Jeweled Fire
Page 1
Ace Books by Sharon Shinn
THE SHAPE OF DESIRE
STILL LIFE WITH SHAPE-SHIFTER
THE TURNING SEASON
TROUBLED WATERS
ROYAL AIRS
JEWELED FIRE
MYSTIC AND RIDER
THE THIRTEENTH HOUSE
DARK MOON DEFENDER
READER AND RAELYNX
FORTUNE AND FATE
ARCHANGEL
JOVAH’S ANGEL
THE ALLELUIA FILES
ANGELICA
ANGEL-SEEKER
WRAPT IN CRYSTAL
THE SHAPE-CHANGER’S WIFE
HEART OF GOLD
SUMMERS AT CASTLE AUBURN
JENNA STARBORN
QUATRAIN
Viking / Firebird Books by Sharon Shinn
THE SAFE-KEEPER’S SECRET
THE TRUTH-TELLER’S TALE
THE DREAM-MAKER’S MAGIC
GENERAL WINSTON’S DAUGHTER
GATEWAY
An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
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This book is an original publication of Penguin Random House LLC.
Copyright © 2015 by Sharon Shinn.
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eBook ISBN: 978-0-698-17643-0
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Shinn, Sharon.
Jeweled fire / Sharon Shinn.
pages ; cm
ISBN 978-0-425-27705-8 (hardcover)
I. Title.
PS3569.H499J49 2015
813'.54—dc23
2015007962
FIRST EDITION: November 2015
Cover illustration by Jonathan Barkat.
Cover photograph: dark stormy sky © Mr Twister / Shutterstock.
Cover design by Judith Lagerman.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Version_1
To that crazy fan who never expected a dedication.
These are the blessings I pulled for you: intelligence, love, and time.
Contents
Books by Sharon Shinn
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Who’s Who in the Southern Nations
Welchin Affiliations and Random Blessings
Quintiles & Changedays
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
WHO’S WHO IN THE SOUTHERN NATIONS
IN MALINQUA
FILOMARA, empress
GARAMENO, Filomara’s oldest nephew
JIRAMONDI, Filomara’s second-oldest nephew
GREGGORIO, Filomara’s youngest nephew, son of Morli
ARAVANI AND SUBRIELLA, Filomara’s daughters
MORLI AND DONATO, two of Filomara’s four brothers
HARLO, the prefect
MARIANA, Harlo’s wife
LIRAMELLI, daughter to Harlo and Mariana
BARTOLO AND SATTISI, Filomara’s cousin and his wife
SARONA, a high-born young lady
LORIAN, steward of the royal palace
EMILITA, Corene’s maid
BILLINI, a tavern owner
RENALTO CORSICARA, head of Malinqua’s institute of biological research
VISITORS FROM OTHER COUNTRIES
CORENE, a princess from Welce
STEFF (STEFFANOLO KORDAN BORS ADOVA), the son of a Welchin farmer and Subriella
FOLEY, a member of the Welchin royal guard
LEAH, a Welchin native acting as a spy for Darien Serlast
ADA SIMMS, a Welchin sea captain
MELISSANDE, a princess from Cozique
CHANDRAN, a merchant from Cozique
ALETTE, a princess from Dhonsho
TEYTA, the daughter of a shopkeeper from Dhonsho
CHEELIN BARLIO, a young man from Dhonsho
IN WELCE
JOSETTA, Corene’s sister
DARIEN SERLAST, Corene’s father, advisor to the old king, currently the regent
ZOE LALINDAR, coru prime and wife of Darien Serlast
ALYS, Corene’s mother, formerly the third wife of the old king
DOMINIC WOLLIMER, Alys’s second husband
NELSON ARDELAY, sweela prime
KAYLE DOCHENZA, elay prime
TARO FROTHEN, torz prime
RAFE ADOVA, Steff’s half brother and the eldest of Subriella’s sons
WELCHIN AFFILIATIONS AND RANDOM BLESSINGS
ELAY
(AIR/SOUL)
HUNTI
(WOOD/BONE)
SWEELA
(FIRE/MIND)
joy
courage
innovation
hope
strength
love
kindness
steadfastness
imagination
beauty
loyalty
clarity
vision
certainty
intelligence
grace
resolve
charm
honor
determination
talent
spirituality
power
creativity
CORU
(WATER/BLOOD)
TORZ
(EARTH/FLESH)
EXTRAORDINARY
BLESSINGS
change
serenity
synthesis
travel
honesty
triumph
flexibility
health
time
swiftness
fertility
resilience
contentment
luck
patience
persistence
endurance
surprise
wealth
QUINTILES & CHANGEDAYS
The calendar of the southern nations is divided into five quintiles. A quintile consists of eight “weeks,” each nine days long. All the nations observe the quintiles, though each nation calls them by different names. In Welce, the first quintile of the year is called Quinnelay, and it stretches from early to deep winter. It is followed by Quinncoru, which encompasses late winter to mid-spring; Quinnahunti, late spring to mid-summer; Quinnatorz, late summer to fall; and Quinnasweela, fall to early winter. The quintiles are separated by changedays, generally celebrated as holidays. In total, the calendar year is 365 days long.
ONE
Leah crowded onto the dock with half the population of Palminera and watched the ships come in. There were dozens of them, crammed with soldiers, because the empress didn’t believe in leaving Malinqua without a formidable force at her back. Even when she was only planning friendly negotiations with the rest of the southern nations, Filomara had always believed that the threat of war was the best way to ensure peace.
A cry went up from the crowd as the most elegant ship in the fleet tacked its way closer to the pier reserved for the royal family. As everyone else surged forward, Leah dropped back, moving from the rough wood planking of the dock to the paved streets of the surrounding harbor. Eventually she came to rest against the warm brick of a dockside tavern and settled in for a long wait. She knew how these disembarkations went; it would be another hour before the boat was secured and the exalted personnel began to exit. First the empress, of course, whose stern face would soften to a smile as she acknowledged the waiting multitudes. Then her attendants, the high-born family members who had accompanied her on her long journey. And finally Princess Corene of Welce. Who had stowed away on the empress’s ship without the consent of her family.
It had been common knowledge in Malinqua that Filomara was visiting the nations of the southern seas with the precise goal of bringing princesses back to the royal court. She was looking for eligible foreign young women to marry off to her nephews, and Princess Corene was as eligible as they came. The girl’s father had politely declined the invitation on his daughter’s behalf—but Corene had accepted it anyway.
Even though it had been five years since Leah lived in Welce, she vividly remembered a twelve-year-old hellion, all fierce will and red hair. She wondered if Filomara had any idea what she’d brought home to Malinqua.
The summer air was starting to heat up, though at this noon hour, it wasn’t truly wretched yet. Leah resettled her back against the building, then glanced up as the front door opened. The man who stepped out was wearing a cook’s apron and polishing a glass, so she assumed he was the tavernkeeper. He stood there a moment, eyeing the great ship, which was still tacking and rocking its way to the dock. Behind it, the escort flotilla hung back, not a single boat planning to drop anchor until the empress was safely on land.
“Not tied up yet, then?” the bar owner asked. “It’ll be sundown before we see a one of them.”
“Not quite that long, I think,” Leah answered.
He seemed annoyed. “And everyone out in the streets watching instead of inside ordering beer.”
“I’ll come in and order something,” Leah offered. “Food, too, if you’ve got it.” There would be no chance of missing the empress’s appearance; the crowd would roar out its welcome the minute she showed her face.
The barkeeper looked pleased. “I do. Not yesterday’s leftovers, either, but fresh-made this morning.”
She followed him inside to find the tavern clean enough, pleasantly cool, and wholly empty. She picked a booth by a window, though it didn’t show a view of the harbor, and ordered lunch.
The barkeeper, it turned out, was talkative, but that suited Leah perfectly. Gregarious people were indirectly her source of income. He loitered by her table, holding a broom as if he planned to wield it, but he really just stood there and speculated about the events that might transpire now that the empress was home.
“So she’s found three brides,” he observed.
Leah affected surprise. “I know about Princess Melissande from Cozique and Princess Alette from Dhonsho,” she said, because these two very different creatures had arrived in Malinqua within the past two ninedays and had already taken up residence at the palace. “There’s a third one?”
The barkeeper nodded in satisfaction. “A girl from Welce. A princess,” he corrected himself. “Apparently they have dozens of them over there.”
Well, not quite dozens, Leah thought, though it was truly hard to keep track. Before he died, old King Vernon had amassed four wives and four daughters—though it seemed that some of those daughters had been sired by other men to conceal the fact that Vernon was practically impotent. One of the men who had stepped forward to perform this most intimate service was Darien Serlast, the king’s closest advisor. It was his daughter who was on the Malinquese ship.
“How’d you hear about that?” Leah asked. “This princess from Welce?”
The barkeeper spared a moment to look self-important. “The empress has been sending news to the palace every nineday since she’s been gone—she brought a whole fleet of clippers to carry her messages. I know all sorts of things. I have lots of friends at the palace.”
Probably his fish vendor also supplied a merchant who made deliveries to the palace, Leah thought cynically, and his information had traveled a very circuitous route before finally landing here. Still, as she had learned during the past five years, gossip that filtered down from the highest to the lowest levels of society had an uncanny way of being accurate. The lives of the royal heirs and the titled nobility were far less private than they liked to think.
And in this case, the tavernkeeper’s information was good, though Leah liked to think hers was better. Since she’d gotten it from Darien Serlast himself.
He’d been the one to suggest Malinqua to her, five years ago when she had wanted to be anywhere but Welce. Vernon had already started to fade, and Darien had clearly been the force behind the throne, the firm hand that kept Vernon steady whenever the old king started to wobble.
“I could use someone in the city of Palminera,” he’d told her.
“I’d have thought you already had spies in Malinqua,” she’d answered.
“I do. But none of them are—” He’d hesitated, as if looking for a word. Which, of course, was a ploy, because Darien always knew exactly what he was going to say before he opened his mouth. He wanted her to rush right in and supply the words herself.
“Connected to the highest echelons of society,” she said bitterly.
He smiled. “Exactly. Able to understand how the machinations at the palace play out in the taverns along the wharf. And how policy in one royal house might have repercussions for royal houses in other nations.”
So she’d come to Palminera to spy for Darien Serlast, and he’d sent her a regular supply of gold to pay her expenses and fund her bribes. She’d thought his political clout might fade once Vernon died, but in fact, he grew more influential. First he’d acted as regent while everyone squabbled over who should be the next person to take the throne; very recently, Welce’s royal advi
sors had decided Darien would actually make an excellent king. He hadn’t been crowned yet, but Leah thought he was the ideal choice: an intelligent, thoughtful, committed, and righteous man who had an uncanny knack of getting people to do what he wanted. Though apparently that ability didn’t extend to his daughter.
She could only imagine how relieved he’d been to know Leah was already in place when he learned Corene had sailed off to Palminera.
It had been only four days since one of his messengers had arrived at her doorstep, bearing the surprising news. Darien had sent his letter via one of the sleek little mail ships that could skim through the ocean much faster than Filomara’s heavy warships. Darien was the sort of man who habitually concealed his true thoughts, so she had been astonished to read the bald distress in his first missive.
Corene has defied me and set out for Malinqua with Filomara, who claims she is looking to forge alliances through weddings between her nephews and foreign brides. But Malinqua’s royal court has an unsavory history of poisoning off its political rivals, and who knows how a Welchin princess will be received? She has her own personal guard with her, so she’s not unprotected, but one man might not be enough. Let me know AT ONCE if Corene needs to be rescued by force or if a slower extrication will be safe for all.
He might as well have claimed he was mad with worry; it could not have been more obvious.
Leah had wasted no time sending him a reply that should have assuaged the worst of his fears. Those legendary poisonings seemed to be a thing of the past, since the last suspected murder among the palace elite had been more than fifteen years ago. The empress was indeed collecting potential brides for her nephews—two of them were already present, and so far, they had both been treated like the royalty they were. Leah emphasized the fact that one of the foreign visitors was from Cozique, the largest, most sophisticated, and most powerful nation in the southern waters. It might be considered a coup for a Welchin princess to stand alongside a Coziquela heiress and look every bit as desirable.