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By Blood Betrayed (The Kingsblood Chronicles)

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by Houpt, David




  BY BLOOD BETRAYED

  By David Houpt

  Text and graphics copyright © David J. Houpt

  Cover Art and Map of Northern Shara by Emily Hershey (aryiea.deviantart.com)

  All rights reserved

  Dedication

  To Lorri, my wife, friend, helpmate, and editor extraordinaire, all my love.

  Preface

  I first envisioned Prince Lian as a supporting character in a short story. In “Zaria,” Lian is embroiled in a conflict with his uncle, the Usurper King Rishak and his wife the evil sorceress Queen Jisa. The titular character, Zaria, is a spellsinger of great power who is one of Lian’s allies in this war. Lian and his aunt and uncle weren’t the main characters in the story—that’s Zaria’s place—which I wrote with the intention of submission in the late Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Sword and Sorceress anthology.

  I wrote three other short stories set in the same world, with the same song-based magical rules, and thus the world of Tieran was born. I began to wonder what kind of cosmology could create such a world of high magic, and what kind of crisis would give rise to Prince Lian’s desperate situation. By the time I’d written the opening chapters of By Blood Betrayed, I had developed Dunshor’s history and the development of the situation that led to both the terrible events shown in Zaria’s story as well as the ones contained in this book.

  I submitted the book to a number of literary agents and publishing houses, and rejection letters were the only result. I set Lian and his world aside for years, figuring I’d try again when the market changed. I never envisioned the degree to which the bookselling market could change—electronic readers were the stuff of science fiction, and while I believed that someday they’d become common household items, I never really envisioned that they’d be quite as mainstream as they’ve become. Amazon’s Kindle™ and the other tools out there have revolutionized the industry and has given Lian a chance to share his story with the reader.

  I hope you enjoy it as much as I enjoyed writing it.

  Table of Contents

  Dedication

  Preface

  Table of Contents

  Map of the Northern Continent of Shara

  Tieran and Her Moons

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  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

  Chapter Twenty Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty One

  Epilogue

  Map of the Northern Continent of Shara

  Tieran and Her Moons

  Prologue

  “Beware the hand closest to the heart.”

  -- Elven proverb

  Glowering as he stood in deep thought, the man watched the mages at work. In the harsh azure glow cast by the many enchanted lights, the scars on his face were clearly visible. Something had burned a horrible wound on the right side of his face, which had never fully healed. If it bothered him that the lesser mages occasionally turned away in distaste at his appearance, he didn’t let it show. Instead, he observed the wizards singing their magic around him as if he could actually visualize the enchantments being woven in mid-air.

  This man, however, possessed none of the magical talent characteristic of his lineage; his abilities lay in other arenas. Turning to the mistress of the circle of mages, he tenderly kissed her cheek. “It goes well?” he asked, slipping his arm around her lithe waist.

  The woman smiled, leaning into his warmth. Her own part in this complex ritual was yet to come, as well as that of the other two Masters present. “It does, husband. The gate will open exactly as we discussed, and the castle wards will be thwarted. Your forces will enter the fortress unmolested and strike freely at the garrison.”

  “The men I hired are already inside?” he confirmed, ensuring that nothing was amiss on this critical night. There wouldn’t be a better opportunity for a long time, and perhaps never would be, if any fraction of the strike were to fail.

  “They are, cloaked by the enchantments they carry,” she said soothingly. Most of the men hired by the scarred man were not mages, so the powerful spells to confound and confuse the defensive spells of the castle had been provided in advance by the sorceress and her colleagues.

  She continued, “Unless Bes’ hand is against us this night, Evan’s line is doomed.” She was eager to proceed, and he could feel the tension in her muscles.

  “Opening a gate into the castle would never have been possible if I hadn’t discovered a weakness in their wards,” she said, continuing to placate her husband. “I am certain that they are unaware of it, and this attack will come as a complete surprise, especially given the quarter from which it comes. Dunshor City will be ours by morning, and your claim to the throne will be unchallenged.”

  “It won’t be as easy as that, woman,” he said, growling at her attempt to calm him. He preferred to worry before an engagement. “The noble houses have to be neutralized or placated, and our borders will be weakened for a decade by this little coup. The peasants won’t approve of our actions, and we’ll have revolt after revolt to quell. No, this is just the beginning, and I don’t believe for a moment that we’ll succeed unchallenged.”

  She smiled, “Just as you leave the magic to me, I leave the politics to you, husband. They are your strength, especially where our neighbors are concerned. The western kingdoms won’t dare strike against you, and the southern states and barbarian lands alike can be subdued if need be.

  “Once the castle is ours, it will be a simple matter to consolidate our power,” she reassured him, slipping from his embrace to resume her position with the other Masters.

  As she joined the song with her amazingly beautiful voice, the man stalked toward his waiting troop commanders. “Best get the men ready, gentlemen,” he ordered, donning his helmet. “All is proceeding according to plan.”

  As he watched the gate they were summoning gain substance, he still wondered what would go wrong. A plan on such a grand scale could not avoid problems, and his only hope was that they weren’t substantial enough to overwhelm him, for all his careful scheming.

  For a moment, as the troops began to file into the dank cavern they’d chosen for the ritual as quietly as possible, he wondered what the cost of this night’s work would be.

  Chapter One

  “The concept of the battle language is usually attributed to the elves. However, the earliest use of such a tongue is found among the kossir, who used it to good effect against their ancient underground enemies, the goblins.”

  -- Thriel of Dunshor, from “The Languages of War,” c. 1600 PE

  A sudden, complete silence provided the only warning the guardsmen received before the small glass globe shattered at their feet. Choking yellow vapors, a derivative of the mikasha plant, billowed up from the broken sphere and engulfed the pair. The two began to cough and gasp for breath that simply wouldn’t come. The fir
st fell almost instantly, overcome by the noxious fumes. The other, hardier than his companion, turned to run from the mist, but a short dagger appeared in the center of his chest. In amazement, he looked first at the slim figure of the assassin who’d thrown it, and then down at the weapon as he joined his fellow on the flagstones of the palace floor.

  A second assassin, with crossbow aimed to fire at the backs of the guardsmen, slipped around the corner. The pair of assassins smiled and nodded to one another. The gaseous poison quickly dissipated, perversely leaving behind a faint scent of lilacs, and except for the fallen guards, all appeared normal. The older of the two motioned that he would continue on to their target, and the younger assassin nodded. They had agreed earlier that either one of them was more than a match for their target, and that some preemptive looting was only their due.

  It was strictly against their orders, it was true. It was also true that the one who’d given those orders would have them both flayed alive while regenerative magic was continuously applied to their tortured bodies.

  But that would happen only if they were caught.

  The elder assassin, clothed in a dark maroon cloak, was a member of the ancient Guild of Trakala. His black-robed companion was a freelancer from Jisad, one of the few cities lacking a formal Assassin’s Guild. Under normal circumstances, the two would likely have been at each other’s throats, for the rivalry between guild and non-guild professionals was often bloody and extreme. However, their employer had paid a tremendous amount to the guildmasters of the various cities, enough to ensure that old rivalries would be held in abeyance, at least temporarily. The penalty to the transgressing guild would be terrible, should some cutthroat take it upon himself to redress some ancient wrong. The independent killers had no organization behind them, and they were even less likely to cause trouble with no one to protect them from their employer’s wrath.

  “Not on my coin,” their employer had announced to all of them when they’d met, the first and only meeting between this band of assassins and the man who had hired them. Even the Trakalan had been impressed with the immense number of murderers and hit men assembled in the dank cave near their targets’ castle. There were enough men and women assembled, for their employer showed no bias toward sex or age or race, to eliminate an entire family line.

  That’s the point of the exercise, the older assassin thought grimly as he moved toward his target’s quarters. His movements made no sound, for he was surrounded by a field of silence, wrought by the mages at the beck and call of their master. That meant more money, and lots of it. Mages were more expensive to keep on retainer than any assassin—barring those who were also mages, of course. The Trakalan had a trace of the mageblood in him, but his throat had been slit at an early age, and while the cut hadn’t been lethal, it had forever ruined his voice.

  His employer’s intelligence reported that his target would be alone in his room, likely studying for some kind of examination. The subject of the test didn’t matter to the old Trakalan; that his target would be alone did. His protective circle of silence was one-way, so he could hear clearly any sound around him. It was such a useful magic that he planned to use a portion of his generous payment to buy an enchanted ring that could perform it.

  So it was, as he drew close to the room, that he heard a scratching noise, the unmistakeable sound of quill on paper. Grinning tightly, he prepared his crossbow, old habits forcing him to cock it slowly, easing the catch into place so that no sound would betray his presence. When he loosed the quarrel from this bow, it would become a bolt of fire. There was little chance that his target could survive the searing heat which would lodge, still burning, into flesh and bone. Only a countering spell would extinguish the flames before the spell embedded in the crossbow ran its course.

  His target was reported to possess a magical sword, but his briefing indicated that it hung on the wall of the chamber, away from the desk. The Trakalan might have to worry about belt knives and throwing spikes, but not the eldritch blade. He wasn’t expecting a response of any kind from his target, however, since at this range he didn’t plan to miss.

  Around his neck, the Trakalan wore a medallion, wrought with charms against magics. He now removed it from his shirt, allowing it to hang openly. The diabolistic runes upon it worked only when they were exposed, so he now projected a field that deadened the magics of others. Spells intended to deflect or even reflect missiles would not function. Other spells, that would normally pinpoint an assassin or other attacker, would fail as well.

  He took a deep steadying breath, and moved into the corridor that contained his target’s quarters. The scratching of the quill on paper continued unabated. The clarity of the sound led him to surmise that his target was right in front of the doorway, sitting at the writing desk. He whirled around the corner, taking quick aim over the tip of the quill.

  Age hampered him now, for his attempt to relax his finger and hold his fire failed. His bolt tore past the feather, which was clamped to a mechanical device that moved it across a piece of parchment. As it passed, it touched the feather and the quill burst into flames, consumed in an instant. The bolt was buried into the wall behind the desk, igniting the tapestry that hung there.

  Cursing his luck, and knowing that he had no time to reload his bow, the Trakalan assassin drew his long, curved knives and entered the room, searching for his target. He spotted the young man immediately, seated on a second chair against the wall beside the entryway. The youth, who held a book in his lap, looked dumbfounded, but he quickly shook free of his surprise. The book dropped to the floor.

  The magical sword, hilt embedded with precious stones, hung on the wall twenty feet from the Trakalan’s intended victim, who drew his belt knife and rose into a fighting stance. He yelled for help, but the Trakalan knew no one was left to hear him by now, even if his screams could carry beyond the spell of silence.

  Maps adorned the walls of the room, and as the Trakalan charged his victim, the young man tore one down, draping its length across the older man. The assassin’s blades made short work of the obstacle, but it provided the boy time to roll back and to the side. The Trakalan briefly wished that he hadn’t sent his partner off to loot, then rushed his victim, knives flashing. Both blades were envenomed, though they didn’t look it, and the merest scratch would spell doom for the target.

  To the assassin’s surprise, the younger man didn’t move toward the longsword, now behind him. When the attack came, the boy, ignoring the knife in his hand, reached in past the assassin’s blades, catching the Trakalan’s right wrist with his own, and turned it aside, continuing his motion with the palm of his other hand, and striking the forearm just below the elbow. The assassin continued to turn, propelled by the momentum of their mutual strikes and the strength of the boy’s motion. His arm had somehow gone numb, and he dropped his right-hand knife. The boy immediately brought his knee up into the chest of his attacker, and despite his soft leather armor, the Trakalan went weak in the knees. Nerve junction, he thought briefly, before he attempted to slash at the leg of his victim as he stumbled. He was far too off-balance, his remaining knife in the wrong position to connect. Damn the elf! the assassin thought, cursing the boy’s teacher. In his fading seconds, he recognized the deadly moves of the elven martial art form known as aythra. It was his final thought.

  Now, the nobleman struck the Trakalan with his knife, plunging it unerringly into the liver. Between the strike on the assassin’s solar plexus and the knife in his vitals, he went down, his consciousness fading. The younger man took no chances, however, leaving his belt knife embedded in the assassin’s back as he leapt back to grab the longsword. In a smooth, practiced motion, he drew the fine blade without dismounting the scabbard, and continuing the same movement, severed his attacker’s head.

  The telepathic voice of the sword spoke in his mind, There will be more of them, my boy. Fetch your pack and flee to the passage. The spirit of the sword named Gem performed the mental equivalent of shaking h
er head. Whatever magic had been on the man’s medallion had been strong indeed. She had heard nothing; her senses had been dimmed to near-blindness, and her attention had been drawn away from the situation.

  Now that Lian, her wielder, bore her in hand, she could use his senses, and magical wards against detection would no longer be able to blind her. The attacker, who appeared to be from one of the western kingdoms, was lying on his chest, his body covering the engraved diabolistic warding medallion. Blood poured from the stump of his neck, and the eyes in his severed head stared sightlessly at the ceiling.

  Lian Evanson, youngest prince of Dunshor, moved swiftly to his bed, heart pounding. His auburn hair, parted in the middle, hung straight to his shoulders. He had his father’s dark brown eyes, which contrasted with his mother’s fair face and complexion. Freckles adorned his nose and cheeks, and beads of sweat formed on his forehead and neck. Beneath his white and gold tunic, bearing the royal crest of an upraised sword surrounded by a ring of stars, his muscles were well developed, and he moved with the sure grace attained from long, strenuous workouts.

  With practiced motions, he pressed two different parts of the stonework, activating the mechanism of the compartment above the headboard. Inside were a pack and a harness, equipped with a light crossbow and a shortsword. He slipped the harness over his shoulders so that he could easily draw either weapon. Like Gem, the crossbow and the shortsword were enchanted, though their ensorcellments paled in comparison to those of the sentient blade.

  The blade named Gem thought, Tempting to take that crossbow along, but there’s no knowing if it’s been painted with poison or carries tracer magic. She decided not to distract her charge by telling Lian how powerful its enchantments were.

  Once he had the weapons harness buckled, he slung the pack over one shoulder, hefting its substantial weight easily. He crossed the corner of the room to retrieve Gem’s scabbard and buckled that on his waist while he advanced to the entryway.

 

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