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Authors: Grace Draven

Tags: #Adult, #Fantasy, #Romance

Eidolon (5 page)

BOOK: Eidolon
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Brishen’s heartbeat accelerated. “Who’s gone?  And what is this of
galla
?”

As if restored not only by the wine but also Brishen’s calm voice, the messenger inhaled and exhaled a steadying breath before continuing. “Three days ago, someone summoned a
galla
horde.”  This time Brishen didn’t bother to silence the chorus of gasps punctuated by fearful cries. “It started in the castle. Consumed everyone inside. The horde destroyed everything in the capital east of the Absu. Some in the city escaped into the river and swam to the other side. The rest were devoured, trampled or drowned.”

A flare of heat pressed against Brishen’s lower back—Ildiko’s hand, touching him. He stared at the messenger, listening to his words as if the man spoke from the opposite end of a tunnel, and they carried back to him at the other end on an icy wind. “Are you certain of this?”

The other man nodded. “I saw it all myself. Ran to the river with the others. I rode my horse into the ground and stole another to get here. The
galla
are spreading from the capital like contagion. Survivors are keeping close to the Absu or fighting over boats. They’re coming here to Saggara.”

The roar of the frigid tunnel wind sounded in Brishen’s ears.
Galla
. Survivors. Both streaming toward Saggara. “My family?” he asked softly, even though he already knew the answer.

Shoulders slumped, the messenger shook his bowed head slowly. “The royal house of Khaskem is gone. All perished. Except you. The king is dead.”  Mournful wails from the Kai surrounding them met his declaration. He fell to his knees before Brishen and bent to touch his forehead to the ground. “Long live the king.”

The crowd’s whispers rose to a dull roar. Brishen’s stomach plummeted to his feet. He scowled and bent down to haul the man to up from the ground. “Off your knees,” he snapped. “There is no king at Saggara until we know more.”

His heartbeat echoed the earlier pounding of the drums from the dancing. The hot desire for his wife that had coursed through his body moments earlier was snuffed, replaced by detached purpose. He turned to Ildiko, noting her stricken expression and eyes made glossy with unshed human tears. “Find every vicegerent, mayor and clan chief in the crowd,” he instructed in a calm voice. “Send them to the hall.”  She nodded without speaking and briefly caressed his forearm before disappearing into the sea of Kai.

Brishen motioned a grim Anhuset closer. “Summon Mertok. I want you two and a dozen of your best scouts in the hall with the ministers.”

She leaned toward him, speaking in a low voice. “How did
galla
breach the barriers between worlds and enter ours?”

He met his cousin’s firefly stare but didn’t reply. The question wasn’t how but rather who breached the walls for them. They both knew the answer. If the messenger was right and
galla
first appeared in the royal palace, then his mother, Queen Secmis, and her power-mad machinations had something to do with it.

He gestured to the haggard Kai who waited for his next command. “Come with me. There’s more wine and food inside my hall and a promise of rest as well, but first I need your help.”

Once inside, he sent Mesumenes to retrieve a set of maps from the library. Space was cleared on a trestle table and the maps rolled out flat. The messenger picked listlessly at the food served to him before abandoning his plate to join Brishen who studied the terrain illustrated on parchment.

One map depicted the known world, from frozen Helenrisia in the far north to the Serpent’s Teeth in the south and all the lands between, including the kingdoms of Bast-Haradis, Gaur and Belawat. The second map focused solely on Bast-Haradis, and it was this one Brishen scoured first. He tapped a finger on the square that marked the capital of Haradis. “Show me which path the survivors are taking to reach Saggara.”

“What about the
galla
?”  The other man choked on the name.

“Such demons are drawn to blood and magic. Where the Kai travel, the
galla
will follow unless distracted by a greater food source or trapped by water.”

The messenger paled. “Then they’re bringing them here.”

Brishen stared at him before speaking, that cold numbness inside him spreading throughout his body. “Possibly. We must figure out how to contain them before such a thing happens.”  He didn’t point out the fact that containing
galla
was the least of their challenges, the most difficult, how to send them back to the chaos from whence they came.

The hall filled with more people as Ildiko ushered in the various village and clan leaders. Anhuset, Mertok and a company of other officers and scouts swelled the gathering until a sizeable group congregated around Brishen. They were no longer revelers enjoying a night of celebration but a somber troop faced with a possible catastrophe unlike any witnessed by Kai generations much earlier than theirs.

Ildiko and Mesumenes traveled back and forth between the hall and the kitchens and the hall and the loggia, directing the small army of servants to serve food and drink. The servants whispered among themselves, wide-eyed and frightened as they watched and listened to the arguments rising and falling around the two maps.

The exhausted messenger took the brunt of it, peppered with multiple questions, exclamations of disbelief and even an accusation of falsehood by one clan chief. That had almost erupted into a brawl. Brishen threatened to imprison the chieftain and tie the messenger to his chair if they didn’t calm themselves.

No one spoke when the man described what he witnessed at the river, his voice broken. “We saw...we saw a line of elders, led by the old general Hasarath, make of themselves a wall near the riverbank so that others might reach the water in time. Their sacrifice saved hundreds, maybe more.”  His breath hitched, and he bowed his head. “No one should die like that.”

Brishen knew the image conjured by those words would remain emblazoned on his mind’s eyes until he died. He spent the next several hours planning and strategizing with his most trusted ministers and his garrison officers. Fear and the black of edge of panic saturated the air, heavy enough he could taste its bitterness on his tongue. When the meeting finally ended and the group disbanded to race to their respective homes or scout the territories Brishen had marked for reconnoitering, the sun was high in the sky and the exhausted Haradis messenger slumped over the table, asleep.

Brishen scraped a hand over his face and blinked a dry, itchy eye. Even the memory of his left eye itched. He swallowed, wondering when his tongue had grown a wool blanket, and gratefully accepted a cup of cold water from his heavy-eyed steward. Except for Mesumenes and the slumbering messenger, he was alone in the hall. “Did the
hercegesé
find her bed?”  Ildiko had long since disappeared from the hall, and Brishen was desperate to hold her, find some steady point to grasp in a world suddenly spinning out of his control.

The steward nodded toward the hall’s doors, now closed to the brutal daylight. “She’s outside, my liege, seeing off the last of the ministers. As you know, she can withstand the light better than we can.”

Brishen was tempted to follow her, but the events of the past few hours had drained him, the enormity of their circumstances threatening to overwhelm him. “When she returns, tell her to come to me.”

He left the hall for the sanctuary of his chamber. A low fire danced merrily in the hearth, the windows shuttered closed tight against the daylight. Brishen dropped into the nearest chair and closed his eye.

A more cold-blooded side of his character reasoned it was probably fortunate that he wasn’t close to any member of his family except Anhuset, and she was here at Saggara with him, thank the gods. Otherwise, the shock and grief over their deaths would cripple him.

Still, he sorrowed for his brother’s children, for their mother, the quiet, biddable Tiye and for every Kai in the palace and in all of Haradis who never imagined the horror their own queen would visit upon them.

He’d grown up with stories of the
galla
. Even humans knew of them and called them by the same name. Savage, ravenous, they thirsted for blood and fed on magic. Some held they were created by the gods at the same time as the elder races. Most, however, believed them born of the Gullperi who sought to somehow purify themselves and transcend their worldly limitations by wrenching out the darkness in their own souls.

That ancient schism had wrought the
galla
, entities of such brutality and voracious appetite that the most powerful leaders of the elder races united and cast them out of the world. Unable to destroy them, they had sealed the
galla
in a realm outside of time and place, a prison without lock or key. The elders’ punishment of those who had brought the
galla
into the world had been swift and merciless: a lesson to all that such an act repeated would be dealt with in the harshest way.

History, however, was long and memories short. Whatever lesson those long-ago elders tried to teach was either forgotten over time or disregarded. Centuries of record and mortem light memory told of instances where one or two of the
galla
had broken free of the prison realm, usually because of a sorcerer with more power and ambition than sense. Brishen firmly believed Secmis was the culprit mage in this instance.

He growled. Leave it to his murderous bitch of a mother to miscalculate the
galla
’s savagery and bring down an apocalypse on an entire kingdom. Maybe even a world if the horde wasn’t stopped in time.

Brishen covered his face with a trembling hand. In a way, he understood the motivations of those misguided ancients who sought to cleanse themselves of their own malevolence. He was the child of a woman who had stained the world with her presence. Her blood ran in his veins. If he could somehow physically rip his maternal legacy out of himself, he wouldn’t hesitate. His skin crawled with self-loathing.

The door connecting his bedchamber to Ildiko’s opened on a faint creak before closing. He didn’t look up. He recognized the scent of flowers and the light footfalls that drew near.

Ildiko remained silent except for the rustle of her skirts. Brishen dropped his hand from his face at the feel of her head pressed to his knee. She sat at his feet, her cheek against his leg as she stared into the fire. She hugged his calf to her breasts while her hands stroked and massaged him through his boot.

Brishen combed his fingers gently through her hair, his claws sliding easily through the silky locks. The giant knot inside his chest didn’t unravel, but it did loosen. Her presence soothed him.

“Your ministers and chieftains have left Saggara for home as have many of our visitors from the nearby villages. Word of the
galla
horde is spreading like brush fires already.”

He managed a small smile, admiring the way the firelight shimmered in her red hair. Ildiko would give him all the succor he wanted, but she was a practical sort and didn’t shy away from the harsh reality of a bad situation. This one was dreadful.

“And unsubstantiated rumor fanning the flames,” he replied. “Expect a wave of fearful visitors returning to Saggara with many questions over the next few days, wife.”

“What will you tell them?”  She hugged his leg even harder to her.

Brishen shrugged. “Very little. At least until the scouts I sent out report back with more news. I’ve instructed the holt and village leaders to set their own watches and coordinate a system of signal fires  to warn each other in case any spot
galla
breaching their borders. Except for a single messenger’s account, we know nothing at the moment.”  He spiraled a curl of her hair around one claw. “In all honesty, I hope he’s delusional and spewing a nonsensical tale. I’d rather be made a fool than made a…”  he stopped.
King.
   He hid a flinch. Gods.

Ildiko stared up at him. Fatigue pinched and paled her face. “And if he’s of sound mind?”

He bent, lifting her from the cold floor to settle in his lap. She looped her arms around his neck, fingers sliding under his hair to stroke his nape. He kissed her once, twice, before speaking. “He is. My gut tells me he is. Whatever news the scouts bring back to us, I’m afraid it won’t contradict what he’s told us.”

Her eyes glossed over once more with tears. “Your family...surely someone survived.”

The numbness wormed its way deeper into him, seeping into his soul. “You heard what he said, Ildiko. The
galla
spread from the palace first. No one survived such an attack.”

“I’m sorry, Brishen. So very sorry.”  She kissed his face, soft pecks on his forehead and eyelid, his eyepatch and nose, cheeks and lips.

He caressed her hip. “There was no love lost between us, but I wouldn’t wish a death like that—cruel and unclean—on anyone.”  Except his mother, and even death by
galla
attack was too merciful for such a viper. Rage cast ripples across the still surface of the numb pool inside him. He almost wished he’d been there to witness her demise. It might have been worth suffering the same fate just to watch her die. “I may be all that remains of the House Khaskem.”

A vertical line stitched the space between Ildiko’s eyebrows. “There is Anhuset.”

Yes, thank the gods for Anhuset. He treasured his fierce cousin. “There is, but she isn’t recognized as an official member of my house.”  Ildiko’s eyes widened at the revelation. “She’s
gameza
, a bastard sired by a stable hand on my father’s sister. Khaskem by blood but not by validation.”  What little color remained in his wife’s face drained away at his words. “Ildiko?”

She blinked, then shook her head, the brief smile flitting across her mouth tight and insincere. “Sorry. It’s been a very long night.”

He couldn’t agree more. The day promised to be even longer. “Bed?” he asked.

Ildiko shook her head. “Not yet. Do you think Sec—”

Brishen pressed a finger to her lips to stall her question. He knew what she was about to ask. Anhuset had expressed a similar suspicion earlier. She’d made sure to murmur it low enough that only the two of them could hear, and such conjectures were best left unspoken at the moment. Those who suffered and those who feared would find someone to blame. The Queen was likely dead of her own twisted machinations, but her younger son and his immediate family were not. He refused to shoulder the blame of Secmis’s evil.

BOOK: Eidolon
11.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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