answers to the court, and I have,” he said, his tone quiet and authoritative.

    “Draeya Prince is as efficient as the stories claim,” Princess Sanan said softly. “If you have answers, please share them with the court so we may be at ease.”

    Raithion thanked her with a nod and stepped away from his table.

    “Before we begin, I would like to ask one of the officers working in the treasury office to approach the dais,” Raithion said.

    Gesi tried not to frown as panic hit him. Was this about the counterfeit silver? He glanced at Dio, but the Basileus was focused on Soriel’s right hand. Dio had laced their fingers, smiling as he squeezed her hand.

    A finance officer hurried down the aisle to Raithion.

    Raithion handed him a gold denari. “What are you holding?”

    “A denari crafted by the Treasury,” the man said.

    “Are they available to the general public?”

    “No,” the officer said. “These are special gold denari given to those who leave the palace after their service. They can be kept at home or exchanged at the bureau. Small ones like this exchange for five hundred common gold denari. There is a larger size worth one thousand.”

    Raithion whistled and took the coin back. “So, they’re very valuable.”

    “Yes. Everyone who works in the palace hopes to receive a settlement in these for years of service.”

    “And years of service determine how many you get?”

    “Yes, Your Highness,” the finance officer said. “The longer you work, the more you get.”

    “Very good.” Raithion shook the officer’s hand. “Thank you. Scribes, record that information. I hope everyone remembers it.”

    Raithion asked the finance officer to sit at his chair, which surprised the man. The finance officer tried to decline, but the bulky man who had been guarding Raithion pushed him into the chair.

    Gesi Ajai hid his amusement and returned his attention to Raithion.

    Raithion faced the court. “Two days ago, Princess Soriel found a dead palace maid in her chambers, hidden in the closet. Rose Hall lost confidence in palace security. I’m here to restore it, with Basileus Dio’s permission.”

    “Continue,” Dio said.

    Raithion nodded. “We have identified the palace maid despite an orchestrated effort to conceal her origin.”

    He raised his right hand to beckon someone at the main door.

    Gesi Ajai turned in his seat to see who the Draeya Prince was inviting. He had to hide his surprise when he saw Eden’s mother and sister. He had been looking for Eden to join Naeri’s entourage as she prepared to enter Raithion’s house.

    What the hell were they doing here? Oh no, was Eden the dead palace maid? Unable to hide his frown, Gesi Ajai shifted his attention to Olneth, who sat next to the Grand Dowager undisturbed.

    Gesi looked at Raithion and cursed under his breath when he saw Raithion watching him.

    ***

    Raithion noted Gesi Ajai’s small movements but had no time to dwell on them. Eden’s family reached the front. They were nervous, especially Cherry, who clung to her mother’s hand and avoided looking at Basileus Dio.

    “The deceased palace maid’s name is Eden Kata,” Raithion said. “She is the daughter of Deni and Lois Kata. She was sister to Cherry Kata. Eden was engaged to Palace Guard Fidias Pallas.”

    Raithion bowed his head to the family. “We are sorry for your loss.”

    To his surprise, Soriel also stood and bowed her head. Because she did, Dio did as well. Chairs scraped as the ministers echoed, “We are sorry for your loss.”

    When the room settled, Raithion continued, noting Lois weeping into her handkerchief as Fidias wrapped an arm around her shoulders. So, he continued, giving her time to calm down.

    “Eden Kata died of belladonna poisoning delivered in a peach blossom pastry and a cup of tea,” Raithion said.

    “Who fed her this poison?” Dio asked, leaning forward.

    “The Head of the Palace Maid Office, Chalia,” Raithion said, silencing the room. “I will provide the evidence that has led to this conclusion now.”

    “Five days ago, Eden left Minister Gesi Ajai’s home, where she was training under Lady Ajai on how to run a household,” Raithion said, ignoring Gesi’s pointed look at the mention of his house.

    Raithion moved to lift a book from the table where the finance officer sat. It had come with items collected by Lieutenant Volker from Eden’s quarters in her mother’s home. He held the book up for the court to see.

    “This book contains Eden’s careful notes on how to make various soaps and sauces. It is signed by Lady Ajai to mark Eden’s completion of her training. I submit this to the court as evidence.”

    Dio nodded to his scribes in the hall to take on the task. Raithion gave the book to one of them, who moved it to Dio’s large desk.

    “Eden returned home, met her sister and mother, and stayed with them. Palace Guard Fidias Pallas visited and gave her a hairpin with peonies to propose marriage and a move to Naga State. She accepted.”

    Soriel gasped next to Dio and shook her head at Eden’s misfortune.

    Raithion turned to Fidias.

    “Mr. Pallas, I would ask you to pick out the pin you gifted to Eden from the jewelry box on the table.”

    Fidias nodded and walked to the jewelry box on Raithion’s table. He pulled out the hairpin with peony flowers and held it up for the court to see. It was not expensive, but it was elaborate. The crafter of the pin had made the pink peony in full bloom mounted on a bronze metal hairpin.

    “Can you tell the court any other features that might be on this pin?” Raithion asked.

    “I asked the jeweler who made it to engrave Eden’s name on the inner side of the pin,” Fidias said.

    “Thank you. I submit this hairpin, as well as the jewelry box it was found in, to the court as evidence,” Raithion said.

    Dio nodded in agreement, and a scribe carried the jewelry box to his table.

    “What else did you plan with Eden, Mr. Pallas?” Raithion asked.

    Fidias swallowed hard and said, “Since we both work for the palace, she said she would ask for a withdrawal first. She would then arrange for the family to move as I worked on my withdrawal from the palace guard office. She promised to ask for a certificate of leave from the head of the palace maids the next morning.”

    Raithion nodded.

    “The next morning Eden wore her engagement pin and entered the palace. According to her fiancé and family, she intended to apply for a certificate of withdrawal from the Head of the Palace Maids. So, she made her way into the inner palace. The palace guards at each entrance have her signing in.” Raithion walked to his table and got the ledger records the scribes had found for him. “I submit the two signatures Eden left at the outer palace entrance and the inner palace entrance on these ledgers into evidence.”

    Dio’s scribes took custody of the ledgers and placed them on his desk.

    “At this point we establish that Eden entered the inner palace to meet the Head of the Palace Maids,” Raithion said. “Mr. Pallas, did you see Eden after she entered the palace?”

    “No, Your Highness,” Fidias said, voice shaking slightly. “I was assigned to a shift at the Maenaer Manor to guard Princess Soriel before her move into the palace. I left a message for Eden at the outer gate so she wouldn’t wait for me.”

    Raithion moved to his desk and lifted the envelope Volker had retrieved. “Is this the letter?”

    “Yes, Your Highness,” Fidias said with a nod.

    “Is it open?” Raithion asked, handing the envelope to Fidias.

    “No, Your Highness,” Fidias said.

    “Thank you.” Raithion took the unopened envelope and held it up. “This is evidence that Eden did not leave the inner palace. There is no record of her signing out, and since all palace staff leave through one gate, the gate where Fidias Pallas left a letter for his fiancée, a letter that is still intact, it is safe to say that Eden Kata did not leave the palace. I submit this envelope as evidence to the court.”

    Raithion handed the envelope to Dio’s scribe. Then he urged Fidias and his family to sit on chairs arranged behind his desk by Haedor.

    “At this point, I’d like to bring Lady Chalia Leas to court,” Raithion said.

    “Permission granted,” Dio said.

    Haedor left the hall and returned minutes later with Lieutenant Volker. They led Lady Chalia into the hall. She was still in her palace uniform, and they had not made an attempt to arrest her, so her hands were free. The expression on her face was filled with pride, as though Raithion had only called her for a simple inquiry.

    The doors stayed open, and Raithion smiled when he saw his best friend, Kailu, lead three palace maids in blue uniform, the baker, the coroner, and the healer into the room. Kailu was dressed in a neat long burgundy coat, a white shirt, and dark trousers that disappeared into shiny black boots. His brown hair was in a tight ponytail, and he had a handsome, dandy face. The sword hanging on his left hip was decorative, as he had come from the inner palace, but Raithion knew Kailu was as skilled as he was with a sword.

    “Basileus Dio,” Kailu said at the dais, hand to chest.

    “Kailu,” Dio said with a small smile. “At ease.”

    “Thank you,” Kailu said, then grinned at Raithion. “Your Highness.”

    Raithion winced at the title but nodded.

    “Lady Chalia,” Raithion said, nodding to the woman who now stood before Basileus Dio. “Do you know Eden Kata?”

    “Yes,” Chalia said. “She was a palace maid working under the Dowager Basilinna Olneth.”

    Murmurs rose in the court, and Raithion moved to his table, where he retrieved two ledgers.

    “Lady Chalia, I am accusing you of murdering Eden Kata,” Raithion said. “I will provide evidence. You will have the chance to prove your innocence in the Justice Ministry.”

    “Prince Draeya, I still don’t understand why you want to frame me for Eden’s death,” Chalia said.

    Raithion ignored her protest and instead asked, “Lady Chalia, are you in charge of all the palace maids in the palace?”

    “I manage the palace maids in the inner palace,” Chalia said. “The outer palace has its own office.”

    “So, Eden Kata and all her colleagues in the inner palace refer to you in all matters.”

    “Yes.”

    “Did you write in these ledgers?” Raithion asked, handing Chalia the two red ledgers he held.

    “Yes,” Chalia said after she looked through the two red books with neatly printed words. “These are all active maids, and this one has a list of all those who have left the palace.”

    “Good,” Raithion nodded to Dio’s scribe. “I submit these ledgers as evidence of Chalia’s crime.”

    Chalia frowned as the scribe took the ledgers to Dio’s table. Raithion was not surprised when Dio picked up the ledgers to read them.

    “Why are they evidence?” Dio asked as he went through the lists of young women who worked in the palace.

    “We’ll get to that in a moment. I would like to ask the inner palace baker a few questions.” Raithion nodded to Kailu, who urged the baker, still dressed in his white tunic and trousers with a white apron tied around his hips.

    “What’s your name?” Raithion asked the baker.

    “Hagas Jodan. I’m the inner palace baker.”

    “Do you work closely with Lady Chalia?”

    “Yes,” Hagas said. “She brings requests made by the ladies living in the inner palace. We plan meals and seasonal pastries.”

    “Anything else?” Raithion asked.

    Hagas frowned, then nodded. “Once in a while, Lady Chalia asks to use the kitchen for special requests from the inner palace.”

    “What kind of requests?”

    “Her specialty is fruit cakes,” Hagas said. “She’s the best at making fruit cakes in shapes. The most popular is the peach blossom pastry. So, the ladies in the inner palace often ask her for special fruit cakes. I take the hours off as she’s working to get more ingredients or complete unfinished tasks around the bakery.”

    “When was the last time this special request happened?” Raithion asked.

    Hagas counted on his fingers, then raised his right index finger. “Four days ago.”

    “Four days ago,” Raithion repeated. “Princess Soriel found Eden dead two days ago. Eden entered the palace two days prior. So, the morning Eden came to the palace, Lady Chalia used the bakery to make peach blossom pastries. What time?”

    “In the morning. I had to visit the market to get a fresh bushel of apples to make apple pie for Basileus Dio’s midday meal. Peach blossom pastries are baked in two hours; by the time I returned, she was done. She took them to the inner palace in a box, as usual,” Hagas said.

    “Thank you,” Raithion said, inviting the baker to sit with Eden’s family.

    He met the coroner’s gaze and nodded. “Now, the coroner who examined Eden, Dain Liarel, will tell us how she died.”

    Dain stepped forward, neatly dressed in a black tunic, trousers, and boots, with a brown coat fastened by three silver buttons. His hair was cut short to his shoulders and brushed. He looked quite presentable as he faced Basileus Dio.

    Dain nodded to Basileus Dio in respect before he started speaking.

    “Eden Kata died of poisoning. She ate a peach blossom cake laced with belladonna. The contents of her stomach showed that the belladonna was ingested through the cake and the tea she drank.”

    “Could she have died any other way?” Raithion asked.

    “No,” Dain said. “There were scratches on the backs of her legs and heels, indicating she was dragged after she was poisoned. Bruises around the upper chest, under the arms, and on the back show she was tied with a rope and either lifted or dangled. These injuries occurred after death. I assume they were incurred as she was placed in Princess Soriel’s closet.”

    A sob filled the room. Eden’s mother cried, and Lieutenant Volker helped her out through a side entrance.

    “Thank you, Dain,” Raithion said.

    Dain produced the coroner’s report from an inner pocket in his jacket and handed it to Dio’s scribe, then sat next to Eden’s little sister.

    Three palace maids who worked closely with Chalia were brought forward. Kailu positioned them beside Chalia and met Raithion’s gaze, nodding.

    Raithion crossed the room and lifted one of the wooden boxes filled with Treasury gold denari and placed it on Dio’s table. He opened the box and gasps rippled through the court. Raithion aligned the three boxes next to each other, placing the precious gold denaris on display.

    “Whoa, so many,” Soriel said, her eyes wide.

    Raithion met Soriel’s gaze and winked and she sat up with anticipation. Dio did the same, and it suddenly felt like he was staring at two eager puppies. Raithion shook his head and turned to the officer he had given his seat. He beckoned the man to Dio’s table.

    “I need you to verify these gold denaris,” Raithion said.

    The finance officer nodded and checked on the coins at the top in each wooden box. He then turned to Dio.

    “These are all authentic gold denaris issued by the palace treasury,” the officer said. “It is rare to see so many in boxes like this.”

    “Thank you,” Raithion invited the man to sit, and the officer hurried back to his seat at the table.

    “Lady Chalia, as you’ve heard, these gold denaris are very precious,” Raithion said. “The Commandery legion officers found these boxes hidden in a hole beneath a tile in your chambers. How did you accumulate so many?”

    “They came from maids who wanted to thank me for taking care of them in the palace,” Chalia said. “They were kind as they left and shared their severance.”

    “Really.” Raithion moved back to Dio’s table and overturned the jewelry box with Eden’s pin beside the gold. “Do these all belong to you?”

    “Y-yes,” Chalia said.

    “Including this one?” He held up Eden’s hairpin.

    “No,” Chalia said, shaking her head. “Eden gave it to me because she was leaving. It was a gift of friendship.”

    Murmurs started again in the hall, and Raithion let them simmer for a moment, before he lifted the pin again.

    “Do you know what this pin meant to Eden?” Raithion asked.

    Chalia stared at him with wide eyes.

    “This hairpin was a betrothal gift from Palace Guard Pallas. Mr. Pallas even had the artisan engrave her name on the pin. Do you believe she would give away something so precious? I don’t think she gave it to you. You must have taken it from her.”

    “No!” Chalia screamed, startling the room. “Eden gave it to me!”

    Finally, a crack in the mask, Raithion chuckled and nodded. His gaze shifted to the three maids standing beside Chalia.

    “Lord Kailu, have someone search the chambers where these ladies live. I bet they have a stash of gold denaris disbursed by the treasury hidden. Bring anything else you find that is useful,” Raithion said.

    “Raithion,” Dio said softly. “What are you getting at?”

    “I need one more clue to close the net and everything will make sense,” Raithion said, as Kailu ran from the court.

    “Your Highness,” one of the girls began, but Raithion shook his head. “We’ll wait.”

    Gesi Ajai leaned forward. “Draeya Prince, you’ve painted an interesting picture this evening. Are you suggesting Lady Chalia murdered Eden Kata for a specific reason other than greed?”

    “Whatever the reason,” Raithion said, pacing around Chalia and her three accomplices, “my goal is to ensure this never happens again. Do you know what is most frightening when you rely on others for your meals?”

    “An assassin?” Gesi asked.

    “No, a trusted friend’s betrayal,” Raithion said, thinking of Azula holding a dagger in the middle of a street, asking him if his people could trust him. Suddenly, Azula’s passionate voice filled his head.

    Twelve families are mourning the loss of a breadwinner in their homes. The pain of this loss hurts us all. So, when you walk onto our ship and promise to protect, we’ll take your word seriously. That’s who we are. The Sura takes the promise of protection with solemn belief. If you won’t be able to meet us on the same level, then it will be better if you walk away.

    At the same time, the memory of Azula dressed in white robes, his hair an odd dirty black color, clutching his father’s ashes in his arms, tears tracking down his face pushed through, chasing the happier memories away.

    “Get lost!” Azula shouted at him as he stood at the entrance into his father’s house. “You broke your promises. I thought you were going to protect us, but instead…instead—

    The sight of Azula’s tears sliding down his handsome face had torn him up inside, still did even now. “Those blades I gave you, consider them blades of doom. Draeya General, you wield nothing but blades of ashes. I never want to see you again. Get lost!”

    Raithion swallowed the bitterness that filled his mouth at the memory of Azula’s pain. All that pain was caused by the man now daring to ask him questions. He turned away from Gesi Ajai and faced the ministers of the court.

    “It is very painful when you trust someone with your family, their lives, their well-being, and then they stab you in the back and bring disaster,” Raithion said, barely able to hide his anger. “There’s no cure for such a wound.”

    Gesi stared at Raithion for a full minute, then turned to look at Olneth.

    “Draeya Prince are you saying there are friends who would betray Basileus Dio in the palace?” the prime minister asked.

    “Oh, did I say that?” Raithion asked lightly. “I’m pointing out how the ‘friendship’ between Eden and Chalia brought us here.”

    When Kailu returned, it was thirty minutes later, and he looked shaken to the core. The scribes following him carried three bags filled with gold denaris.

    “The gold was found in holes under their beds, similar to Lady Chalia’s hiding spot,” Kailu said, glaring at the young girls standing next to Chalia. “There is more. We searched the compound where their house is and found an enclosed yard hidden in tall trees. It looked overgrown, but when we followed a small path, we found a sealed well. There are bones in the well. I invite the coroner to visit there.”

    Dain got up and excused himself, leaving with one of the legion officers.

    Kailu handed one of the gold bags to Raithion. Raithion moved to upend the contents on Dio’s table. Next to the gold, belladonna flowers fell out.

    “Stop.” The healer hurried up the steps to stop Raithion from touching them. “Those are poisonous. They are belladonna flowers, mixed with dried berries. It’s very poisonous, Draeya Prince. Don’t touch.”

    The healer took a handkerchief from his pocket and carefully returned the belladonna to the bags with the gold, securing the cloth bags so that no one else would make a mistake.

    “The poison is found,” Raithion said, glancing at the girls next to Chalia. He suspected they were suspicious of each other. One of them had placed the poison in the gold to keep others from stealing.

    “You are indeed responsible for Eden’s death,” Raithion said, looking at the girls and Chalia.

    The three maids fell to their knees, shaking their heads. Chalia remained standing, her fingers bunched her skirts tight.

    “Which of you will gain leniency for the crime?” Raithion asked, standing in front of the girls. He watched them for a moment, then crouched before the one who trembled most.

    “Why did you kill Eden Kata?” he asked, his tone leaving no room for hesitation.

    “Because she was l-leaving the palace,” the girl said. “Lady Chalia said no one would miss her. She was getting so much money from her certificate of leave. Chalia promised to share her payout. We were just waiting for when the investigation ended.”

    “Have you done this before?” Raithion asked, then narrowed his gaze at her. “Don’t lie. We’re already at this point. If you want to help yourself, you need to tell the truth. What is your name?”

    “Viessa Beidi. I entered the palace two years ago. I only started working for Lady Chalia six moons ago. She assigned me to her team when Kena, the girl who was to leave six months ago, applied for her leave. It wasn’t until later that I understood what happens to any of the maids who ask for leave. Especially those without family waiting for them.”

    “What happens to the girls without family?” Raithion asked.

    “They die,” Viessa said with a sob. “I heard it started when one of the girls died of an illness. Lady Chalia was given her severance money to disburse to her next of kin, but when she found out the girl had no family, she discovered she could keep the gold denaris with her. From then on, any one of us who dies without a clear next of kin, she took the severance pay. For the ones who want to leave, but have no visible ties, she decided to take matters into her own hands. She grows belladonna in a patch hidden in the thick forest in the closed off part of the compound where we stay. She bakes it into the peach blossom pastries. Our job is to make sure the girls disappear and are not found. It’s just that, it’s just that, Eden… Lady Chalia said that she had to die. She knew too much.”

    “Liar,” Chalia said, turning to slap Viessa before Kailu could stop her. “You’re making things up.”

    “I’m not making it up,” Viessa said, hysterical as she held on to her right cheek. “You said it was best to get rid of Princess Soriel by putting Eden’s body in her chambers. That way we would still have control of the inner palace. You said…”

    Raithion straightened up and met Chalia’s gaze. “Did you do this for the gold or under someone’s order?” Raithion asked Chalia.

    She stared at him, then scoffed, shaking her head. “You know I can’t say who asked me to put Eden in the Princess’s closet.”

    “I don’t need you to,” Raithion said with a small smile, holding her gaze until she gasped and fell to her knees.

    Raithion turned to Dio and Soriel.

    “You asked me why the list of palace maids is evidence,” Raithion said. “If you look at the last entry on the list of leaving maids, what does it say?”

    Dio opened the ledger, and Raithion hid a smile as Soriel looked at it with him. She pointed to where Chalia had signed her name.

    “It says ‘Eden Kata’ granted certificate of withdrawal,” Dio said. “The date is the day after Soriel discovered Eden in her closet. Chalia signed her name at the end. But… there is a red dot after the signature.”

    Raithion nodded and glanced at Chalia. “Can you count how many red dots are on that ledger?”

    Dio remained silent as he read the ledger, then Soriel started counting next to him. Her eyes widened when they reached close to fifty red dots.

    “So many,” Soriel said with a shocked whisper, her horrified gaze shifting to Olneth. “But… how could it go unnoticed?”

    Raithion nodded and looked at Chalia.

    “Someone kept you in place to clean up,” Raithion said, meeting Chalia’s wary gaze. “You worried that with Princess Soriel’s entry into the palace, your usefulness would end. You would no longer be able to collect your bounty as usual.”

    “I wasn’t wrong,” Chalia said, sounding tired as she let out a soft scoff. “Look, with this one discovery, you’ll clean out the palace service in one go. I doubt any of the old staff will survive the coming purge. I will say that you’ve really played a good one, Draeya Prince. Wiping us out in one big wave, you’ve really opened the stage for your sister.”

    “So, it seems,” Raithion said, hoping this would be enough of a painful lesson for the Dowager Basilinna. He turned to face Princess Sanan. “Princess Sanan, have I answered your question?”

    “Yes, Draeya Prince,” Sanan said, with a wide smile. “You’ve lit a bright, wide path for us to clean out the inner palace. I am very grateful to you.”

    “The case is laid out, and the culprit is accused,” Raithion said. “Basileus Dio, I seek justice for the Kata family and Eden’s fiancé.”

    “Certainly,” Dio said. “Chalia is under arrest for the murder of Eden Kata, along with Viessa and the two ladies next to her. Chalia and the three implicated maids are remanded to the Justice Ministry for arraignment at first light on charges including murder, conspiracy, and theft of palace treasury settlements. As of this moment, all the palace maids working in the palace are under the direct care of Princess Soriel. The new Basilinna will take charge, and all will answer to her without question.”

    Raithion brought his hand to his chest.

    “Draeya Prince,” Dio said. “The commandery office shall make sure that all the palace maids who have suffered under Chalia and her accomplices receive their honors and commendations, including Eden Kata and her family. I trust that you will make sure all the orders of redress to these families are carried out. Make sure the families affected receive the deceased’s effects, see to the rites, and restore dignity to the victims. My office will fund all Eden Kata’s funeral rites.”

    “I will make sure it is done, Your Majesty,” Raithion said.

    Dio took in a deep breath and stood up, facing the room. “Let every court official know, the crown shall remember, and repair injustice rendered. No servant of this court is disposable, and no crime within and outside these imperial halls is beyond the reach of light. Let it be known. Court is adjourned.”

    ****

    Two days later, Raithion stood with Soriel at the palace gates as they watched an elegant hearse drive out, heading to Eden’s home. Cherry and Fidias stopped before Raithion.

    “Thank you, Your Highness,” Fidias said to Raithion with a solemn nod. He was dressed all in white, just like Cherry, whose eyes were swollen from crying too much. “We would never have known what happened to her without your help.”

    “Here,” Raithion said, handing Fidias a small wooden box with Eden’s hairpin. “This should be returned to you.”

    “Thank you,” Fidias said.

    “These too.” Soriel handed Cherry a box filled with Eden’s severance pay from the treasury office. “I don’t know what the future holds, but I’m sure your sister would want you to live a good life. Take care of your mother, and if you ever need anything, you’ll find a small token inside that will help you come find me.”

    Cherry swallowed her tears back and nodded, unable to speak. The hearse was a distance away, so Raithion waved the carriage they had given to the family for their journey closer.

    “Alright, go so that you don’t delay the funeral,” Raithion said when the carriage stopped a few feet away.

    Lois was already inside the carriage, so Fidias helped Cherry into the carriage before he followed her in. Raithion closed the door for them and stepped back to stand next to Soriel. They watched the carriage leave in silence, then, when it was a distance away, Soriel gripped Raithion’s right arm.

    “How do you think Dio has managed to live in such a dangerous place for so long?” Soriel asked quietly, turning to look at the large white-stone palace, with its extensive gardens, arched entrances, and opulent furniture. “This is a nest filled with vipers.”

    “Are you afraid?” Raithion asked, patting her hand.

    “No,” Soriel said with a smirk. “You’ve always called me Little Bird. Days ago, I discovered that Dio’s Adertha Family uses a griffin as a crest. A legendary creature with the body of a lion and the head and wings of an eagle. So, if he is the lion, I will be the eagle. Eagles attack vipers. Raith, do you think I can peck the eyes out of the vipers in this palace?”

    “I think you can,” Raithion said with a small chuckle.

    “Then, support me as I do it,” Soriel said. “I have started cleaning out the palace maids. The ladies Mom assigned to me have taken control of the important parts: the kitchen, the warehouses with food, and housekeeping. At least we don’t have to worry about poison.”

    “Next is the administration office,” Raithion said. “The dowager will want to control the information you receive. Come on, I’ll show you something.”

    Raithion took her to the commandery office compound. At the back, where there were training grounds, Raithion stopped by a group of ten women in dark uniform. They turned and saluted when they saw him.

    “Meira, Vanya,” Raithion said, and two of the women stepped forward. “Greet your new master.”

    Soriel grinned as the two soldiers moved before her and lowered their heads.

    “Meira and Vanya run this unit,” Raithion said, handing Soriel a small whistle shaped like a bird. “The team will stay hidden and help you carry out any sensitive tasks. Don’t scare Dio with them. He is still the Basileus and may be wary of a Basilinna with a small army.”

    “I know what to do,” Soriel said, taking the whistle.

    “Meira will stay in the open, while Vanya in the shadows,” Raithion said. “They know how to reach me if you need me in an emergency.”

    “Okay,” Soriel grinned and leaned up to kiss his cheek. “You’re the best brother a girl could ask for.”

    Raithion hugged her for a moment, then let go and dismissed the team. Meira remained by Soriel’s side. She would be Soriel’s bodyguard from now on. He was about to head to the office when Haedor came running.

    “Lord Raith,” Haedor said, looking panicked. “Lady Maenaer says that if you don’t show up at the manor in the next hour, she will submit a protest to Basileus Dio.”

    Raithion frowned. “What will she be protesting about?”

    “Your wedding, Lord Raith. You forgot that you’re getting married to Lady Naeri. You’re supposed to get the bride,” Haedor said, reaching for Raithion’s left arm. “Excuse me, Princess Soriel, I have to get him back home.”

    “I’m not going,” Raithion said, refusing to move even when Haedor pulled on his arm. “She can deliver herself to the manor. Why do I have to act like I’m eager for her to enter my house?”

    “Your mother was sure that was what you would say,” Haedor said, scowling at him. “So, I’ll repeat what she said verbatim: ‘Raith, a groom should at least show up for the ceremony in their own house. If you embarrass me in front of our guests, I will make you kneel in the ancestral hall for ten days. See if I’m scared of a Basileus for keeping you away from your duties.’”

    Soriel laughed, and Raithion scowled at her.

    “Don’t scowl. It’s a happy day.” Soriel held his right hand and started leading him back to the palace exit. “Let’s go. I’ll take you home, big brother. My sister-in-law is coming to our Maenaer house. If you won’t collect her, we should at least meet her at the family hall for the ceremony.”

    Raithion grumbled and allowed his sister to lead him out of the palace. Haedor looked too relieved for his comfort. In a daze, Raithion soon found himself back at the manor. After an afternoon filled with unbearable preparation activities, the next morning dawned, and his wedding day arrived.

    His residence at the manor was separate from the main house, set directly behind it. It had already been arranged by his butler, Daron, and the two housekeepers, Aryn and her sister, Sira, with Sharia, Daron’s son, acting as a butler’s assistant. His mother pushed them into getting Raithion ready for his wedding. Since he had refused to collect the bride from Gesi Ajai’s home, he was to wait in the main hall and greet guests as they arrived.

    In a blink, Raithion stood in the main hall of the manor wearing a knee-length, fitted formal coat in the finest black brocade, featuring gold metallic embroidery at the shoulders and cuffs that caught the light with every shift. A stand collar framed his jaw, and ornamental front closures finished the coat. It was worn with tailored white trousers and matching boots with gold embroidery. His hair was brushed and left to fall down his back. Kailu and Haedor stood on each side of Raithion. They were witnesses to the marriage, but Raithion looked at them as wardens. His mother was afraid he would bolt from the hall, and she had placed his strongest legion officers next to him to keep him in check.

    Shaking his head, he tried not to sigh, but when the bride appeared at the entrance of the main hall, he took a step back, only to be stopped by Kailu and Haedor, who each placed a hand on his shoulders.

    Naeri’s family had gone all out. She was dressed in an embroidered two-piece red gown with a matching sheer veil; the full skirt and bodice worked in gold thread. Her wrists were decorated with gold bangles, and she walked slowly under the weight of her dress.

    Naeri made a beautiful bride, and when she smiled it was difficult to look away, but Raithion only felt a chain wrapping tightly around his heart when she looked at him. With each vow he made before the audience, the chain wound tighter.

    By the time Dio stood in the large hall to toast his wedding, Raithion was ready to drown his future in the taste of the most potent wine he could find. His thoughts were firmly focused on a Sura clan prince named Azula, whom he had never even gotten to kiss.

    ***

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

  • Updates

    June 2023 Updates

    I’ve been on an editing spree these past two months. I have loved going back to old work and rediscovering characters.  Now, I write this update because I’ve had to move my e-books from their usual platforms. One of the platforms I was using removed my work and wrote me a message about inappropriate content. I am not proud of the emotional turmoil that ensued. March 2023 was an unforgettable period of anxiety, and questioning the meaning of policies on sites, and life in general.

    Instead of fighting and haggling with decisions from platforms I do not own, I’ve decided to consolidate all my content on Kindle for ebooks, and on gayauthors.org/authors/lilansui for running chapters. GayAuthors.org has always been a welcoming home for all my content. If you can’t get into gayauthors.org for whatever reason, I will also post ongoing chapters on this site. Hopefully, keeping it to these tried-and-true sites will make my life easier.

    On a personal note, I’ve had a series of emotional ups and downs over this episode. I know it happens, people report books and content and mark it inappropriate. Policies on platforms kick in and voila! While I respect personal opinion, it sure has sent me on a crazy spiral. I considered removing all my work, or only using this website, even quitting all together. March was really hard to deal with. Thank goodness for my hubby, who suggested a re-edit and a decisive move. There is no easy way to deal with judgment from others. I know now that I can only shake it off, and march on. My stories will now live in these three platforms, until another crazy episode happens.

    So,the official platforms to find and read Suilan Lee Books and Ongoing Stories are here:

    Ongoing Chapters: gayauthors.org/author/lilansui/ /or here

    To Download e-books: Find them on Kindle

    The e-Book re-upload will take some time, but I will keep writing my other stories as I go. I apologize to anyone who is waiting for the next part in a story. I’ve not been in a place to continue, which is not a good enough excuse, but I’m seeing the light at the end of the tunnel.

    Be whole, be well. It always will get better.

  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 16-1

    Dante loved everything about the farmhouse in the middle of an apple orchard.

    From the kitchen filled with herbs growing in little pots on the window seal, the antique cooking range and the oven spelled into baking potatoes in the afternoon like clockwork.

    “What happens if I put in something else to bake?” Dante asked the first day when Tani pulled out a tray of four large baked potatoes. “Will it let me?”

    “It will,” Tani said. “This is Cale’s sense of humor. He thinks I will soon have potatoes growing in my stomach. I figure I have loved eating them so long, it is unlikely his thoughts will come to be.”

    “You and Cale sound close,” Dante said, as he sat at the kitchen table. He watched Tani pull out sour cream from the fridge.

    Tani found a bunch of chives from a vegetable holder on the counter and washed them. He chopped them on a board, then opened the sour cream container and got to work cutting open the baked potatoes. He took his time responding to Dante’s comment. Dante waited with patience.

    “Cale is family,” Tani said, as he found a tablespoon. He scooped sour cream and placed it on the top of the baked potato. Two scoops for each potato, then he sprinkled chopped chives on he sour cream.

    “He was assigned to watch over me when I was sentenced to stay in the mortal realm,” Tani said. “Through the centuries, we have come to understand each other better. Cale’s the master of calamities and he has ended up being the one to understand mine best. He helped me through the worst of it.”

    Dante absorbed Tani’s answer with a nod. His heart heavy at the thought of the pain Tani must have lived through to find comfort in the god of calamities.

    “Don’t think about it,” Tani said, bringing a plate with two baked potatoes and placing it on the table before him. “Cale is a friend. Don’t over think it.”

    Dante nodded, and accepted the spoon Tani handed him. He used the spoon to mix the sour cream and the chives with the soft insides of the potato. He took a bite of the result and smiled at Tani.

    “It’s delicious.”

    Tani smiled, sliding soft fingers over Dante’s cheek. He went to the counter and returned with two glasses of orange juice, and his own plate. He pushed the salt and black pepper shakers closer to Dante.

    “What would you like to bake in the magic oven?” Tani asked, with a wink.

    “Chicken,” Dante said.

    “Mm,” Tani nodded taking a bite of his own baked potato. He let out a soft moan of appreciation at the taste and Dante placed his spoon down to stare.

    The joy on Tani’s face at the taste of baked potatoes was hard to ignore. He filed the look away and reminded himself to discover new baked potato recipes for Tani to try.

    “We’ll have to visit my nosy neighbor for chickens,” Tani said. “This farmhouse has none. It would be cruel to let life grow here without a tender

    “Okay,” Dante said, picking up his spoon. “So, does this count as our second date?”

    Tani glanced at him then and chuckled.

    “When was the first?” Tani asked.

    “This morning when you met my parents,” Dante said, making Tani laugh. The sound filling Dante up with joy. “We can say the elephants in the forest in the middle of a jungle were the highlight of that date. This must be the second one.”

    “You’re impossible,” Tani said, continuing his meal.

    After lunch, Tani took him on a walk around the vast farm, to see the apple trees. They were blooming, ready to fruit soon.

    “Why apples?” Dante asked, when the sun started sliding down in the horizon. They walked back to the farmhouse at a slow pace. They held hands, and Dante felt like he was living a teenage dream he had forgotten. It felt exhilarating.

    “Will you laugh at me if I tell you why?” Tani asked, stealing a glance at him.

    “No,” Dante said with a small smile, as they walked along the grassy path between rows of apple trees.

    Tani nodded.

    “The first gift I ever received from a mortal was a bunch of apples in a bag,” Tani said. “They were delicious, and I became partial to the taste.”

    Dante’s eyes widened, remembering the bag of apples the original Durante brought to a wild forest for Tani. The start of a fate that tied them together for a lifetime.

    Dante tightened his hold on Tani’s hand and stopped, making Tani turn to look at him.

    “Is that why you’ve grown an orchard full?” Dante asked.

    “Perhaps,” Tani said, with a shrug. “It started out that way. I transplanted the original apple tree from Durante’s old farm. Then, in time, I grew more, collected others. Now…”

    Tani looked at the rows of apple trees around them.

    “Maybe I always liked apples. In any case, they have become my sanctuary,” Tani said, then resumed their walk back to the farmhouse. “It’s been too long. It’s hard to pull it apart to figure out the reason.”

    Dante held his comment on the matter. His anger at Durante growing again. Tani’s devotion was so clearly painted in the apple orchard. How did that fool miss it? Or had Durante simply chosen to ignore it?

    Breathing out the weight of their past, he followed Tani to the farmhouse in silence. Listening to Tani talk about their nosy neighbor who might visit them if she noticed smoke coming from the fireplace the next day.

    Falling into a domestic routine with Tani felt amazing. They took turns showering in the well-stocked bathroom tucked in the corridor. Tani summoned Dante’s clothing from Artri House. They both dressed down in sweats and t-shirts.

    Later, they ate sandwiches for dinner.

    Tani was careful to keep their conversation away from their heavy past. Pulling Dante into discussions about the archeological digs he had participated in around Europe. They ended up in the living room designed for comfort after a hard day’s work. Tani lay on the comfortable couch with his head resting on Dante’s lap as they talked. They watched the fire crackle away in the fireplace in the corner.

    “Do you miss spending time with April and Zach?” Tani asked at some point, late in the night.

    Dante combed his fingers through Tani’s hair. His fingers occasionally playing with the gold leafs on Tani’s right ear.

    “I do but my presence in their lives will never be prominent,” Dante said with a soft sigh. “There was a time Viola would get very angry when I told her that. She thought I had no love for our children, for her.”

    “And?” Tani asked, shifting on Dante’s lap so that he could look at him.

    “I do love my children,” Dante said, holding Tani’s gaze. “Because I do, I feel the best place for them to be is with Viola. My fire magic, my family legacy is too heavy for them to carry. It would only place them in harms way if they stayed with me.”

    “What if they had the legacy in their blood?” Tani asked.

    “Then I would bring them to Artri House without hesitation and teach them everything I know,” Dante said. “As my mother taught me. As Grandmaster Landi taught me.”

    Tani studied him for a moment.

    “None of them have the legacy though. They might never understand why you left them. Will you be sad if they never understand your way of thinking?” Tani asked.

    “Perhaps,” Dante said, his gaze shifting to the bright fireplace. “It is the price I have to pay as a warlock father to two pure mortals. I do hope, when they are older, we can meet and talk. I do want to see them achieve their dreams. I’ll always support them, if they let me.”

    “You’re a good man, Dante,” Tani murmured.

    “You’d be the first partner I’ve ever had to say so,” Dante said, thinking of Viola and the way she got angry with him.

    “I will remind you often,” Tani said, then got up and held out his hand to Dante. “We should sleep. I think we should prune the apple trees while we’re here. Make sure my nosy neighbor gets a good harvest.”

    Dante took Tani’s hand, and stood up.

    “Turn off the fire,” Tani murmured.

    Dante waved his hand at the fireplace, using his magic to snuff out the flames until the embers cooled. Then Tani led the way to the master bedroom with its large bed made of oak. They slid onto the comfortable mattress. The white sheets felt so soft Dante wished he could feel them on his skin.

    He imagined making love to Tani on the comfortable bed, even anticipated it. Then, once they were in bed, Tani gave him a chaste kiss, turned of the lights and promptly fell asleep.

    And so, a seven-day stay at the farmhouse started.

    Each day was filled with a lesson on patience and restraint. Dante was sure Tani was testing him. They spent their days in the orchard, pruning apple trees.

    Mornings at breakfast were light, their fridge refilled by the clever magic created by the god of calamity. Dante listened to endless praises for Cale from Tani. After breakfast, they started work. He loved watching Tani walk the grand apple orchard with a set of shears pruning apple trees. There was a love for the work in every action Tani did.

    In between the work, there were fond kisses and affectionate hugs, but their nights were filled with Tani going to sleep the moment they slid between the comfortable sheets. It was as though he had forgotten their promise to make love on their third date. Dante started a very regular sighing routine.

    Two days into their stay, Dante finally met the nosy neighbor.

    She was a Greek woman in her late twenties. She wore her blonde hair long, was dressed in a white cotton skirt and a blue blouse, her feet in flat sandals. The Greek woman brought two chickens for their pantry and a basket filled with an assortment of vegetables from her garden. She arrived right as they returned to the house for lunch.

    “Fox Lord, you should call to let your neighbor know you’ve returned to the farmhouse,” she complained the moment she saw Tani. “How long has it been since you dared to let your shadow darken our region?”

    “I don’t remember,” Tani said, opening the front door.

    Dante took the basket of vegetables from the woman and smiled in greeting as he hugged the basket.

    “I’m Selene,” she said in greeting. “Can’t wait for him to introduce you to me. He thinks I’m a nuisance. I’m glad he is staying with someone this time. I worry he might starve to death if he stays here alone.”

    “I’m Dante.”

    “I know,” Selene said with a small smile. “The last one of you.”

    “You know?” Dante asked, surprised as he looked at Tani.

    “Hard not to when Cale is his warden,” Selene said. “I thought the little lordling had jumped into the dark side the first time I saw the god of calamities aura in our region. I came to banish them both, only to discover Ekho royalty had come to search for solace in our quiet isle.”

    “You talk too much,” Tani said.

    “You barely talk, Fox Lord,” Selene said leading the way into the farmhouse. She headed straight to the kitchen. “Come on Dante, I bet you want to eat more than baked potatoes. I’ll teach you a special trick about the magical oven in the kitchen. Cale has a strange sense of humor. If you put vegetables into the oven, they cook in record time. One day I tried chicken and I swear to the fates that it makes the most delicious grilled chicken in the world. Otherwise, baked potatoes remain a boring staple.”

    “I like your neighbor, Tani,” Dante said, placing the basket of vegetables he held on the kitchen table.

    “Fox Lord thinks I’m nosy,” Selene said, as she pulled out a flat baking pan from a cupboard and took it to the sink. “Let’s make chicken, with grilled cauliflower and some wild rice. Dante, the rice bin in the pantry is refilled by Cale’s magic.”

    “Hm,” Dante winked at Tani who had sat down at the kitchen table with his arms folded against his chest. “I should explore this kitchen more.”

    “It will surprise you,” Selene said, coming to open her basket to find two heads of cauliflower. “In any case, I’m glad to see you here, Fox Lord. I worried that this would be the last—”

    “I’m already here,” Tani cut off Selene. “Stop talking so much. Why don’t you focus on making the chicken?”

    Tani stood up and took the cauliflower heads from her.

    “I’ll wash these for you,” Tani said.

    Dante frowned at how fast Tani interrupted Selene but did not pause to think deeper about the reason. He went to the pantry and found the rice bin filled with wild rice. Taking the scoop inside the bin, he measured a cup and returned to the kitchen to find Tani glaring at Selene.

    Tani sighed when he saw Dante and turned on the tap at the sink.

    “What now?” Dante asked, moving to join Tani at the sink so that they could wash the cauliflower and the rice. “Why does Selene annoy you so much?”

    “He can’t stand my sunny face,” Selene said, as she found a pan for the chicken.

    “You’re too nosy for your own good,” Tani grumbled.

    Dante kissed Tani’s right cheek, amused by Tani’s attitude toward Selene.

    “I like your annoyed face,” Dante said when Tani glanced at him.

    “I’m not annoyed.”

    “Yes, you are,” Dante said, leaning on the counter so that he could study Tani’s expressions.

    Dante stole a glance at Selene who was busy arranging the chicken pieces she brought on the baking pan. She salted and seasoned them with the attention of a seasoned cook. So, Dante leaned in and whispered into Tani’s ear.

    “She seems worried about you, you know,” Dante said. “I think she’s no different from Cale who spelled the house.”

    “Mm,” Tani said, biting his bottom lip as he washed the cauliflower and broke it into pieces.

    Dante placed a colander in the sink for the cauliflower pieces.

    “She’s the reason you want to prune the apple trees, right?” Dante asked, studying Tani’s face.

    Tani met his inquiring gaze and nodded.

    “She’s another Hera,” Dante said with a quick grin.

    “Not at all,” Tani said, shaking his head. He glanced at Selene and then scowled at the cauliflower. “Hera is a child I’ve raised. That one is Ekho.”

    “What?” Dante glanced at Selene to find her watching them.

    Selene grinned wide.

    “You heard everything I just said,” Dante said, knowing their hearing was sensitive.

    “Yes, handsome Dante. Have I told you that I think you’re the best version? I especially appreciate the fire brewing inside you for the Fox Lord. It’s spectacular to watch,” Selene said.

    Dante bit back a grin when Tani’s scowl deepened at Selene’s comment.

    “What kind of Ekho are you?” Dante asked, leaning on the counter, his arms crossed as he studied Selene.

    Strange, but had Tani not said it, he would never have known Selene was an Ekho. She did not look like one. Dante frowned thinking about the Ekhos he had met in the past few days.

    Tani’s uncle, Amu, and the earth goddess, Eren, had also looked quite plain. Why was it different when he looked at Tani? Was it because Tani’s eyes were amber?

    “I’m a half-breed,” Selene said, smiling at Dante. “Half-fox and half-dragon. My parents brought me to the mortal world to escape harsh criticism from the more cynical members of our clans. Don’t look so surprised. Prejudice grows in every society in some form.”

    “Why do you call Tani royalty?” Dante asked.

    “He’s the son of the Fox Goddess Anit and…,” Selene looked at Tani. Dante wondered if she was waiting for Tani to protest, but when he did not, she grinned and continued. “The Immortal Lord Sunu.”

    “Immortal Lord,” Dante said, his gaze returning to Tani. “As in the head of the Immortal Clan?”

    “Yes. Lord Sunu is the master of the Citadel and the emperor of our Ekho clan. He rules the Septum,” Selene said. “You’re well informed for a mortal.”

    “I’m a bloodborne warlock,” Dante said. “Ekho-blessed with fire magic.”

    “Oh,” Selene’s eyes widened with drama. “That explains the fire I see in your veins. You’re a mortal hybrid. Your kind is rare. Your mother must have come from a powerful warlock line.”

    “Yes. Her powers added to my father’s and made me. Why are your eyes different from Tani’s?” Dante asked, curious about Selene’s blue eyes.

    “My father is a dragon,” Selene said. “I get my eyes and blonde hair from him. Even my powers and love for beautiful things come from him. In our line, the more powerful parent leaves a mark on his or her children.”

    “So, Tani’s power and eyes,” Dante said, his sentence trailing off as he met Tani’s amber gaze.

    “My father’s mark on me,” Tani confirmed. “My hair is red from my mother’s side.”

    “Fox Lord’s parents are at the god level,” Selene said, her voice heavy with reverence. “It’s natural to have a mark from each one.”

    “Why do you call him Fox Lord?” Dante asked.

    “It is the easiest title,” Selene said. “I’m not shameless enough to go around calling out the name of the Immortal Lord’s son. I’m afraid he will come to find me.”

    Tani scoffed at Selene’s comment, his shoulders tense at the mention of his father.

    Dante noted the tension growing in Tani at the mention of his roots. He brushed his lips on Tani’s forehead and decided to change the topic. He asked Selene about her farm and what she was growing.

    Selene was fun to have around, once they got over her need to poke at Tani’s mood. She was lively and enjoyed sharing recipes. She shared the same aversion to Cale that Dante had for the god of calamities.

    “Don’t fight him if he shows up,” Selene said to Dante when she got up to leave after lunch. “He protects Fox Lord like a guard dog. It’s hard not to respect him for his dedication.”

    “Have I said you talk too much today?” Tani asked as he watched Selene leave the kitchen with a wave.

    “More times than I care to count,” Selene said. “I’ll bring you more veggies the day after tomorrow.”

    “I didn’t ask,” Tani said.

    “I’m telling Dante,” Selene said, blowing a kiss at Dante. “I’ll see you later, handsome Dante. I hope you smooth his edges by the time I get back.”

    Dante chuckled as a strong wind pushed Selene out of the house and slammed the door closed.

    “Your magic works well when you’re annoyed,” Dante said. “Selene is not so bad.”

    “She is an acquired taste,” Tani said, shaking his head.

    “I think you worry about her, but you don’t want to make it obvious. Why?”

    “I don’t,” Tani said, standing up. He took their used plates to the sink.

    “Tani.”

    “We should finish the row we started this morning,” Tani said starting the water to wash their plates.

    Dante bit his bottom lip to stop himself from pushing. It was interesting to discover that this house probably held the secrets of Tani’s core. Like the truth of Cale protecting Tani, and pushing him to live when he didn’t want to.

    This place was where Tani allowed himself to feel vulnerable. It held the truth of Tani’s true feelings.

    Later in the afternoon, Dante stood next to Tani looking at the dead branch Tani was pointing out.

    Dante held a hand pruner, poised to make a cut as soon as Tani showed him where.

    “We have to get rid of these dead branches,” Tani said, showing him the spot to cut. “I try to make sure there is enough light coming through. Don’t hesitate when you cut. We don’t want the branch to gain an unnecessary bruise.”

    Dante made the cut, holding the dead branch so that it would not fall on Tani’s head.

    Tani turned to him with a pleased smile, and Dante froze in place, his heartbeat speeding. Sunrays sifted through the leaves of the apple tree they were pruning, falling over Tani’s red-brown hair, turning it into a rich vibrant color. Tani’s amber eyes shone in the light making Dante’s heart squeeze tight.

    So beautiful, Dante was sure he would never tire of looking at Tani.

    Yes, these past two days had turned into an exercise in restraint.

    Dante waited every day for Tani to reach for him. To ask him for more than the kisses they shared, for more than holding hands as they sat watching the sunset. He wished and hoped for their kisses to turn into lovemaking, but Tani seemed content with the little they were doing.

    It was hell sleeping next to Tani and feeling so unsure—

    Of course, the sun would decide to push his limits. Painting this perfect creature with light, making him look so utterly stunning, it was hard not to want to kiss him until they were both naked on the grass under the apple trees.

    Damn. Did the sun forget he was a simple poor mortal soul?

    Dante dropped the branch he held in the wheelbarrow from the shed already half-filled with dead branches. He stole another glance at Tani and caught him frozen in place.

    “What are you thinking about?” Dante asked, closing the pruners he held.

    “I should ask you that question,” Tani said, turning away. He sauntered to the next apple tree.

    Dante watched Tani study the branches. Dropping the pruners into the discarded branches in the wheelbarrow, Dante followed Tani.

    “Your lips are pursed so tight, I want to kiss them into compliance. What are you holding yourself back from saying?”

    “I’m not holding back,” Tani said, touching a small bud on the tree. The white apple flower grew into a fuller bud before Tani let go of it and walked to the next tree.

    Tani’s magic seemed to work better in this place, Dante noted.

    “Yes, you are. Tani, you promised not to keep me at arms’ length,” Dante accused, following Tani. “I can barely restrain myself from pulling you down on the grass and making love to you. Yet, when I look at you, I think you don’t feel the same way.”

    “Who says I don’t? We’ve slept in the same bed for two nights. I must hold no appeal to you, as you have not attempted to reach for me at all. Dante Arturo, if you want me, you must tell me. How will I know if you don’t say it?” Tani asked.

    Tani abandoned his study of the apple trees and headed to the farmhouse.

    Dante gaped and then chuckled at Tani’s last question.

    “Then, I’ll just show you how much more I want with you,” he murmured and ran after Tani.

    ****

    <<Previous | Table of Contents | Next >>

  • Blades of Ashes Ch 3-2

    Arc 1- The Case of the Forged Silver Coins

    Chapter 3-2

    Raithion sat on the balcony on the second floor at the Teba Inn. He had a great view of the busy port city below. The main street connected the town with the docks. The balcony at the Teba Inn was the best spot to see who was coming and going.

    Sipping mild grape wine, Raithion thought about Basileus Dio and his father’s instructions. According to the findings of their ongoing investigation, the forged silver coins had ore that was only found in the Sura mines.

    The simplest way to end the case was to arrest the Sura Clan and have them confess their counterfeiting crime.

    This was the easiest end.

    However, when Raithion’s legion arrived at the Endless Port, they discovered a rumor. Someone had robbed six Sura cargo carriages. The clan had lost twelve skilled drivers and was now concerned about their safety on the road. Everyone at the port worried because they all made money through the Sura clan’s enterprises.

    From inns in the port town to fruit stands in the market, everyone had a small connection to the Sura. If the clan suffered, they did too.

    Curious about this development, Raithion asked Haedor to follow up on the robbery rumors with the magistrate. He hoped the Sura clan had reported a case of theft. These disruptions in their supply would exonerate the Sura Clan from the counterfeiting case.

    Raithion did not want to see an entire clan pay for the sins of the few.

    Shaking his head, he returned his gaze to the main dining hall beyond the balcony when he heard a commotion. Two of his main officers sat eating at one of the tables.  They were waiting for Haedor with him. The rest of their legion brothers were downstairs in various stages of rest.

    The two officers in the dining hall stood to greet Haedor, who had returned from his errand.

    Raithion watched them salute Haedor, and then return to their meal.

    Haedor crossed the dining room and came out to the balcony to pull out the seat opposite Raithion.

    “The port magistrate is a piece of work,” Haedor said as he settled.  “He was asleep when I arrived and had not heard the rumors of theft. He acts as though a robbery would inconvenience him if he were asked to investigate it.”

    Raithion poured a glass of wine for Haedor and pushed it across the table.

    “Take a sip. Relax,” Raithion said. “The manager of this inn says no one in the town trusts the port magistrate to help. He is a lazy, corrupt fellow. There is a possibility the Sura did not bother to report to him.”

    “They should,” Haedor said, after taking two sips of the weak wine. “It protects them later when we have to bring this case before the Basileus at the Imperial Court.”

    “First, we have to find them in order to convince them to make the report,” Raithion said. “I’ve yet to spot someone of consequence in the crowd. I hope the Sura Clan has not given up or gone into hiding.”

    Haedor’s stomach growled, and Raithion grinned.

    It was almost midday. Of course, his lieutenant was hungry.

    “Order food,” Raithion said, nodding to the interior of the inn. “I’ll have what you’re having.”

    “Yes, General,” Haedor said, getting up fast. “We should change the wine to tea, especially if we need to chase after the clan later.”

    “Do that,” Raithion said, drinking the last of the wine in his goblet. He handed over the goblet and the bottle to Haedor.

    Once his lieutenant left, Raithion returned to staring at the street. He gave his attention to anyone he saw with strawberry-blonde hair. So far, he had seen an old woman with two young boys following her. A young woman too focused on her destination as she carried a large basket on her back. And a blacksmith hauling his tools to the docks. None of them had seemed attached to the Sura cargo carriages or the transportation of burnt ore.

    Raithion sighed and sat back in his chair. Maybe he should just knock on the Sura port station and see if any of them would answer his questions.

    He was pondering on the merits of this plan when he caught a shimmer of gold and white hair in the midday sun. The shimmer drifted between the crowds of people walking on the main street. Raithion sat up, focusing his gaze on the spot where he saw that distinctive color.

    The crowd parted to reveal a young Sura man standing by a fruit stand. Raithion could not help watching him with interest.

    The Sura man was on the short side, maybe five eight. He was lean, and his hair was in a messy top ponytail. His hair was long to his shoulders. He was dressed in dark trousers, a cream tunic, and a long leather coat. The sleeves of the leather coat were decorated with shiny metal. Raithion wished he could get a closer look at the designs.

    The young Sura man had a handsome profile. He smiled easily as he talked to his companion, a taller man with short curly hair, the same color. They browsed the fruit stand for a moment and then moved away from the stall.

    Raithion frowned as the young man tossed a silver coin into the air and caught it. He did it with ease, unworried that a passerby would steal it from him. He walked with ease, as though he had no reason to hurry.

    The young Sura man’s companion was the opposite. He looked nervous and kept glancing behind them. His glimpses back were discrete, but Raithion could tell an uneasy character from a distance. So, he too assessed the crowd behind the pair.

    “Interesting,” Raithion murmured when he saw two women who were following the pair without attempting to hide.

    They kept the same pace as the two Sura men, making sure to keep them in their line of sight.

    Haedor returned with a tray laden with food. He placed it on the table and got to work arranging a bowl of beef stew and bread for Raithion.

    “Look,” Raithion said, nodding to the youth who was getting closer to the inn. “The young man with messy Sura hair. He’s strolling in the inn’s direction.”

    Haedor found him and nodded.

    “Now, look fifteen paces behind him,” Raithion said. “What do you see?”

    Haedor watched the crowd in silence for a moment and then nodded.

    “He is being followed,” Haedor said.

    “Looks like we’ve found the start of our Sura case,” Raithion said with a grin.

    “Should our brothers get him?” Haedor asked, starting to turn to give the order.

    “No.” Raithion kept watching the young Sura man who was approaching the inn.  “Let’s watch for now. Sit, Haedor. Eat your food. Let’s not spook him.”

    Haedor frowned, but he nodded and sat in his chair. He picked up his spoon and ate, his gaze on the Sura pair walking toward them.

    Raithion watched the young Sura man approach the inn, ignoring his food. He frowned when the young man stopped at the entrance of the Teba Inn.  His companion followed suit and Raithion held his breath, hoping…hoping the young man would choose to enter the Teba Inn.

    “Why is he hesitating?” Haedor asked as he took a healthy bite of his beef stew.

    “Where did we leave our horses?” Raithion asked, curious.

    “Out front,” Haedor said, and then groaned. “The brothers are sitting on the chairs arranged at the front. They might look too fierce and sprawled around with their weapons. I’ll go—”

    “No,” Raithion said, returning his gaze to the young Sura man at the entrance of the inn. “Let’s see what he does.”

    “General, no civilian is willing to get that close to the legion when they’re so clearly armed.”

    “Isn’t it more interesting if a civilian were to enter this inn with all the brothers guarding the entrance,” Raithion said with a soft chuckle.

    As though to prove his theory, the young Sura man entered the small compound outside the inn. His smile was wide as he greeted the fifteen soldiers who were enjoying their food at the front tables.

    “Good day, gentlemen,” the young Sura man said. His voice was cordial, an enticing medium tenor, with a playful note. “Welcome to Endless Port.”

    The legion brothers nodded, returning the greeting with various nods, waves, and cordial greetings.

    Raithion smiled and picked up his spoon as the young man entered the inn.  He picked up his spoon and took a bite of his beef stew, waiting.

    The main dining room downstairs was not usable.

    Raithion’s officers had packed their luggage on the tables there.

    So…the Sura pair would have no choice but to come upstairs.

    Raithion grinned wider as he waited.

    ****

    Azula worked on controlling the anxious energy growing inside him. He truly did not know whether it was good or bad luck that made him think of coming to the Teba Inn. Usually, the place would be filled with travelers from other states on their way to the port or returning from elsewhere.

    Today, however, it looked like they had run into strange luck. The inn was filled with legion brothers and possibly their leader. Their uniforms were peculiar. Not the red and black colors prevalent with the port magistrate’s garrison. This new batch was dressed in greens and black.

    Azula shuddered.

    There was a common tale often heard in the beer inns in the evening. A tale about Legion Brothers from Draeya County. Strong and ruthless, they maintained peace in the main Naga State town.

    The Naga State King was so impressed with their valor, that he presented them with the mandate to cleanse the lands of any wrong without question.

    A fierce young general who had gained his rank at a young age led these fierce brothers.

    They called him the Draeya General. He was reportedly cold and fierce, just like his soldiers, but his loyalty to his family was faultless. Women in Naga wished to have the Draeya General as their brother or husband.

    Azula hoped the legion brothers at the front of the inn did not belong to the Draeya General. Meeting the Draeya General would be equivalent to facing a man with ties to the highest authority in the empire.

    Azula shuddered again at the thought. He loved his small existence. He prayed the legion brothers belonged to a small lieutenant who would not mind taking a few coins to protect a carriage.

    The inn’s main dining hall was filled with large crates, the tables moved to the side. Azula paused as he wondered if they could get a meal here.

    The inn’s manager hurried to his side from the kitchen.

    “Vandra,” Azula said, smiling at the inn manager. “Are you getting booted out by the landlord? What is with all the crates on the tables?”

    “Ay! Master Doriel, you left the island! I’m honored you would come for a meal in our inn,” Vandra said in greeting. “Don’t worry about these tables; let’s take you to the second floor. There is space there for you and Sennin. Why didn’t you send word that you would be coming to town today? We would have planned a nice meal for everyone in your crew. Are you here with Lord Magnus?”

    “The trip was unplanned,” Azula said, shaking his head, his gaze still on the crates on the dining tables. “Lord Magnus is still at home today, too lazy to cross the seas.  Our people will bring the fruit delivery cart later. We brought two crates of the mangoes you like.”

    “That’s good news,” Vandra said, patting Azula’s left arm. “I know you crave sweet and sour roasted chicken. I’ll make sure the kitchen makes you a good one for your lunch today.”

    “I promised Sennin fried fish and a sweet bun,” Azula said, as the manager led them to the stairs.

    “Fried fish and a sweet bun for Sennin,” Vandra agreed with a nod, “and a nice pot of fresh tea. It will fill you up.”

    “Vandra knows how to treat guests,” Azula said with a quick grin, then lowered his voice. “Who leads the legion brothers at the front? Is there a new lieutenant joining the magistrate’s office?”

    “Heavens, no,” Vandra stopped at the staircase landing, glancing at the second floor with a wary gaze. He gripped Azula’s left arm tight. “No matter what you do, don’t go to the balcony. The legion brothers downstairs belong to someone very scary. He and his lieutenant are having a meal up here.”

    “Oh?” Azula frowned, and then lowered his voice in a whisper. “Who could be so scary as to make you worry, Vandra?”

    “The Draeya General,” Vandra said, matching Azula’s whisper.

    Azula felt his anxiety rise another notch.

    Damn it, he would need to go to another place in search of an easy pack of legion brothers. His shoulders slumped with distress. There was no way to buy off a decorated general.

    Sennin, sensing Azula’s disappointment, stepped around to talk to Vandra.

    “No wonder you don’t have other guests in the inn,” Sennin said, urging Azula to move when Vandra continued upstairs. “Don’t worry about us. We’ll have our meal in peace and then head out. We have a lot undone and the sun won’t stay still.”

    “Yes, yes,” Vandra agreed. “Our chef makes the best sweet and sour roast chicken. Young Master Doriel will not be disappointed.”

    They reached the second floor, and Vandra led them to a round table on the opposite side of the balcony. He chose a table near an open window. Azula looked out and saw the magistrate’s compound two streets away.

    “You have a good rest. I’ll get someone to bring you water to drink, and warm towels to wipe your hands.”

    Vandra hurried away, leaving them to settle.

    Azula slid into the chair closest to the window, while Sennin looked around the empty dining hall.

    “Only the Draeya General would empty out such a popular inn,” Sennin sighed. “On the plus side, those two women will not follow us in here. No one in their right mind will want to provoke this wild pack. You know this places you in the mad case category. Why did you want to come in here again?”

    “I hoped the legion brothers were under a lieutenant. Lieutenants are easier to talk to. They also don’t mind making a little money,” Azula said, resting his elbows on the table. He placed his chin on his left palm and studied the magistrate’s compound.

    “Generals are harder to handle. You never know what side they stand on. Maybe I should do as Papa says. Then, I’ll have an excuse to run into a few officers at the magistrate’s compound.”

    “Azula, the lot in the magistrate’s compound is likely to stab us in the back before we leave the port heading to the capital,” Sennin sighed. “Why don’t we find Tingyu? He has a nice group of mercenaries that are quite good at defending.”

    “No,” Azula shook his head. “We can’t afford to owe Tingyu’s mercenaries a favor. Not when we’re facing thefts from an unknown person. Who knows, maybe some of the mercenaries he runs are part of the robberies.”

    “True, I hadn’t thought of that,” Sennin sighed and stared out the window too. His gaze was on the magistrate’s compound too.

    “I suppose our only option is as you say,” Sennin said. “Heavens, I hope we don’t have to deal with the port magistrate. Let’s hope we meet a nice lieutenant at the entrance into that compound.”

    “Mm, may our luck hold,” Azula said with a nod, as he stared out the window.

    The sound of a chair scraping the wood floor on the balcony drew Azula’s attention away from the magistrate’s compound.

    Azula sat up and turned in the direction of the balcony. The terrace doors were all open. There were no curtains or screens to hide any diners who chose to sit on the balcony. Azula caught a glimpse of rich black fabric hanging on the back of a chair.

    Draeya General was a mythical beast.

    People talked about him in tales and whispers, but none described his face or knew him.

    Azula frowned.

    Now that he did not need to ask for help from the legion’s head, he could take a good look at the mythical Draeya General. See if he was truly human, or if a horn grew on top of his head that made him so fierce. In any case, it would be a great tale to tell Alva, Kalas, and Alise.

    Curiosity drove him out of his chair, much to Sennin’s surprise.

    “Azula?” Sennin started.

    Azula waved him off and walked across the large second dining hall to the open terrace door. He stopped on the edge of the exit, checking the balcony. He paused when he saw the striking man sitting alone at a square table near the balcony railing.

    Green, green eyes met his. Azula forced his feet to keep moving, keenly aware of that green gaze following him as he stepped onto the balcony. The man at the square table wore a fine white tunic, with an unbuttoned black legion jacket over it. The heavy embroidery on the cuffs of the jacket was gold, with five lines of intricate designs to mark the wearer as a decorated general. The general had mink black hair. It was so dark it surpassed the jacket he wore. Long and neat, the strands were caught in a high ponytail with a sturdy large round gold clip secured with a thick pin.

    Azula took in the general’s face and felt eternally disadvantaged. He had a penchant for harsh-faced men. Chiseled jaw dusted with a dark beard shadow, sharp keen eyes, lips in a hard line, all of it put together in this harsh, cold forbidding face that made the strongest men shudder, or bend to the general’s will.

    One look and Azula knew this one never failed in ordering men to do his will.

    Which meant anyone Draeya General bowed his head to would have to be stronger, and much more powerful.

    Azula’s heart skipped with violence.

    Vandra was right.

    It was best not to engage. He could not walk into a pit with his eyes wide open.  He turned toward the terrace doors determined to run away.

    “Wait.”

    Draeya General’s voice was a booming bass. Unrelenting, and hard to ignore, the sound traveled to the core. So dangerous.

    Azula closed his eyes as he stopped. He took in a deep breath to calm his speeding heart and turned to face the general.

    “Yes?”

    “Are you leaving after having a good look?”

    Azula imagined Draeya General did not get people looking at him without a purpose. Pasting on a smile, Azula clasped his hands behind his back and shrugged.

    “They said Draeya General was having a meal on the balcony,” Azula said. “I heard Draeya General has a horn growing on his forehead that makes him fierce. I came out to have a good look.”

    Draeya General stared at him, green eyes wide with shock.

    “Now that I’ve seen there’s nothing to talk about, I’m leaving,” Azula said, and started to turn away again.

    “Wait. Stop right there.”

    Azula stopped and turned to face the striking general.

    “Are you always this bold?” Draeya General asked. “Walking up to a general and joking around like this, aren’t you worried I’ll arrest you?”

    “For what?” Azula asked, his right brow rising in question.

    “Being so outrageous?”

    “Then Draeya General would seem very petty.”

    “Insolent.”

    Azula grinned, gave Draeya General a wink, and started to turn away again.

    “Stop.”

    “What? What now?” Azula asked, looking at Draeya General. “I’ve already answered your questions. What?”

    Draeya General closed his eyes, taking in a deep breath as though to keep his calm.

    “You’re from the Sura Clan,” Draeya General said. “What’s your name?”

    Azula debated lying about his name for a full minute. Then he thought of Vandra who was hoping to run a quiet business selling meals and good wine. He sighed. If trouble was to come from this meeting anyway, then it was better with him, than with Vandra.

    “Azula Doriel.”

    “You’re the Sura Chieftain’s son.”

    “Draeya General knows much,” Azula said, all sense of playfulness escaping at the mention of his father’s station. The general was well-informed.

    “I should know this much,” Draeya General said. “I have important business to discuss with your clan.”

    “What kind of business would we have to discuss the Draeya General?” Azula asked. “Our meeting is a coincidence. I might have decided to eat down the street for all you know. Then, you’d have met one of our people—”

    “Perhaps,” Draeya General cut him off with a nod. “I would still have found you for this talk, Chieftain’s son. I suggest you join me at this table.”

    “Or else?” Azula asked, frowning now, he unclasped his hands as anxiety grew.

    A strong hand gripped his left arm and Azula jumped as he turned to find a hulk of a man standing behind him. The new face was not as striking as the Draeya General. The new man held a sweet bun in his left hand. He ate it as though he had not had food for years. The enthusiasm with which the sweet bun was ending made Azula’s stomach growl in protest.

    “Excuse me, Master Doriel, I’ll help you have a seat at the table,” the newcomer said. “Or else, I’ll break your arm for being so insolent to the general.”

    “Oh,” Azula said, his gaze on the strong hand holding his upper left arm.

    After wielding a hammer for ages in his workshop, Azula could not say he was a weak man.  However, the hand holding his arm felt like it might break iron with a single twist. It was warrior-forged strength grown from a place of pure violence.

    Azula had no doubt the newcomer would follow through on his threat.

    “Okay, okay,” Azula said, smiling at the new face. “Let’s not get so serious. I’ll have a seat if you let go of my arm. You two already caught me. I’m caught between you. Where can I go?”

    “Indeed,” Draeya General said, with a small shake of his head. “Let him go. Chieftain’s son will have a seat.”

    “My name is Azula. Chieftain’s son sounds like a mouthful. Stop calling me that,” Azula said, shaking his head. “You who threatens to ruin my arm, you should at the least tell me your name.”

    “Why?” the hulk of a man asked.

    “So I know who to curse as I get through the pain,” Azula said with a glare at the new face.

    Draeya General chuckled drawing Azula’s gaze.

    “Are you going to watch him bully me?” Azula asked. “I thought you were a decorated general? Where is your care for the small citizens?”

    “The small citizen is a handful,” Draeya General said. “I need my lieutenant, Haedor, to help manage you.”

    Azula scoffed as Haedor pushed him to the empty chair at the square table. He cursed his curiosity when Haedor let go of his arm. Azula spent a few minutes adjusting his long jacket as he settled.

    “I don’t know about managing. I call this abusing the small citizens,” Azula said. “If I knew where they complain about you, I’d sent in my two cents on the matter.”

    “Thank goodness I have not heard of a magistrate’s office that will take a complaint against me,” Draeya General said. “Tell me something, Azula Doriel.”

    “What is it that you must know that you are pushing me around like this?” Azula asked, scowling at Haedor who stayed standing behind him.

    “The rumor is that the Sura is getting their cargo carriages robbed. Why hasn’t anyone from the clan reported the thefts to the port magistrate?” Draeya General asked, folding his arms against his chest.

    Azula stared at the Draeya General for a full minute and then broke out into a loud amused laugh. He laughed long and hard until there were tears in his eyes. Azula used the corner of his sleeve to wipe his eyes and shook his head at Draeya General’s joke.

    Azula looked at the Draeya General when he was calmer and blinked when he found the general frowning at him.

    “What?” Azula asked. “Do you know you frown often? It’s not good for your complexion. The lines on your forehead could turn permanent. Draeya General, you might not have a horn on your forehead, but frown lines will not serve you. No matter how striking you look.”

    “Insolent,” Haedor hammered the table with his right fist, and Azula jumped in his seat with a sigh.

    “That must be a favorite word,” Azula said, shaking his head with a sigh. “Listen, I don’t understand your question, Draeya General. What does the theft of our carriages have to do with the port magistrate? It’s not like he will help us find them.”

    “And how do you intend to find your stolen carriages?” Draeya General asked.

    “That’s my problem to solve, isn’t it?” Azula asked. “What does it have to do with Draeya General?”

    Haedor started to slam on the table again, but Azula grabbed the lieutenant’s thick right wrist.

    “Stop,” Azula said, mimicking Draeya General’s booming tone from earlier. He grinned when he nailed it right, and Haedor paused.  “Vandra spent a great deal of effort to construct these tables. You breaking them will only add to his expenses. Lieutenant Haedor, why don’t you reserve this effort for the legion’s arenas?”

    “Inso—” Haedor started

    “Insolent,” Azula completed for him, looking up at the great big giant of a man with a wide grin.

    Haedor’s physique was all thick arms, bulky chest, trim waist, and firm thighs. He was the perfect Legion soldier.

    Azula worried about his own sanity as he teased the seasoned warrior that could break his arms.

    “You might need to find a new word,” Azula said. “My parents have exhausted themselves with it since I was ten. It’s been a decade and I have only gotten worse. I’m afraid I thrive on insolence.”

    “I might really break him,” Haedor said, shaking his head. “I leave him to you, General.”

    Haedor walked away from the square table and Azula was left staring at the Draeya General. Haedor headed into the main dining hall and Azula hoped Sennin was not too nervous facing Draeya General’s lieutenant.

    Azula sighed and met Draeya General’s cold green gaze.

    “What now?” he asked when Draeya General stayed silent.

    “I’m trying to calculate how much trouble you get into in a day,” Draeya General said. “It surprises me that you’re alive.”

    Azula chuckled and shook his head.

    “You and my parents would get along.”

    Azula’s stomach growled and he brought his right hand to rub the ache of hunger with a frown.

    “Listen, Draeya General, no one in this Endless Port trusts the magistrate. He is more likely to help the thieves robbing us, than help my people find the missing cargo carriages.”

    “Then why did you walk into this inn?” Draeya General asked.

    “Huh?”

    “You saw my officers taking up the seats at the front of the inn. Most citizens walked on and went to find their meal elsewhere. Why did you not walk away? Why did you enter this inn despite the legion brothers downstairs?”

    “I’ll be honest,” Azula said, holding Draeya General’s gaze.

    “I’d like that,” Draeya General said, with an expectant nod.

    “It was an attack of insanity,” Azula said, keeping his tone very solemn. “Insanity took over and I led my best friend into a lair of alphas. I should have ignored the urge. Don’t worry, the insanity can be cured. I promise to mend my ways from now on. Can I leave?”

    “Inso—,” Draeya General started, and then cut himself off as Azula grinned at the reaction.

    “I could have you arrested,” Draeya General said, glaring at Azula.

    “On what grounds? Being hungry? How ridiculous of a legion general to bully a small citizen. I might live on Sura Island, but I know my rights. I have done no wrong—”

    “You’ve insulted me multiple times.”

    “Insulted? What insulted?” Azula widened his eyes. “Draeya General, the most I’ve done is called out your incurable need to bully people. My stomach is clearly growling with hunger as I sit here. Do you even care that I might need a meal the next minute? What if I collapse with hunger?  My people will blame you for letting me starve in front of your eyes. What noble career is this you’re—mm—?”

    A sweaty palm covered his mouth and Azula turned to glare at the person who would dare. He stopped struggling when he saw a petrified Sennin standing next to him.

    “Draeya General, I apologize for my best friend,” Sennin said, his voice shaky as he bowed his head low in the direction of the general. “He’s just worried about our clan. He doesn’t know how to filter his words. I’m sorry if he has insulted you. Please, let him off.”

    Azula tried to shake Sennin’s hand off his mouth to protest the apology, but Sennin would not have it.

    “I can let him off if you tell me what is going on with your stolen cargo carriages,” Draeya General said, after making Sennin stand with his head bowed for close to five minutes.

    Azula glared at the annoying general, and almost bit Sennin’s finger when Draeya General smirked at him.

    “Answering Draeya General, our clan has recently suffered six losses,” Sennin said, his voice shaky. “We are hoping to save our current orders by replacing the stolen cargo. Young Master Doriel is looking to hire legion officers who can help protect our convoy on our journey to the capital.”

    “You’re hoping to buy protection,” Draeya General said, his gaze knowing as he studied Azula.

    “Yes,” Sennin said, with a quick nod. “Master Doriel thought a lieutenant was the head of the legion downstairs. We are sorry. He did not mean to bother you.”

    Azula managed to fight Sennin’s palm off his mouth.

    “Draeya General need not bother with this information,” Azula said, pushing his chair back as he stood.

    “I can offer help,” Draeya General said, shocking Azula and Sennin.

    “Why?” Azula asked after a moment.

    “Why not?” Draeya General asked, a charming smile curving his lips.

    Azula could not help but stare at the enticing curve. How amazing. A simple smile transformed the Draeya General into a painfully handsome man. So handsome that Azula wanted to shift closer and touch the general’s smiling lips.

    Argh, why could he never find the will to ignore such striking, dangerous men?

    “Draeya General is very busy,” Sennin said. “Our Sura Clan cannot ask you to help us with this trivial matter.”

    “Trivial?” Draeya General asked, his smile disappearing, the expression on his face turning cold again.

    Azula sighed.

    “Theft is never trivial,” Draeya General said. “Theft of a cargo carriage carrying burnt ore is certainly not a small matter. You must report this kind of theft to the magistrate to protect yourselves. To hear that your clan has lost six carriages of burnt ore is very worrying. This is the ore that is then used for sinister means…like counterfeiting silver.”

    “No,” Azula shook his head.  “Our ore does not make silver coins.”

    “Your people might not but others can,” Draeya General said, his green eyes glaring. “Chieftain’s son, don’t you know the consequences of counterfeiting silver? Do you know what happens to a clan found interfering with the economy this way?”

    Sennin shook his head no, but Azula did not need instruction on what counterfeiting cases dealt to the perpetrators.

    Draeya General did not wait for them to give him an answer.

    “Entire clans have been wiped out by the imperial court on suspected counterfeiting. What makes you think your Sura would be different?”

    Azula shuddered and wished he had not stepped out to the balcony to catch a glimpse of the Draeya General. This man was no fun at all.

    “No one in my clan would ever betray us that way,” Azula said, speaking from a place of truth. He trusted his family, his clan. They lived for each other. If one of them made a misstep, they all suffered.

    “You’re a very exhausting individual,” Draeya General stated. “I’ve warned you. I’ve asked you to report to the magistrate, and wasted words for your own good. Now, ask me for help.”

    “We can’t afford your help,” Azula said.

    “I won’t charge you anything,” Draeya General said.

    Azula narrowed his gaze, wary of gifts from a powerful general.

    “Why?”

    “Why can’t I help? Isn’t it looking after a small citizen as you put it?” Draeya General asked.

    Azula scoffed, studying Draeya General for a full minute, and then because he truly could not keep having words with this man, he sighed.

    “Draeya General. Do what you want,” Azula said. “I have no power to stop you. What I do have the power to do is leave this inn. I have not committed a crime. Your legion brothers cannot detain us. Do you agree?”

    “Yes.”

    “Good,” Azula said and took Sennin’s right arm. “We’re leaving. Please, excuse us.”

    Azula led Sennin back into the main dining hall. They found their table was laden with food. Knowing he could not leave Vardan with the expense, Azula led them to eat first. After all, they had come in for a meal.

    Sennin hesitated when they got to their table.

    Azula started to ask why but then Draeya General pulled a chair next to their table and he sighed.

    “What?” Draeya General asked, smiling at Azula, as he sat down. “You told me to do what I want. I want to follow you. In fact, I must follow you to learn more about these thieves.”

    “Then, it’s your choice,” Azula said with a nod as he watched Draeya General sit back and fold his arms against his chest.

    Azula sank into his own chair and reached for the platter with sweet and sour roasted chicken. He cut off a large drumstick and took a bite. Ignoring Draeya General, he smiled at Sennin who was watching the general with a wary gaze.

    “Sennin, eat your fish or you’ll be starving later,” Azula said, chewing on his drumstick with enthusiasm.  “Vandra’s chef does make the best sweet and sour roast chicken. This is very good.”

    Sennin opened his mouth to tease him, but then stopped conscious of the general sitting with them.

    Azula scowled at the general as he chewed.

    “Do you have to sit here with us?” Azula asked when he swallowed.

    “I’m afraid you’ll run out of here if I don’t keep you in my sight,” Draeya General said.

    Azula scoffed and glanced behind him to see Lieutenant Haedor return to the main dining room with three legion brothers.

    “I wonder how we would manage that with your lieutenant so enthusiastic.”

    Azula shook his head and concentrated on eating. He glanced out the window and caught a glimpse of the magistrate’s compound. At least with a general in tow, or following him, he would not have to worry about getting a lieutenant from the magistrate.

    A goblet filled with water was pushed to his right elbow.

    “Here, you should drink between such rapid bites,” Draeya General said. “It would be a disappointment to have you choke after we just met.”

    Azula started to curse at him, but then Sennin kicked his left foot under the table and he bit back the words with a grumble. He glared at Sennin and then reached for the goblet. He gave Draeya General a faux smile.

    “How gracious of you,” Azula said, as he sipped the water. “Don’t strain yourself.”

    “I wouldn’t,” Draeya General said.

    “Then don’t sit here, and let us keep you from your busy life,” Azula answered.

    “You’re the reason for my busy life,” Draeya General said.

    “We don’t even know each other,” Azula said.

    “I’m Draeya General. What else can I do but protect the small citizen in need?”

    “I’m not in need.”

    “Aren’t you? Or do you want to pay me a fee? How much do you offer the lieutenants you hire?”

    Azula frowned, wondering if it was legal to pay legion officers for security. Everyone at the port did it, but it was considered bribery in the capital. What would a decorated general think of the price he paid? Would it get him in trouble? Azula sighed and once again regretted approaching the stupid balcony.

    “I’m not telling you,” Azula said. “Since you’re following us of your own accord, why do I need to pay?”

    “Shrew.”

    “Tyrant.”

    “Insolent shrew.”

    “Can’t-come-up-with-another-word-idiot general,” Azula said and gained a kick from Sennin under the table.

    Azula groaned and glared at Sennin.

    “He started it. Why don’t you kick him too?”

    Sennin sighed and turned to Draeya General.

    “I apologize on his behalf,” Sennin said.

    Azula took a healthy bite of his chicken and ignored them both, wondering how it had come to this. He swallowed too fast and triggered a choking cough. The goblet of water was pressed into his right hand and he met amused green eyes with a put-upon sigh.

    What was he going to do about gaining the attention of a glorified Draeya General?

    ****

    Previous | Blades of Ashes ToC | Next

  • Blades of Ashes Ch 3-1

    Arc 1- The Case of the Forged Silver Coins

    Chapter 3-1

    Magnus rode his horse like a man possessed when he received news of Azula’s plan to counter the robberies plaguing the clan. He rode fast on busy cobbled paths, his assistant shouting out warnings along the way to save anyone who did not notice his haste.

    Yaitan’s workshop was where Azula managed his devious plans. The young man was probably stirring up a large force of trouble. The thought of the consequences had Magnus urging his horse into a faster pace.

    Yaitan’s workshop was hidden in a cave surrounded by tall evergreen trees. Azula discovered the workshop when he was twelve. He gifted the discovery to his master, Yaitan, and they bonded over the large deposits of ilmenite the two unearthed in the depths of the cave.

    Azula was twenty this year. These two, master and student, had built up Yaitan’s Workshop into an experimental, risk-taking, genius center. Magnus felt sweat slide down his back every time he thought of Azula and Yaitan making plans.

    Magnus jumped off his horse when he reached the cave entrance. The heavy wooden doors at the cave entrance were carved with intricate designs. A combination of Azula and Yaitan’s work. The doors were open and warm light indicated ongoing work. A strained shout reached him, and answering calls responded.

    Magnus cursed under his breath and hurried into the warm workshop. It was almost dinnertime, and he would have preferred spending the next few hours listening to beautiful Rara sing. He walked through a team of five men standing between two long workbenches. Their attention was on a huge passenger carriage in the middle of the open space deeper in the cave.

    The men moved when they noted Magnus, allowing him to walk closer to the massive passenger carriage taking up space in the middle of the large cave. The passenger carriage was built with a handsome mix of hardwood and iron. The iron twisted into intricate designs, weaving through the wood, making it look luxurious and sturdy at the same time. The four wheels on the carriage were doubled and wide. Strong enough to carry heavy weight.

    Magnus frowned when he saw his nephew holding on to the handle of a massive wrench. Kalas stood next to him, providing support as they tightened a bolt on the shaft and hitching parts.

    “That should hold it,” Azula said when they tagged once more and the bolt did not move. “I’ll make sure Sennin checks on it when we get to the Everlasting Port.”

    “Are you sure you don’t need me to come with you?” Kalas asked, taking the wrench from Azula and placing it on a holder on the table.

    “They are coming along,” Azula said, waving to the five men Magnus had passed. “They helped put this carriage together. Each one knows how each of the parts work. Plus, they are the ones who will know how to stock the undercarriage with the ore we need. Kalas, don’t worry. This will work out. We’ll get to the capital in no time.”

    “The in-between is what I’m worried about,” Kalas said, shaking his head as he reached for a cloth on the table to wipe the sweat off his forehead. “You’re not a warrior, Azula. None of us are.”

    “We’ll worry about that when the time comes,” Azula said, his focus on the shaft.

    “No wonder your Papa thinks I’ll spoil you to death,” Magnus said, drawing Azula’s immediate attention.  He turned around fast, his gaze widening when he saw Magnus standing a few feet away. “When were you going to fill me in on this plan?”

    “When the carriage was onboard the ship,” Azula said with a wide grin. “Magnus, don’t worry so much—”

    “What is the plan?” Magnus demanded, cutting him off.

    “Magnus.”

    “Tell me now, or I will lock you up in the main house for a month,” Magnus said.

    Azula studied him for a minute. No doubt trying to decide how much he could leave out. Magnus glared at him and fought a grin when Azula gave a resigned sigh.

    “You’re not going to like it,” Azula said. “It has to be done even though you don’t like it.”

    “Tell me,” Magnus insisted. “Then I’ll decide what has to be done.”

    Azula glanced at Kalas hoping for support, but Kalas shrugged and moved away from the carriage to join the five blacksmiths behind Magnus.

    “Really,” Azula said, shaking his head at Kalas’ obvious abandonment. He pulled off a white cloth tucked into the belt at his waist and used it to wipe off sweat from the back of his neck.

    “Fine,” Azula said, shaking his head. “Uncle Magnus, you come closer. I have to show you the inside of the carriage for you to understand the plan.”

    Magnus removed his heavy jacket and handed it to his assistant. He walked around an open toolbox on the floor and joined his nephew at the elegant open door into the carriage.

    Azula stood on the side, holding the door open with his left hand, and held out his right hand to Magnus.

    “Welcome aboard, Uncle,” Azula said, giving him a formal nod.

    Magnus bit back a laugh, his gaze on Azula’s callused hands, the palms covered with streaks of black and dirt. The more than capable hand so dear, he might murder anyone who dared harm this child’s hand. Magnus clasped Azula’s dirty hand with his, holding it tight as he climbed up the steps into the carriage.

    The interior was spacious. The walls of the carriage were covered with a deep blue velvet. The benches were upholstered with deep blue velvet and were button-tufted. It looked like a rich man’s lair. The cushions laid out on the benches were designed for comfort.

    Magnus sat on the bench facing the driver and watched Azula who chose to sit facing the door.

    The carriage provided them with privacy to have a talk away from the men outside.

    “What’s the plan?” Magnus asked, his gaze serious as he met Azula’s determined gaze.

    “This carriage hides secret storage within the walls and the undercarriage. The black ore Papa needs is hidden there. The five men in there are the only people who know what this carriage hides. I’m going to ride it to Genad,” Azula said.

    “Not alone,” Magnus said.

    “Of course, I won’t be alone,” Azula said, shaking his head as he sat back, stretching his legs out. He let out a soft sigh. “I’ll take Sennin, six horses, the five men out there, a driver, and his helper. It’s enough of a spectacle. The journey to Genad will take too long as it is.”

    Magnus studied Azula for a full minute, then looked at the luxurious carriage that now hid valuable ore. He could have never thought to do this to save the clan from thieves.

    “How long have you worked on this carriage?” Magnus asked, curious as to how such a large project had gone unnoticed.

    “This carriage is meant for Alise’s wedding,” Azula said, starting to touch the bench with his palm, only to stop when he noticed the dirt on his hands. “You know she’s going to bring Yemin to greet our parents. He’s her chosen mate and the next second to the chieftain. I wanted them to celebrate their day with style. I have been designing this carriage bit by bit. Too bad it’s now being used to save our ore.”

    Magnus smiled.

    “It’s good luck it will be used to save the clan’s ore,” Magnus said. “When you succeed, it will bring good luck to Alise and Yemin.”

    Azula grinned at the mention of his sister and her chosen partner. Magnus loved the easy support between siblings. Alise loved her younger brother even more. This was why Magnus worried about Azula’s safety. Nothing could happen to this youngest chieftain’s son.

    “You need protection,” Magnus said.

    “I will have our five blacksmith’s with me,” Azula said. “Sennin is there too.”

    “Not blacksmiths,” Magnus said, shaking his head. “You need warriors. Warmongers. People who are not squeamish about drawing blood. Our people are too soft. We have families and value peaceful existences. You need soldiers.”

    “We don’t have those,” Azula said.

    “Buy them at the port,” Magnus said, holding Azula’s gaze. “I mean it, Azula. Use the money I get from the mango selling if you don’t have spare silver.”

    “Uncle Magnus, it’s not about the money,” Azula said. “You know good lieutenants are not easy to find. The port magistrate is corrupt. We can’t trust them to get us to the capital. Let alone fight off determined armed robbers.”

    “They will fight them off for the right price,” Magnus said. “I’ll find you the gold to make sure it works out. Do this for me, and I’ll not oppose your plan.”

    Azula stared at his dusty boots for a full minute before he let out a sigh.

    “Finding a lieutenant will cost us time at the port,” Azula said.

    “It should,” Magnus agreed. “It will also give you time to understand what else we don’t know about the people coming after us.”

    “Okay,” Azula said, with a sigh. “I’ll do as you say.”

    “Can you pull this trip off?” Magnus asked Azula.

    Azula looked up then and met Magnus’s worried gaze. He smiled wide and nodded.

    “Yes,” he said. His confidence made Magnus almost believe it too.

    Magnus nodded and scratched his head.

    “I can’t wait to hear what your father will have to say about this when he sees you. He’ll blame me for indulging you again. I’m warning you early. I’ll make you drink two barrels of wine at your wedding to pay me back for all this trouble.”

    Azula laughed then, and Magnus grinned at the youthful sound filling the carriage.

    ****

    Two days later, two hours before noon, Azula’s ship docked at the Endless Port and the crew started offloading the easier packages.  Azula stepped out of the ship with a lazy yawn, stretching his arms above his head as he walked. He dropped his hands when a short boy blocked his path and handed him a folded scroll.

    Thanking the boy, Azula stepped to the side and unrolled the scroll to read the contents. It was a message from his father, asking him to visit the magistrate’s compound at the port.

    The Naga State port was an entry point into the empire. Traders, visitors, immigrants, and travelers from other continents filled the port. Its fame won it the unofficial name of Endless Port.

    The Naga State King tasked the port magistrate with the work of overseeing law and order in this vibrant port. He even handed over a military garrison and placed it under the magistrate’s direct command.

    The magistrate used the officers in the port garrison to maintain peace and punish anyone who tried to cause trouble at the port. However, his dedication to the job left much to be desired.

    Everyone making a living at the Endless Port knew not to trust the magistrate.

    Which was why Azula stood frozen as he read his father’s second message.

    “He wants me to report the theft to the magistrate here at Endless Port,” Azula said, turning to Sennin who joined him from the ship. “Has Papa lost his mind? What does he think the magistrate will do? It’s like asking me to confront the thieves in person.”

    Sennin took the note and read it fast.

    Azula looked around the busy dock. His frown depended as he wondered what had gotten into his father. A man with short strawberry-blonde hair carried a crate filled with mangoes into a large warehouse a few feet away.

    The Sura Clan ran this docking station at the Endless Port. It was where their ships offloaded and received the cargo. The men and women who operated the port were all from Sura Island. They packed the cargo into transport carriages and seasoned drivers took it to the capital city of Genad. They also arranged cargo from the capital into the ships for transport to Sura Island.

    This routine was ageless. Every member of the clan old enough to contribute had worked the system here at the Endless Port.

    Suddenly, Azula was sure their age-old traditions had somehow opened them up to a new threat.

    Sennin handed the note back, and Azula stuffed it into his pocket.

    Azula adjusted the leather belt holding his trousers in place. He took a good look at their ship. Inside, in the cargo hold, hid their first attempt at a new transport carriage.

    A transport carriage Azula hoped would fool the people doing their best to ruin them.

    Now, all they had to was fulfill his promise to Magnus. He needed to find a stronger force to deal with an aggressive attack.

    Magnus was always right. Their people were blacksmiths. They could beat iron, silver, gold, and any other metal into shape. However, they were no warriors.  Half of them were very softhearted. Their family life in the Sura village made it impossible to become cold warriors able to fight off a killing horde.

    “What do we do now?” Sennin asked.

    “Follow Magnus’s wishes,” Azula said, his gaze shifting away from their ship to the rest of the busy dock.

    Azula nodded his greetings to familiar faces, which was everyone here. He had grown up knowing everyone who worked or ran a business at the Endless Port. This was why he paused when he noticed a pair of women sitting at the end of the boardwalk.

    They looked too new, unfamiliar, and out of place. They sat on old wooden crates eating fried potatoes out of brown paper. A misshapen wooden stand was arranged before them, facing the main street. It looked like they were selling something, but their attention was on the Sura ship.

    “We should find somewhere quiet,” Azula said. “There are too many eyes.”

    Azula met Sennin’s gaze and nodded in the direction of the two women.

    Sennin waited for a beat then with grace and tact. He glanced at the end of the boardwalk.

    Azula noticed the two women had gained an interested customer.  The customer browsed their wares, but the two women made no effort to sell.

    “Maybe your father has the right idea,” Sennin said, shaking his head.

    His gaze shifted back to their ship.

    “I asked everyone to hold on moving the carriage. They are going to take out crates filled with the mangoes Magnus sells to the inns around here.”

    “Agreed,” Azula said. “Uncle Magnus was right. We need updated information. Let’s go to the nice inn in the middle of town where outsiders like to go. We’ll get something to eat. I’m hungry and they have the best sweet and sour roasted chicken.”

    “Azula,” Sennin started to add more.

    “It’s not like we can leave the port right now,” Azula said, using his thumb to point behind them. “They are probably going to follow us. There is a possibility they are with the people robbing us blind.”

    “You know Alva packed your food,” Sennin said, as Azula turned and headed along the boardwalk to the main road.

    “I will eat later when I’m locked up in the carriage we brought,” Azula said with a mischievous grin. “Come on, let’s head to Teba Inn.”

    Sennin let out a sigh and followed Azula, hurrying after him with a deep frown.

    “Our drivers have experienced twelve losses which have left their families devastated. Aren’t you worried we’ll endure a robbery?” Sennin asked as he caught up with Azula.

    “I’m worried. I am scared of riding that carriage all the way to Genad. But, we don’t have a choice. We need to stop the robberies from happening. I think my plan will help us discover who is doing this. In any case, I also agree with Magnus’s suggestion. We need to find someone strong enough to help us fight back.”

    “Someone like whom?”

    Azula reached into his pocket and pulled out a silver piece. It was a pure silver coin. The first silver coin Azula ever made from a blade he forged at sixteen years old. He kept it with him for inspiration and good luck.

    “Magnus suggested finding a lieutenant we can buy,” Azula said as he kept walking.

    The trick was to find the right person. A lieutenant who was loyal to the empire. One who would help them fight thieves without demanding more than their agreed price.

    Otherwise, Azula’s plan to catch the thieves would be for naught.

    They walked by the two women who were now actively selling the cheap beaded jewelry laid out on their wooden stands. Azula ignored the pair and joined the foot traffic on the main road leading to the center of the port town.

    “Sennin, don’t sulk,” Azula said when he glanced at his best friend and saw a visible frown and a pout on his lips. “I’ll buy you fried fish and sweet buns. Let’s fill our stomachs.”

    Sennin clapped in excitement at the mention of fried fish and hurried to keep up with Azula’s easy stride.

    ****

    Previous | Blades of Ashes ToC | Next

  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 14

    Christophe and Landi stood. Their gazes wide for different reasons as they took in Tani.

    “It is you,” Landi said in greeting, moving away from the island table, coming to face Tani. “You are Ryuzo?”

    Tani smiled.

    “Yes. It has been a long time, young Landi,” Tani said. “How have you been?”

    Landi took a few steps forward and took Tani’s right hand, holding it with both his hands as he studied Tani.

    “Extraordinary thanks to your help. You haven’t aged one bit,” Landi said.

    “What are we missing?” Nora asked, looking to her husband. “Christophe? Why are you standing there like a statue?”

    “Excuse me, it’s not everyday one gets to meet an Ekho in ones home,” Christophe said.

    Tani chuckled, glancing at Dante, who winked at him.

    “When did you meet Landi?” Nora asked.

    “He was a very young man when we met,” Tani said, not making an effort to remove his right hand from Landi’s hold.

    The grandmaster watched him with wonder. His eyes bright with recognition.

    Tani sifted through his vast memories, until his stint with Landi in Andalusia in the late eighteen hundreds returned to him.

    “We met when I was fourteen,” Landi said.

    Dante let out a short impressed whistle and walked around them to sit at the island table.

    “Grandmaster, were you ever that young?” Dante asked.

    “Even younger,” Tani said, smiling at Landi when the older man grinned back at him. “As reckless as you, Dante. He almost burned down an inn over brutal treatment by a gang leader at the docks where he lived at the time.”

    Landi chuckled and let go of Tani’s hand.

    Christophe pulled out a chair next to Dante at the island table.

    Nora then guided Tani to the island table and he sat next to Dante. She hurried to the cooking range to get him a glass of tea.

    Landi sat across Dante and Tani with Christophe joining him.

    “Why did you almost burn down a building, Grandpa?” Christophe asked, taking the glass of tea Dante pushed toward him.

    “Our family was going through a hard time,” Landi said. “My father passed away and we had creditors who wanted our very life. I had to protect mom, so I tried my best to make money and sometimes it wasn’t enough so I broke the law. Until I met Mr. Ryuzo. He changed my life.”

    “Please, Mr. Ryuzo sounds so formal,” Tani said, getting comfortable in his seat. “Call me Tani.”

    “I think we need to know more about this encounter. Don’t you think so, Dad?” Dante asked, accepting a glass of tea from Nora. He passed it to Tani and waited for the second one.

    “I have read the stories in your grandmaster’s journals,” Christophe said, sipping his tea. “Still, reading is not the same. He tells the story better.”

    Landi let out a soft sigh and looked at Tani.

    “There is not much to tell. I was born in a shabby house in the Seville docks in Andalusia. My dad worked in cargo ships, and often took voyages so we lived where he could find work. He had moved our family from Ottoman territory, hoping to escape the life of a farmer and make a fortune in a different region. The only work he could get easily was working on ships. He made good money, but he was not very smart with our family’s finances,” Landi said, shaking his head.

    “When he was not on long voyages, he ran destructive vices: drinking, gambling, and women…,” Landi sighed. “There was no way to cure him. Mom tried and failed too many times. She did her best to keep my younger sister and me safe. Mom worked in the laundry of a successful inn. She kept money aside to sustain our lives and pay rent. We tried to hide what she saved, but it didn’t always work out.”

    “Your father found it,” Dante said, tensing in his chair.

    “Most times,” Landi said, shadows in his eyes as he remembered his distant past.

    “Was he violent?” Dante asked, his tense tone drawing Tani’s gaze.

    “When he was drunk,” Landi said with a shrug, looking at Dante. “It’s in the past.”

    “Either way, I’m sorry you had to live through that kind of situation,” Dante said, sitting back in his chair.

    Tani placed a hand on his right knee and warmth flooded him when Dante reached down to cover his hand with his right one.

    Landi studied Dante for a moment, and then his lips curved in a smile at the clear sympathy in Dante’s gaze.

    “Don’t dwell on it,” Landi said. “I don’t. In any case, Dad died after fighting with a man he owed money in a pub. His creditors soon came knocking at our door after his funeral. I had to start working to make money to help mom. The best place to do that as fourteen-year-old kid was doing odd jobs at the docks.”

    “We lived along a stretch dominated by a powerful gang that had its hands on liquor imports and all the pubs along the docks,” Landi said, staring into his tea. “As I said earlier, I was very angry at fourteen. Easy to trigger, and full of fire. A fire my mother called the devil’s gift because she had no idea why I had it in me. She tried her best to love me despite my strange gift. Still her discomfort with it made me angrier.”

    “We had to live. I had no scruples in making sure we had money for food. I overstepped and crossed multiple members of the gang, and even stole money from their leader if an opportunity presented itself. One bad night, the gang boss caught me thieving from one of his clients, and he made mom pay for the interest with money she had saved for our rent. Mom was at her wits end with me. She cried for a night and a day. So…I left the house the next evening determined to make the gang boss pay for making her cry.”

    “Not stealing would have made her cry less,” Nora pointed out, placing a platter filled with cured meats, tomatoes and lettuce, white cheese cubes, eggs, and more on the table. She handed Dante a glass of tea, and patted his shoulder.

    Tani studied the platter of food excited by the spread. He smiled at Nora in thanks when she handed him a plate and cutlery.

    “Stealing was the easiest way to keep our family living day-to-day, or so I believed,” Landi said, continuing his story. “In any case, I set about getting that gang boss back for making mom cry. I decided the best way was to burn down his most popular pub, which was where he had his office. I waited until it was late in the night. You see, I was skinny enough to slip through the alleys without people noticing me. I found the right spot to start the fire on the bar and lit up a beam with my magic, and…”

    Landi made a wave with his hands, soft harmless sparks falling from the tips of his fingers.

    “My fire died in a vacuum,” Landi said, shaking his head. “It shocked me because I had never experienced something like that. The fire always came when I wanted it. I looked up and Mr. Ryu—I mean, Tani was leaning on the wall opposite watching me. I thought he was one of the gang boss’s men. Though with his clean cut style of dress, he couldn’t have been.”

    “You tried to put me on fire,” Tani said with a short grin, as he took a slice of homemade bread, and covered it with a thin layer of cottage cheese. He took a bite, his gaze on an embarrassed Landi.

    “There was no chance I would manage it,” Landi said with a soft voice. “You turned my fire attempts into grape vines. Told me I should rethink my choices. That I should work to get my family to move back to our true home and start a new.”

    “I just wanted to give you a new school of thought,” Tani said, swallowing the delicious bread. He sipped his tea. “Had you continued as I found you, I fear this present existence would not have come to be.”

    Landi studied him, and then agreed with a single nod.

    “Yes. You are quite right,” Landi said. “The vines you made from my fire started this vineyard. I have always wanted to thank you for helping my family back then. Your support saved us, helped us return here to Artri.”

    “It was my duty,” Tani said, placing his slice of bread on the plate and sat back, his gaze on Landi.

    “Is it because of the promise you made to the original Durante?” Christophe asked, watching Tani openly.

    “No.” Tani shook his head, the importance of his meeting with Landi suddenly filling him.

    “No, that is not why I came for you, Landi. I was working under the Elderwood Conservancy. We were hidden in those ages, still are in a way. We are known now among modern scholars because we try to help heal the environment and protect wildlife. However, the core reason why Elderwood exists is to watch over the Ekho-blessed children in the mortal realm. Creating sanctuaries for the children powerful heretics insisted had the devil’s gifts, as you say,” Tani said. A deep frown creasing his forehead. “I was sent to check your case because of a rumor that there was a child who started fires when he was angry. I had no clear information on you until you wanted to burn down the bar.”

    “Oh,” Landi frowned. “So, it is not because of my connection to Durante? I heard you are sworn to protect his generations.”

    “I am sworn to this promise, but no, that is not why I came to you. Durante’s line had no power when you were young, Landi. His bloodline was pure mortal. You changed it though when you met your wife. She belonged to Durante’s bloodline.”

    “Wow,” Christophe said, his gaze shifting to Landi. “Here you thought it was because of our Artri bloodline.”

    “It seemed like it should be,” Landi said, shaking his head as he studied Tani. “Then…is it true our patriarch is a powerful ekho, a god of fire in the Ekho Realm?”

    “It is true. Kinon is his name,” Tani said, holding out his wrists. “Forger of these cuffs that ground me to the mortal realm.”

    “Is he a good soul?” Nora asked, her gaze on the cuffs on Tani’s wrists. “This Kinon who has blessed our Artri House with his power. Is he a good ekho?”

    Tani let out a soft sigh, and dropped his hands to his lap, a heaviness filling his chest. Dante responded to the sigh by taking his left hand and tangling their fingers. The warmth of his touch soothed the sting in his chest and he took in a lighter breath.

    “Your definition of good is different from mine, ours as Ekho,” Tani said. “In real truth, I am not old enough to pass judgment on Kinon, the Ekho god of fire. By all the rules governing my existence in the Ekho Realm, I am a deviant Ekho. One who has broken, defied, the accepted rules of our Ekho realm. So, I cannot answer your question, Nora Arturo.”

    The room went silent, and then Dante cleared his throat.

    “So, just how old are you, Grandmaster?” Dante asked. “Should I be calling the Guinness World Record? I’m very sure we are bound to win. What year were you born?”

    “You will do no such thing,” Christophe said, pointing a finger at Dante in clear admonishment. “This son of mine might actually attempt to do it.”

    Tani chuckled and glanced at Landi.

    “I should be a hundred and forty-seven or so,” Landi said. “The fire inside me keeps me young. It should be the same for those in our bloodline. We age slowly.”

    “How many are there like you?” Tani asked.

    “Our family is very old. Our bloodline dates back to the eleventh century. We here in this room are the last standing with power,” Landi said, his gaze lost in memory. “The first of our line was named Christophe Artri, he had a daughter named Nora Artri, and it continues. Those before me had passed on by the time we were able to return to Aretias Island.”

    “When my family returned from Andalusia, we only found my grandmother. Thank the fates for her. She helped me understand who I was, what I was. From her, I learned how to control my fire. She kept records of our family. It felt good to discover that a long line of Artri men and women had gifts like mine. I didn’t feel so alone, even though my power was decidedly stronger than all the others in our line were. I have helped document our line since then.”

    “How did you know your power was stronger than others?” Tani asked.

    “There were spells grandmother could not do and she was with power. I was stronger than she was, though that changed when Dante was born. He is stronger than Christophe and me. When my wife gave birth to our children,” Landi said. “I got one son and three daughters. My son had no magik in his blood because his mother was not ekho-blessed. The magik skipped the girls too, but that is common. However, it found my grandson because we made an effort to make sure his mother was ekho-blessed, Christophe, and his son, Dante. These two should have the same outcome with age as me.”

    “They should,” Tani said, with a thoughtful nod.

    Kinon had truly put a lot of thought into his interference. The question remained why.

    Had this been his intention to begin with?

    Tani studied Landi.

    Kinon had blessed the Artri nurturing a long line of warlocks. Then Landi’s father decides to break out of farming, ending up in Andalusia. He takes long voyages in search of a fortune, and Landi is born with the strongest power in the line. His bloodline then contributes to Dante’s current bloodborne warlock magik. It felt like a renewal of Ekho magik. Renewing the Artri line to keep it relevant.

    Tani bit back a scoff at the thought.

    For Landi to grow his power this much, then it should have been that his mother had an affair with Kinon. Landi’s mother would have no real knowledge of what Kinon was.

    Tani thought about the request to the conservancy to find Landi. It was also suspect.

    Could Kinon have pretended to be the owner of the inn…?

    Tani reached for his phone.

    “What is it?” Dante asked.

    “Now that I hear Landi’s story and remember his case, I have questions as to how Elderwood knew to find you in Andalusia,” Tani said.

    “Is it very unusual?” Dante asked.

    Tani wrote a message to Hera.

    ‘Visit the conservancy archives for me. Find case files for the Andalusia region, late eighteen hundreds. I need to know who sent the case to the conservancy. Also the lineage book with Artri House.’

    “Mm,” Tani said. “Not quite, we did get requests for odd occurrences around the world, but…Landi’s case was specific.”

    Tani’s phone pinged and opened the voice message from Hera.

    Sawa, Babu. By the way, the ghost of the fortress left a gift in the living room you should see. Tom and I have decided you should bring your new boyfriend to meet us. I’ll make him samosas with pepper.

    Tani grinned and glanced at Dante.

    “What are samosas?”

    “Triangle pastries filled with beefy yummyness,” Tani said. “Hera is a master with them. You’ll love them.”

    “Can’t wait to try them then,” Dante said.

    “Just so you know, she’s going to ask many questions,” Tani said, putting away his phone.

    “Does she know about our past?” Dante asked.

    “No,” Tani shook his head. “And, I would like to keep it that way. There are parts of my life that are difficult to share with Tom and Hera. Our long connection is part of that.”

    “I understand,” Dante said tangling his fingers with Tani’s left hand again.

    “Just how long has the Elderwood Conservancy existed?” Landi asked, sipping his tea.

    “Elderwood has been around in various forms since the thirteenth century. My uncle named it.”

    “Uncle?” Dante asked.

    “Mm,” Tani said turning to Dante. “He would have given you the tour when you came, but he had a pressing engagement. He’s my…guardian.”

    “Will I meet him too?” Dante asked. “Will he approve of me?”

    Tani chuckled.

    “I doubt he has a choice at this point. We’ve been—,”

    Tani broke off, biting his bottom lip his gaze on Dante.

    “He’s been part of us for a long time. He knows everything about you.”

    “Oh,” Dante said.

    “What kind of work does the conservancy do?” Christophe asked. “In this age.”

    “It has always protected your kind,” Tani said. “You’re not the only recipient of our care. Though, I wasn’t sure of your bloodline at the time. There are many like you who need our care, even now.”

    “Like my father?” Landi asked.

    “Your father was a mortal,” Tani cut in, studying Landi, wondering how to convey his suspicions without seeming callous. “If the power was in him, it remained dormant. Instead, he was a damaging force. I doubt anyone could have saved him from himself. Once his quest for fortune failed, it was not in him to return to his true family here, so he kept you and your mother in pain and poverty. In a way, he forged you.”

    Landi sighed and nodded in agreement.

    “I’ve always wondered if he had the gift.”

    “He did not,” Tani shook his head. His phone buzzed again and he reached for it to find a picture from Hera. It was the file he asked for and the book with Atri House’s lineage. They were on the desk in his private library.

    “Thank you. Will plan for you to meet Dante. Don’t give him a hard time. He’s my heart.”

    Tani messaged back to Hera and summoned the file and book to him. He moved his plate and teacup to the side so that the book and the thick folder could fall on the table. No one at the table flinched in surprise. They had clearly seen more elaborate designs of magik.

    “This book records your house and claims the current head of the house is Christophe Arturo.” Tani opened it to the fire element pages and held out the book to Landi. “I think it was recorded using hearsay. If you would help correct the record for future generations working in our Elderwood Conservancy.”

    “We will,” Christophe said, taking the book from Landi. He started reading the contents and paused. “This is fascinating. Are you saying Artri is the only lineage with fire?”

    “Yes,” Tani said. “There has not been any other. Any discovered anyway.”

    “Oh,” Landi said. “We’re so rare.”

    “I think your patriarch is very strict with himself. Your house should be the only one he created,” Tani said, opening the old file from the Andalusia period.

    He searched and found the name of the inn keeper who submitted a request to find Landi.

    It read, ‘Onnik Kinno.’

    Tani grinned at the god of fire’s clear originality.

    Onnik Kinno. First and Last name, each one an anagram of Kinon.

    Must you reveal Master’s clear lack of originality?” Artri whispered in Tani’s head.

    Not my fault he could not think up a good name for his mortal lover,” Tani replied. ‘Onnik Kinno.’

    Artri huffed and Tani bit back his amused laugh.

    Landi’s true father was Kinon, the god of fire himself. Tani sighed. Kinon must have been very invested in making Dante’s line strong to have renewed the bloodline.

    This…he would have to discuss with Dante later.

    He returned the file to his library and sat back in his chair to drink his tea. His gaze on Christophe and Landi who were busy counting down the number of generations they needed to add in the book.

    Dante used tongs to fill Tani’s plate with cheese cubes, grapes, toasted fresh bread and a mix of cold meats.

    “I have a question,” Nora said. She had settled in a chair at the head of the table on Tani’s side. “What is your Ekho clan, Tani?”

    “I am a hybrid,” Tani said. “Also, I’m a deviant Ekho sent to the mortal world to serve a sentence. My affiliations with any clan have ended at this point.”

    “Because of your beloved?” Dante asked, studying his plate of food with grat interest.

    “Partly,” Tani said. “I was still in the mortal realm even before my punishment. There are reasons for that too.”

    “Oh,” Nora said, nodding. “So, would you be willing to give us more information about the Ekho Realm?”

    “Yes,” Christophe said, looking up from the lineage book. “I mean, our institute is in dire need of information about your kind. What we know is like folklore. We teach it but it’s not the same as the offering truth. Is that something you would be willing to share?”

    “It would depend,” Tani said, accepting the fork Dante handed hi. “I might be a deviant but I am still sworn to the laws of our kind. They include not giving mortals too much information about our kind.”

    “It’s hardly fair,” Landi said. “Your kind has all the power. You come here and create the ekho-blessed. We now have to content with deadly parasites like Kara ot. Don’t you think it’s unfair to keep us in the dark about your kind?”

    Tani chuckled and sat back in his seat.

    “I suppose you are right,” Tani said. “Those in the Elderwood Conservancy have spent time with me and my uncle. What they know has been largely from dealing with us, and situations that crop through time. We handle the worst brought by the Ekho Realm. We don’t share the information with outsiders because it can also prove dangerous. I suppose it is because of Uncle Amu—”

    “Can we join the conservancy?” Landi asked. “Including us into Elderwood will mean you violate no agreements with your people.”

    “Who are us?” Tani asked, popping a grape into his mouth. “Artri House or the school you both run. The one that made Dante?”

    “Both,” Nora said, drawing Tani’s gaze.

    “Mom,” Dante started.

    “Artri House includes me,” Nora said, sipping her tea. “The institute does not. Tani, I saw how you were with Hera and Tom. Who is Hera to you?”

    “She is my ward,” Tani said. “Why?”

    “You respect her opinions,” Nora said. “I feel Elderwood does that for the women of our kind. I want to be part of it.”

    “Nora,” Christophe said, staring at his wife in shock. “You run Artri House, unfettered. Why would you say you are not included?”

    What did you do when I told you that Landi had placed a silencing spell on me?” Nora asked.

    Christophe stopped, his gaze shifting to Dante.

    Tani watched Dante sip his tea without pause. He decided to relax and enjoy breakfast too.

    “You did nothing,” Nora answered for Christophe. “Our son confronted Landi the moment he discovered the truth. So, I am no longer spelled thanks to Dante. This is why I am able to tell Tani that the Ekho I trade with is called Aero. He is from the Dragon Clan.”

    Tani placed his fork down and frowned.

    “Aero. I’ve know of him. He runs auctions across the world. Elderwood has watched him for some time now. The results of his auctions have been mostly harmless. But now with the wicked black weed…”

    Tani’s frown deepened in thought.

    The dragon clan was in peace with most clans in the Ekho Realm, but they were a cunning race. They were noble and ferocious. Dragon clan people loved wealth and precious jewels. They did not discriminate on the people they traded with especially if it meant attaining a coveted item. Which could mean Aero might have brought Kara ot for the right price.

    “Tani?” Dante touched his elbow.

    Tani met worried brown eyes.

    “Perhaps your grandmaster is right,” Tani said with a small sigh. “Our traits make us. In saying that, Aero’s dragon traits are important. He might have brought the black weed. I need to call in someone Dante. Do not lock them out.”

    “I don’t—”

    “It is your will that runs Artri House,” Tani murmured. “I won’t go with them, but we need to work very fast. Aero is dangerous. Trust me.”

    “I do,” Dante said. “Do what you need to do.”

    Tani smiled and turned to Nora.

    “Thank you for sharing the name with me,” Tani said. “I’ll bring someone who will help resolve this mystery. He can also accept Artri House and your school’s application to join Elderwood. I can only help you up to here. The rest is up to you.”

    Nora nodded her consent and Tani closed his eyes and reached out to Amu.

    ‘Uncle.’

    ‘Tani, where are you?’ Amu responded.

    ‘Please visit Artri House. Use me as an anchor to find it,” Tani said.

    Tani hesitated then clenched his hands into tight firsts as he added.

    You may bring the Ekho goddess of earth with you.”

    We’ll be there,” Amu answered.

    Tani ended the connection and swallowed down his annoyance with having to include Eren. The thought of helping the Septum left him angry but he could not leave the members of this house vulnerable.

    Dante’s warm hand covered his left fist. He looked up to find Dante studying him.

    “You okay?” Dante asked.

    “I’m fine,” Tani said, his heart skipping at the warmth in Dante’s eyes. He wished they were alone. He consoled himself with the fact that they would be sooner or later. Reaching for the tea glass before im, he took a sip. “Nora, the breakfast spread looks delicious. Atri House sure does have the best meals. Dante cooked last night and it was amazing.”

    “Meals are the soul of a house,” Nora answered. “It is good to have everyone in the house meet at the table to touch base.”

    “Meals are how you discover who has spelled who in the family,” Dante said, making Nora chuckle and Christophe and Landi scowled at him.

    “Then you serve tea after serious threats,” Nora added. “Grandmaster would know very much about such an incident.”

    “Really?” Tani turned his inquiring gaze at Landi.

    “Yes, Dante threatened to rip me to pieces with liquid silver on Wednesday. He wanted me to remove the spell on Nora. I did it and then Nora served us breakfast right here.”

    Tani chuckled at his beloved’s petty nature.

    “You have a mean streak, Dante,” Tani said, glancing at Dante.

    “I was protecting mom,” Dante said, holding out a piece of white cheese to Tani. “Try this, it’s delicious.”

    Tani took a bite and nodded in agreement, as he ate. He was sipping his tea when Amu and Eren shimmered in to the kitchen.

    The wave of white light that filled the kitchen surprised Nora. She dropped the butter knife she held to stare at the two Ekhos in her kitchen.

    Tani stood then, and Dante followed his gaze to Amu.

    “Uncle,” Tani said in greeting.

    “Tani,” Amu said, with a small nod in greeting. “So this is Artri House.”

    “Yes,” Tani held out his hand to a stunned Landi. “He is the eldest of the Artri line, followed by Christophe and his wife, Nora. They are Dante’s parents.”

    “Children of Kinon,” Eren said, her gaze fixated on Dante. “You…you’re the culmination of his power. How extraordinary.”

    Tani ignored Eren’s observations and faced Dante’s family.

    “May I introduce Amu Izuna, born of the Fox Lord Nua Izuna. He is brother to the fox goddess. He takes the last name Ryuzo in the mortal realm to honor my roots. She is Eren, the Ekho goddess of the earth. She is from the Immortal Clan and one of the Septum.”

    Landi, Christophe, and Nora stood to give their greetings.

    Dante’s came up much slower, his gaze on Eren.

    “She contributed to the cuffs on your wrist,” Dante said, still holding Tani’s left hand. “Why is she here?”

    Tani smirked, meeting Eren’s gaze.

    “It is unavoidable,” Tani said, moving closer to Dante. He squeezed Dante’s fingers. “We need her authority to control Aero.”

    “How should we address you?” Landi asked.

    “Amu and Eren,” Amu said, looking at the laden table. “Sorry for intruding during your breakfast.”

    “Not at all,” Nora said. “You are welcome to join us. Have a seat. I’ll brew some more tea.”

    “Thank you for the offer but not this time,” Amu said, shaking his head. “We have an appointment we must keep elsewhere. Cale waits for us.”

    “The god of calamity?” Dante asked with a frown. “Why would you associate with him?”

    “I would ask why we are associating with mortals.” Eren countered.

    Dante gaped at her.

    “These mortals are Ekho-blessed, guarded by Kinon,” Tani said, frowning at Eren. “I called you here because Nora Arturo has provided us with the name of the Ekho who visits this manor. He is Aero from the dragon clan.”

    “Aero, the owner of the Kur Auction,” Amu said, his right brow rising in mild surprise. “Why would he visit here?”

    Tani glanced at Nora and smiled when he saw her shiver with anxiety.

    “Uncle, you know Aero needs to source items for auction,” Tani said. “Artri House is filled with great magik. They will cross paths. It is not taboo.”

    “Of course,” Amu said, shifting his gaze to Nora, Christophe, and Landi. “Now that we know the possible source of the black weed, we can trace back his steps. We shall need help from the person Aero meets.”

    “That is me,” Nora said.

    Eren held out her hand.

    Nora walked around Dante and Tani to reach her. They shimmered out of Artri House the moment Nora touched Eren’s hand.

    “Don’t worry,” Amu said when Dante took a startled step forward. “They will be back shortly.”

    “Uncle,” Tani said, squeezing Dante’s hand. “Artri House would love to join the Elderwood network. Landi and Christophe also run a school they want to include. I told them you would hear them out.”

    “Artri House is included in our network without question,” Amu said, his gaze on Dante. “As it always is with one in his bloodline. His children and theirs after remain under our care.”

    Dante held out his hand to Amu.

    Amu took his hand in a firm handshake.

    “Thank you,” Dante said.

    “Don’t thank me,” Amu said, letting go of Dante’s hand after a moment. “I take care of what is important to Tani.”

    “I am grateful for your care,” Dante said.

    “Uncle,” Tani started.

    “The culprit responsible for the black weed is almost caught. We know where to start looking in order to resolve this incident. Leave the search to Cale, Eren, and me,” Amu said his gaze gentle when he looked at Tani. “The sand in the hourglass lessens. You should get on with it.”

    Amu was giving him time with Dante. Releasing him from the search for Aero so that the trial might end with no interference.

    “This is the last chance,” Amu continued. “Give it your all and make sure there are no regrets.”

    Tani smiled and stepped forward. He took Amu’s right hand, and pressed the back of it to his forehead. A show of respect for the man he considered his father in all the ways that mattered. He was keenly aware that his life would be miserable without Amu’s full support.

    Amu placed his palm on top of Tani’s head in gentle blessing.

    “Be careful out there,” Amu said. “I will let you know if any changes arise.”

    Tani stepped away from Amu, just as Nora and Eren returned to the kitchen. Nora sat in the closest chair when Eren let go of her hand and let out a relieved breath. Her eyes shining with excitement.

    “Mom, are you alright?” Dante asked, moving to Nora’s side.

    “I’m very fine,” Nora said with a happy grin. “The teleporting was exciting. Lady Eren is very powerful. She traced Aero’s comings and goings at the beach. We discovered he uses a ship that docks not too far from our beach and comes in. They’ll find out more.”

    “Mm,” Eren said, nodding as she turned to Amu. “I have marked his footsteps on the ground. I’ll be able to find him in this realm.”

    “You’re indeed of the earth,” Amu said. “Before we leave, there is the topic of Elderwood and this house. Mrs. Arturo, why don’t we get started on an agreement. Tani, don’t let us keep you here.”

    Tani looked to Dante with a small smile, relieved his uncle would take on the case with Aero.

    “You wanted to stop by your office,” Tani said, remembering Dante’s wish for time alone. “Do you still want to take the sabbatical?”

    Dante squeezed his mother’s right shoulder and moved away from the table to stand next to Tani.

    “Yes,” Dante said, taking Tani’s left hand. “I’d love it very much.”

    “Then,” Tani said, tightening his hold on Dante’s hand. “Let’s go.”

    Dante glanced at his family, gave them a short wave, before Tani enveloped both of them in bright gold light. Tani teleported them out of Artri House, heading to Dante’s apartment in Istanbul.

    ***

    <<Previous | Table of Contents | Next>>

  • Blades of Ashes Ch 2-2

    Arc 1- The Case of the Forged Silver Coins

    Chapter 2-2

    The sun shone on the surface of the lake, turning the water a beautiful azure. Azula held his breath, sinking deeper into the cold embrace of the lake water. The water was so clear. He could see the light shining on the surface of the lake. The rays fighting to light the deep depths below.

    Azula sank deeper.

    It was so quiet down here. A bubble escaped from his lips. Azula watched it travel to the surface above him. He grinned when the shadow of a boat covered the light.

    He waited a beat, enjoying the silence. Then an oar struck the surface, making ripples in the water. It seemed that someone was anxious.

    Azula kicked his legs, rising to the surface of the lake. He took in a deep breath when he could, and let it out, wiping water out of his face with his palms. He pushed his hair back and smiled at the two people leaning over the boat watching him.

    “Tell me, are you hiding fish traits? Are you searching for a treasure in this lake? Think carefully before you answer.”

    Azula grinned at the woman who smiled at him as she spoke. He trod water as he studied her familiar face.

    Alva was twenty-eight, a mother of two, and her strawberry blonde hair was filled with braids, thanks to her family. Her husband ran the smithy at the Doriel ancestral home, while she managed the ancestral house. She took care of Azula’s meals and mended his clothes. He grew up with her and knew her hot temper. Had endured spankings from her when she was sixteen and he was naughty. She was like his big sister.

    Azula truly could not afford to offend her.

    “If I say I’m looking for treasure, what happens?” Azula asked, dipping his head back into the water, and sweeping his hair back away from his face.

    “Then tomorrow morning, I’ll make sure Kalas gets men to drag this lake and empty it. Surely an empty lake will help you find the treasure faster,” Alva said.

    “Big sis, wouldn’t that mean I’m responsible for the loss of all the fish in this lake?” Azula complained. “Let’s say I’m hiding fish traits and feel at home deep in the water.”

    Alva laughed and Kalas held out his hand to Azula.

    “We need to get back,” Kalas said. “A message has come from your father. There has been another robbery.”

    Azula forgot his ploy to stay longer in the water and gripped Kalas hand. Kalas helped pull him out of the water, and he climbed onto the large flat passenger boat with a blue canvas shelter. He sat on a bench, took the heavy towel Alva handed him, and used it to dry off.

    “What does my father’s message say?” Azula asked, dropping the towel on his lap, knowing Alva would have brought it along.

    Azula took the dry white linen tunic Alva held out and wore it with practiced moves. He straightened the long sleeves to his wrists and stood. Alva handed Kalas the pair of clean white linen shorts and a pair of black trousers.

    “I’ll get the note,” Alva said, moving to the blue canvas canopy to rummage in the bag she had brought and left on a bench there, her back turned to them.

    Beyond the blue canvas canopy stood the oarsman steering the flat passenger boat to the private dock behind the Doriel ancestral home. He had also tied the little boat Azula used to come out to the larger one and it now trailed behind them.

    Azula removed the wet linen shorts he used for swimming, wiped dry, and took the white shorts and trousers from Kalas. He pulled them on with impatience, hopping from side to side.

    “Another robbery is bad for business. I’m guessing Papa wants me to deliver the next round, though we can’t keep losing shipments like this,” Azula said, finally pulling up his trousers.

    He paused to tie the strings on his trousers and tucked one side of his tunic into them. Grabbing the heavy towel, he did his best to dry his hair. The strawberry blonde hair was braided on the sides, and the top was tied with a leather strip to make a messy ponytail. The length of this ponytail fell down to his shoulders. His hair would feel damp for a while yet.

    Alva returned holding a folded letter and a long heavy wool dark coat with rabbit fur on the collar. She handed Azula the coat. He wore it because she worried he would catch a cold. He did not bother closing the wooden buttons on the coat and instead sat on the bench and took the letter from his father.

    Azula broke the wax seal on the cover of the letter and unrolled the note.

    There are traps on our usual routes. The cargo carriages marked by the enemy. Find a way to bring black ore to the city. Trust no one outside the clan. Make haste, the workshops in the city are running low. We will start losing income if we can't fulfill orders.'

    “Someone is out to defame our Sura,” Azula said. “These robberies do not seem simple.”

    Azula handed the letter to Kalas to read and picked up his wet linen shorts. Squeezing out excess water, he rolled them into a small bundle and slipped them into the bag Alva held out. He picked up the towel he had used, dried his hands and feet then placed the towel in the bag too.

    He sat and Alva passed him a pair of knitted black socks and his usual boots.

    “Taking a shipment to the capital with this climate is dangerous work,” Kalas said. “You’ll need Sennin and me with you.”

    Azula wore his socks, and sunk his feet into his warm boots. He tied the laces and sat up, his gaze on the surface of the still lake. The sun was still high above, but the depths of the lake were dark again. He frowned and shook his head.

    “No, you stay here with Magnus and the clan. I’ll take Sennin with me,” Azula said. “In case we run into trouble and need help, I can count on you.”

    “Very well,” Kalas said, his lips set in a hard line of disapproval.

    “Kalas, no matter what is going on in the capital, our most important asset is here,” Azula said, placing his hand on Kalas’s shoulder. “I trust you to protect our home.”

    Kalas gave him a swift smile and shook his head.

    “There is Lord Magnus,” Kalas reminded him.

    “Lord Magnus is the same age as my father,” Azula said with a wide grin. “He is strong, but I don’t expect him to run along the docks to push everyone to action. All he knows is how to give orders. You will make sure they are fulfilled.”

    “If he hears you say that about him, he will surely spank you,” Kalas said with a laugh.

    “He might but he knows I’m right,” Azula said. “He’s not young anymore. He needs you to push people around.”

    “Right,” Kalas said with a sigh, staring at the letter he held. “Twenty years old, and you sound like a veteran.”

    “I should grow up faster because our Sura Mountain is coveted by too many. Protecting this place and our family is not easy,” Azula said, squeezing Kalas’s shoulder. He stood up to watch the boat approach the dock behind his beloved home.

    “Our black ore is precious. Blacksmiths in the capital prefer it because it converts to iron bars with a higher percentage. I don’t have to mention how strong the steel made from our ore is. I can see why there are those who want to take it from us. Six cargo carriages stolen is no small feat.”

    “Our enemy is strong,” Kalas said, standing next to Azula, his hands folded against his chest. “We need a good plan.”

    “We need a genius plan,” Azula said as the oarsman navigated the boat so that the side of it stopped right at the dock.

    “I’ll tell the ten kinsmen to find you,” Alva said, as Azula stepped up onto the dock and turned to take her hand.

    “I will be in Yaitan’s workshop,” Azula said, once Alva was safely standing on the dock. “Don’t forget to tell Godfather.”

    ****

    Huga Nedin watched his locksmith break the last lock on the Sura cargo carriages. A sigh of relief filled the men around him as the door opened to reveal the pure burnt ore found only in the Sura Mountain.

    The five cargo carriages standing open in their hidden compound had carried enough to fulfill their plans. This sixth carriage would be shared out among the mercenaries in Huga’s team. It would fetch a handsome price when sold to blacksmiths outside the capital.

    “What do we do with the cargo carriages?” Lian asked, drawing Huga’s gaze.

    Lian was his most reliable man. He managed tasks without question. He would not ask about the cargo carriages without a reason.

    “Why?” Huga asked.

    “They are Sura property,” Lian said. “The clan is actively looking for them. This compound is hidden but there is no guarantee that it won’t be found. Our plan is still ongoing. We should discard the carriages in a place of convenience.”

    “Convenience, you say,” Huga said, smiling as he turned back to the open cargo carriage. He reached in and took a piece of the burnt ore.

    Yes, he had almost forgotten their true purpose at the thought of their incoming profits. This burnt ore had a larger role to play. Lian was right. The stage was coming along nicely, so why not use the carriages too.

    Who in the capital did not know what a Sura cargo carriage looked like?

    Huga chuckled.

    “Lian, you have the best ideas,” Huga said with a nod. “Find three men to help you move the cargo carriages. Leave them somewhere the Sura Clan is able to find them. Somewhere that works for the grander plan. The yard behind the warehouse they keep in the middle of the capital is a great place.”

    “Yes, Sir.”

    “Meanwhile, look out for another Sura cargo carriage,” Huga said. “We only needed six, but extra burnt ore is good for the pocket. They will be sending one out soon in order to cover the deficit. Now, everyone gets to work! Move this ore to our transport carriage.”

    ****

    Previous | Blades of Ashes ToC | Next

  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 13-2

    Dante woke to sunshine flooding his bedroom, and the feel of Tani Ryuzo’s warmth in his arms. He lay still, taking in the scent of his own shampoo, mixed in with Tani’s clean scent. It filled his nostrils, permeated his cells, and his lungs, and filled his heart with joy. He could not remember feeling so content in his life.

    Tani shifted, snuggling deeper into his chest, and Dante smiled at the trust Tani was giving him.

    He rarely held his partners in his arms, not even Viola with whom he had children.

    Dante brushed his fingers through Tani’s red-brown hair and enjoyed the moment. They were on his bed, the covers wrapped around them after a night of hard sleeping. Tani breathed in gentle motion, deep asleep.

    Dante took the chance to sink his fingers into soft red-brown hair, allowing his fingers to memorize the texture of it between his fingers. He stroked Tani’s hair in absent movement and managed to uncover Tani’s right earlobe.

    The gold leafs lining Tani’s right earlobe drew his interest, and he shifted his fingers to the earrings. It took him only a second to discover the leaves were not earrings. They were part of Tani and could not be removed. They looked sealed into Tani’s skin. Five Elderwood leaves, their artisanship hard to copy, they looked real.

    Dante rubbed his thumb on the surface of each leaf, fascinated by their presence on Tani’s ear. Why five golden leaves on his ear? Did they represent something? Did he feel it when Dante touched them?

    Dante pressed a kiss on the top of Tani’s earlobe and leaned back to find Tani watching him. His breath caught when he looked into clear amber eyes. His cock filled in full appreciation when Tani pressed into him with a small smile.

    “Morning,” Tani murmured, burying his face into Dante’s chest.

    “Morning,” Dante said with a pleased grin, then whispered into Tani’s right ear. “I think I should let you know that I’m in trouble.”

    Tani leaned back, eyes wide with worry.

    “What kind of trouble?”

    “It’s very serious trouble,” Dante said, his tone grim.

    Tani frowned, and Dante grinned.

    “Now that we’ve spent this night together, I really cannot give us up. I slept so well, and then I woke up with you in my arms. It’s a gift. I have to keep you. Can I?” Dante asked. “You’re addictive.”

    Tani shook his head at Dante’s declaration and studied him for a moment.

    “I didn’t think you were so mushy,” Tani said, resting his head on Dante’s chest.

    “I can’t help it,” Dante said, running the palm of his hand over Tani’s back. Up and down, until Tani leaned back to look at him.

    “You’re not the only one addicted,” Tani said. “I love yo—this, I love this, too.”

    Dante smiled and leaned in to kiss Tani. Taking his lips in a sweet kiss that quickly turned possessive. The moment his lips touched Tani’s, he wanted more, wanted to feel Tani’s skin, explore, caress, and touch every inch of him. Discover what made Tani moan in pleasure and come apart in ecstasy. Tani returned his kisses with equal hunger. Dante wished they could stay in his bed making out the whole day.

    His phone buzzed on the bedside table and burst the bubble. He ignored it, kissing Tani, wrapping his arms around him, and rolling so he was on his back with Tani lying over him. Their kiss continued until they were both breathing hard. His phone started ringing again, this time in earnest and Tani broke their kiss to stare at the gadget on the bedside table.

    “Nora is calling,” Tani said, looking at Dante. “She seems determined.”

    Tani rested his head on Dante’s chest and let out a soft contented sigh. Dante sunk his fingers into his hair as he reached for his phone with his left hand. He answered the phone.

    “Morning, Mom.”

    “My son is finally awake,” Nora said. “I wanted to catch you before you decide to leave this morning. Your father is home. It will be nice to have breakfast together. I also have news from Aero. Will you come down?”

    “Yes, Mom. I am also bringing someone to breakfast.”

    “That sounds heavy,” Nora said. “I can’t wait to meet him.”

    Dante smiled as he hung up and looked down to find Tani watching him.

    “My family is downstairs,” Dante said, placing his phone on the bed so that he could wrap both his arms around Tani. “They want to have a meal together.”

    Tani nodded and held his gaze.

    “You want me to meet your family?”

    “Why not?” Dante asked, kissing the top of Tani’s head. “I want to introduce you to my family as my boyfriend. This way, they will not be confused. They’ll know what you mean to me.”

    Tani gave him a slow grin, his amber eyes shimmering for a moment with a beautiful ring of gold. His eyes were so beautiful; Dante took in a breath as his heart leaped in his chest. Tani lowered his gaze and shifted his head on Dante’s chest. Dante’s gaze caught on Tani’s right earlobe and he reached for the gold leaves.

    ***

    Tani closed his eyes and listened to Dante’s heartbeat. Tani’s heartbeat matched the rhythm. It was steady, assuring.

    “Your right earlobe is fascinating,” Dante said, his thumb stroking Tani’s right earlobe. “Why do you have five gold Elderwood leaves on your ear?”

    “They show my standing in my father’s family. To show that I’m his son,” Tani said, not liking the melancholy filling him when he thought about his father.

    “Your Dad?”

    “Mm,” Tani said, looking up to meet Dante’s gaze again. “Let’s not think about him. I don’t want to spoil this beautiful day.”

    Dante studied him for a moment then smiled.

    “Okay. It is a beautiful Thursday morning,” Dante said with a nod. “The best I’ve ever had. I lay here earlier, watching you sleep, and contemplated taking a sabbatical.”

    “Are you running away from work?”

    “It won’t be running away,” Dante said with a chuckle. “Just taking time off and spending a year with you. I don’t want to miss a moment with you, Tani. It occurred to me that I’m almost thirty-six years old. You are the first person in my life I want to give all my time. Maybe Viola was right and I am a cold bastard.”

    Tani’s heart skipped a beat and warmth filled his chest at Dante’s words. He had already given Dante all his time, his life. It felt good to have Dante want to give him back a little of the same. It was the first time his beloved had voiced even an intention of more than a dalliance.

    “I will cherish your time, Dante,” Tani said. “And you’re not cold, you’re filled with fire. She just didn’t know how to see it.”

    “Do you see my fire?” Dante asked, his brow rising in question.

    Tani sat up, his left hand resting on Dante’s chest. The warm fragment of Dante’s soul residing in his empty heart sent a pulse of heat through him. The gold mist swirling around Dante wrapped around his palm, responding to the obvious affection in Dante’s heart.

    Their connection was so very fragile, but promising. He wished there was more, but this felt enough for now. He had no words to describe the gift of having spent a night in Dante’s arms after decades of being without him. There were never sufficient words to describe this moment.

    He looked into Dante’s curious gaze and smiled.

    “You forget,” Tani said. “You singed me at our first meeting, Dante Arturo. I was so stunned that I ended up ankle-deep in marshland when I returned to Elderwood. You ruined a good pair of my favorite shoes.”

    Dante grinned, his lips curving in a handsome smile. Tani immediately wanted to kiss him again.

    “I promise to get you a pair to replace them,” Dante said, his grin turning into a short chuckle.

    Left with no defense, Tani kissed his beloved just to feel Dante’s smile on his lips and then scrambled out of the comfortable bed. Afraid they might linger and not leave at all.

    “I’ll wash up first. I can’t believe you have me meeting your parents when we haven’t been on our first date.”

    “It is part of my secret plan,” Dante said, making Tani pause at the bedroom door to look at him.

    “What secret plan?’

    “The plan to seduce you and keep you at Artri,” Dante said. “Before you showed up, I had planned on kidnapping you.”

    Tani laughed.

    “Does my staying here make me a willing kidnapee?” Tani asked as he opened the door.

    “Yes. Elderwood will have to be calling you to hear your voice,” Dante said. “I’m a very invested kidnapper and will entertain you until you forget you have them waiting.”

    Tani chuckled and shook his head.

    “Entitled warlock,” Tani said as he headed to the bathroom.

    “Dazzling Ekho,” Dante called back. “Come back to bed and make out with me all day.”

    “Your parents are waiting downstairs,” Tani replied and heard Dante let out a soft sigh.

    “They are clearly ruining perfect plans,” Dante complained.

    Tani smiled in amusement and closed the bathroom door.

    ****

    Thirty minutes later, they were both showered and dressed for the day. Tani had made friends with Atri, so he was able to teleport to his house for a moment for a change of clothes. He returned just as Dante was emerging from the bedroom.

    Dante stopped Tani by the door on their way out. He pressed him against the wall and kissed him making Tani chuckle, and wrap his arms around Dante’s shoulders.

    “We should stay in here,” Tani said, raining kisses on Dante’s face. “I love it in your suite of rooms.”

    Dante smiled and wrapped his arms around Tani, holding him close. He buried his face into Tani’s shoulder.

    “I agree.” Dante squeezed Tani tight, loving the fact that Tani was an Ekho and he seemed to love tight hugs, with no flinch at Dante’s strength. “But we should finish with my parents downstairs. My father must know all about the black weed in the olive grove by now. Mom wants to tell us about the Ekho she meets there.”

    Tani rubbed his hands over Dante’s back.

    “Dante. Let’s live your day today,” Tani said. “Tomorrow, we can live mine. I have lawyers to meet. Then we can deal with the rest after.”

    “Okay,” Dante agreed, pressing a kiss on Tani’s shoulder not making a move to open the door.

    Tani rested his chin on Dante’s strong shoulder. He rubbed his hand over Dante’s back, smoothing the pale blue shirt he wore. He liked the color on Dante. It brought out his eyes. Dante’s stomach growled and Tani chuckled.

    “Dante.”

    “Mm?”

    “You’re my beloved and I worry about you very much. We should leave your room so that you can have your morning meal,” Tani whispered into Dante’s ear.

    “I’m in love with the way you talk to me,” Dante said.

    Tani grinned when Dante let him go and took his right hand.

    “Let’s go eat breakfast,” Dante said. “The faster we get through it, the faster we can have time to ourselves.”

    Dante opened the door and led Tani out. They went down the stairs and Dante could not help looking back every few steps just to see Tani following him.

    “I won’t disappear,” Tani said when they got downstairs and Dante squeezed his hand, making sure to walk right beside him. “I’ve already thrown my lot in with you.”

    Dante stopped, bringing Tani’s right hand up to press a kiss on his inner wrist.

    “I just…I feel like I need a minute or two hours to process,” Dante said and then squeezed Tani’s hand, a kiss on his inner wrist. “Maybe twenty-four hours, or a few days…”

    “Months?” Tani asked, teasing.

    “Definitely months,” Dante said. “Years even.”

    Tani’s amber eyes gained a gloomy cloud that quickly disappeared. The shadow hidden behind the strange wall Tani was keeping up between them.

    Dante could not wait to break it down and discover what brought the shadows into Tani’s eyes. He wanted to obliterate it, replace the shadows with joy.

    “Your family fills the kitchen,” Tani said when they continued their walk along the hallway to the kitchen. “Your father doesn’t know I’m here, but your mother and the grandmaster might.”

    “Are you nervous?” Dante asked, surprised by the naked note of anxiety in Tani’s voice.

    “They are your family. Your closest ones. Of course, I’m nervous. What if they don’t like me for you?” Tani asked, anxious energy filling him as they approached the kitchen.

    Dante stopped their progress, brought their clasped hands to his lips, and pressed a kiss on Tani’s knuckles.

    “They should worry if you like them,” Dante said and kissed Tani’s right cheek. He clasped Tani’s hand tighter and did not give Tani a chance to think as he opened the kitchen door.

    Nora gasped when Dante and Tani walked into the warm kitchen. She sat drinking tea at the island table next to Christophe. Grandmaster Landi sat across them, arranging a salad plate.

    They all looked at Dante and Tani when Nora gasped.

    Tani tensed as Nora pushed her chair back and got up. Dante squeezed Tani’s hand as she crossed the room to meet them.

    “Dante,” Nora said, coming to kiss both his cheeks. “You look very happy this morning. Well rested. So very handsome.”

    “Are you saying I wasn’t handsome before?” Dante asked, giving her a scowl, as she let go of him.

    “You’re always handsome to me. I am only saying you look even more handsome this morning,” Nora said, turning to Tani. “Do I have you to thank for this change?”

    “I can’t take any credit. He got it all from you,” Tani said.

    “Aw, I like you very much,” Nora said, leaning in to kiss Tani’s cheek. “What is this?”

    She rubbed her thumb over a red spot on Tani’s neck.

    “I like kissing Tani,” Dante said, wrapping his arm around Tani’s shoulder, pulling him closer, making his cheeks fill with color.

    “Oh, that is the mushiest thing you have ever said near me,” Nora said and held out her hand to Tani. “You’re a miracle to have him announcing he likes you in our kitchen. Come, I’ll introduce you to Dante’s Papa.”

    Tani pulled his hand out of Dante’s and took Nora’s in a gentle handshake. She led him to the island table where two men stood looking at him, caught between shock and…surprise?

    Tani could not tell.

    “Christophe,” Nora said, leading Tani to the younger of the two older men. “This is Tani Ryuzo. He healed the soil in our olive grove. Dante is sweet on him.”

    ****

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  • Blades of Ashes Ch 2-1

    The Case of the Forged Silver Coins

    Chapter 2-1

    A majestic mountain stood in the middle of the Sura Island. Under this mountain, a series of tunnels existed. These tunnels were built in the hundreds of years the Sura Clan had called the island home. Generations came, passed their knowledge to the youngsters, and moved on. Youngsters grew up, taught their next generation. The cycle continued until mining and working with ore became a way of life for the Sura.

    The Sura Clan lived with deep loyalties to family. Theirs was a community based on family first no matter the situation. The members of the clan lacked for nothing. There were no restrictions on love and marriage, ambition or spirit. They supported each other without question.

    Hence, the Sura Clan nurtured skilled jewelers, tool artisans, weapon forgers, talented blacksmiths and many more. The only thing their chieftain, Marius Doriel, worried about was their small number compared to the other clans in the Lyria Empire. The Sura Clan was only two thousand, five hundred and twenty-three souls strong. Marius was in a constant bid to encourage marriage and child bearing to every Sura Clan member’s dismay.

    It was lucky the passionate chieftain had moved to stay in the capital for the sake of their trade.

    Marius lived with five hundred Sura people in the capital city. This group endured his constant nagging to procreate. Weddings were a usual practice during days of rest at Marius’ main home.  He even footed the wedding bill as long as a couple approached him with the intention to marry.

    The Sura who remained on the island had an easier time, as they lived as they wished. However, the marriage bug caught the Sura quite early. Every month, the assistant chieftain hosted a marriage ceremony at the main hall in the center of the Sura Village on the island. Everyone hoped their numbers would grow and allow Marius some peace of mind.

    Marius watched a young couple exchange rings before him and clapped when they smiled at each other before they kissed. He smiled wide too and nodded as the guests in his hall erupted into wild cheers, toasting the young couple’s happiness.

    The couple ended their kiss and their peers pulled them to the large circle made in the middle of the room for a dance. It warmed Marius’s heart to see a new pair start a family in his clan.

    “Have a drink, Marius,” Lasma said. “Come sit with me and let the young ones dance.”

    Lasma was his wife and they had been married for twenty-five years. They gave the clan two children. A girl named Alise who was the next chieftain. Alise was twenty-four years old. And their son, Azula who was only twenty.

    Of his two children, Marius worried about Azula most. His son was a skillful warrior and a talented blacksmith. Azula ran wild and preferred life at the Sura Mountain, swimming in the lake where their ancestral home stood, and eating sweet and sour chicken roasted by his dear godfather, Magnus.

    Marius sometimes blamed his second cousin, Magnus, for allowing Azula such unbridled freedom. He was convinced Magnus was the reason Azula shunned any attempts to civilize him. He could only dream of seeing Azula dress in formal robes and stand in a room like this without causing trouble.

    “Thinking about Azula?” Lasma asked, sitting next to him.

    “How did you know?”

    “You always have a frown when you think of Azula,” Lasma said, pressing the pad of her index finger on his forehead. “He is young, only twenty years of age. He does good work running our ancestral home and the mines without us. Give him time.”

    “I hope daily that he will be able to support Alise in her work.”

    “Alise is strong on her own,” Lasma said, her gaze shifting to their daughter across the room.

    Alise stood surrounded by the members of the chief’s council, two men and two women. They looked in deep discussion. Alise spoke and the others listened to her with rapt attention.

    “She grows to look like you every day,” Marius said, studying his eldest daughter.

    Alise, like everyone in the Sura clan, had thick strawberry blonde hair. It grew long and she kept it in a tight braided ponytail. She had green eyes, an oval face, fair skin and a slender figure. She was five foot three, but her personality more than made up for the lack of height.

    Alise was dressed in a beautiful light yellow dress with long skirts, and a gold knitted belt at her waist. The oval ilmenite jewel hanging at the end of the belt was the only indication of her station. Her smile was ready. Although when she was discussing business, it rarely made an appearance.

    “She is managing the clan’s affairs,” Lasma said, with a wistful smile.

    “Do you think she will choose her husband soon?” Marius asked, wondering when he was going to get to hold grandchildren.

    Lasma chuckled.

    “You told her you did not like Yemin,” Lasma said. “Alise and Yemin have been close for a year.”

    Marius let out a huff at the mention of the strong warrior who helped them run the workshops in the capital city. Yemin was tall at six feet. He forged the best swords, second only to Azula, but he was conceited.

    Marius worried he would make trouble for Alise, if they married.

    “Why can’t she choose Juya?” Marius asked, his gaze on the young man standing next to Alise. “He is smart, manages our accounts and can tell apart precious tones with a single look. He dresses well, and is part of the council so he understands Alise’s responsibilities.”

    “We are Sura, my love,” Lasma said, sitting back. She nibbled on carrot slice and smiled. “We follow our hearts when it comes to marriage. Don’t look down on Alise’s choice. She’s the only one who knows why Yemin is the right one.”

    Marius sighed and shook his head when Lasma handed him a fresh carrot stick from the platter on the table before them.

    “You’re right. Look at this, I’ve allowed you to turn me into a rabbit,” Marius complained as he ate the carrot slice.

    “I’m nurturing your health,” Lasmas said. “When Alise comes to you with Yemin, promise to give them your consent.”

    Marius grumbled but he agreed with a nod. The side door opened, and he turned to see his secretary rushing to him. He looked worried.

    “What is it, Torak?” Marius asked.

    Torak sighed as he came to a stop next to Marius. He was dressed down in leather trousers and a white cotton tunic. Noting the curious gazes everyone was giving him, he took in a deep breath and leaned in closer to Marius and Lasma.

    “There has been another robbery,” Torak said. “The third one this past week. This last one makes it six missing cargo carriages in total. We are running short of burnt ore here in the capital. The workshops are behind on orders. The robbers killed the drivers. We must plan two more funerals.”

    “Where is Yemin?” Marius asked.

    “Yemin is on the route doing his best to guide the search for the six missing cargo carriages. He is also handling the funeral arrangements for the two affected families,” Torak said. “He told me to mention that the thieves might have other motives. The carriages have not made it to Genad City.”

    A cloud of anxiety filled Marius’s chest as he glanced at Lasma. He was afraid Yemin was right. The uneasy feeling that had been plaguing Marius since the first robbery of their cargo carriages increased.

    “Send a message to Azula,” Marius said to Torak, holding Lasma’s gaze. “Have Azula escort the next shipment of burnt ore in person. Tell him to take precautions.”

    “Yes, Chief,” Torak said, starting to leave, but then he paused. “What about Yemin and the men on the route?”

    “Ask Yemin to concentrate on the funerals,” Marius said, his frown deepening. “They will not find the cargo carriages. Let Azula handle the robbery issue. When the funerals end, Yemin should bring me a report of how much black ore is left in each of our workshops. We need him here handling our failed orders.”

    “Okay,” Torak hurried off.

    Lasma took Marius’s left hand and squeezed.

    “This is not the first time we’ve encountered theft,” Lasma said. “But this episode is extreme and vicious. We also cannot find the cargo carriages. What do you think these thieves want?”

    “I’m afraid whatever it is does not bode well for the Sura,” Marius said, his gaze on Alise.

    As though sensing his unease, Alise excused herself from the council members and made her way to their table.

    “Another robbery?” Alise asked when she was close enough, keeping her voice low.

    “Yes,” Marius said with a grim nod. “We have now lost twelve of our seasoned drivers. The transport team is losing morale.”

    Alise leaned on the table. She picked up the tail of her gold belt and played with the woven gold. She bit her lip in thought, and then frowned.

    “Yemin suspects the ore thefts are tied to the cases of forged silver coins,” Alise said. “It’s a speculation—”

    “A dangerous one,” Marius said, sitting up straight as he studied Alise. “We cannot be implicated in silver coin forgery, Alise. Our clan will suffer enormous ruin.”

    “I know,” Alise said, shaking her head. “But what if the person robbing our black ore is helping the forgers? What should we do?”

    “Do the best we can to thwart the culprit’s plan,” Lasma said, answering for Marius. “Help the blacksmiths with inventory in all our workshops. Make sure the ledgers are completed. Melt any molds we have that make small coins. Your dad might need to visit the magistrate’s office to report this case.”

    Alise pushed off the table and started to leave.

    “Alise,” Marius said, making her stop to look at him. “Yemin is a good man. Ask him to visit our manor for a meal when he has finished with the funerals. Tell him he will like your mother’s sweet and sour chicken. He had better show up if you’re ever to help him braid his hair.”

    Alise smiled wide and ran to kiss Marius’s right cheek.

    Marius grinned with pleasure.

    “Thank you, Papa,” Alise said, then hurried away.

    Lasma squeezed Mariu’s hand, and Marius glanced at her.

    “Forging silver coins is treason,” Marius said, hoping to ease her concern. “If someone is plotting against us, we need to be careful. Anything could happen. You are right. It’s best to report the matter of stolen black ore to the magistrate. Then, I shall reach out to the old Draeya general from Naga County. He may have a solution.”

    “He is a good man,” Lasma said. “I’m more concerned for Azula. He will have to face these thieves on the way to the capital. Do you think he will make it?”

    Marius smiled.

    “Azula outsmarts wild tigers in our mountain. He designed the tracks that run our mines and even the cargo carriages we use. Azula might not catch the thieves, but they will not rob him,” Marius said, his voice filled with pride. “He won’t give them the chance.”

    “So much praise, I almost can’t believe you were worried about him earlier,” Lasma said, grinning.

    “Azula is Azula,” Marius said, his voice wistful. “I’ll be glad to have him in the capital. Maybe we can get him to wear a nice pair of clothes like Juya. I think Azula would look better.”

    Lasma chuckled.

    “Azula is more likely to kiss Juya for dressing that well.”

    “If he would make an effort,” Marius said, “Juya might think of kissing him too.”

    Lasma laughed then and shook her head.

    “I bet he is neck-deep in mud at the moment, making trouble for Magnus,” Marius speculated.

    “Or climbing trees, and ripping his tunics,” Lasma countered. “Poor Alva is constantly sewing his clothes.”

    “And Kalas and Sennin are always chasing after him, hoping he doesn’t break his legs,” Marius said with a sigh that descended into a chuckle. “I truly do miss him.”

    ****

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