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The Belial Warrior (The Belial Series Book 9)

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by R. D. Brady




  The Belial Plan

  A Belial Series Novel

  R.D. Brady

  Scottish Seoul Publishing, LLC

  Contents

  List of Characters

  Untitled

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Untitled

  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

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Chapter 72

  Chapter 73

  Chapter 74

  Chapter 75

  Chapter 76

  Chapter 77

  Chapter 78

  Chapter 79

  Chapter 80

  Chapter 81

  Chapter 82

  Chapter 83

  Chapter 84

  Chapter 85

  Chapter 86

  Chapter 87

  Chapter 88

  Chapter 89

  Chapter 90

  Chapter 91

  Chapter 92

  Chapter 93

  Chapter 94

  Chapter 95

  Chapter 96

  Chapter 97

  Chapter 98

  Chapter 99

  Chapter 100

  Chapter 101

  Chapter 102

  Chapter 103

  Chapter 104

  Chapter 105

  Chapter 106

  Chapter 107

  Chapter 108

  Chapter 109

  Chapter 110

  Chapter 111

  Chapter 112

  Chapter 113

  Chapter 114

  Chapter 115

  Chapter 116

  Chapter 117

  Chapter 118

  Chapter 119

  Chapter 120

  Chapter 121

  Chapter 122

  Chapter 123

  124. FACT OR FICTION?

  125. ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Books By R.D. Brady

  126. Excerpt from ‘The Belial Plan’ (Coming February 2017)

  List of Characters

  Sparta and Mycenae

  Helen—Queen of Sparta, ring bearer

  Menelaus—husband of Helen

  Hermione—daughter of Helen and Menelaus

  Davos—son of Helen and Menelaus

  Theron—son of Helen and Menelaus

  Castor—Helen’s brother, Pollux’s twin

  Pollux—Helen’s brother, Castor’s twin

  Achilles—hero of the Trojan War

  Clytemnestra—Helen’s twin sister

  Leda— Queen of Sparta, mother of Helen

  Tyndareus—King of Sparta, father of Helen

  Proteus—King of Pharos, Egypt, father of Barnabus, close friend of Leda

  Barnabus—illegitimate son of Proteus, friend of the Spartan royal family

  Agamemnon—King of Mycenae, Menelaus’s brother, Clytemnestra’s husband

  Iphigenia—daughter of Clytemnestra and Agamemnon

  Morcant—loyal servant of Clytemnestra

  Adorna—loyal servant of Helen

  Cergen—Agamemnon’s servant from Mycenae

  Faenus—Zeus's agent who scoured the globe for him

  Claudius - Agamemnon's spy

  Troy

  Paris—Prince of Troy, scum of the earth

  Priam—King of Troy, father of Paris, Cassandra, and Hector

  Hecuba—Queen of Troy, mother of Paris, Cassandra, and Hector

  Cassandra—sister of Hector and Paris, daughter of Priam and Hecuba

  Patroclus—best friend of Achilles

  Briseis—spoil of war given to Achilles

  Chrysies—spoil of war given to Agamemnon

  Hector—brother of Paris, son of Priam and Hecuba

  Dugal—Myrmidon, one of Achilles’s closest friends

  Agaro—Paris’s servant

  Crete

  Minos—King of Crete

  Orestes—young boy from Minos’s palace

  Gaelous—successor to Minos

  * For the sake of reader understanding, modern geographic names are often used rather than historical ones.

  “Indeed, she was proud to have inflamed leaders, to have torn apart the world in war,

  and to have gained an infamous reputation for her shameful beauty.”

  —Joseph of Exeter, Trojan War (AD 1180)

  “Well-behaved women seldom make history.”

  —Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

  Chapter 1

  The Chandler School for Children, Baltimore, Maryland

  Six months before the world turned against Delaney McPhearson

  The sea of teenage faces looked up at Father Patrick Delaney as he stood in front of the classroom. Most were engaged, although more than a few glanced toward the clock, counting down the last few minutes of the class.

  Patrick ignored the clock-checkers and focused on the engaged instead. “The city of Troy and the Trojan War were long believed to be a legend, until the 1870 discovery of Troy in Turkey by Heinrich Schliemann.”

  A girl with long, dark, wavy hair and bright eyes shot her hand into the air.

  “Lou?” Patrick asked.

  “But I was reading that Schliemann actually stole the site from a guy named Calvert.”

  Patrick smiled. Lou Thomas, age sixteen and a Fallen, had taken to history like a duck to water. She was always looking for more reading above and beyond what he assigned in class.

  “That’s true,” he said. “Originally, Schliemann wasn’t even interested in Troy. It wasn’t until after touring the world that he met up with Frank Calvert and developed an interest in the ancient city. At the time, there were three potential spots in Turkey where Troy was believed to be located: Bunarbashi, Hisarlik, and Alexandria Trois. The third was believed by many to be a long shot. The first, Bunarbashi, was believed to be the most likely. But Frank Calvert, he was digging at Hisarlik. In fact, by the time Schliemann arrived, Calvert had been d
igging at Hisarlik for seven years. He had dug three trenches and found enough to convince him he was at the correct site.”

  “So how did Schliemann get the credit?” asked Rolly Escabi, who was sitting next to Lou.

  “Well, Calvert told Schliemann all about his finds and beliefs. Within a year, Schliemann was digging at Hisarlik under Calvert’s permit and with Calvert’s men. When he struck pay dirt, he gave Calvert absolutely no recognition.”

  “Jerk,” Lou muttered.

  Patrick smiled. “Yes, I would have to agree.”

  A hand shot up in the back. Patrick called on Chris Santos.

  “So,” said Chris, “if they found Troy, does that mean everything that Homer said about the Trojan War was right? Gods, a ten-year war, and cheating Helen?”

  A few students chuckled at Chris’s last words, and Patrick tried not to cringe. Ever since he had learned that his niece, Delaney McPhearson, had been Helen of Troy in a previous life, he had been researching the historical figure to try and figure out the truth about who she was. And while it was proving a difficult endeavor, he could at least say that history seemed equally clueless when it came to the famous queen.

  “Well, that’s the question, isn’t it?” Patrick said. “But you have to remember that the Spartans never wrote down their own history—the facts were handed down by oral tradition only. And Homer’s tale was written five hundred years after the Trojan War, so it—like any tale handed down by oral tradition, or like any game of ‘telephone’—undeniably changed in that time, no doubt making it more exciting, and less accurate.”

  Theresa Schneider, who usually sat quietly in the first row, spoke up, her voice shaky. “But the gods—they were us, weren’t they?”

  Now Patrick had the attention of everyone in the classroom. Every set of eyes looked at him, as everyone wanted an answer to that question. Because the Chandler School for Children was no ordinary school. All the students here were either Fallen, or they were nephilim—the child of a human and a Fallen angel. And all of them knew that this was not the first lifetime they had lived—although none could remember those past lives. Now like Patrick, they wondered which moments of history they had been a part of.

  The idea of past lives wasn’t an easy thing to accept—especially for Patrick, a Roman Catholic priest. But when he was preparing for this lecture, he knew this question was going to come up. He took a breath, sitting on the edge of his desk. “I think it’s possible, yes. The gods had incredible abilities—speed, strength—but also some that were supernatural, like the ability to control the weather or move the sun across the sky. I think the stories of the gods, like the tale of the Trojan War, are based in fact but diluted by exaggeration.”

  The bell sounded, and everyone looked up. “Okay, read chapters seventeen through nineteen by Friday. There will be a quiz.”

  A groan sounded across the room, making Patrick smile. He gathered his papers and pushed them into his briefcase as the students filed out.

  “Father Patrick?”

  He looked up. “Lou. What can I do for you?”

  “The Bronze Age, it was also called the Age of Heroes, right?”

  Patrick nodded. “Yes.”

  “But there were no women. All the heroes—they were men. The women were all supporting players. Cassandra, Leda, Hecuba, even Helen—and the whole war’s about her.”

  “That’s how it’s written, yes.”

  Lou shot a quick glance behind her, and Patrick had the impression she was checking to make sure everyone was gone before speaking. “Do you think that’s true? That the women had nothing to do with the war besides Helen being the catalyst? That it was only the men that were the heroes? I mean, do you really think Helen of Troy was nothing more than the adulteress history has made her out to be?”

  As Patrick looked into Lou’s eyes, he knew this question was more than just an academic one. All the students knew Laney was the ring bearer, and they looked up to her; Laney was a superhero come to life. Lou felt the same way. But what Lou knew that the others didn’t was that Laney had once been Helen of Troy.

  “What I said in class was true,” Patrick said. “The Iliad was written at least five hundred years after the Trojan War. And that was a time when women were viewed as little more than property; a strong woman in any capacity would have been viewed unkindly. And history was written by men. I think Helen is another case of history being particularly judgmental, if not downright inaccurate, about women.”

  “So you think she was more than an empty-headed woman controlled by her passions?”

  Patrick smiled. “Helen is called Helen of Troy but remember, Helen was the Queen of Sparta. Spartan women were not easily fooled, nor did they suffer fools easily, which is what Paris appears to have been. She was known around the world well before The Iliad was written. For hundreds of years after her death, there were cults dedicated to her across the Mediterranean. So no, I don’t think she was simply a pretty face who launched a thousand ships. I think history has been very unfair to her.”

  “What do you think the real story is?”

  “I don’t know. And I don’t think we ever will.”

  Lou grinned. “But it’s probably a good story.”

  Patrick pictured his niece. Time and time again she had faced every challenge presented her, at great cost to herself. And she had kept her morality and her priorities correct through it all—protect as many as you can and do the right thing, no matter how hard it may be.

  “Yes,” said Patrick. “I think whatever the true tale is, it’s probably amazing.”

  Chapter 2

  Sparta, Greece

  1450 BC

  The sword arced toward her head. Thirteen-year-old Helen of Sparta, heir to the Spartan throne, ducked. She stepped under Lucia’s outstretched arm, grabbed it, and slammed her elbow into it, breaking it.

  Lucia cried out, and Helen twisted the woman’s wrist, stripping the sword from her hand.

  Helen let Lucia drop as she scanned the courtyard for more opponents. Not one of the muscular women dressed in leather tunics now stood to face her. A few women held their sides. Blood dotted more than a few faces and bodies. It was Helen who was responsible for their injuries but she felt no guilt.

  And none of the women held any resentment at her for being the creator of those injuries. A few even smiled as she scanned across them. Finally her gaze came to rest on the woman in charge of all female training for more than fifteen years. Boudica’s body was pure, sculpted muscle. She stepped forward with a rare grin. “Well done, Helen.”

  Helen straightened, feeling a sense of accomplishment. This was the annual test of strength: all the women in Sparta without children fought for the honor of top warrior. And for the first time, Helen had won—and she had done so at a younger age than any woman in the rite’s history.

  A chuckle came from behind her. “Yes. Nicely done, sister.”

  Helen glanced back. Two eighteen-year-old men—identical from their blond hair, deep violet blue eyes, and muscular builds down to the matching smirks on their faces—lounged against the stable wall.

  “What are you doing here?” Helen asked.

  Castor and Pollux strode toward her. Helen noticed more than one woman straighten her posture as they approached, and she stifled a sigh. Her brothers could turn fierce warriors into giggling schoolgirls with one look.

  Pollux beckoned her toward them. “Come with us.”

  Helen frowned, but she nodded at her sisters-in-arms and followed her brothers out of the courtyard.

  The boys set a quick pace through the busy training grounds. Helen felt proud as she witnessed the Spartan warriors competing in archery, wrestling, hand-to-hand combat, swords, and staffs. These were her people, and they were the greatest fighting force in the world.

  The boys turned away from the main house and instead cut through a side gate that led to the hills north of the citadel.

  Helen frowned. “Where are we going?”

 
Castor glanced back. “You’ll see.”

  With a grin, the twins began to race for the top of the hill. Helen sprinted after them. Pollux blurred, and in seconds he was at the top, waving down at them.

  “Cheater,” Castor yelled, but Helen just dug in and sprinted past her brother with a grin.

  “Hey!” Castor yelped, picking up the pace. They reached the summit side by side, both panting.

  Even without the sprint, the view would have taken Helen’s breath away. Almost all of Sparta lay spread out before her. The river valley was bounded by Mount Taygetus to the west and Mount Parnon to the east, and behind her, hills reaching thousands of meters high added to the natural boundaries that had kept Sparta from ever being sacked. The Eurotas River itself ran right through Sparta, sparkling in the sun, and providing fresh water to the city.

  Castor and Pollux headed to the plateau used for competition, and Helen followed. Ruts in the dirt showed where the chariot races had been held, and the benches were still in place for the crowds. Helen loved watching the competitions. Of course, she would have preferred to compete herself, but her mother never let her. Some nonsense about her being female and it being unfair to the other male competitors. Sparta might know the true value of a woman, but the rest of the world was still outdated in its views.

  Her brothers stopped five feet ahead of her and turned their feet braced apart. Helen came up short, glancing between the two of them. Castor threw a sword at her feet.

  Keeping her gaze on them, Helen crouched down to pick up the sword. “Okay. So what exactly are we doing?”

  “Pollux and I have decided that you need learn how to fight.”

  Helen laughed. “Did you guys miss the big announcement? I’ve just beaten every woman in Sparta.”

  Castor smiled. “And now we’ll teach you to beat every man.” He lunged.

  Chapter 3

  Halfway between Prudhoe Bay and Barrow, Alaska

  Present day

  A small man with a large hammer was trying to pound his way out of Delaney McPhearson’s skull. Even with the pain, she clung to the memory of the dream. Helen’s life played out behind her eyes, and she felt the lingering warmth of her friendship with her brothers, Castor and Pollux. The three of them had formed the triad—just like Laney, Jake, and Henry did today.

 

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