Yassiâs family had given up their nomadic, goat-herding ways long ago, but theyâd maintained their ancestral camp along the coastline at the edge of Sanvara City. The water there was too shallow for deep-hulled vessels, but those who lived in the camp plied their trade as fishermen by sailing small skiffs out into the little cove theyâd claimed as their own.
Most of Yassiâs relatives preferred to live and work in the city itself, taking advantage of the more metropolitan lifestyle, but any member of the extended family was welcome home at any time.
It wasnât safe for Yassi to stay at the campâthe location was too obviousâbut sheâd been a regular visitor since arriving in Sanvar.
This time, though, she hadnât come for a social visit. Her aunt was waiting impatiently outside one of the huts.
âI sent the messenger four hours ago,â Saira said. âWhat took so long?â
âI couldnât find any carriages at this time of day, and Merice wanted to come with me,â Yassi told her. Sheâd left the former queen playing on the beach with the younger children.
âWell, the Seeker is hereâsheâs been waiting this whole time. She might work out as a bodyguard, too.â Saira led Yassi into the hut. There they found a woman of around thirty years of age, dressed in menâs clothing in a modern Zidari style. A scimitar hung from her sword belt.
The woman scowled. âI was starting to wonder if youâd changed your mind, Your Majesty.â
âI apologize for the delay,â Yassi said. âBut please, call me Mera, at least outside this camp. Iâm trying not to attract any attention.â
âSo your aunt said. My nameâs Narini. What is it youâre looking to Seek?â
âMy husband has become concerned that there may be a threat against our childâs life,â Yassi said, patting her belly. She was visibly pregnant now. âHe sent me away for our safety, but Iâd like to make sure I wasnât followed.â The demonic compulsion didnât prevent her from lying, and sheâd managed to come up with a half-truth that didnât trigger a compelled response. She hadnât convinced everyone, thoughâher grandparents seemed to think Rusol had sent her away in some sort of disgrace. Yassi wasnât sure whether Saira believed her or was just humoring her.
âFollowed by who?â Narini asked.
âThatâs what I need your help with,â Yassi said. âIf I knew who they were, I could See them.â After arriving in the city, sheâd kept up a constant stream of viewings on her surroundings, but sheâd found it impossible to locate a ship sailing on the ocean when she didnât know which ship it was, nor who was on it.
Narini grunted. âSeekingâs not much different than Seeing in that regard. Iâd need more details. Where I can help is in looking for imminent threats. I can Seek out someone whoâs nearby and planning to cause you harm, but it takes a lot of effort to keep that up for long periods of time. Itâs better to stay in a safe location and only venture out if you have to.â
âI have a house in the orange grove district,â Yassi said. âI donât plan on traveling anytime soon.â It was Merice whoâd paid for the property, spending a fraction of what sheâd gotten for selling off her extravagant jewelry. Yassi had to be more careful with her own coin.
âThatâll work, if you can secure the entrances. How many guards do you have?â
âJust one.â Lucanus had stuck around after Yassi announced she was staying in Sanvar. The other man sheâd hired had left after learning the voyage to Nobitar was a lie. Heâd been more interested in a paid ride east than in a long-term job.
Narini raised an eyebrow. âOne guard? Youâre a queen, arenât you?â
âThat doesnât mean the same thing in Larso as it does elsewhere. Itâs more of an honorary titleâIâm just the kingâs consort.â
The woman gave Yassi a suspicious look but let the matter pass. âYouâll need at least one more guard, even if you hire me. How long is the contract?â
âAt least until the child is born,â Yassi said. âAfter that, Iâm not sure.â With two guards and a Seeker, plus her half of the servantsâ wages, she would be running out of money by then. Sheâd have to find some way to support herself.
âIâll need to see the place where youâre staying,â Narini said. âI wonât agree to a contract until I know whatâs involved.â
Yassi figured she should ask some questions of her own. âHave you done this sort of work before?â
âI spent the last five years working as a bodyguard in xâChxlthliss,â Narini said. She managed the name of the desertfolk city with ease.
âYou lived with lizardfolk for five years?â
âI wasnât interested in working for the Imperial Seeker corps,â Narini said. âThe lizards made the next best offer.â
Yassi nodded. âCan you come to the house tomorrow? If you take Parade Street to the orange grove district and go westââ
Narini interrupted her. âIâll find you.â
Yassi nodded. âTomorrow, then.â
After Narini left, Yassi turned to her aunt. âI should get going as well.â
âYou canât stay for supper?â Saira asked.
âLucanus is waiting for us, and I told the cook weâd be eating at home. Youâre still coming out tomorrow night, though, right?â
âYes. Motherâs complaining that youâre making her try northerner food, but she wants to see where youâre living.â
Yassi grinned and said goodbye to her aunt, then went in search of Merice. She found her near the water, kneeling in the sand with Azad, one of Yassiâs young cousins.
âYassi! Want to make sand monsters with us?â the boy asked. Heâd piled wet sand in a long line and was teaching Merice how to shape it into a sea serpent.
Yassi smiled at him. âMaybe some other time. If I got down there, I donât think I could get back up again. Merice, are you ready to go?â
âOh, I suppose I should,â Merice said. âHelp me up?â
Yassi gave her a hand.
The voyage south had been difficult. Merice had mourned her son all over again as her memories continued to return, but sheâd finally begun to take some small joy in life once more. She was happiest around children, and seemed intent on playing grandmother to Yassiâs child once it was born, regardless of their actual relationship.
Before the two of them left the camp, Yassi closed her eyes and did a viewing on the surrounding area. She didnât See anyone suspicious, just the normal mix of residents and workers who inhabited this corner of the city. Lucanus was the only northerner she could find. Sheâd had him wait outside the camp as usualâher family knew her real name, and she wasnât ready to tell the bodyguard the truth.
When Lucanus saw them walking his way, he gave a sharp whistle, waving to a disreputable-looking man who was watering his horse at a trough. The man looked up, then scurried back to a light, two-wheeled carriage, which he pulled over to re-attach to the horseâs harness.
âFound us a ride,â Lucanus said. âIâll hold onto the back.â The carriage only had one spot for the driver and two seats under the canopy for passengers, but beggar children often caught rides through the city by dodging the tall wheels and finding a foothold on the rear of the vehicle.
Even with the carriage, it took half an hour to reach the orange grove district. Not that there were many orange trees thereâtheyâd been torn down over a century earlier to make room for the neat rows of homes that had taken their place.
The house Yassi shared with Merice was no mansion, but it was comfortably large for the two of them and their few servants. The grounds were small, just a dozen raised flower beds and a tidy lawn of local grasses. A gardener came by once a week to take care of it all. Like the other homes on the street, the property was surrounded by wrought-iron fencing.
The neighborhood was new enough that it reflected influences from northern building styles. Merice had been more comfortable with that than with the local styles theyâd looked at first.
After theyâd arrived at their destination, Lucanus paid off the driver and sent him on his way.
Merice rubbed the back of her neck. âI think Iâll take a nap before supper,â she said. âThis sun is really too much in the afternoon.â
âWeâll go out earlier next time,â Yassi promised.
âIf you two are staying here, Iâm going to go try to find someone who can reinforce the shutters,â Lucanus said. While the house was generally northern in style, it followed the local custom of using lightweight screens or shutters for the windows, rather than panes of glass. The bodyguard hadnât been happy with how easy it would be for an intruder to remove the shutters from the outside.
With Merice and Lucanus otherwise occupied, Yassi retreated to her bedroom and sat down with her scrying orb. Every day, she spent an hour or more searching for whoever Rusol had sent after her. She wasnât sure who it would be, but she knew heâd send someone.
Today, she started her search with Magnus, then added Kolvi and Sir Barat for good measure. Magnus and Kolvi were blocked from her vision, likely still behind the new scrying wards in the palace. Barat was in a war camp, in the same location heâd been for the past week. His mercenary forces, their numbers growing by the day, had laid out their tents in neat rows near a fortress town guarded by Larsonian soldiers and knights. Based on the appearance, it had to be Fort Hightower. What was Rusol up to?
In any case, Barat was nowhere near Sanvar, so Yassi turned her attention to the docks. She checked each ship she didnât recognize from previous days, particularly those with northern crews. She didnât find anyone familiar, but that didnât mean anythingâpassengers were unlikely to remain aboard ship after arriving at their destination.
Her next viewing was of the Larsonian embassy, and there, her heart started thumping in her chest.
Her parent were outside, directing a group of porters in moving their belongings into the building. The embassy had been the familyâs home once, back when Yassiâs father had served as the ambassador, but that was unlikely to be the reason why theyâd come all this way.
Yassi had been blocked from Seeing her parents for weeks, and sheâd assumed Rusol had moved them into the palace, inside the warding spell. Instead, he must have had Odwins cast the spell directly on them so they could move in secret.
Sheâd worried for months about who her husband would send after her. Would it be one of his other bondmates? A group of soldiers? Or would he launch some sort of political ploy?
Instead, heâd sent the two people she absolutely couldnât avoid.
#
Nedley batted his opponentâs wooden practice sword out of the way with his shield, using the motion to put himself into position to launch a backswing that caught the man on his unprotected side.
This story originates from Royal Road. Ensure the author gets the support they deserve by reading it there.
âPoint to Nedley!â Georg announced. âThatâs ten-three. Enzo, youâre taking too long to get your shield in position.â
Enzo was panting. âHeâs too damned fast!â the former mercenary said.
âWe still have some of the small shields left if you want one,â Nedley told him. Enzo was using his heavy wooden heater shield rather than one of the round silversteel shields from Tir Yadar.
âTheyâre too small to cover anything!â
âThey seem to do the job well enough against a single opponent,â Kevik said. The knight had been helping Georg evaluate the soldiersâ skills with different weapons. âThough I wouldnât want to face a company of archers with one.â
âAll right, weâre done for the day!â Georg said. âYouâre back here tomorrow, crossbows, and then you rotate to watch duty the day after.â He paused for a moment. âWell? Go on, already!â
Nedleyâs squad mates grabbed their gear and headed off in different directions. While duties were all organized by squad, not everyone in this group would remain in Nedleyâs squad. After Sarette chose a third squad leader, she would be reforming the groups so they could start focusing on different areas. Ral had already been selected to command the siege weapons, but no one had told Nedley what his own area of responsibility would be.
Heâd made it almost as far as the gatehouse when Kevik caught up with him.
âYouâre not bad there with a blade,â the man said. âYour hammer work needs more practice, though.â
âYes, sir,â Nedley said, suddenly nervous. Boktar had only shown him the basics of using a warhammer, but it was the knightsâ preferred weapon for dealing with an opponent in plate armor. Nedley hadnât thought heâd done any worse than the rest of his squad.
âHas Corec taught you how to use a lance yet?â Kevik asked.
âNo.â
âWeâll have to do something about that. Come see me tomorrow and weâll try it out. Iâve already cleared it with Georg.â
âI donât have a warhorse,â Nedley said. Horses bred and trained to charge into battle were rareâand expensive.
âIâll talk to Corec about getting some good horses. Weâll need them if weâre ever going to build up a cavalry unit. For now, you can borrow Dusty, but weâll have to go south of town to practice. Thereâs not enough room here, of course.â Kevik gave him a nod of farewell, then headed off in the direction of the keep.
Cavalry? Was that why the knight had sought him out? Nedley hadnât had any cavalry training whatsoever, and it didnât explain the warhammer comment. Warhammers could be used from horseback, but they werenât common among cavalry. They were more effective as a secondary weapon for infantry.
Nedley wasnât sure he liked the idea of fighting from horseback. Wouldnât Corec or Sarette have mentioned something before now if they wanted him to become cavalry? It took entirely different skills than what theyâd been teaching him.
Heâd have to ask, he supposed. Sarette would be the best person to talk to. Corec was too good at convincing people to do things.
Nedley headed out through the gatehouse, waving to the guards on duty, then made his way to his cottage on the far side of the village. He still didnât have a roof. Heâd been trying to negotiate with some of the builders about adding a second floor, but even though they were almost done with their work on the fortress, they had plenty of other potential customers vying for their attention.
Back homeâif it could be called thatâNedley washed up and changed into nicer clothing. Corec and Boktar had asked him to meet them at the tavern that evening, and he couldnât go smelling like heâd been sparring all day. Thankfully, the villageâs southernmost communal well had finally been repaired, giving him a shorter walk to get water.
When he arrived at the tavern, he paused in the doorway, finding a larger crowd than heâd expectedânot just Corec and Boktar, but also Katrin, Treya, Bobo, and Ariadne.
âCome on in, Ned,â Boktar said, then waved to Katrinâs brother behind the counter. Barz brought over another ale.
âWhatâs going on?â Nedley asked, taking a seat.
Corec grinned. âItâs come to our attention that you turned eighteen while you were in Four Roads. We didnât want to miss your birthday again.â
âTonight is ⦠for me?â
âSure is, so drink up!â
âIâll buy a round for that!â called out Ezra from his regular spot in the back corner of the tavern. The shopkeeper had appropriated the table as a place to do business while he waited for the builders to start work on his new store. He was keeping his trade goods locked up in one of the old warehouses, and once or twice a day, heâd head out there to fulfill any orders heâd received.
A few of the other patrons cheered at Ezraâs offer. He looked flustered for a moment, apparently not having intended to include the whole tavern, but then he just gave a shrug.
âIâm sorry we couldnât get everyone here tonight,â Corec said to Nedley. âWe didnât want to keep putting it off.â Ellerie, Leena, and Shavala were all away in Terevas, and Sarette had taken the new armsmen on a long-range patrol to get an idea of their capabilities.
Boktar lifted a blanket-wrapped bundle from where it had been hidden below the table. âEllerie asked me to give you this,â he told Nedley.
Nedley unfolded the blanket to find a gleaming silversteel breastplate and backplate, in the same style as his current armor.
Corec chuckled. âDid you think we wouldnât notice you were bursting at the seams? Itâs just the cuirass for nowâthere should be enough room for you to grow into it. We figured weâd wait to see how much taller youâre going to get before we replace the vambraces and greaves.â
âBut how did she ⦠?â Nedley asked.
It was Boktar who replied. âWe had most of what she needed already, and she brought back some more of that pure silver from Terevas. Corec helped her figure out the right size.â
âIâm afraid weâll have to take back the old armor,â Corec said. âWe canât afford to just give away a full suit of silversteel. But I told you weâd do something if you outgrew it, so I wanted to make good on that promise.â
âThank you!â Nedley said. Heâd worried he would have to give up his plate armor when it no longer fit, but it seemed his friends had anticipated the problem.
They had to pause their conversation then as other patrons in the tavern, some of whom had traveled south in Nedleyâs caravan, came over to offer their congratulations.
#
Corec waved his hand in front of Nedleyâs face. âYou still with us, Ned?â he asked. The young man was glassy-eyed, having had a bit too much to drink.
âWh - what? Iâm awake!â
Boktar chuckled. âItâs probably about time we break things up.â
The party had gone on until late, giving everyone a rest from the work theyâd been doing. It had felt like back in their traveling days, when they would stay in village inns night after night, spending their time in the common rooms.
Most of the customers whoâd been in the tavern at the beginning of the party were gone, but others had arrived to take their place, including some Corec didnât recognize. Two tables were full of men heâd never seen before. While the newcomers had eyed the festivities with some annoyance, theyâd kept to themselves. Corec figured tomorrow would be soon enough to welcome them to the village.
Bobo was snoring, slumped down on the table with his head resting on his arms. Treya tried shaking his shoulder, but he didnât wake.
She shrugged. âWe might have to leave him here,â she said. Bobo had lost weight during their travels, but he was still a hefty man.
Corec nodded. âIâll walk Nedley back to his place,â he said, then tugged on the young manâs sleeve. âCome on.â
âWhere are we going?â Nedley asked. It seemed he hadnât been paying attention to the conversation.
âYou need to sleep off the drink.â
âOh.â Nedley thought about that for a moment. âYes.â
Corec picked up Nedleyâs new armor and headed for the door. As he went by the nearest table of strangers, he got a closer look at them. They had a hard-edged appearance that seemed out of place, and two were wearing sword scabbards on their belts. The others had knives or walking cudgels close at hand.
Fighters, then, all of them. The other table looked to be the same. Were they just taking advantage of the newly opened roads, or had they come looking for work?
Ellerie had brought back enough gold that the group could afford to hire more soldiers, but Corec didnât like having this many unfamiliar armed men within the fortress walls.
He paused to talk to them. âGentlemen,â he started, and then chaos broke out.
The nearest man grabbed a cudgel from the table, standing up to swing at Corecâs head. Light rippled as Corecâs shield spell deflected the attack. He bashed the man with the cuirass he was carrying just as another fellow tried to stab him with a dagger. The shield barrier flared again.
After that, the whole room devolved into a brawl.
Corec threw the cuirass at the second attacker and drew his long knifeâthe only weapon he had with himâwhile his other combat spells snapped into place.
He slashed at the man, but then the flare of a different shield spell caught his attention. Someone had tried to attack Katrin, triggering the ring sheâd taken from Tir Yadar.
Corec didnât know the ringâs limits, so he rushed Katrinâs attacker, barreling into him and knocking him to the ground, then stabbing him in the gut and leaving him to bleed out.
Another attacker approached but Boktar broke a chair over the manâs back, then pummeled him with the remaining pieces.
Corec pushed himself to his feet just as two more men came at him. He took down the first, picking him up by the shirt and throwing him to the ground, then stomping the heel of his boot onto the manâs neck.
The second assailant slashed at him with a sword, but Corecâs armor spell prevented the blade from penetrating. Then Barz was suddenly there, stepping in front of Katrin with the heavy cudgel he kept behind the bar. He slammed it into the fellowâs face, crushing his nose and dropping him to the floor.
âGet under the table!â Corec shouted at Katrin. In the commotion, she didnât hear him. She was yelling at the attackers to stop, but if she was using bardic magic, it wasnât having any effect.
The battle had formed into two rough lines facing off against each other, but then Treya suddenly leapt onto a table and dove over Corecâs head, landing in a somersault behind the attackers. She sprung to her feet in a smooth motion and jammed her glowing palm up against a manâs jaw. He collapsed and she turned to find another opponent.
With a flicker, Ariadne joined her behind the enemy line. The Chosar woman had no weapons or armor, but she summoned a spinning shield of flame out of nothing, touching it against a man whoâd backed Ezra against the wall. The shield dissipated on contact but her target shrieked in agony, burning to death in an instant. Before any of his companions could strike back at her, she disappeared from view. A moment later, another flaming shield appeared at the far end of the line, indicating her new position.
More strangers came through the door as the fight progressed, and the formations divided back into separate battles. A new, gaunt-faced man carrying a sword grinned when he saw Corec standing alone with just a knife. Before he could close the distance, though, Nedley appeared out of nowhere and dove at Corecâs legs, knocking him to the floor.
âWhat the hell, Ned? Get off me!â Corec pushed the young man away and stood up.
Nedley had stood too, and was now keeping himself between the two of them, his arms out to his sides.
âGet out of my way, Ned!â the attacker exclaimed.
âStop it, Bert!â Nedley shouted. âWhat are you doing?â
The door swung open again and Razai strode through, holding a man up off the ground by his throat. She bashed his head against the doorjamb and dropped him to the ground, then drew one of her knives and slashed open the nearest attackerâs throat.
âTreya, red-eyes!â she yelled.
Treya spun out of the way of a dagger, then opened her mouth to shout. A clear bell tone came out. A flash of white light washed over the room and the remaining attackers collapsed where they stood. Taking a deep breath, she thrust her arms out to the sides and did it again. The flash of light was brighter this time, and the bell sound echoed outside the building to the fortress walls and back again.
It took a moment for everyone to realize the fight was over.
âThere are more outside,â Treya said. âTheyâre down, too.â
âIâll go get the men and some rope,â Boktar said. A rivulet of blood ran down his cheek, but he didnât seem badly injured. âCan you keep them asleep until we have them tied up?â
Treya nodded.
âBarz!â Katrin shouted, scrambling over to her brother. Heâd collapsed down onto one of the chairs, holding his hand against his stomach. Blood was seeping through his fingers.
Ana, whoâd been peeking out from the stairwell, repeated Katrinâs cry. The heavily pregnant woman made her way over more slowly, almost slipping on a puddle of blood, but Ezra caught her arm and helped her.
Treya held her hands to Barzâs head and stomach, healing him. âYou should be good now,â she said, stepping back.
Katrin hugged her brother tightly, then moved out of the way so Ana could take her place.
With time to think, Corec looked around the room. Ezra wasnât the only villager still there. The others all appeared stunned by the sudden violence.
âIs anyone else hurt?â Corec asked. They slowly shook their heads.
Seeing their response, Treya relaxed. âIâm sorry,â she said to Corec. âSomething felt wrong, but I thought it was just the ale. I didnât realize what they were.â
âI should have been watching closer, too,â Corec said. âI thought they were looking for work.â
Ariadne grabbed one of the fallen menâs swords and took position to guard them.
That seemed like a good idea. Corec stepped outside the tavern and activated the binding spell linking him to his own sword. The blade burst out of his bedroom window on the second floor of the keep, knocking the wooden shutters to the ground. The hilt thumped into his palm a moment later.
He went back in and found Razai. âYou came back,â he said. Sheâd left for Deece a week earlier.
âSomeone has to make sure you donât get everyone killed,â the demonborn woman said with a scowl. âYouâre too trusting. You thought theyâd attack during the day, in uniform, didnât you?â
âNo,â he said. âIf theyâre really red-eyes, theyâve always tried to take us by surprise.â
Razai didnât appear to believe him, and she wasnât entirely wrongâif the men had been wearing their normal black brigandine, it would have been easier to recognize them for what they were. And sheâd warned him that the new compelled troops didnât have red eyes.
Making peace with Razai would take more time than Corec had at the moment, so he turned his attention to Nedley. The young man was biting his lip in worry, standing over one of the unconscious attackers.
âWhat did you think you were doing, Ned?â Corec asked. âYouâre not so drunk you couldnât recognize me.â
âI didnât want you to kill Bertram,â Nedley said.
âThatâs your brother?â
Nedley nodded.
Corec sighed. That would make things more complicated.
Boktar returned then, accompanied by Ral and Sargo. All three were carrying coils of rope.
âThe gate guards are dead,â the dwarven man said.
Corec clenched his fists. âWho?â he asked.
âLudlo and Graeme. We found them hidden behind the gatehouse. Two of the mercenaries had taken their placeâto keep people from getting suspicious, I would guess.â
Ludlo had been part of Corecâs ballista crew during the dragon fight. Graeme was a hillfolk mercenary whoâd been helping the men with their sword work.
Why couldnât Rusol have just left them alone? It had been a year and a half since the last attack, and Corec had never tried to harm the man.
He looked around the room again. None of the villagers had left yet, all still watching him intently. They would need reassurance, as would everyone else once the news got out. And Corec would have to figure out what to do with the prisoners.
It was going to be a long night, and a longer day.
Bobo looked up blearily from the table where heâd passed out. âWhat happened?â