Daughter of Moth (The Moth Saga, Book 4)

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Daughter of Moth (The Moth Saga, Book 4) Page 1

by Daniel Arenson




  DAUGHTER OF MOTH

  THE MOTH SAGA, BOOK FOUR

  by

  Daniel Arenson

  Copyright © 2014 by Daniel Arenson

  All rights reserved.

  This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination, or, if real, used fictitiously.

  No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by an electronic or mechanical means, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the express written permission of the author.

  Table of Contents

  FOREWORD

  MAP

  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

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

  AFTERWORD

  NOVELS BY DANIEL ARENSON

  KEEP IN TOUCH

  FOREWORD

  Daughter of Moth is the fourth volume of The Moth Saga, continuing the tale of a world torn in two—one half always in sunlight, the other always dark. If you're new to the series, you'll probably still get the gist of things here, though I do recommend reading the first three books first: Moth, Empires of Moth, and Secrets of Moth.

  Between chapters, you might like to visit the Moth website, where you can find: a large map (more detailed than the one in this ebook), original music, artwork, a Moth wiki, and more. Visit the website at: DanielArenson.com/Moth

  And now . . . let us reenter a world of light and darkness . . .

  CHAPTER ONE:

  AN UNPLEASANT ENCOUNTER

  The creaky, horse-drawn cart trundled across the bridge, taking Madori away from her homeland and old life.

  Here it is, she thought and took a shaky breath. The border.

  The Red River flowed beneath Reedford Bridge, beads of light gleaming upon its muddy waters. The cart clattered over the last few bricks, rolling off the bridge and onto the western riverbank. Madori looked around her, expecting more of a change—a different landscape, a different climate, at least a different shade of sky or scent to the air. Yet the grass still rustled on the roadsides, green and lush as ever. Elms, birches, and maples still grew upon the plains, and geese still honked above. A wooden sign rising from a patch of crabgrass, a crumbly old fortress upon a distant hill, and a twinge to her heart were the only signs that they had left Arden behind, entering this kingdom of magic and danger named Mageria.

  Magic and danger? Madori thought, raising her eyebrows. She had heard tales of dark sorcerers, brooding castles swarming with bats, and creatures of both nightmares and fairy tales. Sorcerers? She saw only two distant farmers toiling in a turnip field. Brooding castles? The fort upon the hill—a mere crumbly old tower—looked liable to collapse under a gust of wind. Wondrous creatures? Madori didn't see anything wondrous about the cattle that stared from the roadside, lazily chewing their cud and flicking their tails. When Madori twisted in her seat to look behind her, gazing across the Red River to the eastern plains, she couldn't even distinguish between the two kingdoms—this new realm of magic and her old homeland.

  And yet . . . and yet this was a new world. She knew this. She felt it in her bones, even if she couldn't see it. It wasn't in sorcerers or castles or creatures—it was in the chill that filled her belly, the tremble that seized her fingers, and the tightness in her throat.

  I'm leaving my home forever, she thought as the cart trundled onward. I will find magic here. I will find a new life. And I don't intend to return.

  Sitting beside her in the cart, her father patted her hand.

  "Excited, Billygoat?"

  Madori rolled her eyes. She hated when he called her that. Her name was Madori Billy Greenmoat—"Billy" after Bailey Berin, the great heroine of the war whose statue stood outside the library back home. "Billygoat" was just the sort of groan-worthy pun her father would come up with.

  "No." She stared forward over the head of their horse, an old piebald named Hayseed. "I don't get excited about things. And please stop calling me that."

  Her father smiled and Madori groaned. It was a smile that practically patted her condescendingly on the head.

  A sigh ran through her. She knew that her father was something of a legend in both halves of Moth, this world split between endless day and eternal night. He was Sir Torin Greenmoat, the famous war hero, the man who had fought in—and eventually ended—the war between day and night. The world saw him as a great warrior and peacemaker. But to Madori, he was simply her dull, boring father with his little quips and infuriating smiles.

  She looked at him. Torin didn't even look like a hero. At thirty-eight years of age, the first wrinkles were tugging at the corners of his eyes, and hints of white were invading his temples and beard. He wasn't particularly tall, handsome, or muscular. He wore a simple woolen tunic and cloak, and he drove a humble cart pulled by Hayseed, an old horse no more impressive. Despite being knighted years ago, he wore no jewels, and soil hid under his fingernails. He didn't seem a warrior, a hero, a knight—simply a gardener, which was how Madori had always known him.

  She knew the tales of Torin fighting in the great War of Day and Night, but that had all happened before her birth. Madori was sixteen now, the war was long gone, and to her, Torin Greenmoat was no hero but the most annoying man in both halves of the broken world.

  "Are you sure?" Torin said, still smiling his little smile. "You look a little nervous. You're traveling into a new kingdom. You're going to try and gain admission to Teel University, the most prestigious school in the sunlit half of Moth. You're leaving everything you've ever known behind. You—"

  Madori groaned. "Father! For pity's sake. Are you trying to get me to kill you? You're worse than Mother."

  His eyes widened. "What? Never!"

  "Mother scolds me nonstop, but you just smile and hint. That's a lot worse."

  Torin grunted. "If your mother were here, she'd have spent the trip berating you about your clothes, your haircut, and your Qaelish lessons. You know that. Be thankful I'm the one taking you on this journey."

  Madori had to admit he was probably right. Father was perhaps more embarrassing than britches split down the backside, but Mother was a terror. Koyee of Qaelin was as much a legend as Torin, and she actually acted like it.

  While Torin was a Timandrian—a man of sunlight, his hair dark, his skin tanned—Koyee was an Elorian, a woman of the night. Her hair was long and white, her skin pale, her lavender eyes as large as chicken eggs. Koyee stood only five feet tall, but Madori thought her more terrifying than any warrior.

  "Why do you wear this rubbish?" Koyee would say, tugging at Madori's clothes. "Why don't you wear proper Elorian dresses? And your hair! I've never seen a young woman with nonsensical hair like that. And your Qaelish—stars above, you've been neglecting your lessons. This turn you will read your Qaelish poetry books until you memorize them."

  "I'm
not Elorian!" Madori would say. "My hair is black. My skin is tanned bronze. I don't want to dress or talk or look like an Elorian, all right, Mother? Now will you—"

  That's about as far as Madori would ever get. A slap usually silenced her, followed by screams, tears, and finally long hours in her bedroom, forced to study the language of the night.

  Sitting on the cart, far away from her distant village near the darkness, Madori shuddered. She looked down at her clothes, which she had sewn herself. She wore a violet tunic over purple leggings, and leather boots heavy with many buckles rose to her knees—clothes strange in both day and night. Her hair, she knew, drew even more perplexed stares. She cut it herself, shearing it so short she could barely grab the strands between her fingers. She left only two long strands on top, both sprouting just above her forehead; they fell down to her chin, framing her face.

  "I already look strange because of my mixed blood," Madori would often tell her mother. "I might as well have strange clothes and a strange haircut."

  The argument never worked, but Madori thought it apt. Even if she wore proper Timandrian clothes—a skirt and blouse—or proper Elorian clothes—a slim, silken qipao dress and embroidered sash—she'd look out of place. She had inherited some Timandrian traits from her father. Her hair was black, not white like the hair of Elorians, and her skin was tanned, not pale like a child of darkness. But nobody would mistake her for a full-blooded Timandrian. Her Elorian blood—the blood of darkness—was clear to all. She was slim and short, barely standing five feet tall—normal perhaps in the darkness, but diminutive in the daylight. Most obvious were her eyes—they shone a gleaming lavender, large as owl eyes in her small, round face. A tattoo of a duskmoth—one wing black, the other white—adorned her wrist, a symbol of her two halves, of a soul torn between day and night.

  A mixed-child. A child of both daylight and darkness. Perhaps the only one in the world.

  And so I will seek a new home, Madori thought, throat tight. A place where I'm accepted.

  The taunts rang through her memory, cutting her like icy daggers.

  Mongrel!

  Freak!

  Creature!

  As old Hayseed pulled the cart along, leaving their homeland behind, the pain still lingered inside Madori. She lowered her head and clenched her fists in her lap. Fairwool-by-Night, her old village, lay in the daylight near the border of darkness. Grown near the shadows, its people feared the night. Fairwool's children had spent years shoving Madori into the mud, spitting onto her, and mocking her mixed blood. Madori never told her parents—a father of sunlight and a mother of darkness—about how the other children treated her. She knew it would break their hearts.

  And so now I'm leaving that home, she thought, and her eyes stung—those damn eyes that were twice the size of anyone else's here in daylight. Fairwool-by-Night was a backwater, a forgotten village full of ignorant fools; the entire kingdom of Arden was a land of fools.

  But Mageria...

  Madori looked down the road, and a tingling smile tugged at her lips. Ahead, the plains led to misty hills and a hidden world of wonder. Here was a new kingdom—only another kingdom of daylight, it was true, but a land of magic nonetheless. People here were educated, unlike at home, and they would accept Madori. At Teel University she wouldn't be simply a mixed-breed from a humble village. At Teel she would learn the secrets of magic. She would become a mage. She would grow strong.

  She noticed that Torin was watching her, his eyes soft. He patted her knee. "Whatever happens at the trials, my daughter, I'm proud of you. Whether they accept you to the university this year, or whether we have to return for new trials next year, I love you. More than anything. To me you are magic."

  She blew out her breath and rolled her eyes. "Oh, Father, you are such a horrible poet."

  And yet tears filled her eyes, and she leaned against him and hugged him close. He kissed her head, lips pressing against the stubbly top.

  "Even if your hair is too short," he said.

  She managed to grin and tugged the two long, black strands that framed her face. "This part is long. It's good enough."

  Torin groaned. "It looks like a damn walrus mustache is growing from your head."

  For the first time since leaving her village long turns ago, Madori laughed. "Excellent. That's what I'll tell Mother next time she harasses me—that I simply have a head-mustache."

  She was still laughing, and even Torin smiled, when hooves and horns sounded ahead.

  Madori looked up and her laughter died upon her lips. She reached into her boot where she hid her dagger.

  "Trouble," she muttered.

  A convoy of armored riders—a dozen in all—was heading down the road toward them. Since leaving home, Madori had seen many travelers along this pebbly path—farmers, pilgrims, peddlers, and soldiers on patrol. But she had never seen anyone like the riders ahead. Each man wore priceless plate armor, the steel bright and gleaming in the sunlight. Their horses too wore armor—and these were no old nags like Hayseed but fine coursers, each more costly than anything and everything Madori's family owned. As the convoy drew closer, Madori tilted her head and squinted. She was well versed in heraldry—one of the few fields of study she enjoyed—but she didn't recognize the sigils on these riders' shields and banners. The symbol showed a golden disk hiding most of a silver circle—the sun eclipsing the moon.

  Hayseed nickered and reared, raising the cart and pushing Madori and Torin back in their seats.

  "Easy, girl, easy . . ." Madori said. Despite her calm words, she clutched the hilt of her dagger. These riders ahead were no good; she could smell it on them.

  Raising dust and scattering pebbles, the convoy reached them, its formation not parting to allow the cart through. Torin had to tug the reins, pulling Hayseed to a halt. The riders ahead halted too, staring through eyeholes in their helmets.

  Torin raised a hand in a friendly gesture, though Madori saw the tension in his jaw, heard the the nervousness in his voice.

  "Hello there, fellow travelers!" he said. "Lovely day for a ride."

  They stared down at him. A few riders gripped the hilts of their swords, and wondrous swords those were—the scabbards filigreed with silver motifs, the hilts wrapped in black leather, the pommels bearing gemstones.

  The lead horse, a magnificent beast of snowy white fur, snorted and pawed the earth. Slowly, his gauntlets creaking, the horse's rider pulled off his helmet. The man had a cold, hard face, one that could have been handsome were it not so aloof. Wavy blond hair crowned his head, the temples streaked with white. Chin raised, the rider gazed down with icy blue eyes. Disgust filled those eyes like coins filled a rich man's coffers.

  "Torin Greenmoat." The rider sneered. "So the rat has left his gutter."

  Sitting in the cart, Torin glared up at the rider. "Hello again, cousin. I see the snake has left his lair."

  The snowy horse sidestepped, and its rider clenched his fist around the hilt of his sword. "Yes, technically we are cousins." The man's voice was smooth and cold as ice around a frozen corpse. "Your mother's sister had the sense to marry into a proper, blue-blooded family, sense you clearly lack. But you will address me as all in Mageria do—as Lord Serin."

  Madori had spent the trip here thinking her father the dullest, most insufferable man on Moth, but right now, she thought Torin Greenmoat a true hero. She leaped to her feet in the cart, drew her dagger, and pointed it at the riders.

  "Get out of our way!" she said. "Ride your pretty little horses through the mud and let us pass, or by the stars above, we'll soon see how blue your blood truly is."

  "Madori!" Torin hissed, pulling her back down into her seat. "Be silent."

  The riders ahead snickered. Lord Serin glared at Madori like one would glare at dung upon a new boot. He raised a handkerchief to his nose as if Madori's very scent offended him.

  "Learn to control your mongrel of a daughter," the lord said. "It's bad enough you bedded an nightcrawler, begetting a deformed h
alf-breed, but you can't even keep the beast muzzled."

  Madori stared, mouth hanging over. She could barely breathe.

  Nightcrawler. It was a foul word, a dirty word for Elorians, the people of the night—the name of a lowly worm. She winced, remembering the names children in Fairwool-by-Night would call her. Half-breed! Mongrel! Creature!

  All those taunts—years of them—pounded through Madori now, and somehow Serin's words were even worse. This was Mageria, the land of her dreams, not some backwater village. These were noblemen in fine armor, not peasant children.

  Her eyes watered and Madori screamed. She leaped from the cart, ran across the road, and waved her dagger at Lord Serin.

  "Draw your sword and face me!" she shouted. "I'm not scared of you. I have no muzzle and I can bite. I—"

  "Madori!"

  A hand gripped her wrist and tugged her back. Torin was pulling her away from the lords and onto the muddy roadside. Madori struggled and kicked, but she couldn't free herself from her father's grip. The riders roared with laughter.

  "She's a wild animal, cousin!" Lord Serin said. He spat toward Madori; the glob landed on her boot. "She doesn't belong in Mageria. Mongrels belong in cages."

  With that, the armored lord spurred his horse. The animal cantered forward, hooves splashing mud onto Torin and Madori. The other riders followed, spraying more mud.

  "Send your nightcrawler wife back into the night!" Serin shouted as the convoy made its way around the cart, heading east down the road. "The Radian Order rises in the sunlight. The creatures of darkness will cower before us."

  With that, the riders turned around a bend, vanishing behind a copse of elms.

  Madori stood on the roadside, mud covering her clothes up to her chest. She clutched her dagger, fuming, and spun toward her father.

  "I could have slain them all!" Her fists trembled. "Let's go after them. We'll leap up from behind. We'll—"

  "We'll ignore them and keep traveling to our destination," Torin said calmly.

  Madori raised her hands in frustration. "You'll just give up? I thought you're a war hero! I thought you fought in battles. How could you just . . . just . . . ignore them?"

 

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