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Elisha Rex

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by E. C. Ambrose




  Rave reviews for E. C. Ambrose and The Dark Apostle:

  “In a grim world of medieval warfare, witch-hunts and primitive surgery, E. C. Ambrose has crafted a shining tale of one man’s humanity and courage. A gritty read for those who like realism as well as hope in their fantasy.”

  —Glenda Larke, author of The Last Stormlord

  “A vivid, violent, and marvelously detailed historical fantasy set in the perilous world that is medieval England in the middle of a war. Elisha Barber wades through blood and battle in his pursuit of arcane knowledge—forbidden love—and dangerous magic.”

  —Sharon Shinn, author of Troubled Waters

  “Ambrose’s fantasy debut depicts a 14th-century England in which magic and fledgling science exist side by side. Elisha’s struggle to bring relief to those in need is complicated by his own need for redemption and his innate fear of what he cannot understand. This beautifully told, painfully elegant story should appeal to fans of L.E. Modesitt’s realistic fantasies as well as of the period fantasy of Guy Gavriel Kay.”

  —Library Journal (starred review)

  “Elisha Barber is at its heart a story of resilience, of why we strive to be better, even when that journey seems pointless. As the start of a new series, the book sets a half-dozen plates spinning, and not a one wobbles for a second.”

  —San Francisco Book Review

  “E.C. Ambrose has created an exciting, adventure-filled world that draws you in; you are able to picture not only the characters but the world they live in. Elisha Magus is fantasy at its best and I can’t wait for the next book by E.C. Ambrose.”

  —Fresh Fiction

  “I am really enjoying this series. After reading the first book I was eager to read [Elisha Magus]. It did not disappoint.”

  — Night Owl Reviews

  “The historical milieu is detailed and brings the period into sharp focus. . . . The magical battles rivet readers’ attention as Elisha fights for his life and sanity. Book three looms in the wings as Elisha learns to wield his powers and protect his chosen king.”

  —SFRevu

  Novels of The Dark Apostle from E. C. Ambrose

  ELISHA BARBER

  ELISHA MAGUS

  ELISHA REX

  Copyright © 2015 by E. C. Ambrose.

  All Rights Reserved.

  Cover art by Cliff Nielsen.

  Cover design by G-Force Design.

  Book designed by The Barbarienne’s Den.

  DAW Books Collector’s No. 1697.

  DAW Books are distributed by Penguin Group (USA).

  All characters in the book are fictitious.

  Any resemblance to persons living or dead is strictly coincidental.

  The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the Internet or any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal, and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage the electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  ISBN 978-0-698-18852-5

  DAW TRADEMARK REGISTERED

  U.S. PAT. AND TM. OFF. AND FOREIGN COUNTRIES

  —MARCA REGISTRADA

  HECHO EN U.S.A.

  Version_1

  Contents

  Praise for E. C. Ambrose

  Also by E. C. Ambrose

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Epigraph

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  “Lest perhaps by gazing at his face thou receive a seed of desire sown by the enemy and reap sheaves of corruption and ruin.”

  —St. Basil, Renunciation of the Secular World

  Chapter 1

  In the manor house on the Isle of Wight, where he had been exiled for too bloody long, Elisha sat hunched at a dining table cluttered with books, practicing skills that most of his friends learned when they were children. He carved a few painstaking letters, then cursed under his breath. He smoothed out his wax tablet and started over, squinting at the page his teacher prepared with questions he was to answer in the wax. That “o” should have been an “e.” Elisha rubbed his temple. He was not meant for such labor.

  Mordecai pushed back his chair, went to a chest, and pulled out a slim codex. “Here, try this instead.” He slid it across the table.

  Grateful, he dropped the stylus, stretched his hands, and opened the book. The pages held dense blocks of words alongside grotesque illustrations of people being tortured—tongues pulled by tongs, burns applied, racks of instruments not so different from his own medical tools, a woman bound to a stake, flames licking up around her. Elisha shuddered. “What is this thing?”

  “An inquisitorial manual,” Mordecai said drily. “Not merely to remind you of the consequences of our being discovered. There may be references among the testimony that would be of use in future confrontations with the necromancers.”

  “Do I really need to know this?”

  “You tell me, Elisha. What will it take to survive the next time?”

  Elisha thought of Morag, the least of his enemies, who had nearly slain him more than once, and Elisha’s stomach curled. When Morag’s master came, what then? When Elisha met another magus, or two, or three who knew death so much better than he? He had been eager to get out of here, to find his enemies, and do what—die more quickly this time?

  Elisha’s eyes fell upon a passage, and he painstakingly worked through the Latin. “The Devil grants to witches a great influx of power upon dying, and thus the witch must either be dispatched quickly and without foreknowledge, or in such a manner that the flesh is ex—excoriated,” he sounded out the word aloud, “thus preventing the witch from mastering his diabolical aspect.”

  “That is why witches are dunked—drowned—because the body’s need to survive distracts the witch from any magic he or she might prepare,” Mordecai said with a meaningful glance.

  “When he asked me to leave his lodge and come here, Thomas told me a story about an old blind woman who lived in the chapel at the back—she was there when his wife and daughter were killed. When the townsfolk came, this woman was raving, covered in blood and holding a bloody bit of Alfleda’s hair. They dunked her for a witch, but she got away.”

  “A magus, do you think?”

  “Or a mancer, taking a talisman from the dead princess. Thomas said Alfleda had been so mutilated she could be identified only by her nightgown.” He should never have pressed for information about a crime two years gone. Even the pursuit of the mancers should allow his friend, his king, t
o grieve in peace.

  Elisha flipped a few pages of the text, through one appalling image after another, then he shoved the book away, recalling the discussion of how to kill him in order to secure Thomas’s crown, and how narrowly he had avoided the stake. “This is what Brigit’s always railing about; the laws about torture don’t apply to witches.”

  “She is not always wrong.” Mordecai regarded him evenly. “Still, it’s a good thing she’s not with the mancers.”

  “What makes you say that?”

  “Still has the hanging rope, doesn’t she? And maybe your hair from when the hangman cut it. If your enemies had those, only the ocean would stop them finding you.”

  Which was why they had come to Wight to begin with: the watery border that prevented Elisha from searching for his enemies prevented them from finding him as well. Elisha slumped into his seat. “Morag met her. At the grave. She came to mourn over me.” He scrubbed his hands over his face, feeling the tendrils of Mordecai’s concern.

  “You did not mention this.”

  “It didn’t seem important.”

  “Everything is important,” said Mordecai carefully. “You still want to believe she would not hurt you.”

  “She won’t—unless I get in her way. She wants justice for our people; it’s hard to argue against that.”

  “Most of those people would not count a Jew among their number.”

  “They don’t know any better.”

  Mordecai’s presence felt infinitely deep and sad. “We have been trying to tell them a thousand years and more, Elisha.” For a moment, it seemed the shades of his slaughtered family hovered near. “Does she fight for freedom, or for the chance to be the new oppressor?”

  A knock at the door gave Elisha the excuse to break away. If Morag had communicated about Brigit to any of the others; if they learned what she was capable of, how could Elisha stop them?

  Mordecai conversed with the woman in the passage beyond, and returned unrolling a cloth bundle with a couple of books and a folded parchment.

  “A letter for you.” Mordecai offered the parchment, dangling a ribbon with a red wax seal bearing the stamp of the king’s ring, Elisha’s false name written out in Thomas’s clear, careful hand.

  With the back of his Damascene knife, Elisha broke the seal and opened it. His lips moved along with his finger as he found the letters, the words, the spaces which showed where one thing ended and another began.

  • • •

  My dear Elisha,

  I hardly know how to address you. How long should my greeting be? In comparative rank, my titles should cover the page. We are not companions of rank or kinship, except in the kinship of battle.

  Allow me to apologize for my anger on the day we parted. You sought only the knowledge of our enemies, the better to fight them, but the death of a child, especially in such a brutal manner, can drive a man near to madness. When I came to the lodge to confront you, I felt you had betrayed me in turning your funeral into a circus, then took this mockery yet further in opening up the past. Of course, you needed to know about the princesses, the better to pursue our enemies, and I hope that you can forgive my reaction. With all you have done for me, I should have more trust. Trust is not an easy thing for either of us, I warrant.

  While I should have liked for you to remain close by, being reminded of the terrible events at the lodge has made me ever more determined to keep those I care for far from the perils of the crown.

  In happier news, I believe that Rosie is already with child. Though she does not wish me to suspect until the pregnancy is well along, I have seen the signs before. Also, she manifests the skills of the magi now, because of it. I wish that you could be here for the birth. She has her mother and a flock of ladies more flattering than useful, I fear.

  There has been no further incident regarding our enemies. I wonder now if they spoke so broadly about their conquests merely to impress my brother with their power when, in fact, they have little. In any case, their absence is a relief. The Londoners remain restless in spite of my lifting my father’s poll tax. There have been riots in London over your death, and, when the priests raised your coffin to find it empty—well, it has made the rumors fly. The clergy are hunting for you, while the peasants are making of you a new saint. Why did they not support you in your life, I want to ask. Some of the barons urge action against them and I must intercede for patience and mercy. Truly, if I were to take up again the Scottish cause or to make war in France, I think that Gloucester and a few others would take arms against our own people in my absence. Over my protest, the bishop of London has summoned a papal legate to investigate the rumors surrounding your death, and the mayor fears outright revolt. It is hard to know how I shall gather all these forces once more beneath the crown. I pray that distance shall keep you safe—and keep me from your condemnation. A king cannot always afford to be merciful.

  In the hopes of placating his allies, I have held a funeral for my brother. I think there is no need for his treachery to be broadcast, though Dunbury has had some misgivings.

  I trust your own work goes well, and I am sorry I have no better for you. I would I could be there to feel the breeze off of the ocean, for London is a very nest of vipers. This is a land in need of healers, and I have exiled my best.

  Yours,

  Thomas

  And after that, the word, “Rex” with a line drawn through it, as if the writer had thought better of it.

  It took Elisha a long time to puzzle through the words, even with all the care that Thomas had taken in forming his letters. Alaric buried, Rosalynn pregnant, Thomas trapped in a nest of vipers, and Elisha far away and helpless. He shoved back from the table. “I’m leaving.”

  Mordecai’s head snapped up from his new books, his eyes flaring. “What news?”

  With a calming gesture, Elisha said, “For a walk, that’s all.”

  He stalked down the passage and out into the twilight. Most times, he crossed the manor’s dry moat and headed for town, to market or to listen to a passing bard. Today, he turned away from people and moved steadily upward, crossing a stile. His attunement was instant after the last several weeks of practice: He knew these trees and stones and sheep. He cast his deflection, using the Law of Opposites to project a sense of his own absence, thick and complete, and the sheep did not even stir as he passed nor the crows fly from their trees to keep an eye on him. Lucky the mancers didn’t know about the crow woman, either—her searching messengers were not blocked by water. Mist rolled along the rills and valleys, enveloping him, and letting him pass to the other side.

  It had not been the king’s intent to make him restless. Thomas fell prey to the assumptions of the rich: the princes’ boyhood would have been taken up with tutors, their manhood with writs and courts and training. Either Thomas imagined Elisha would enjoy that life, or merely that it would make for a pleasant change from battle. Instead, his eyes felt dry, his head ached, his shoulders hunched from too long at the table. Even the lessons in sorcery became rote with repetition, and there was no hint of threat, in spite of their fears. He might live for decades here without ever meeting another mancer.

  But he did not believe the mancers had abandoned their fight for the throne—they had spent too long in search of it. To Elisha, it seemed only a piece of an even larger plan. Elisha slipped his hand into his pouch and touched the lock of Thomas’s hair he always carried, but it held no warmth and gave him no sense of the man as it used to do. The water, perhaps, or the distance between them, prevented his awareness.

  He came beneath the trees, to the great elm where crows congregated, cackling with unpleasant glee. The sensation caused Elisha a moment’s pause. Nothing made crows happy but a corpse-strewn battlefield, or the promise of it. Focusing his awareness, he reached up toward the birds. A few of them fluttered and ruffled their feathers. Something fell, tinkling as it tapped the bran
ches on the way down until it landed a few feet away.

  Elisha picked it up: a low-relief lead badge, like the ones given out to pilgrims at the shrine of St. Thomas in Canterbury. He made out the image of a man on horseback, an unkempt man reaching up toward him. The horseman had his sword in hand, using it to sever his rich cloak: St. Martin of Tours, one of the patrons of France. The image made him think of the French magus who had died in his arms—and it also decorated the sign that hung over Martin Draper’s shop in London. Martin, another friend he could not see again. Elisha tried to shake off his melancholia, rubbing his fingers over the medal. A French saint, on English soil. Interesting.

  A few crows hopped lower, peering at him from the branches and from other nearby trees.

  “What do you want?” he asked them aloud, their black eyes and sharp beaks reminding him of his burial day.

  They tipped their heads, bobbed and croaked, then one of them swooped at him. “Shit!” he yelped, dodging the blow. He covered his head, cloaking himself in an instinctive deflection, but the crows already knew he was there and could not be deflected.

  They swooped down, diving at him, and more of their treasures pinged his arms and head. St. Martin of Tours rained to the ground around him, along with a few others. So many? A handful of French medals, he could imagine, would be found around here, but a hundred? He scooped up a few and ran.

  Thankfully, the crows did not want to fly far at night, and contented themselves with shrieking bird insults at his back and collecting their stolen trinkets from the ground.

  Torches burned before the manor house, awaiting his return, but three horses stood in the yard, and Elisha hesitated. They’d never before had visitors, yet he sensed no great distress from Mordecai—and found a familiar presence along with him. He stepped up to the door and ducked inside. Three armed men stood in the dining hall, with Mordecai still seated before them.

  “Good Lord, you are alive!” said Lord Robert, one of Duke Randall of Dunbury’s companions. Robert’s expression moved from dismay, to delight, to anger—a frown that looked out of place on his pleasant, oval face.

 

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