Of Noble Chains (The Ventori Fables)
Page 1
Of Noble Chains: A Ventori Fable
D.L. Miles
© 2013 by Devin Miles
All Rights reserved
Also by D.L. Miles
The Ethereal Crossings
Shadeland
Fenridge
Northcliffe
Shimmering
The Warden in the Gates
Table of Contents
Prologue:
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:
Epilogue:
About the author:
Shimmering, the first two chapters:
Chapter 1:
Chapter 2:
Shadeland, the first chapter:
Chapter 1:
The Warden in the Gates, the first two chapters:
Prologue
Chapter 1:
Prologue:
“And what’s this say, Zia?” her brother asked, holding the little girl in his lap. He pointed to the northern part of the map, near the house they now lived in. He had ditched his extra classes to spend time with her, because he knew he wouldn’t be able to see her much when he started college.
Zia pointed at the same area and said, “North Quarter!”
“Very good! How about over here?” he dragged his finger west, to a tangled mess of barren lands.
“Wild Lands!” Zia cried.
He laughed, giving her a hug as a reward, “That’s right! Now how about here?” His finger slid south, to the area she had been forbidden to go.
“South Quarter, Specter lands!” she growled and bared her teeth playfully at him, and he mimicked her.
“That’s right,” he agreed, “but Zia you know they’re not all bad, right?”
“They’re monsters,” she stated, “they’re bad!”
“No, kid,” he shook his head at her, “not all of them. Don’t think like that, okay?”
She pouted and faced the book. “Okay.”
“But for the ones that do go STRAY, the Ventori will keep you safe. Like me!”
Zia crawled around in her brother’s lap to face him, the book forgotten. He thought she looked sad, and she stared straight at him with a bit of wonder as she asked, “You won’t go without me, right? I wanna be Ventori!”
He laughed, and patted her head. “Never, kid.”
That was the moment Zia truly decided what path she wanted to follow, and it was the same as her brothers.
Chapter 1:
“It didn’t take long for the five clans to unite themselves against the darkness all those years ago. They did it to save everyone, because nobody else wanted to try. Unfortunately their bravery wasn’t enough, even battling as one didn’t save all of them.
The clans fell, but so did the darkness, and the children of the sides that remained went into hiding, immersed themselves amongst the humans, dormant for eons; until one day, the Raijin clan stood up and declared war against those who lived in the shadows. Soon the other clans joined them, all but the Neith, who chose to remain neutral.
It’s been just over a century since Havilan the Light revealed our people to the world, revealed that the nightmares are real too. Although the humans had legends, stories told through generations, they had difficulty accepting the clans help. And now the darkness is growing stronger with each passing day, awaiting their moment of glory; waiting for the opportune moment to strike, so they can take down the clans…take down all of us…”
“What about the humans?” a tiny hand rose into the chilled air, waving about to get Zia’s attention. Breena, a little blonde girl wearing a pink sundress with matching bows stared down her storyteller, along with the rest of the New Havilan Library daycare attendees. “Did we get to live?”
Zia resisted a chuckle and allowed her eyes to roll over the bookshelves a moment. An elderly couple was peering at her, listening to her story, they were probably old enough to remember when the darkness was really bad. Zia had been sure to leave out the part that the humans already knew of what lived among them; it just didn’t make the story sound as good. “The Specter’s will leave no survivors, Breena,” Zia finally said.
The girls eyes dimmed a little, as did the other children’s. The librarian, and daycare supervisor, cleared her throat, warning Zia that her tale was getting a little too mature for the kids. Zia pulled at the collar of her shirt and decided to change her answer.
“What I mean to say,” she continued, “is that as long as there are Trackers, you humans don’t have to worry about the darkness making a comeback. We’ll save your sorry—um…we’ll keep you safe.”
Another hand shot into the air; Joshua’s dirt-caked face scrutinizing her every word. “Mama says you’re a freak that should be put down just like all the Specter’s.”
Zia felt her eye twitch and forced a smile across her face. These kinds of comments from Joshua and his racist mother weren’t uncommon. She said, “Well, Joshua, your mother is an ignorant—“
“Ms. Noble!” the librarian cut Zia off before she could insult Joshua’s mother again. The ankle-length skirt swished back and forth with her hips as she came around the desk. “How many times have I told you not to insult the children’s parents?”
“Sorry Mrs. Mayfield,” Zia said, standing up from the miniature plastic chair. The woman began to usher Zia towards the door, the history lesson with the kids was now over.
“Alright children,” Mrs. Mayfield sighed and pushed her glasses up the bridge of her nose, “say ‘goodbye’ to Ms. Noble.”
The kids did as they were told and the librarian was already motioning Zia towards the door, shooing her as if she were an intruding cat. She hoisted her backpack over her jacket, hoping the knife she hid there didn’t clink against anything to give Mrs. Mayfield yet another reason to kick her out. She loved coming to tell stories to the kids despite how often it ended like this. Zia’s feet shuffled against the thin carpet as she made her way to the door.
“You’re going to be late,” Mrs. Mayfield smirked at her before glancing at the clock. Zia followed her eyes to the wall and realized that the ceremony had already begun. Much to the librarian’s annoyance, Zia swore rather loudly and dashed out the door.
Her bike wasn’t that far from the glass doors, but it seemed like a mile now that she was in a hurry. Zia hopped on it and began to race down the street, careful to avoid traffic, when her phone began to ring. With some careful maneuvering she got it from her pocket.
“Where are you?” Iscah hissed into Zia’s ear. “The ceremony has already started and I just told your parents that you were already in line!”
“I’m on my way,” Zia shouted, narrowly dodging a large pickup. It blared its horn at her and she yelled right back at it. “Sorry Issy, I’ll be there though. I’m like, five minutes away.”
“Well you better hurry because your mom already has her camera out; I think she’s on her second memory card.”
“That sounds about right. I’ll see you there!” Zia ended the call before her best friend could say anything else. She
was a soon-to-be Tracker, or Ventori to those that were part of a clan; dealing with a bit of rush-hour traffic was nothing. Zia’s smile grew wider across her face, the summer breeze blowing her hair back. Today was the beginning of her destiny, and nothing could ruin that.
It wasn’t long before Zia was leaping off of her bike and running for the auditorium of the New Havilan Community College. She could already hear Principal Smithers calling out names as her heels clicked on the newly buffed floors. She reached the huge wooden doors of the auditorium but stalled as her hand stretched towards the handle.
Glancing down at her attire, Zia didn’t think jeans and a tank top with matching army bag were appropriate for this occasion. Her lips pulled towards her teeth when a noise caught her attention.
Wheels squeaked and echoed down the hallway, bounced off of the glass trophy case and towards Zia. Her head swiveled around to find someone rolling a cart of costumes towards her; one black robe that hung on the rack was exactly what she needed. As the janitor stopped at another wooden door, he began to jingle a roll of keys in his hands, searching for the right one.
“Hey,” Zia said, running up to him, wary that the Principal was getting dangerously close to her name. “Can I borrow one of these?”
She ripped the costume from the hanger and threw it over her head before the man could refuse. He didn’t seem to try though, just continued to look at his keys. She tossed her bag into a corner by the trophy case, figuring it would be safe enough there.
The robe she wore was obviously made for someone much taller than she and the edge of it pooled on the shining floor. She quickly thanked the man and ran back to the doors of the auditorium, being sure to hold up the robe so she didn’t trip.
Taking a moment at the doors, Zia ruffled up her hair, getting it to the perfect tousled look. As she pushed the doors open with a little too much force, the Principal was just turning back to the microphone.
“Kehzia Noble,” he said into the thin silver mic. Zia glanced over at her classmates, hiding at the back of the room and awaiting their names to be called. A few of them rolled their eyes at her, as did the parents and teachers. The Principal peered over his glasses, unimpressed. “I’m so glad you could make it to your own graduation.”
Everyone laughed, but that didn’t slow Zia down as she walked across the blood red carpet of the auditorium. With a big smile she said, “I know you are!”
She held the robe up and waved at her parents in the sixth row from behind the students that had already been called on. Her mother, the beautiful Win, was already snapping photos while her father, Cash, recorded everything. Iscah was next to them, signing that Zia had cut it too close as she pointed at her wrist. Zia couldn’t help but notice that a lot of the people there were giving her a strange, confused look as well. When she made it to the stage and looked out over the crowd she understood why.
All of her classmates that had been called and those hiding at the back were wearing a navy blue robe, while she wore a black one. She mindlessly shook the Principal’s hand and took her fake diploma from him.
“I’m amazed you survived this long,” he mumbled to her.
“Right back at’cha,” Zia shot at him. Principal Smithers inspected her costume as she walked away, the silence of the auditorium a little unnerving.
The steps down to meet the rest of the graduates creaked and moaned. Zia shambled her way into a seat, right next to her least favourite person in all of New Havilan.
“Congratulations,” Hayden whispered to her, “but you won’t cut it as a Ventori with that punctuality.”
“At least I know the alphabet,” Zia hissed back at him, “last time I checked R was not in front of N.”
Hayden shrugged. “What can I say? I wanted to make sure I graduated before you. Nice robe, by the way.” His hand reached over and flipped up a hood Zia hadn’t known was there. It pushed her hair forward, blinding her as more names were called.
Using jerking motions, she shoved it back, making sure to fix her dark strands; it was simple since there weren’t many of them.
“I didn’t think Ventori were allowed to be so petty,” Zia whispered, “besides, it doesn’t matter if you graduated first; I got my acceptance letter before you.”
A smirk in Zia’s direction and her heart did an unfamiliar hard thump. Hayden shifted in his seat to face her. He put an arm around the back of her chair and brushed his sandy bangs from his eyes. Zia would never admit it, but her heart did another little flutter. He laughed, “You got an interview first, not an acceptance letter.”
“Sorry, but I don’t see the difference,” Zia grew tired of being so close to Hayden, especially with the overwhelming scent of after-shave. “By the Light, have you picked a clan yet?” Hayden flinched and turned back to the stage, removing his arm from Zia’s personal space. He kept his mouth shut for the rest of graduation.
The reception was held outside, once everyone had gone through the journey of walking across the poorly lit auditorium stage. Zia had managed to escape any more conversation with Hayden Rider and met up with Iscah first. She greeted her best friend with a tight, breathtaking hug.
“I’m so happy for you!” Iscah said, pushing Zia back to hold onto her shoulders. “You graduated early, and from the Light Academy no less!”
“I know!” Zia grabbed Iscah in another hug, her strawberry scented hair flowing everywhere. “Now all I have to do is survive telling my parents about college and I’m done!”
Iscah pushed her away. Zia laughed, thinking about how their roles were usually reversed.
“You still haven’t told them?” Iscah asked, her large eyes sharpening on Zia. “But you’re interview is tomorrow, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” Zia said slowly, “I’m going to do it tonight, after dinner. So don’t say anything!”
Zia waved her hands at Iscah as her parents approached. Iscah was staring daggers into Zia, and had every right to. But as Zia’s parents approached, they each plastered an easy smile on their faces. Win and Cash immediately hugged their daughter, right before they started snapping pictures.
“Alright Win, calm down,” Cashel laughed, taking the camera from his wife’s frail hands. “I think we have enough photos for now.”
“But I can’t help it, honey,” Win started to pat down the shoulders of her daughters robe, picking off stray hairs or pieces of fluff, “she graduated from Light Academy at only seventeen. She’s the youngest student to ever do it!”
“Technically there are five of us graduating at seventeen this year,” Zia burst her mother’s bubble, even though she already knew this. “But I guess out of all of them I am the youngest by about a month.”
“Oh, I don’t care,” Win whipped Zia into another hug, “I couldn’t be prouder and I got to be here to see it.”
“Ha ha, yeah…” Zia pushed a strand of hair behind her ear. Knowing what she was thinking, Cashel handed the camera back to Win. “Let’s get some more photos, yeah?”
Zia spent the rest of the reception with Iscah and her parents, taking small chances to glare at Hayden Rider.
He stood on the opposite side of the courtyard, watching Zia with every chance he got. From now on he wouldn’t be able to see her on a regular basis, and it made his chest hurt. But Hayden knew that if she at least got into the Tracker program, there was a slim chance he would get to have classes with her; of course he had to get in as well. Arranging to sit next to her at graduation hadn’t been easy. He had to convince the girl that was originally supposed to be there to trade spots, and then he had to switch the names on the roster. Hayden couldn’t believe Zia had thought he was doing it just to say he graduated before her, but then again she had never been able to notice his advances before. For one of the most popular girls in school, she certainly was oblivious to how others felt towards her; or maybe it was just his feelings she didn’t notice.
A sigh escaped his lungs, and his friend Cal noticed.
“I got a plan,” he announc
ed to Hayden, who finally shifted his gaze away from Zia.
“A plan?” Hayden mocked. Cal, one of the only other clan members in the school, always had a plan.
“Yup, just you wait,” Cal winked, “she’ll be yours in no time!”
Suddenly Hayden noticed his father had disappeared and he glanced around the immediate area. The man he called dad was already stepping into a sleek limo on the edge of the road, not even turning around to give his only son a wave goodbye. Hayden grimaced, and Cal jostled him.
“Your mom’s coming over, man,” Cal said, and whirled away with a fresh drink. Hayden wished he could do the same.
But instead he jumped into action as his mom approached, “Hello, mother.” He wrapped his arms around her stiff shoulders and she gave him a single pat on the back. She was of the Shakti clan, and they weren’t known for being…caring. But she was better than his father, at least.
Her sandy brown hair blew in the light breeze and her lips formed a tight smile, “Congratulations on your graduation, Hayden. I trust you’ll be choosing your clan soon?” his mother questioned. Everyone was asking that, even Zia. But he faked a smile, and nodded.
“Of course.”
“I trust you’ll make the right choice,” she eyed him, her makeup perfection. He nodded again.
But the truth was he had no idea which clan he would pick. His gut told him to go in one direction, while his mind told him to go another. But for now, he would convince his mother he was going to enter the Shakti clan, and become a true member.
“Of course.”
Hayden couldn’t help but wonder what his parents would do when he really did choose.
Chapter 2:
That night Zia went with her parents to her favourite restaurant to celebrate. It was half bar, half diner, and had a family feel to it. Though her father had suggested going to one of New Havilan’s more upscale restaurants, Zia refused; Stallion’s had the best burgers, in her opinion. Plus there was no chance of running into Hayden there. She squeezed into the blue vinyl booth next to her mother while Cashel retrieved their drinks from the counter.