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The Fireblade Array: 4-Book Bundle

Page 36

by H. O. Charles


  sister and grasped her thin fingers, and together they rushed down the luminous corridors. A tall man stepped out in front of them and Morghiad tripped headlong into the icy floor in trying to avoid him. He felt himselfbeing picked up and hoisted onto the man’s shoulder. The kahr struggled to escape but was nowhere near strong enough; the man’s shoulders were like tree trunks! Pale paving slabs moved away from him at frightening speed. “Are you taking us to mother and father, Captain Terand?” His sister asked from below. The big man grunted what Morghiad thought was a ‘yes.’

  Something heavy blasted through the hall window to the side of them, forcing Morghiad’s carrier into the opposite wall.

  The man took a few breaths before steadying himselfagain. “You alright, little guy?” “Yes,” The kahr said. He wasn’t terribly impressed with being carried around like this.

  “Tough as nails, aren’t you?” Captain Terand said as he bent down to pick something up.

  Morghiad saw his sister’s black braid fling over the captain’s other shoulder. Was she dead? She didn’t seem to be moving. He’d seen dead animals before in the kitchens, and didn’t want his sister to end up like them. Alliah was always kinder to him than the nurse. Everyone was kinder than that nurse and her stupid rules.

  Terand ran with them both for a little while longer until they reached the royal apartments. As soon as they arrived he heard his parents’ voices. It was so good to hear

  them. His father plucked him out of the captain’s arms and squeezed him tightly.

  “Put me down!” Morghiad yelled. How many times did he have to tell them?

  His father set the kahr on his feet but kept a hand on his son’s head. Morghiad looked up. The dark-blond man glanced back down at him with a weak smile. Worry marked his father’s square jaw. Morghiad turned his eyes to Alliah, who was being checked over by their mother. Strange light sparkled around the older woman. Alliah sat up unexpectedly, quite of her own accord; green eyes open and bright.

  “We’ll put them both in the book room,” his father said solemnly.

  His mother turned around and nodded. He always thought his mother was the prettiest out of everyone’s; and that’s what his father

  always said, so it had to be true. She moved forward, wrapped him in her arms and kissed him on the forehead. “I hope you can forgive us one day. Make sure that fighter girl takes good care of you, Mor,” a tear rolled down her cheek. “I love you so much.” His mother stood and went to embrace Alliah, whispering something in her ear. The four of them walked into a small chamber stacked high with books, and his father knelt down to give him a hug. “Always remember to guard your left side and never underestimate even the weakest-looking warrior. Fight to save what you love, never to destroy what you hate. And always be ready to listen to counsel, you never know when it might help. And here...” He pulled out a silver-hilted dagger. “...Take care of this for me.” His father handed the blade to the kahr, and ruffled his

  hair. The tall, dark-blond man went to say something to Alliah and hugged her tightly. A furious crash from the room beyond interrupted their embrace.

  His father whipped round, drawing his sword, and ran to the source of the sound. The air around his mother came alight, and she followed close behind her husband, teeth gritted. Alliah ran to Morghiad and grabbed his hand, dragging him to a cupboard. “Get inside!” She pushed him in with full force and shut the door. There was a gap at the hinge; the kahr looked through it. He could just make out his father and mother, battling a group of soldiers. Red flames burst out around them, engulfing everyone in the room. When they cleared, his mother was lying motionless on the floor. Dark hair fanned around her head.

  Bodies continued to fall left and right from his father’s blade, until no more of the black and green soldiers remained. The tall man dropped to his knees beside his wife and put both hands to her face. Morghiad could hear his sister weeping quietly in front of the cupboard. He wanted to go and comfort her, be strong for her. Someone else stamped into the room, out of view; the invader’s voice was gravelly and rough. His father did not remove his gaze from the queen’s body, and he did not raise his sword. He looked... lost or confused. Abruptly a blade cut cleanly through the kneeling man’s neck, killing him instantly. Morghiad did not want to look anymore; he wanted to close his eyes, but was paralysed with fear.

  The executioner strode into the book room; his narrow eyes glittered at the sight of

  Alliah. Alliah was screaming at the bearded man, yelling at him to get out, to leave them alone. The man advanced rapidly with his sword brandished; he shouted words Morghiad did not understand. He picked Alliah up by the neck of her dress, slit her throat right through and dropped her to the floor. Morghiad fell against the back of the cupboard in shock and clamped his hand over his mouth to stifle the scream that wanted to escape. The bearded man must have heard the noise for he flung open the cupboard doors, grinning wildly. He hauled the kahr into the air. “I didn’t know about you, little boy!” The older man raised his sword but hesitated. He looked thoughtful for a minute, studying his quarry closely. “Do you know why you were a secret, lad? Eh?” Morghiad shook his head.

  The man’s eyes narrowed. “What’s your name?”

  “Mor,” the kahr whispered.

  “That would be short for Morghiad, yes? Well, you won’t be needing this where we’re going!” The bearded man threw the silver dagger onto the floor. “You will call me father,” he said sternly, and stepped over the bodies with the young kahr in his arms.

  Morghiad sat up. He wanted to cry, to shout, to vomit. Nothing would come. Artemi, woken by his movement, drowsily reached for his arm. His emotion must have spurred her alert, for tension touched her voice when she spoke: “Another nightmare?”

  “Will you look at the crest on my shoulder?”

  Confusion filled Artemi’s face in the

  half-light.

  “Please.” Morghiad turned his back to her. She hesitated, but presently he felt her delicate fingers trace the outline of the mark, fire sprouting from each point of contact. “What do you see?”

  “A hawk on a sword and feathers. I don’t know what -” Her fingers pressed harder into his shoulder blade. “Wait.” It was a minute before she spoke again. “It was made by two different wielders.”

  The kahr did not want to hear it, but pressed on. “Can you tell what is underneath?”

  “Underneath?” Her mind was working groggily. “I’ll need to use Blaze to reveal it,” she said.

  Morghiad scrambled for the flames, caught them and released control to her.

  Abruptly a soft white light filled the tent; a light from within the skin of his shoulder.

  “It’s a large cat of some kind. A panther, I think – raised on its hind legs. What did you see in your nightmare?”

  “A memory,” the kahr said. The horror of it dug at his heart. How could he have forgotten them? He had disgraced them deeply with every action he had performed since their deaths.

  Artemi waited quietly for him to continue.

  “I remember...I...” It was almost too painful to put into words. Morghiad turned round to her, summoning the strength from their tie, “I saw them die. My parents and... my sister. Acher cut her throat.” The image echoed through his mind. “She was just a child.”

  The flame haired woman’s eyes widened. She could feel every sadness he felt, and every anger. The emotions echoed between them. Artemi looked at the floor; she was experiencing hurt at his pain, and some curiosity. “You said parents.”

  Morghiad nodded. “My mother was alive. And I knew her.” How it was possible, he could not fathom; but he remembered her face clearly.

  Artemi placed her head against his arm and began to weep the tears he could not. “What will you do?”

  The kahr’s first thoughts turned to vengeance. “King Acher will pay.” And the king would pay for the crime he had committed. The dark river of anger began to boil inside Morghiad. He fought to smoot
h the

  uneven surface down; Artemi did not deserve to feel that. But a swift dispatch with the sword would be too kind, and would draw the entire country into conflict. Provincial nobles would vie for The Marble Throne and neighbouring countries would strike to claim portions of Calidell as their own. Thousands would die as a result of his reprisal. Morghiad would then become hunted, he and all those he cared for. ...Never to destroy what you hate... No, Acher could be made to suffer in other ways. The disinherited kahr would fill the entire city of Cadra with wielders! Of course, he would have to resign his command of the army. His men could hardly follow the son of their one-time enemy. But he could still find ways of making life extremely difficult for the king, and he would have time to build a good

  replacement government. Once he killed Acher, as he would eventually, he would have to submit himselffor arrest and trial. Morghiad could never be king. He needed to find someone strong, someone with experience... someone whom people respected. The former kahr of Gialdin looked down at the locks of dark golden-red hair that cascaded over the arms of his lover. Artemi had been a legendary queen, and the men had already adopted her as such. The only problem would be convincing her that she could do it.

  The ragged clouds pressed down heavily as the exhausted and hungry Calidellian army exited the Orsenid Pass, snaking into the green lands that marked the edge of their kingdom. The men were tired but buoyed by the scale of their adventure; it would surely become a story of legend, and they had been part of it. Artemi was troubled by the inconsistent mood of her captain. Violent, frightening anger would sometimes surge in him and, though he gave no signal of it in his features, he battled hard to suppress it. How he controlled it, she had no idea. The man was like a long-silent volcano, simmering beneath the surface in a prelude to the destruction it would one day unleash. Artemi fully expected him to assassinate King Acher; it only seemed

  reasonable, after all. But the kahr had told her of his desire to postpone it, and she thought she partially understood.

  In seven hours they would reach the city of Larkena, one of the victims of the rogue army’s attacks. Morghiad wanted the army to stop there for a day while he travelled to the ruined city of Gialdin with her, and then they would all rendezvous at Jesundh in the north. The plan concerned Artemi. Though the reason for his desire to visit the ruins was clear, it would not be so clear to his soldiers. Silar rode up beside them. Since the morning he’d been hanging around them both like a fly that had found a chicken carcass. “Will you tell me why you both have faces as grim as the caves we just escaped from? You two ought to be grinning like the fools you are. Tell me. We are

  far away enough from the others now,” he said. His blond hair was a touch more ruffled than usual, and stubble had begun to roughen his jaw. Artemi still appreciated his prettiness, and was surprised at how Morghiad tolerated it. But then he knew the relative depths of her feelings for them both.

  The kahr remained placid, but Artemi felt the gentle trickle of tension that preceded his words. “King Acher is not my father. My parents were the one-time rulers of Gialdin.” He took a breath. “I must resign my command, Silar, when we get back. Would you look into the problem for me, in your usual way?”

  Silar’s face was a picture of shock. He stared for a minute, as if waiting to hear it was all a joke. “I’ll do my best, Morghiad,” he said. And he trotted back to the column.

  Artemi hoped her father had not caught sight of their moods in the last few days. Silar was a little more understanding, but she knew her father would think it was the kahr’s fault. She had no idea what the reaction of a man of little money might be; her love completely blinded her from thinking any less of Morghiad. And, if anything, she was more honoured to have earned the fondness of a kahr who was not Acher’s progeny. But she feared what hopes her father had built for her. He almost certainly would not want her with an outcast, potentially an outlaw. And now that the former soldier had re-enlisted he would be forced to stay, forced to oust her lover from his post. And if Morghiad had to leave Cadra then so would she. Her father could not afford to be arrested for desertion a second time. Artemi

  was torn by the prospect of leaving either man alone. “We have to deal with Aval,” Morghiad said, disrupting her reflections. The thought of the woman made Artemi want to dispense with her lunch in an unconventional manner. It was bad enough that the noblewoman was so handsome, worse that she admired the kahr and deeply troubling that she now knew several of Artemi’s secrets; the army’s secrets. Aval had only to speak a word of it to the king, and Morghiad would be the noblewoman’s to do with as she wished. Artemi chewed on her lip to stop herselffrom spitting on the ground like a horse thief. “What do you propose?” she asked

  calmly.

  Morghiad was mulling over an idea in his head. “I will talk to her. She will not be

  permitted to return to Cadra. I will make sure of that.” He looked at her intently. “I would not allow her to endanger you, Artemi.”

  She found it amusing that he had allowed her to fight in a messy battle against hardened warriors, and yet seemed more concerned about a noblewoman with poor sword skills. The kahr was a curious man at the best of times, and in many ways he was now more of a puzzle to her than when they’d first met. That current of anger was worrying. Had it always been there? “That hummingbird of a woman doesn’t scare me. Just don’t let her seduce you with her looks.”

  Morghiad frowned at her. Was that mirth she could feel in amongst his emotions? Artemi had no idea what that meant. She hoped it was in her favour.

  Thick weeds wedged through the gaps in the broken, grey brick road. It hadn’t been maintained inyears, and Morghiad doubted many people had travelled it in as long. The uneven nature of the paving made for slowgoing; anything faster would break a horse’s leg. Artemi’s mount stepped lightly a few yards ahead of him. She had grown morose in light of the revelations of his parentage and he despised himselffor infecting her fires with his

  unhappiness. The flame haired warrior also appeared despondent at being made to wear dresses once more, though Morghiad found her equally as desirable in tight-fitted trousers. There could be a good future ahead for her and for Calidell, and he would do his best to ensure it came to pass. His surge of optimism caused her to turn and smile at him. He had missed that smile for all of the four days it had been absent. Morghiad caught up with her and pulled her onto Tyshar’s saddle with him. The smell of her hair alone was enough to warm his heart. They walked on for several hours before the tall, bare birch and alder trees started to thin.

  Fallen red brick structures poked through the undergrowth here and there, indicating the abandoned farmsteads that had once been occupied. Rotten wood beams

  jutted from some of the debris, covered in ivy and pale green moss. No one worked these lands now, though the soil looked as good as any Morghiad had seen. He kicked the horses on eagerly through the low scrub. Brilliant white fragments shone from beneath the leaves, breaking up the green of the foliage ahead. The trees had now cleared completely: this was the edge of the city proper, and it had been vast. The kahr pulled the horses to a halt. The area was almost entirely flat, save for the route of a silted river which etched across the middle. Shards of white wall jutted out of the ground closer to the core of the city; those must have been the castle fortifications. The surrounding birdsong was almost deafening, even in the heart of winter.

  “This

  place is alive like a still-beating

  heart. Can you feel it?” Artemi said.

  Morghiad could feel it, The Blazes seemed to resonate here. A muddied and ivyladen white road led to the centre, but it was too covered in fallen masonry to take the horses down. “Let’s dismount here.”

  Artemi jumped off with appreciable agility and Morghiad followed in a heavy fashion. He’d begun to feel rather clumsy next to her lately. She’d always been graceful, but recently she’d assumed an ethereal elegance in every action she performed. It was as if sh
e’d become a part of the leaves that waved in the breeze or the currents that ran through The Blazes themselves. Perhaps it was a resonance of her still-absent memories.

  With the horses tethered, they picked their way carefully over the shattered masonry. Morghiad had been careful to approach the city from the southernmost gate, or what remained of it. In his memory Artemi had been running to the northern gate shortly before her death, and he didn’t want her walking over her own body again. He needn’t have worried though, there were no bones visible amongst the debris. Either the Gialdins had taken pains to bury their dead or the animals of the forest had done it for them. Morghiad wasn’t entirely sure what he was looking for here; perhaps some kind of reconciliation with his memories or a chance to ask forgiveness from his parents. He needed to set at least one thing right and whatever it was began here, where all wrongs had been committed. The white fabric of the city buildings was still sharp-edged and piled high across the road in places, and Artemi seemed

  to glide over it as if it were simply a twig in her path. He scrambled over a particularly high and razor-like splinter gingerly. It was no wonder the wreckage of Gialdin city still remained as it had fallen nineteen years earlier; the crystalline structures would have been lethal to clear, and the smallest pieces were improbably heavy too. Morghiad placed his hand on the surface of one piece; it whirled with the sensation of Blaze echoes in a similar way to Artemi’s sword. But the form of it had been disrupted; the energy was not locked-in as it should have been. It would have taken a powerful wielder and kanaala to disrupt such a complex form and shatter these white walls, not to mention years of study. The kahr wondered where and how King Acher had found such a person.

 

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