Call Of The Flame (Book 1) (13 page)

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Authors: James R. Sanford

BOOK: Call Of The Flame (Book 1)
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“Teodor,” said Aiyan, running to him, “are you wounded?”

“A bit of a headache,” he said, letting Aiyan take his arm.

“Who else?” demanded Aiyan.  “Was there anyone — “

“Candidate Radic,” said Teodor.  “He was at the tiller.  I
told him to jump.  He didn’t feel the danger, didn’t see the smoke.  I think he
tried to maneuver . . . I looked for him in the wreckage.”  He sat on a rock
and emptied his boots.  He wore a sword much like Aiyan’s, protected by leather
wrappings, but it was a little different.  The same silver locket with the
emblem of the flaming blade hung at his waist.  He looked at Kyric and then to
Aiyan.

“Kyric is my friend, and he’s a friend of the order as
well.”

“I am?” Kyric said.

Teodor smiled thinly.  “What Aiyan has told me is that you
know of the Knights of the Dragon’s Blood, and the true purpose of our order. 
And that you are worthy of trust.”

He turned to Aiyan.  “Master Bortolamae was worried about
you.  I take it his concern was not misplaced.”

“We can’t stay on this spot,” Aiyan said.  “Chances are that
one of their informants has a spyglass on us right now.”

They crossed the harbor road, and pushed through a small
crowd at the square where everyone vied to see what was happening on the
water.  Entering one of the quiet alleys, the only sound was the rhythmic
squish of Teodor’s boots.

“Radic was going to stay with the boat and return to Esaiya
when I had some news of you,” he said.

Aiyan threw out his arms.  “They must have been waiting for
days.  Can you imagine the preparations involved in this kind of ambush?  They
would have to have a pair watching Esaiya.  They would need a series of
signals, or a series of very fast horses, and a second set of watchers to
confirm you were heading for Aeva.  The crew of the bomb boat would have to
live aboard and be ready at all times — probably a third set of watchers to
signal them.  I saw one swimming for it, and I’d wager there was another
blood-charmed sailor to stay and make sure it went off.

“Morae foresaw this.  When I stole the rudders he was afraid
I would summon a band of knights from Esaiya.  He planned to kill them all at
once.”

“Doesn’t this Morae know that the full force of Esaiya would
retaliate?” Teodor said.

“After the Senate votes day after tomorrow, I’m sure they
plan to fade away and leave it all for Lekon to run.  I’ll explain it all
later.  I’m very happy to see you my friend, but now that I see the depth of
their commitment I wonder if the two us will be enough.  They want this very
badly.”

 

CHAPTER 13:  Cinnamon upon a Pillow

 

It came to him in a dream, of
course.  He shouldn’t have been surprised.  Mother Nistra stood over him while
he recited the Edda of Derndra, staring at him with her dragon’s eyes.

And Derndra conceived his third grimoire

To be written in the blood of Aerth

An ink too great for thrice cursed vellum

Fresh virgin skin it could not burn

So lifted he his Wirmen progeny

Rattus eyed and fingered hand

Bred in filth with demon's milk

Sinews formed for thievery

The call to newborn flesh
inculcate

He sat up in bed, fully awake.  Yes.  That was it.  The Wirmen. 
They had been created to steal infants in the dead of night.  He struck a light,
tiptoed downstairs to wake Aiyan, and found him already awake.

He was dressed in his field clothes, and in the process of
loading the double-barreled pistol.

“Something has happened to Teodor.”

“How do you know?”

“We are bonded by the secret fire.  Look, we have no time
for conversation — get dressed quickly and bring weapons.”

Kyric ran upstairs and was back down in two minutes.

“It’s half past four o’clock,” Aiyan said.  “There will be
no cabs out at this hour.  We will have to run.”

The streets were empty and Aiyan set a steady pace that they
could sustain for a while.  It was over two miles to the royal residence.

After the attack in the harbor, Aiyan had decided to keep a surreptitious
watch on Princess Aerlyn.  He told Kyric and Teodor that he would slip over the
wall once darkness fell, but Teodor had said, “I can see the fatigue around
your eyes — you’ve been on the run for over a week.  Allow me to do it.  I feel
well rested, even after what happened today.”  Aiyan had agreed, no doubt
grateful he didn’t have to bring another lodger back to Sedlik.

Kyric had a stitch in his side and was struggling to keep up
by the time they reached the estate.  Something indeed had happened.  Torches
stood on poles at the gate, illuminating guardsmen standing with bayonets fixed. 
Kyric could see lights moving around the house and out on the grounds.

An officer, the same one who had been there that morning,
had just reined his horse to a halt as Aiyan ran up to the gate.  He shook his
head in confusion.

“The Princess commands you to be admitted should you . . . happen
to come here,” he said uncertainly.  He climbed down from his mount.  “Here,
you can use my horse.”

Aiyan leaped into the saddle and hauled Kyric up behind him. 
They galloped to the house.  A butler quickly ushered them through the fine
marble entryway, past ornate tapestries, and up a mahogany staircase to the
royal suites.  Aerlyn stood at the open window of a child’s bedroom, still in a
night robe, her hair disheveled.  Kyric could hear Kaelyn speaking to someone in
the next room.

Aerlyn turned to them, her eyes wide and her face pale with
shock.

“Aiyan,” she said.  “They’ve taken my son.  They’ve taken
Eren.  I — ”  She tried to say more, but her voice caught and she stood there
helpless, her mouth moving silently, until at last a sob escaped, then another,
then another.  And for all her wealth and all her influence, Kyric thought, he
had never seen one so destitute.

Aiyan went to her and took her hands.  “We will find him,”
he said.  “We will find him.”

“I heard a cry,” she said, catching her breath.  “When I
came in the window was open and he was gone.”

Kyric looked out the window.  The drop to the garden below
was fairly long.  The wall was unblemished stonework and there was no trellis
or drainpipe or anything that could be climbed, but broad spots of moisture ran
from the windowsill to the ground like little footprints.

“What kind of man,” Aerlyn demanded, “can come into my house
unseen and carry away my child?”

“It may not have been a man,” Kyric said.

“What do you mean?”

“Never mind,” said Aiyan, staring daggers at Kyric.  “For
now we must search the grounds for subtle signs your people will not know.  I
will return to you shortly.”

Once outside with a lantern in his hand, Aiyan led Kyric
into the darkness.  “We must find Teodor first.  If he is alive the flame will
guide me to him.”

He took out his locket and opened it.  A blue-white flame
burned there, the same spirit fire Kyric had seen on the edge of his sword. 
Aiyan held it up like a compass, and the flame drew strongly toward the south. 
They went in that direction, and walked all the way to the wall before they
found Teodor behind a thick hedge.  He sat against the wall, a torn shirt tail wrapped
around his upper thigh as a bandage.

Next to him lay the bloody carcass of some foul creature.

“I thought it best to hide and wait for you,” Teodor said.

“No sense in drawing undue attention,” said Aiyan.  “Can you
walk?”

He shook his head.  “I can’t put any weight on this leg.”

“We need to get you over the wall before the dawn comes. 
You and
this
.”  He held the lantern over the carcass.

It was the size of a small woman, with the rough skin of a
hairless dog, hands with tiny claws that were as much human as rodent, and legs
made for both walking upright and bounding on all fours.  Set in what was more
of a snout than a face, round eyes of solid black reflected none of the lantern
light.  It was the long black whip-like tail that gave it the appearance of a
rat.

“A Wirman,” said Kyric.

“They were fast and silent,” Teodor said.  “I didn’t see
them until the first one came out of the window with the boy.  I thought there
were only two.  I killed this one and had the kidnapper up a tree when the
third one hamstrung me.”

He held out an arm, and they helped him up to stand on his
good leg.  “Aiyan,” he said softly, “I never felt them in the realm of power. 
I sensed no danger when I was attacked from behind.  They are invisible to the
spirit eye — how could that be?”

“We will ponder it later,” Aiyan said, “but now we need to
go.”  He suddenly stopped.  “None of them were wearing a collar or other kind
of ornament were they?  A bracelet or bangle perhaps?”

“No,” said Teodor.  “They were all as you see this one.”

“Hmm.”

With a leg up from Aiyan, Kyric pulled himself to the top of
the wall, and together they managed to get Teodor up and over.  They passed the
carcass of the Wirman down to him then headed back to the main house.  Aerlyn,
now fully dressed, met them at the entrance.

“They have fled,” Aiyan said to her.  “Was there anything
left behind?  A note perhaps?”

She nodded, her eyes closed tight.  “A sprinkle of cinnamon
on his pillow.  I know what that means.”  She clutched at his arm.  “Aiyan, if
I vote with them, will they return my son unharmed?”

He took her hand.  “That will not be necessary, Princess. 
Because I will go and get him this very day.  Did you by chance save a lock of
his hair when he was a baby?”

“No,” she said, a quiet teardrop slipping from one eye.  “Why?”

“I need something that, ah, has many layers of his scent
upon it, more than the clothes he wore yesterday.”

“My master of hounds had already taken the dogs around the
grounds.  They have scented nothing that they could follow.”

“That may be,” said Aiyan, “But I know a dog that can find
anything if he has the scent.  I need something was almost a part of Eren — a
ring he always wore, a hat, a penknife he always carried.”

“I know what,” she said.  She ran upstairs and returned with
a leather bag.

“These are his favorite toys,” she said.  “He plays with them
almost every day.”

Aiyan took the bag from her.  “I will find him, Aerlyn.”

“I know you will try,” she said, unable to meet his gaze.

He looked deeply into her eyes, forcing her to look into his,
to see his unshakable resolve.  The eastern sky had begun to lighten, the stars
there fading away.

“I will find him, Aerlyn.  I swear by the name of my sword
and upon the secret fire that I will return him to you before you see another
dawn.  I swear it.”

They left her there, and followed the driveway back to the
gate at the run, silent but for the sound of their footfalls against the
gravel.  Teodor waited for them, away from the street at the far corner of the
wall.  Kyric helped Teodor hobble along while Aiyan dragged the carcass of the Wirman. 
They searched the southern length of the wall until they found the slimy
footprints they had seen at the house.  These led them back to the streets and
to a storm drain.  The grating that should have covered it was gone.

Aiyan dropped the carcass into the drain opening.  “No point
in trying to follow the Wirmen.  They will have already taken the prince to Morae,
and I doubt he is anywhere in the sewers.”

“What now?” asked Kyric.

“Pitbull.”

“Ah,” said Teodor, “the dwarf magician.”

They limped eastward along Veleriand Boulevard as the sun
rose, at last seeing a cab as they came to the Way of Kings.  Aiyan whistled it
down and gave the driver directions.  The city was slowly returning to life after
its day of rest, the streets running with the aroma of bread wagons as they
hurried by.

It turned out that Pitbull lived on a narrow street by the
river, only a mile from Sedlik’s house.  It was a sprawling neighborhood of
squat, stucco-covered houses.  They found him standing in his vegetable garden
behind a short rickety fence, water can in hand.  Kyric heard him curse under
his breath as they pulled up.

“Aiyan, I haven’t even had my breakfast yet.”

Aiyan threw a full kandar at the driver as he leapt from the
cab.  “I need you now my friend as I have never needed you before.”

Aiyan explained everything to Pitbull, handing him the bag
of toys.  When he was done Pitbull said, “Take my wagon and go get all you need. 
I’ll purify Teodor’s wound — no telling what kind of filth or poison those
creatures leave with their bite.  By the time you return I will have cast a
ritual finding.”

Pitbull’s son, Rellen, the teenage boy who had driven him
the morning of the archery tournament, hitched the donkey cart and brought it
around for them.  Aiyan drove while Kyric squirmed impatiently.  “This isn’t
any faster than walking,” he said.

“That’s alright,” Aiyan said.  “We will need all our
strength before this day is done.”

A hay wagon had overturned in the avenue, so Aiyan made a
detour through some side streets.  When they finally arrived at Sedlik’s house
they parked on the street and went in the front door.

“You must keep the doors locked at all times,” Aiyan called,
slamming the door behind him.  “How many —.“  Then he saw Jazul Marlez sitting
with Jela in the parlor, sipping coffee from a delicate porcelain cup.

“Join us,” Jela said cheerfully.  “Jazul is leaving tomorrow
and came to say good-bye.”  She paused and looked at them more closely.  “What
is the matter?”

Aiyan hesitated, and Kyric thought he was about to lie to
them.  “Prince Eren had been kidnapped,” he blurted out, deciding against
deception.  “A few hours ago.”

“What?” shouted Jazul, leaping to his feet.  “How?”

Aiyan quieted him with a wave of his hand.  “Jela, I need
you to quickly make a breakfast for us.  A large one that will hold us all
day.  Kyric, there’s some scraps of linen in the cellar.  Tear them into strips
for bandages.  And bring the axe up as well.  The keg of gunpowder too.  I’ll
gather all the firearms and see them freshly primed.  Don’t let me forget to
clean the frizzens as well.  Please forgive us Marlez, but we are making ready
to mount a rescue.”

Jazul looked insulted.  “Not without me,” he said, throwing
out his broad chest.  “A child has been taken.  Be he prince or beggar, I will
not let that stand.”

“What we are going to do,” Aiyan said softly, “will be
terrible.”

Jazul stood like a great figure of stone.  “Before I was a
showman, I fought in the pits of Javian.  I know what to do with bad men.”

They each fell to their tasks, Jazul helping Aiyan with the
weapons.  When Aiyan offered him the blunderbuss, Jazul said, “I’d rather have
a heavy blade,” so Aiyan fetched him Sedlik’s shortsword.

“Where is your father?” Aiyan asked Jela when they sat down
to eat.

“He went to oversee a delivery at the warehouse.  Then he
has a meeting at a coffeehouse.  He won’t be back till afternoon.”

Having no time to prepare anything, Jela had simply laid out
bread, cheese, fruit, and leftover potato pie.  Aiyan ate quickly, taking huge
bites and choking them down with little thought of chewing.  Kyric could do
little more than nibble, thinking that he may soon be lying in agony with a
bullet in his gut.

When he was done, Aiyan stood, his fists upon the table. 
“Time to go.”

Kyric excused himself and ran to the privy, thinking that he
would throw up.  He stood bent over for a time, but nothing happened.  When he
came back out, only Jela was there.

“They’re waiting for you outside,” she said.  “Are you sure
about this?”

“No,” he said, “I’m not.  I’m scared out of my wits.  But
after what Jazul said, how could I stay behind?”

“Aiyan wouldn’t think worse of you if you did.”  She went to
him and took his hand.  “Nor would I.”

“Thanks.”  He gave her hand a little squeeze.  “But from the
moment I first met those two kids they spoke to me like they knew me, and I
felt like I knew them. . . . “

He lost what he was trying to say.  He shook his head,
trying to force a smile, but he feared he only grimaced.

She kissed him lightly on the cheek.  “Go then.  Hero.”

They returned to Pitbull’s and found Teodor behind the
house, sitting at a weathered table beneath a canvas awning, his leg tightly
wrapped from the knee to the hip and propped up on an old box.  Before him lay
an herb garden embroidered with winding stone paths.  Beyond that, the river.

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