Read Fiction River: Unnatural Worlds Online
Authors: Fiction River
Tags: #fantasy, #short stories, #anthologies, #kristine kathryn rusch, #dean wesley smith, #nexus, #leah cutter, #diz and dee, #richard bowes, #jane yolen, #annie reed, #david farland, #devon monk, #dog boy, #esther m friesner, #fiction river, #irette y patterson, #kellen knolan, #ray vukcevich, #runelords
“He’s a barbarian,” her father argued. He
prepared to take the killing blow.
She stepped in front of the boy. “You train
your knights for years, never knowing if their hearts will remain
true in the depths of battle. This boy’s heart is true.”
The king jutted his chin toward her, and the
giant Sir Bandolan grabbed Avahn’s shoulder, pulled her out of the
way.
In the moment, the world went quiet. King
Harrill strained. Up in the forest above, a woodpecker pecked, and
in the distance a squirrel called from an oak tree.
“Hear that?” the king asked his men. His eyes
danced left and right, as if he were thinking faster than a water
strider could dance above a pool. He whirled and looked uphill, to
where green oaks spread over the dead grasses, casting deep
shadows.
He shouted, “Come on, you bastards! I hear
you up there. May you all taste my wrath this day!”
There was no answer from the silent woods for
a long moment.
Suddenly a single archer stepped out from
behind a tree. As a warlord of the Woguld, he wore a crimson
breechcloth. A white silk cape flowed over his shoulders like a
waterfall. A sunmask adorned his face, a silver imale like an elk
with broad antlers, with black-glass covered eyes to guard against
bright light. The blue tattoos of his family tree wound around his
calves, naming his ancestors and their deeds. He was glorious to
look upon, regal and perfect.
He stood with his great bow, its wings
flaring wide, and nocked an arrow.
The king laughed and rubbed forefinger
against thumb, the sign for “trade.” He pointed to Dval.
Avahn did not know whether her father was
offering to buy the boy, or to spare his life for a price.
***
To Dval, it was the worst of insults. The
folk of the Woguld did not trade in slaves. Every man served his
clan. The warlord up above them was his uncle, and Dval felt
certain that his uncle would order his men to waylay these
foreigners.
Instead, his uncle drew the bow and
fired.
The arrow sped toward them, and Dval thought,
“He plans to kill their king!”
Yet even as the thought came, he realized
that the arrow was winging toward him.
A flash to his side, a heavy thud—and Dval
went flying from harm’s way, his face skidding into the leaves. The
girl Avahn had shoved him, thrown him to the ground as the arrow
whistled past. Avahn lay beside him, groaning in pain. Dval saw red
on her bicep, and realized that she hurt from more than bruises.
The arrow had kissed her.
Dval’s uncle called out, “What kind of fool
are you? Do we not have enough enemies? You must save one?” Always
that tone. “The friend of my enemy,” the uncle said, “
is
my
enemy!”
His uncle spat, turned, and strode into the
shadows under the trees.
For a second, Dval knew the sorrow of one who
has been dispossessed.
Dval watched his uncle, and did not know who
was more a barbarian—his uncle, the northerners around him, or Dval
himself.
Perhaps we are all barbarians,
Dval
thought,
struggling to be human.
Only one person here seemed truly human—the
child Avahn.
After that, no one threatened to kill Dval.
Apparently now that he was cast out from the Woguld, his death
sentence was rescinded. By trying to kill him, his uncle had saved
his life.
Avahn took Dval’s hand. Together they rode
down to the sprawling cities of Mystarria, to her home at the
Courts of Tide, where the war fires of the Toth still burned.
Acknowledgements
This project wouldn’t have gotten off the
ground without the Kickstarter support from these wonderful
people:
Karen Abrahamson
Gerard M. Ackerman
Claire Alcock
Susan Allen
JC Andrijeski
Michael Bellomo
Donald J. Bingle
Robin Brande
Kirsten Brodbeck-Kenney
AnneMarie Buhl
Tom Carpenter
Brenda Cooper
T. Thorn Coyle
Leah Cutter
Ron Dionne
Louis Doggett
Marcelle Dubé
Eric Edstrom
Lynda Foley
Karen Fonville
Robbyn Foster
Annaliese Furnas
John Haines
Mark-Wayne Harris
Joel Horton
Julie Hyzy
Jim Johnson
Jane Kennedy
Malachi Kenney
Pierre L’Allier
Rich Laux
Stephen Lebans
Christel Adina Loar
John Lorentz
Michael Lucas
Big Ed Magusson
Lisa M. May
Robert J. McCarter
Sean Monaghan
Patricia Nagle
Carole Nelson Douglas
Shyam Nunley
Alexei Pawlowski
Steve Perry
Jeff Rutherford
Jeanette Sanders
David Schibi
Ken Schneyer
Risa Scranton
Janna Silverstein
Kristine Smith
Bob Sojka
Margaret St. John
Christopher Stout
Robert E. Stutts
Lisa Sullivan
Raphael Sutton
Randy Tatano
Melissa Taylor
Scott Tefoe
Edd Vick
Ray Vukcevich
Leslie Walker
Terry Weyna
Sarah Woodbury
Stephanie Writt
Thank you!
Year One
Unnatural Worlds
Edited by Dean Wesley Smith & Kristine
Kathryn Rusch
How to Save the World
Edited by John Helfers
Time Streams
Edited by Dean Wesley Smith
Christmas Ghosts
Edited by Kristine Grayson
Hex in the City
Edited by Kerrie L. Hughes
Moonscapes
Edited by Dean Wesley Smith
Crime
(Special Edition)
Edited by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
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