A Charm for Draius: A Novel of the Broken Kaskea (The Broken Kaskea Series Book 1) (29 page)

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Authors: Laura E. Reeve

Tags: #fantasy, #female protagonist, #unicorns, #elementals, #necromancy

BOOK: A Charm for Draius: A Novel of the Broken Kaskea (The Broken Kaskea Series Book 1)
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“Where are the Phrenii?” he muttered, and Rhobar’s eyes widened. The pirate probably thought he was calling on the creatures to perform some sort of arcane torture.

Well, he’d have to get through this without the enhanced insight he’d have from the creatures. He stood up, and the King’s Guard positioned behind Rhobar forced the pirate’s head down in respect.

“You owe your life to me.” Perinon walked close so Rhobar would have a good view of his boots. “You’re not hanging from a noose today because
I
intervened. Do you understand?”

Rhobar didn’t reply, his head still forced down by the Guard. Perinon gestured. The Guard took his hand away and stepped back.

“Do you have any code of honor?” Perinon continued. “In Tyrra, we would say you owe me life-debt.”

Rhobar muttered something.

“What was that?” This time, Perinon grabbed Rhobar’s hair to pull his head back, so the captive would have to look up at him. He was tall, so the pirate’s neck stretched and his eyes rolled upward.

“I suppose I can thank you for the view from my prison cell.” Although it seemed difficult to grin when one’s head was pulled backward, Rhobar managed.

“You don’t value your life?” He let go of the man’s hair.

“Of course, but I always want more. A character flaw, I suppose.” Despite being roughly treated by the Naval Guard, Rhobar still had spirit.

“I want the
Danilo
Ana
.” Perinon watched carefully, noting the flash of recognition in Rhobar’s eyes.

“The
Danilo
Ana
must be a talented woman. Everybody wants her.” Rhobar kept his tone light.

“So your Groygan masters asked you to find her, perhaps for plunder?”

At Perinon’s words, Rhobar attempted to stand, but was kept on his knees by the King’s Guard. “I have no masters! I am my own man and I make my own decisions. Yes, she could have brought us gold, but the
Danilo
Ana
was cursed. She was listing to her port side when we found her, and her crew killing each other in madness.
I
chose to scuttle her, and
I
let her sink to her peace.”

Perinon believed him. “But not before confiscating her cargo?”

“We saw nothing of value on that cursed vessel.”

Rhobar must not have discovered the lodestone, or perhaps the lodestone’s evil aura had actually repelled the superstitious pirates. Perinon changed the subject, pacing in front of Rhobar. “So what would be the payment for your life-debt to me?”

Rhobar gave a short laugh. “I have nothing, thanks to your Navy.”

“You have your life—ah, but that’s mine anyway, isn’t it?” Perinon stopped pacing and looked down at the prisoner.

“Are you playing a game with me, ser? What’s your point?” Rhobar asked, his eyes narrowing.

“The point is I can use your life as I see fit. And I wish to use your life for the benefit of my Naval Guard and my country.”

“Sire—” Sevoi hadn’t been forewarned of his plans, and the master of arms now saw where he headed.

“I can be paid to do anything.” Rhobar’s brown eyes were sly.

“Therein lies the problem, Sire! He’s worse than a hired mercenary.” Sevoi couldn’t contain his outrage.

“Our naval tactics can be vastly improved by this man. If he proves himself trustworthy, I might commission him,” Perinon said to Sevoi.

“But he can never be trusted!”

“Oh, but he can,” Perinon said. “He can, because otherwise he’ll be turned over to either the Sareenians, the Kitarrans, or the Groygans. Which would you chose, Rhobar? The Sareenians and Kitarrans call for your blood, while the Groygans want you silenced. Last time I checked, they all call for public execution as punishment for piracy. Some still disembowel their prisoners alive, don’t they?”

“Times have changed, if Tyrran royalty must resort to coercion.” Rhobar’s lips twisted. “And, all the while, looking down your nose at the
barbarians
in the rest of the Mapped World.”

“I’m merely pointing out your choices.” Now Perinon was using a light tone. “And they’re the only choices you have. You can live a long life in the service of Tyrra, or have a much shorter life with the barbarians.”

“Only if he pledges fealty in front of the Phrenii,” Sevoi argued, ignoring Rhobar. “They will show you his true allegiances.”

“Of course.” Perinon turned to face Sevoi. “But consider this: once he’s publicly working with our Naval Guard, it becomes doubly difficult for him to seek refuge with anyone, even outlaws. No one would trust him.”

Sevoi looked dubious. “I can’t see anything good coming of this, Sire, but—”

Perinon staggered and gasped. Someone was using the Kaskea, someone different, with Meran blood as strong as his. “The Phrenii. Get water…”

Sevoi jumped forward to guide him as he fell backward into his chair.

“Get him out,” Sevoi ordered, pointing to Rhobar. “Send for the secretary, tell him the King’s walking the Void.”

“Wait! Give me a chance!” Rhobar shouted at Perinon, who ignored him. Rhobar continued to struggle against the King’s Guard as they pulled him from the room.

Perinon held out his hand, looking at the ring that held the Kaskea. The shard glowed with a bright, golden light.

Someone familiar uses the Kaskea.
She does not hide her identity.
Inside his head, Mahri’s voice was cool and smooth. Perinon suddenly
felt
the moment, many years ago, when he’d been afraid to jump into a deep part of the canals. He felt his cousin Draius grab his hand with a firm grip as she laughed, pulling him to the edge. He felt the exhilaration of fear when he jumped, the splash of coldness, and the canal water closing above his head as he sunk deeper than he had ever been. Yet Draius kept her hold on his hand, helping him rise.

He opened his eyes and saw his secretary hurry in with a pail of water.

“Be ready.” Perinon clenched his ring hand into a fist and dove into the Blindness.

chapter Thirty-Two

The Void

They say when sorcerers learn to walk the Void, their apprentices stand by with pails of water, in case their clothes start to smolder. Now that our King learns to walk the Void, we hide his burned clothes from the populace as well as any other elemental effects of rapport with Jhari. Strangely, the Phrenii can transit to and from the Void without adverse effects—perhaps because they are portals, and made of the same life-light as the Void.

—Toimi, Historian to King Ruusu, T.Y. 523 (converted to New Calendar)

Lornis rubbed his stomach contentedly as he went through the barracks common area and headed for the officer rooms. For the first time in days, he felt he’d finally eaten his fill, although he’d devastated the Sea Serpent’s provisions.

As he opened the door to his suite, he heard a measured tread coming down the hall. There would be little reason for Ponteva to be in the officer quarters, but he waited patiently for the watchman to approach.

“Ser, there’s been strange developments,” Ponteva said quietly.

Ponteva’s tone made his skin prickle. They were standing in the hallway that connected to all the rooms for officers that held ranks less than commander. There was little privacy here. Lornis motioned for the watchman to follow him into his small sitting room, and closed the door.

He hadn’t heard the details surrounding Usko’s death, but he heard them now. It was strange enough for the Phrenii to show up, together, to speak with an officer of the City Guard, but Ponteva further questioned Draius’s behavior following her encounter with them. “The commander was distressed, ser, by what the Phrenii told her. She then sent me to arrest Purje-Kolme Wendell.”

Wendell?
This could only be the same Wendell who worked for Berin, who was seemingly attached to his employer’s side. But if that wasn’t strange enough—

“Wendell is dead, ser. Had to break in, and we found him lying on his bed.”

“What?”

“Hung, according to Norsis. Said Wendell was placed on his bed
after
death. Having to process yet another body on Ringday ticked Norsis right off, so he gave me this message to deliver. Said he didn’t have the time.”

Ponteva handed Lornis a note. The seal was unbroken and the hastily scrawled words were in Draius’s hand: “Deliver to Officer Lornis on Markday morning.”

Lornis hesitated. “Should I open it early?”

“Not for me to decide, ser.” Ponteva’s voice became prim. “Commander Draius is
usually
precise. On the other hand, she seemed unnatural this afternoon.”

“Hmm, yes, there is that.”

A timid knock at the door made both men whirl around. The knock was singular, and wasn’t followed by another. Lornis stepped forward quickly and flung open the door.

Maricie had been turning away. “Ser?” She glanced at Ponteva, standing behind him.

Before the phrenic healing, Lornis often had propositions from women who hoped for children, a contract with a rich lineage, or just a night of pleasure. Maricie, however, was Sareenian and wasn’t raised to be as agressive as Tyrran women. Besides, she was quite young.

“It’s about Master Peri, ser,” Maricie said. “He’s gone missing.”

“Oh.” Lornis flushed, embarrassed by his assumptions. “Did Draius send you?”

“No, ser. Mistress Draius and the Lady had words. About the safety of Master Peri.” Maricie twisted the fabric of her apron. “Then Mistress Draius left and Lady Anja sent me to get Master Jan. Which I did, ser, some moments ago. He’s already left at the Lady’s direction.”

“Why call upon me?” Lornis asked. His curiosity fought with his sense of propriety; he should probably stay out of an internal Serasa-Kolme matter.

“Mistress Draius said something about the ‘murderers.’ If Lady Anja treats this as a lineal matter, those that murdered my father’s cousin may never be caught. As it says in the Book of Light,
Justice is required for all souls to progress along the Way
.” Maricie’s liquid brown eyes narrowed and glittered in the lamplight.

Lornis said nothing. He looked down at the note in his hand and broke the seal. The note read: “I am tendering my resignation as OIC of Investigation, as well as my commission with the City Guard. If I’m unavailable on Markday morning, you must look to the ancestral stars who have lost their followers.” Draius had signed it with her full lineal name.

Lornis grimaced. “Are you willing to interfere in matriarchal matters, Ponteva? I think Draius and her son are in trouble—far beyond the reach of matriarchal justice.”

“I’ll follow your decision, ser.” Ponteva’s voice was steady, like a rock. “And that’ll serve as my excuse, as well.
You’re
the one who could lose your career.”

“I wasn’t meant for politics anyway.” Lornis looked at Maricie. “Tell me everything you know.”

•••

Voices called, whispered, screamed. Draius was deafened.

“Rise, rise,” urged one voice.

She struggled to look around and was wrapped tightly by the blinding fog. She panicked.
Where am I?

The same voice cut through the rest, a familiar voice. “Relax and float upward, like when we dove into the high canals.”

She tried to look around and was engulfed again by the sizzling and crackling noise of millions of thoughts and voices, the roaring whiteness. She clawed at her eyes and ears, trying to clear them.
Didn’t they bind my hands?

Who are you?
She tried to call, but every time she did, she was overwhelmed by the sounds.

“Don’t use your senses, cousin. You have no body here.”

Peri—Perinon?
For a moment she panicked, and the roaring whiteness took her over. Then she relaxed and glimpsed white mountains, fading through fog. This gave her hope, so she forced the languor, remembering when she and her cousins jumped into the high canals on the north side of the city, where the water was clean, and they would let their bodies float lazily up to the surface and light. Before the Fevers forced them into adulthood…

The whiteness cleared, like stepping up through fog onto a crystal mountainside. She could spread her senses out and felt outlines take shape. The world lay below her: the two cities, the bay, the sea, and the mountains. All of Tyrra was an image made in white, with sharp lines. For a moment she felt peace, and saw a small pulsing golden light in the city halfway up the mountain. Focusing on that light, she felt a dizzying effect of magnification when she drilled through the fog, the walls, everything, to Perinon’s chair. But this was a world of white marble, with no man or woman or creature to be seen.

Cousin!
When she tried to call to him, she disappeared back down into whiteness and noise. Fighting it exhausted her. But, when she rested, as if floating, the white vista came back to her. Was she mad?

“Madness comes from resistance. Don’t try to talk, cousin. You don’t hear my voice, but rather my thoughts and emotions.”

She could sense so much more about Perinon. There was inexperience and fear in him, as well as uncertainty. She could feel fleeting emotions and catch glimpses of his memories: his father dying during the Fevers, his elder brother Valos ruffling his hair before he left on the hunting trip that ended his life, his mother retiring from public life to die. He had suffered many of the same sorrows as she. Could he feel the same from her?

“Your mind is very open, a surprising contrast to your physical self.” Amusement faded to caution. “Only the portals may speak here. One will come for you and you must remain open to them, or your mind will break.”

The Phrenii?
She’d forgotten this was their domain. She went tumbling down through whiteness and for a moment, she was back in the warehouse again, straining against the bonds while a small gray man held up a dripping knife. There was chanting and screaming. Was she screaming? Then she was smothered in roaring, sizzling whiteness again.

With effort, she tried to regain the peace she’d felt before.
No moving, no speaking, just rest, just float
, she repeated internally to herself. The calm surrounded her and took her memories.

•••

The vista was pure white, unsullied by color. She watched the cities, sharply outlined, sitting above the layer of fog. Through experimentation she drifted to places she knew, places she must have visited before she came here, but only represented here in light. She didn’t know how long she’d been in this place, and she didn’t care.

The creature approached her. She knew this one and its beauty. It represented water, and the life-light contained within that element.

“You are Draius. The ‘Little One,’“ Dahni said.

My name?

“You are an officer of the City Guard. This can happen to those who first drive through the Blindness and step into the Void; they must learn to remember. Remember your life, Draius.”

She struggled to remember, because this creature thought it important.

“You have a son named Peri. You are wielding the Kaskea and you must learn to control it, not have it control you.”

Memories came back in a rush, almost crushing her. The pain caused her vision to fog up and for a moment she was in the blinding, choking whiteness.

“Do not sink into the Blindness.” The clean, cool words caught her. She relaxed and when her vision cleared, Dahni was still there.

“Yes, you remember.” Dahni sounded sad. “And you remember that you are afraid of me.”

She cried now, not caring about the suffocating fog. She cried for the loneliness of her life, for all her mistakes, and for Peri. She cried for her father’s grief, and finally freed, she cried for her mother’s painful death. She felt sadness and pain coming from Dahni.

Why do I have to remember?

“You have responsibilities. I cannot allow you to forget them.”

She had thought the Phrenii incapable of understanding human feelings, but the emotion she now felt within this creature was astonishing. Every human soul encountered was remembered and catalogued; every soul lost was mourned for an eternity. There was more grief within this creature than Draius, the person she remembered, could ever contain.

“I am the element you are bound to. You will only see me when you enter the Void and, in the solid world, we are in rapport.”

She struggled with the words, the thoughts, the questions she wished to ask this creature.
Where am I?

“We call this existence the Void and it shows the shape of the world,” the creature said. “The Void is also more than that, much more, but it will take time to teach you.”

She remembered Berin, Taalo, the others.
Criminals use me as a channel to the Void. They threaten the life of my son and another child
. She finally released her despair, her fears for Peri’s life, the unknown boy’s life, her sanity, and her hopeless situation.

She felt Dahni absorb all her fears, examining each. “You have carried others into the Blindness, the layer which separates the solid world from the Void. These others get glimpses of insight into the solid world. But they mistakenly think they have reached the Void.”

Can’t you stop them?

“I cannot. I am part of, and portal to the Void. I cannot travel in the Blindness. But you can stop them.” The creature dipped its horn to indicate a downward motion.

Draius tried to
look
where Dahni pointed and only succeeded in blinding herself. She dispersed the fog easily and tried again, this time extending her senses. By straining, she forced her senses downward and she now knew the layer under her was thick, but could be punched through to see into the solid world below. It was thick enough to have
things
, unnatural creatures, moving inside. Some circled and swam like sharks, others appeared to take linear paths.

“It is dangerous to wander in the Blindness, where there are hunters,” said Dahni. “The people who used you for entry can never ascend above the Blindness, unfortunately for them.”

Hunters?
She concentrated on one of the large swimming things, but it kept sliding out of her grasp. Her mind shuddered.

“The predators, those that feed upon sleeping souls, are the hunters.”

She extended her senses further down into the foggy Blindness. Concentrating and finding a specific something, or someone, was like dredging for the last small piece of meat in a bowl of thick stew. She pulled her senses back.

What about my son?
This black fear ate away at her.

“Perinon prepares the King’s Guard and they are coming to rescue you and your son. I will lead them to you.”

Panic came over her.
No, they’ll hurt Peri if their ceremony is disrupted.
I didn’t give you my location or my permission to do this.

“And what about the other child?”

She didn’t have an answer, suddenly ashamed, but still wanting to protect Peri.

“By rising to the Void you have showed your position.” Dahni gestured with its horn and suddenly they were in the sunken quay. Or rather, they were in the Void’s elemental representation of the place that she’d just left—with no living creature in it. There were outlines of the chair she sat in, but now there was only a pulsing green light where her body should be.

“I ask you once more, Draius. Who will save the other child?” Dahni dipped its horn again, so she extended her senses to the reality below. There was green light below the Blindness and by concentrating, she was suddenly
there
. She saw her body tied to the chair, her head lolling forward. The robed figures were seated and holding hands. In the center of their circle she saw the boy bleeding, lethargic from blood loss, but still alive. But for how long?

Sickened, she rose and dove again, this time to the small room at the side of the stone quay. She now saw Peri, lying on a bench in sleep. The woman, younger than Draius originally thought, still sat watching him. The woman’s head was nodding. She was falling asleep, although she’d periodically stir and look to the curtained opening. A knife and an empty glass lay on the bench beside her.

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