BlackWing: First Ordinance, Book 3

BOOK: BlackWing: First Ordinance, Book 3
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BlackWing

First Ordinance, Book 3

 

Connie Suttle

SubtleDemon Publishing, LLC

 

Copyright (c) 2015 Connie Suttle All rights reserved.

 

Published by:

SubtleDemon Publishing, LLC

P.O. Box 95696

Oklahoma City, OK 73143

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, places, incidents, and characters are the product of the author's imagination and are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

 

eISBN: 9781939759337

 

Cover Art by: Renee Barratt @ The Cover Counts

 

 

 

 

To Walter, Joe, Sarah, Larry, Lee and Dianne. You are amazing!

 

 

And for Billie Hanlin, who left us far too soon.

 

 

Acknowledgements

As always, this book is a collaborative effort. I am grateful to my Beta Readers and my cover artist for making it better. Thank you.

 

About the Author:

Connie lives in Oklahoma with her husband and three cats. Learn more about her and her books by visiting her website: subtledemon.com, or visit her on Facebook: Connie Suttle Author. She is also on twitter: @subtledemon

 

Other Books by Connie Suttle:

 

Blood Destiny Series:

Blood Wager

Blood Passage

Blood Sense

Blood Domination

Blood Royal

Blood Queen

Blood Rebellion

Blood Redemption

Blood Reunion

*****

Legend of the Ir'Indicti Series:

Bumble

Shadowed

Target

Vendetta

Destroyer

*****

High Demon Series:

Demon Lost

Demon Revealed

Demon's King

Demon's Quest

Demon's Revenge

Demon's Dream

*****

The God Wars Series:

Blood Double

Blood Trouble

Blood Revolution

Blood Love

Blood Finale

*****

The Saa Thalarr Series:

Hope and Vengeance

Wyvern and Company

*****

First Ordinance Series:

Finder

Keeper

BlackWing

*****

The R-D Series:

Cloud Dust

Cloud Invasion

Cloud Rebel*

*****

The Latter Day Demons Series:

Hot Demon in the City*

A Demon's Work is Never Done*

*****

The Seattle Elementals Series:

Your Money's Worth*

 

*Forthcoming

 

Chapter 1

Vogeffa II

Quin

Heavy footsteps on cobbled streets invade my dreams, now. I will never forget my first night on the non-Alliance world of Vogeffa II—if I'd fallen into the hands of any besides LaFranza of the Falchani, I may not have survived.

By the time he made his way back to the small shop he owned on a back street of Gungl, Vogeffa II's major city, I was terrified, exhausted and overcome with grief. There was no mistaking the last sound I heard before I'd entered the blackness of the gate—Siriaa had exploded behind me, taking those I loved with it. My call to Queen Lissa had come too late to save them.

When LaFranza pulled me through the back door of his tattoo parlor, I was shivering, too—from the rain that fell outside. His hair, blacker than night and braided down his back, dripped on the rug inside the door as he frantically searched through drawers in a tiny back room to find something warm to drape over me.

That's when I saw the second person after my arrival. It was only because I recognized him immediately that I flung my arms about his neck and wept.

Terrett had walked into the small room at the back of LaFranza's shop to see what the noise was. Somehow, against all odds, he was staying with the man who'd rescued me from Gungl's dark streets that night. Strangely (and perhaps just as well), the Orb had disappeared.

Although Terrett was unable to speak, he did perform a soothing hum in his throat as his arms wrapped around me.

* * *

My life in Gungl began a moon-turn later, when I was finally able to pull myself out of bed without crushing grief slamming into me and causing me to collapse.

The following day, my plan for revenge against Vardil Cayetes, the man responsible for Siriaa's destruction, began.

* * *

"Call me Lafe—it's shorter and better," LaFranza instructed. His language was one I'd never heard before; nevertheless, I understood it perfectly. He was tall, with bulging muscles in his arms and dark eyes that held a strange fold at the corners, lending them a mysterious, unusual shape.

Still, he was pleasing to the eye and when he removed his shirt whenever the temperature warmed inside his living quarters, I discovered he was covered with the evidence of his art.

Eagles, such as I'd never seen, decorated arms, chest and back, with colors so vibrant the sight almost made my breath stop. "I didn't do the back tattoo—my best apprentice did that one with my inks. Do you know anything about the art of tattooing skin?" he asked, the corners of his mouth curling in an almost-smile.

"No, but I imagine I can learn anything with proper instruction," I said, embarrassed by my fascination with the art on his body.

"Can you hand the proper ink cups to me?" he asked.

"I can find anything," I shrugged. "Including the proper ink colors."

"If you're going to be my assistant in the shop, we'll have to do something about your wings," Lafe mused while studying my feathers. I pulled them tighter against my body, suddenly terrified. Would he cut them away? I backed up and into Terrett.

Waving a hand and shaking his head, Terrett let me know that cutting my wings wasn't an option. Lafe confirmed Terrett's denial. "I think we should dye them, perhaps. Along with your hair. What you have will stand out anywhere. We don't need to stand out. I imagine that black wings won't raise such a fuss—I know of some who've had mechanical black wings grafted upon their backs and they fly—after a fashion."

"But," I began. How was he going to dye my wings black? Dyed hair was common; wings were not.

"I'm a master at mixing inks and dyes," Lafe lifted a dark eyebrow as he studied me. "My tattoo colors are the best. That's why my business is so good. I figure we'll have to dye your feathers every three or four eight-days, just to ensure that they stay black," he mused as he walked around me.

"What's your name?" he asked as he faced me once more. For a moon-turn, he'd allowed me to mourn while Terrett did his best to feed and clothe me properly. Now, it was time to repay Lafe's generosity.

"Uh, Quin," I hung my head.

"No. Quin it is not. After we dye your wings black, that will be your name. BlackWing."

I wanted to tell him about real Black Wings. Justis in particular, but somehow, that would make me cry and I knew I couldn't. I'd read something else in Lafe's face as well as Terrett's. Time was different, here, as if the gate I'd been shoved through had flung me forward—years or sun-turns, it no longer mattered.

"Why are you helping me?" I asked, pulling my thoughts away from painful subjects.

"I was placed here to cause as much trouble for Cayetes as possible. I was told I'd have unusual help. I can't think of anything more unusual than a mute Sirenali and a winged girl."

"You knew I was coming?" I frowned at him.

"Not you specifically, but I don't argue with the gods when they say my help is needed. If they hadn't, I'd still be doing battle and tattoos on Falchan."

"Who is Cayetes?" I asked.

"Vardil Cayetes," Lafe amended. "The one who blew up the planet they called Siriaa. Also the one who became ill and went looking for a rogue warlock or two to perform a transference. Once it's done the first time, it has to be done again every few days, before the new body begins to die. It's forbidden spellwork and outlawed by the Karathian King. That doesn't stop a few powerful rogues from doing it now and then—for the right price, you understand."

"This Cayetes destroyed Siriaa?"

"Yes."

"Then he is my enemy."

"Mine, too, young one," Lafe nodded. "Terrett, find our BlackWing a knife and show her how to use it. We'll dye her hair and feathers tonight and you can take her to the market tomorrow."

* * *

"Smoke green." I handed the proper ink cup to Lafe. His customer, who looked as if he could crush rocks in his bare hands, stared at my wings while Lafe worked on his shoulder, tapping ink by hand into the man's skin. My white wings were now a sleek black, although still not as handsome as Justis' had been. No dye would ever compare to the real thing, I think.

Biting my lip, I let my mind go blank—it was a technique Lafe was teaching me—to let my troubles go by clearing my mind of all thoughts. It had become a regular practice whenever painful memories threatened to overwhelm me.

At times, too, I thought about Daragar and whether my mindspeech would reach him, but he would likely attempt to take me away from my intended revenge against Vardil Cayetes. Calling the Larentii could wait. Kaldill, too, if he survived, would only take me away, convincing me that Cayetes should be hunted by someone else.

I wanted that job for myself.

Lafe wasn't yet aware of all my talents, and he'd already said on several occasions that only those closest to Cayetes would be able to identify his latest incarnation.

That's where Lafe was wrong.

With my strange gifts, I would know him the moment I saw him. That's why I was determined to learn knife and blade skills from Lafe and Terrett—I needed every advantage if I were to make Cayetes pay.

"Crimson," Lafe brought me back to the present. I handed him the proper cup and took the smoke green away to cap it tightly.

Other tattoo artists used a mechanical tool to place the designs and colors on the skin—Lafe did his the old way, by tapping it in with long needles by hand. Yes, it was somewhat slower, but just as he said, he had the best colors and his artistry was unsurpassed.

A faster, cheaper tattoo could be gotten a few streets over. If you wanted a work of art on your skin, you came to Lafe.

* * *

"Now," Lafe said, after the shop was closed and dinner consumed, "We begin. I am your sursee—the master. You are the virsee—the student. I have taught Terrett many things since he came to live with me, so he will help you learn."

"Yes, sursee," I dipped my chin respectfully.

"Ah, you do know what to do," Lafe inclined his head in reply. "I wish I could promise no bruises—or at least no hard bruises, but anyone who learns to fight—either with sword or hand, will tell you a different story."

Earlier, Terrett had handed me a training outfit—made of white fabric. White was the beginner's color, a blank canvas for the master to create. Lafe was dressed all in black, the color of the one who'd mastered the art of the blade and of hand combat.

I merely wanted to learn enough to destroy Cayetes.

"There are no shortcuts," Lafe said, as if reading my mind. "You will learn thoroughly or I will not teach. Is there anything you wish me to know before we begin?"

"My bones," I said, lowering my eyes. "They are not as thick as most humanoids. It makes it easier to fly."

"Ah. Like the birds. Their bones are hollow, did you know? This is good information. I do not wish to break bones; therefore, we will temper the blows until I understand how strong your bones are."

No blows landed that night. We began by stretching. Then I learned to position my elbow to make the best strike against an attack from behind. "There is no shame in any blow, no matter how clumsy, if it achieves the desired result against an enemy," Lafe informed me. "However, we will work to ensure you know how to land the most effective blows with the smallest amount of force. Fighting a larger, stronger opponent will tire you if you do not land your blows efficiently."

He was right—few in Gungl were as short or as thin as I. Like the jungle the city was named after, it was survival of the fittest. Whenever I went to the market with Terrett, we watched carefully so we wouldn't be targeted for an attack.

The city itself was crumbling with age and disinterest—its inhabitants were more concerned with keeping their lives than rebuilding something that was falling to dust about them.

Streets had bricks missing; wagons, horses and any other conveyance had to be driven around patches of exposed ground as they made their way past those who walked warily in clumps and bunches.

The market was fifteen blocks away; it was the only place where one might buy food in the city. New bricks and older, used bricks from the streets could be bought, too, if one were interested in repairing one's house to keep out the cold during winter months.

Most of the vegetable and meat vendors knew Terrett, and were quite surprised to see me when I went with him the first time. After all, he could only point and gesture to let them know what he wanted.

He and I—I could see what he wanted and knew what he wanted to say, although he couldn't do that for himself. He would nod emphatically whenever I relayed a message to any vendor. If they asked too much, thinking to take advantage of a girl and her mute companion, Terrett would offer a rude gesture and go to the next stall.

Eventually, they learned to give us what we wanted; Lafe was willing to pay a reasonable price for it.

"Terrett," I said the following morning as we walked to the market, "Do you have mindspeech? Have you ever tried it?" I turned to look into his dark-green eyes. To me, they resembled the color the sea would turn on a cloudy day.

His steps faltering as he considered my question, he eventually shook his head. I understood that to mean he'd never tried it. Whether I saw something in him or in his background, I urged him to try.

"Just think what you want to say and direct it toward me," I said as we continued on our way.

Don't know how
, filtered into my mind.

"Terrett, you have mindspeech," I said. "I heard you clearly just now. You said
don't know how
."

His eyes widened and his steps slowed a second time.
You're making good progress in your lessons. Sursee told me this
.

"Really? I thought I was doing poorly." I had the bruises to prove it, too. I'd failed to block a blow and slip away from Lafe's grip when he came at me from behind. He'd pronounced me dead as I lay on the mat at his feet, blinking up at him while my cheeks flooded with heat.

You try hard. He sees this. I cannot say how grateful I am to be able to talk with you
, he added.

Terrett, if I could, I'd see to it that you could talk to everyone
, I returned. Again, his eyes widened when he heard my mental voice.

I thank you for that. Most who know what I am are grateful I cannot speak
.

"They're fools," I rubbed his back as we began to walk again. "I didn't speak for sixteen years," I added. "Because I was too afraid to say anything."

You must tell me this story
, he said.

Someday
, I promised.
When the telling won't make me weep
.

* * *

"Ah, you make your sursee happy," Lafe accepted the steaming bowl of rice with fish and sauce for his midday meal. Rice was difficult to come by, but the vendor who sometimes had it saved all he had for us.

I liked rice, too, but seldom ate it because I knew Lafe liked it so much. Terrett had his fish seared lightly with some of the green vegetables I'd cooked for myself. We sat cross-legged around Lafe's low table, enjoying a short meal break before he had to go back to work.

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