Authors: Michael A Stackpole
maps that allow others to go further than anyone before, and yet you will be limited to this
little scrap of Moriande.”
Keles felt a hand squeeze his heart. Being trapped in the family tower did frighten him.
Certainly it brought with it security, but security without freedom was useless.
To never
again look upon a sunset in the mountains, or see gaily plumed birds winging through rain
forests . . .
“I guess you’ll just have to bring the world to me, Jorim. It is what I will be called upon to
do. If we are lucky, you and I, we will become
jaecaikyr
and live a good long time. Perhaps the Prince will let us take turns here, being each other’s eyes and ears elsewhere,
bringing back the world. If that is not the case, then I will have to depend upon you, your
children, my children, and perhaps Nirati’s children, to do that for me. It is an eventuality I am willing to accept, for the good of our family and our nation.”
“Protecting me again, brother?” Jorim smiled, then waved a hand toward the door of his
chamber. “I know that’s what you were doing in the map room. That’s what you’ve always
done. Nirati distracts Grandfather, and you appeal to reason. It drives me utterly mad, but
I know I benefit from it.”
Keles reached out and tugged on a braid. “You benefit from it, and you make us work very
hard, you know that?”
“That’s what little brothers are for. It says so in all the stories.”
“And here I thought you preferred being unique.” Keles preceded him from the room. “One
thing, tonight. Please, no fighting. There’s still blood in your eye, and that bruise is not
quite in keeping with the color scheme.”
“Yeah, the purple isn’t quite Imperial, and the yellow edges are just not the right shade of
gold.” Jorim’s hand landed heavily on his brother’s shoulder and squeezed. “Fear not,
brother, I will be on my best behavior. If what you have told me is true, I don’t wish to give
Grandfather any cause to change his mind.”
“Good.” Keles let himself exhale loudly. “This is his night. We let him have his way, and
things will be perfect.”
2nd day, Harvest Festival, Year of the Dog
9th Year of Imperial Prince Cyron’s Court
162nd Year of the Komyr Dynasty
736th year since the Cataclysm
Anturasikun, Moriande
Nalenyr
Nirati found she was having difficulty breathing, and it was not just because of the corset
into which she had been laced. She was a slender woman already, and the corset had
been used to shrink her waist to an impossibly tiny circumference. Her handmaiden had
pulled it tight, admonishing, “Lass like you, Mistress, don’t need to be breathing, since all
the men will think you’re breathless because of them.” Nirati had laughed at that, and the
servant used the exhalation to tighten it just a bit more.
Nirati looked out through the tower’s Grand Ballroom, which was only half-full, and felt a
bit dazzled. The evening’s colors were purple and gold—purple for the Prince and gold for
the Anturasi family. She, her brothers, cousins, mother, and grandfather all wore
predominantly golden robes, overshirts, and trousers, with purple ribbons as decoration.
The Prince and his household would reverse that, and everyone in between would wear
whatever struck their fancy, with gold and purple accents as befitted their ties to the family
or Crown.
Or depending on what sort of impression they wished to make.
The Prince, though not yet in attendance, had already made a strong impression. He had
allowed some of his Keru bodyguards to be stationed at the gate, front door, and the
ballroom entrance. Drawn entirely from the women of the exile population of
Helosundians, the Keru pledged themselves to the Naleni royal house, eschewing
marriage and children, leading an ascetic life filled with training and guard duties.
And odd
rituals, if the whispered tales are true.
Without exception, the women wore their golden hair braided with a white ribbon, in
mourning for their lost homeland. Though quite handsome, few among them would have
been described as beautiful because their features were as strong as their bodies, and
their hard-eyed stares lacked warmth. Each wore a sword and carried a spear, but was
polite and respectful—although Nirati wondered if they would retain that demeanor when
the Prince of Deseirion appeared.
The rectangular ballroom had a row of tall windows along the western wall that allowed a
wonderful view of the night sky. Opposite them, to the left as one entered, tables had been
set up and laden with all manner of viands. Merchants and traders who wished to curry
favor with the Anturasi had gifted much in the way of wine, cheese, and other exotic foods.
Her grandfather’s taste for heavily spiced food had also been represented at the
centermost table, with cooks preparing and bringing out dishes that filled the air with
delightful scents in much the way the musicians in the room’s southwest corner filled the
air with sweet sounds.
As she surveyed the chamber, her eyes were naturally drawn to the catwalk running
around the entire room a good fifteen feet above the floor. Six feet wide, save at the
southeast corner where it became a triangular platform, its golden bars formed a lattice
that separated anyone up there from those below. In the southeast corner stood a chair
and small table, along with two Keru guards. The door in the east wall would be the one
through which her grandfather entered and from which he would eventually announce
the
Stormwolf
expedition.
She smiled slightly because she knew the posting would please Jorim beyond measure.
Her only worry was that her grandfather, through preoccupation or deliberate action, might
make the pronouncement in a way that would set Jorim off. While she loved her little
brother dearly, he did have a temper, and her grandfather’s celebration was not the place
to let it flare.
She shivered because a display of temper could do more than ruin the party. She could
not remember her grandfather’s sixty-third birthday feast, but Qiro and Ryn Anturasi had
gotten into a shouting match. From all she’d heard, Ryn had only been defending himself.
The fact that he’d left on the
Wavewolf
the next day without ever exchanging a civil word with his father—and had then disappeared—kept rumors alive that Qiro had had him
murdered.
Nirati looked over at her mother and smiled. Siatsi Anturasi wore a robe of gold, with
broad white bands trimming it at the hem, sleeves, and edges, and a purple sash holding
it closed. Taller than Nirati, though not as tall as any of the Keru, her mother had gone
from being a slender girl to mature woman without any diminution of beauty. She wore her
black hair up and secured with golden sticks. She’d powdered her face white, and used
gold to add a sparkle of freckles over her cheeks and nose. Gold paint also emphasized
her eyelids and lips, giving her the look of an alabaster statue come to life.
Her mother was an interesting woman, for she had managed to prosper within the
framework of two families dominated by strong patriarchs. Her own family, the Isturkens,
had been prosperous merchants who had married her off to Ryn Anturasi hoping to gain
some sort of benefit from Qiro. They had continued to prosper until her father died and her
elder brother, Eoarch, had taken over the business. His gambling habits extended beyond
the gaming tables, and lost cargoes and ships drove the family to the brink of ruin.
When Ryn died it had been expected that Siatsi would function as Qiro’s hostess, but she
declined and instead returned to her family and took over for Eoarch in all ways save for
the trading company’s public face. She bargained with Qiro for maps in return for allowing
his grandchildren to visit and be trained. Nirati had even heard it said that her mother had
become one of Prince Araylis’ mistresses in return for favorable customs duties on certain
shipments, but she had never asked after the veracity of those remarks.
She and her mother had worked hard preparing the celebration and smoothing things over
between Qiro and Jorim. They’d both agreed to act on Jorim’s behalf without consulting
him. Jorim sometimes did not know what was good for him, and would eventually come
around to their point of view.
Several gasps from near the entrance caused Nirati to turn. She did so slowly, not
because her robe restricted her movement—there would be dancing later, after all—but
because calm patience in the face of any emergency was the hallmark of a successful
hostess. She braced herself for anything from a splash of spilled wine to Jorim’s entering
awash in blood. Despite her preparation, her breath did catch in her throat.
The Keru at the door had stepped aside to admit the Viruk ambassador and her consort.
Ierariach of Clan Nessagia likely would not have elicited the gasps herself. Her ebon eyes
always attracted comment, as did the thick flow of her jet-black hair, which she wore
unrestrained. Her pale green flesh, on the other hand, did make her inhuman nature
apparent. Of average height, she had chosen to wear a gown of sea green that
complemented her complexion. Her concession to the evening’s color scheme came in
the form of a large amethyst set in gold that she wore as a spider-shaped pendant above
her ample bosom.
But her consort
was
enough to take the breath away, and guarantee nightmares. Had he
stood up straight, he would have topped eight feet easily, and Nirati suspected that his
outstretched hand could touch the bottom of the catwalk. He wore only trousers and a
sleeveless overshirt that let everyone see the bony plates on his long, slender arms. The
hue of his flesh matched hers on throat, chest, belly, and the insides of his arms, though it
deepened to a pine green over the rest of him, including his face. His black hair was as
long as Jorim’s and could have benefited from similar braiding, though that would have
entailed plaiting it down the length of his spine. His fingers and toes ended in sharp claws.
The hooks on his elbows and the thorns on his head appeared not quite as sharp as the
claws, but when he smiled, an ivory row of needle-sharp teeth reinforced the idea that
while he carried no weapons, he was far from defenseless.
Nirati strode forward at a pace that would allow her to reach the Viruk at the same time as
her mother. Siatsi stopped ten feet from them and bowed. Nirati matched her in depth and
duration—which were both considerable given the Viruk relationship to Men. They
straightened in unison and smiled.
“
Dicairoun
Nessagia, you honor us with your attendance.”
The ambassador smiled, but not without a little effort. “We were most pleased to receive
the invitation to celebrate the life of the man who has recovered much of the world that
was lost.”
Nirati kept her smile in place. Most of the people hearing those words would think the
ambassador referred to the Cataclysm and the resulting loss of contact with the rest of the
world, but Qiro’s granddaughter knew better. The Viruk had, millennia before, ruled over
an empire that encompassed all Nine Principalities, their provinces and more. The men
who lived there had been enslaved, along with other races, to serve the Viruk.
The Viruk capital, Virukadeen, had been located in what was now the heart of the Dark
Sea, but had been destroyed in a cataclysm of Viruk manufacture. The Viruk who lived
away from the capital, administering the provinces, suddenly no longer had the legions of
Viruk warriors to secure their positions. Revolts followed, and Viruk rule was overthrown in
places. Human freedom did not always last, but just over two thousand years ago, the
True Bloods had come in a vast armada, invaded the Viruk Empire, and driven them out of
what became the Principalities. Within the provinces, pockets of Viruk population still
existed, though scattered and isolated. Far Irusviruk—the Viruk nation from which the
ambassador had come—neither invited nor tolerated human interlopers. Peace between
the races, for the most part, reigned—though did so uneasily the further one got from the
Principalities.
Siatsi clearly had not missed the implications of the ambassador’s greeting. “The world is
a vast place. Not all that was lost can be discovered, and some things discovered may
never have been lost—such as the pleasure your presence brings to me. May your visit be
blessed, and the peace of the Festival yours to enjoy.”
The consort bobbed his head and again flashed teeth. Nirati felt he was no more used to
smiling than Ierariach was, but just enjoyed watching the human reaction to his grin. A
shiver descended her spine as a thin ribbon of spittle began to roll down over his jaw.
Fortunately, his thick black tongue licked it back before it could reach the floor.
The ambassador nodded. “We will enjoy your hospitality. Thank you.”
As they moved away, Siatsi took her daughter by the elbow. “Watch your brother when he
gets here and keep him away from the Viruk. The story that Jorim slew two warriors while
in Ummummorar is not unknown. I doubt anything will lead to violence this evening, but