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Authors: Terry C. Simpson

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BOOK: Game of Souls
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The revenge Ainslen sought that night had went mostly unfulfilled. No matter how many lives he took, it would not return Marjorie. Still, in his single-minded focus to bring those responsible to justice, he’d discovered another path. One that would bring to fruition one of his life long dreams, while at the same time lending its help in laying waste to the guilds.

“Your lordship, snap out of it.”

The words cut like a knife.

Torn from his reverie, thoughts full of malice, Ainslen spun to face Shaz. “You dare touch my mind?”

Sweat rolled down the Marishman’s forehead, yet his expression remained placid. “Look at yourself.”

Even as Shaz said the words, the glow caught Ainslen’s eye. It suffused his balled fists and ran up his arms. In a wavy, off-white haze, it surrounded his entire body. Deep inside his core, his soul craved for release. The energy could take any form he wished. He always felt it was too bad he could not create something beyond reality’s limits.

After a deep breath, Ainslen allowed his essence to recede. “Thank you,” he muttered.

Shaz inclined his head.

“So,” the count said, “my son survived the trial. I’m certain he’ll be here shortly to demand his apprenticeship with the King’s Blades.”

“Will you grant him permission?”

“Even if I refused now, I would eventually have to let him go.”
And I have no reason to stop him. After all, this is what I wanted.
Ainslen stroked his chin. There was a way to play this to his advantage if he reacted in the right fashion.

Judging from what he’d siphoned from Winslow before, his son would have drawn others to him. If not melders, then those who had extraordinary souls. Maybe this boy was one of those. Strength recognized strength.

If I play this correctly, not only might I discover the Consortium’s movements, I’ll have a new source to bleed.
Mired in thoughts of his ascension, Count Cardiff smiled. “Give me all the details.”

B
ait and Cycles

W
hen Keedar reached his home on Nissa’s Road, sandwiched between an abandoned tavern and a warehouse, his father was waiting at the door. Antelen loomed large in the sky, casting its silvery glow on Keedar’s surroundings. The house was sturdier than most in the Smear, but from the outside it appeared as a ramshackle mess, eaves broken, paint peeling, green showing on the warped wood like moldy bread. Bricks and mortar hid underneath that façade, painstakingly placed there by his father and Uncle Keshka over a number of years. Although the shutters were missing one or two wooden slats, it was difficult at best to tell if someone lived there. Black paint covered the windowpanes inside and out.

“You did good today,” Delisar said before stepping aside.

“Thank you, Father.” Keedar entered and closed the door behind him, making sure to turn the key in the lock, and slide home both the top and bottom bolts.

“I picked up some beef stew with potatoes and rice for dinner. I already had mine. Yours is on the table.”

Keedar headed toward the dining area. Candles threw light along the way, barely enough to see by. Books lined the shelves against the walls: reminders of his father’s insistence on education. He sighed as he considered the lecturer who would come to pay a visit in the morning. Not that learning about the world and learning in general didn’t fascinate him, but he preferred to be alone on the rooftops or run within the Parmien Forest. Solitude suited him.

Within those woods, within the wilds, he reveled. Unlike in the citadel’s confines, the forest was where he belonged. Ever since the first days he ventured into them. Ever since he picked up one of Father’s books and traced his fingers along the drawings of woods and fanged mountain peaks, lands with scorching sands, blue seas, green seas, black seas, seas covered in ice. Fascinated by it all, he devoured Father’s teachings. Often he wondered how much the connection resonating in his bones to the wild had to do with what or who he was.

“Wash those hands.” Father’s voice cut him from his thoughts.

Groaning under his breath, Keedar stripped off his derin leather gloves. Dirt encrusted his palms and showed black under his fingernails. He sniffed. His odor wasn’t the best either, but his stomach insisted a bath could wait, particularly after he passed the open doorway from which the spicy scents wafted. He almost stopped when he spotted the bowl on the table, steam rising from its contents. Instead, he continued on to the kitchen where he washed his hands in a basin. After emptying it, he refilled the container from the barrel of fresh water. By the time he made it to the dining room and sat, Father was lounging on a chair a few feet from the table

Keedar dragged out his own seat. Hunger gnawed at his stomach as he dug in. It was always like this when he used soul magic. It took as much physical exertion as it did mental, sometimes more of either depending on the area of concentration. He was on his fourth mouthful of stew, licking his lips, when Father began with his questions.

“So what did you make of those two?”

Keedar swallowed the food before he answered. “Not much but they deserve some respect for coming here.”

“Not impressed then?”

“No. Seemed like your typical nobles. Too arrogant to understand the trouble they were in.”

“Yet, they still followed you.”

“They had no choice.” Keedar scooped up some potatoes and rice, knowing he was downplaying the two boys. At first, he’d thought them stupid, but he realized he’d been oddly drawn to them, especially Winslow.

“Word is they had quite a bit to say about you. Gaston in particular. You fascinated him.”

“Isn’t that what you wanted?”

“Yes. Now, all we do is wait.” Father grew silent, eyes distant, lost in his thoughts and schemes.

“What is it that you want with the count?”

“To discover what he knows of us. And what his plans might be. He blames everyone but himself for his past, but most of all he lays his losses at our feet. Your uncle considers him our best help as well as our greatest threat.”

Keedar continued to eat. Sometimes he wished he could get into Delisar’s head. He couldn’t say he understood everything his father did, but much of it seemed to be centered on Mother or at least her death. At times like this, he wondered what she had been like. Father told his share of stories, and through them Keedar used his imagination. Most of the time that wasn’t enough. Seeing other children with their mothers didn’t help. When he asked his father about her death, the answer would be that she died well. Father promised to reveal all he knew one day. Hopefully, one day would be sooner rather than later.

When he finished his meal, he washed it down with water. Father was leaning back with his eyes closed.

“Are you sure this was the right choice? Letting them think I can meld? I feel like bait.” He’d been skeptical of the plan from the start, but he was also willing to do whatever his father considered necessary.

“You should. It’s what you are. No need to worry, your uncle and I will protect you.”

“Perhaps now would be a good time to teach me more than soul’s cycles.”

Delisar opened his eyes and sat up. “That’s dictated by you, not by anyone else. The faster you learn—”

“And the more I train, the better and stronger I’ll grow. In turn, more cycles will become available to me. At least until I begin melding.” Keedar recited more loudly than he intended. He let out a frustrated breath. “It just seems to be taking forever. Couldn’t you induce it like they say in the books?”

“That’s the problem with books. They can make some things sound so easy, brush over all the danger.” Father held his gaze. “I doubt I have the skill to increase your cycles that way, not without exhausting your soul, which in turn could kill you. I’m not willing to take that risk, and neither should you. You’re trying to force this as you sometimes do when we spar. I keep telling you, you don’t always have to use the edge of the blade; the blunt side can be just as useful. Whether from a severed throat or a broken skull, dead is dead.”

Keedar groaned. When Father started with the sayings, matters only became more difficult. Still, if he managed to convince Delisar … “What of Uncle Keshka? He could do it, couldn’t he? You always say how much stronger he is than you.”

Father rolled his eyes. “He probably could.”

Excited at the prospect, Keedar opened his mouth.

“But he will refuse you.”

“Why?”

“He believes you should develop naturally. It could prevent future issues. Those induced tend to have shorter life spans like the Blades. Brief, violent lives like the strike of a flint. A spark and poof … gone.”

Always some obstacle or another.
Still, hearing about Uncle Keshka fascinated him. The man was as mysterious as the rest of the world outside Kasandar. Supposedly he’d even crossed the Renigen Sea at one time. On the docks, Keedar had listened to many stories from the few sailors who’d made the trip. They spoke of the wonders in the Farlands: the creatures, foods, and strange peoples.

“How many cycles does he have?”

“Eight, as far as I know.”

Keedar whistled. Eight. Two more left. The books said only one type of creature possessed ten cycles. The thought brought back memories of flames and scales. He suppressed the worst of the images and considered his own growth.

The trauma he experienced with Mother had awoken
sintu
—the first cycle. It allowed him to sense his own soul energy, to hold it steady. Years of practice had taught him how to control it. The near-death experience with the derin had triggered his second:
koren
. With it, he’d been able to hide his soul. According to his father, being able to use
koren
shouldn’t have made him impress his will upon other people, but somehow it had. Keedar often wondered if he’d triggered an inner cycle or opened the first of his abilities. His father denied knowledge of any such change, stressing that one needed six cycles, namely all the outer and median ones, to meld. Almost as annoying was father’s refusal to test him for exactly what type of melder he might grow to be. The limitations set not only by Delisar but also by Uncle Keshka were one of the main reasons Keedar frequented the rooftops.

“You’re thinking too much on it.”

“I can’t help myself.”

“Trust me, I know how you feel.”

Keedar doubted Delisar could relate. “Father?”

“Yes?”

“How many more of us are out there?”

Father shrugged, broad shoulders sagging more than usual. “I’m not sure. A few hundred? A thousand? Hopefully enough.”

To Keedar, the numbers were as dreary as the candlelight flickering on the table. “And the King’s Blades? Will they ever acknowledge their heritage?”

“We can only hope they will.”

Confused, Keedar frowned.

“I see the question on your face. Why would they still support the King? Men will do and risk much for a chance at riches and power. Including betray their own. Despite the fact that many of their lives began in the Smear, has that stopped the Blades from killing or arresting one of us, knowing that person could well be their parent? No. Have the deaths on the Day of Accolades ever stopped the parents who wished to give up their children? No. The promise of a better life is a great temptation, no matter how deceiving.”

“Success and survival means everything. Trust no one, betray everyone if need be.” Keedar quoted the Consortium’s mantra.

“Exactly.”

“How can anyone live like that?”

“I often asked myself the same thing,” Father said, regret seeping from his tone, “then I considered us here in the Smear. If we lived that type of a life centuries ago, we would be more than myths and whispered secrets today. Our people wouldn’t be forced to hide like rats in a sewer or waiting to be harvested like some crop. Better to live how we do than to end up bound in a box.”

Keedar shuddered as he considered his father’s words. “If that’s true, then why risk exposing me? Exposing all of us?”

Father bowed, shaking his head. “Your uncle’s plan. We have him and your mother to thank for the few of us alive today. Even if it’s only living in squalor or fear, we’re still free. One day we will regain what we lost.”

The mere mention of Mother brought a surge of pain to Keedar. Although he remembered little of her, he couldn’t help the emotions. They were as natural as the essences of a person’s soul flowing around their body.

“I see the hurt in your face, son. It will pass. No one knows that better than me.” Delisar stood and got into first position, eyes closed, both hands forming a loose circle away from his body. “Come, meditate with me for a while, it will help.”

Keedar followed his father’s lead. With meditation, the process in which one touched soul magic slowed tremendously. He sensed all thirty-two vital points around his body, contained within wispy circles, one inside the other. Those circles held the ten cycles: the three outer, the three median, and the four inner. The latter were an indistinguishable muddle to him. Of the other cycles, five were as clear as a cloudless summer sky, waiting for him to pull on whichever he needed. He longed for the day he could touch his
shi
, the final median cycle that would make him a melder.

He applied pressure, nudging open the points wider. Soul gushed out, forming a thick nimbus. Drawing on
sintu
, he controlled the flow, spreading it evenly around his body. It brought on an immediate sense of relaxation, of completeness. In moments, he was drifting away, weightless, a leaf carried by the currents of his soul.

“At first light, I need you to map routes for a few merchants,” Delisar said. “Consider it as punishment for not sensing my presence today.”

Keedar suppressed a groan. Expressing his displeasure would only get him into deeper trouble. He concentrated on his
sintu
, dreaming of when that last cycle would become available.

A
Count and His Son

W
inslow Cardiff trudged down the hall, seldom noticing the paintings on the wall, and giving nothing more than an absentminded wave to the guards or servants who bowed to him. He should have been livid. But instead of seething, he was crestfallen.

He had ventured into the Smear with such high hopes. Only to have them dashed like the ocean’s swells throwing a ship against a cliff. How did he let three dregs scare him? As loathe as he was to admit it, the dregs had put so much fear into him he’d tasted it. To make matters worse, one of them had saved him.

Keedar.

The boy had to be a melder. No other explanation for what transpired came to mind despite Keedar’s denial. Where there was one, more existed. To think they were hiding within the Smear. Count Cardiff harbored suspicions since the raids sixteen years ago, but none had revealed themselves since. His father would be pleased.
If I decide to tell him.

Not many melders had been discovered in recent years. In decades past, that wasn’t always the case. The Smear was once a place from which the kings chose and found such practitioners of soul magic. These men and women provided the base for many armies in bygone eras when the Kasinian Empire was establishing itself. As time went on, those discoveries grew less, until they were near nonexistent.

And now, he might have unearthed one with some skill in the arts. Surely, the Dominion shone their Light on him.

Contrary to his current demeanor, Winslow managed a slight smile. He would find a way to use Keedar’s ability to his advantage. Until now, Count Cardiff had denied him an apprenticeship with the King’s Blades. With his survival in the Smear, that would no longer be the case. Father or not, the count had to respect the arrangement laid down by the past monarchs.

Similar thoughts had repeated themselves on Winslow’s way home to Mandrigal Hill. He should have been elated at the prospect of becoming a melder, possibly a Blade, of the chance to go off in search of his own destiny, make a mark on the world, but it hurt knowing his achievement had come at the hands of a dreg. He sighed. Regardless, this was the start to a dream. As he strode through the mansion, he swore to make the most of his good fortune.

In the Grand Hall, a guiser had set up a play. Round and soft like a sack of pudding, Felius Carin, possessed a tongue so silvery, he could sell sand to a desert. Winslow paused despite the need to speak to Count Cardiff.

Voice clear and refined like spring water, Felius orated, his double chins jiggling with his pronouncements, while his performers reenacted the story. This one was a comical retelling of how Emperor Ilsindin, the last Dracodarian monarch, convinced many of the Mareshnan kingdoms to side with him by bedding their women, even the lowly commoners. If one were to believe those stories, his philandering spread some bits of soul magic to those not of noble blood. The tales went on to say that it was the king’s prick that eventually got him killed. Something to do with too many deformed births, lack of potent seed, and an angry husband or two. From the tale came the saying that women were the precursor to any man’s downfall, but also that a good woman could make a man stronger. To Winslow, a man’s failure began with bad judgment compounded by a lack of coin.

Enraptured, several nobles watched the play, dressed in fine jackets and trousers or silk dresses lined with embroidery. They seldom clapped for anything, but the patter of their applause resonated down the hall.

Elaina Shenen was among them, her dress gold and blue with a split down the middle from breast to ankle, revealing silver satin with intricate, red scrollwork underneath. She was all curves and curls: her body, her lips, the way she walked, and the black tresses that fell down her back. Winslow shook his head. No matter what his father said, he wasn’t marrying that girl. He had no feelings for her beyond a warming of his loins when she was near, the scent of her perfume a sweet allure. He’d indulged a few times, but such a revelation would cause its own set of issues.

When he drew his attention away from the play, he was standing before the hallway to the count’s chambers. A man strode toward him, sporting a nose that overshadowed the rest of his face, dark hair in coiled braids, and a complexion that stopped short of nobility. A Darshanese, if Winslow’s memory served him right. Cloak aflutter, a small golden sword prominent on his lapel, the stranger bypassed Winslow without any acknowledgement. Seeing a Blade leave his father’s quarters made Winslow wish to be one, while at the same time he despised the man for being a dreg.

With a sigh, he nodded to the yellow-uniformed guards stationed on each side of the foyer and headed to the massive, oak double doors. He stood before the entrance pondering if he should enter. Whorls and carvings in the wood depicted two men fighting with fire. Scales covered their bodies. They were Dracodar: the original melders, the strongest soul magicians that ever lived. Most thought them extinct. His father believed a few still lived.

After sneaking into his father’s study, he understood the count’s obsession with the race. According to his father’s notes and books, legend had it that one could gain a Dracodar’s attributes by ingesting their flesh, blood, or donning their scales. Near impenetrable, a Dracodar’s scales were harder than the strongest metals and more malleable. However, the reports of the creature’s sightings were questionable. Most were rumors. None of them dissuaded Count Cardiff from his pursuit.

Taking a deep breath, Winslow knocked on the door. Moments passed in silence. For the first time, he noticed he still reeked of the Smear’s stench. He hesitated, but it was already too late to turn away.
To hell with it, he will have to understand.

“Enter,” the Count’s deep voice called from inside.

Winslow pushed open the door. Mosquitoes buzzed at him, and he shooed them off. He hated the damned things. They seemed to take too much of a liking to him. He even thought his father enjoyed watching him bat at them. Once, he swore he saw a smile steal across the count’s face. Why his father kept his windows open and curtains tied at dusk was beyond Winslow. If he had his way, he would have closed them long before the insects gathered to invade the chambers. They were a nuisance, alighting themselves on any exposed skin to feed. As the thought crossed his mind, he slapped at one where it pricked the back of his hand.

Smoke rose in wisps from incense around the room. Its sweet aroma mingled with that from scented candles. Sitting at a table with a lamp illuminating his many books and papers was his father, Count Ainslen Cardiff. At times like these, when deep into his studies, a person might mistake the count for being anything but an able-bodied, demanding, and dangerous man. With the horn-rimmed glasses on his nose, he appeared more like a professor than a warrior; more some librarian or assistant rather than one of the most accomplished and deadliest melders outside of the King’s Blades.

People often said Winslow didn’t have much of his father in him. Some even went so far as to spread vile rumors that Count Cardiff was not his father, stating Marjorie had stepped out on him. Of course, they refrained from such statements in public. The report of such a rumor had left more than one man or woman dead. His father’s reaction was the main reason people were careful not to mention his deceased mother or brother within earshot of the count. Referring to them in the wrong light or in any way deemed inappropriate sent his father into a rage. Count Cardiff seldom spoke of them to Winslow. And when he did, his words were steeped in melancholy. On more than one occasion, Winslow had heard his father mutter their names while asleep.

Winslow still recalled the one time several years ago that he’d asked after his mother and Kenslen. Count Cardiff had broken his ribs. He shuddered to think of seeing that murderous glare in the count’s eyes again.

As far as looks went, Winslow could see why some folk thought the way they did regardless of how preposterous the idea was to him. Where his hair was long and obsidian, the count’s was cropped short, brown and curly. Winslow also didn’t have quite the same light skin tone. His shade was a touch darker. Some claimed it to be a trait from his mother’s ancestors. But the two things he felt he had in common with the count were his height and his green eyes.

“It took you long enough to knock on my door. I could smell you from here.” Nose upturned, the count gingerly raised a yellowed piece of vellum to the light and inspected its contents, straining his eyes.

“I was somewhat lost in thought.” If he’d remembered his father’s ability to sense anyone nearby, Winslow would have presented himself sooner.

“So you survived the Smear,” the Count said, tone one of disinterest. “I guess this means I’ll have to appoint you to a Blade.”

“If you think I’m worthy.”

“That doesn’t matter now, does it?”

Winslow said nothing. He preferred not to appear enthusiastic lest the count change his mind for the joy of seeing him beg.

“Well, did you find anyone or anything of interest to report?”

“No. Several from the Snake’s guild set a trap, but some shopkeeper aided us. He let us through his store.”

Shadows flitted across the count’s face as he frowned. “Why would he do that?”

“He didn’t relish the idea of another riot or for the Blades to raid his home.”

“Smart man. I’m disappointed though. I made sure the guilds knew you and Gaston were both counts’ sons. I would have expected them to use that information.”

Winslow felt his eyebrows climb his forehead. He brushed away a nattering mosquito.

“Oh, do not look at me like that. You were both quite safe. Do you think I would risk something happening to my only heir? I had men stationed within the Smear. Still, you weren’t supposed to enter. To be honest, you weren’t to take the Trial at all.” For the first time the count met his gaze, eyes unyielding. “Your mother’s fate could have been yours.”

It took all of Winslow’s will not to fidget or show any reaction under that heated glare. “Why didn’t you have them help us then?”

“Did I send you into the Smear? No? Besides any help from me would have defeated the point of you going there. My people lost you in one of those wretched lanes anyway.”

“And you weren’t worried?”

“I didn’t say that, but showing my concern around the other counts would have been considered a weakness.”

Winslow smirked. A little bolder for Ainslen’s admission, he said, “And you cannot afford that, can you?” All that ever seemed to matter to his father was their precious reputation in the eyes of the court.

“Most certainly not,” the count replied with a shake of his head. “They did mention a young boy trailing you two using the rooftops, but I counted on you being able to handle one child. I’d hate to think all the years having you both tutored in swordmanship and touching your soul went to waste. Unless a person you encountered had developed an actual melding ability, they would not be able to beat either of you, much less both at once.”

It was an offhanded and indirect compliment, but Winslow had become used to his father’s unwillingness to give him praise.
Too much pampering made a man soft. Glorify him and he stops trying.
Winslow didn’t allow himself to relax or feed into his father’s words, keeping his face blank.

“The boy you mention helped us get into the store through which we escaped,” Winslow said. The admission almost made him cringe.

“Some would construe that as a violation of the test.”

“We didn’t ask for his aid,” Winslow protested. “Nor did he physically assist us in a fight.”

“Well, that’s something, I guess.” Ainslen shrugged. “Still, I wouldn’t reveal it to anyone if I were you. Act as if it never happened.”

“And if it comes out?”

“Deny it. We cannot afford such a blemish. Us Cardiffs have the oldest tenure among the Hills. We are as constant as Mandrigal himself, rising to rule each day, despite falling at dusk.” Count Cardiff drew the God of Rebirth’s triangular prayer sign on his forehead. “Remember that every time you feel his warmth. Nothing and no one must stand in the way of us reaching even higher. Mistakes such as the one made today could cost us.”

Winslow bowed his head, not only at the mention of the God, but also to appear sufficiently chastised. If he had his way, politics would be of no concern to him. But he didn’t. It was as much a part of his life as the air he breathed. Not wanting his father to go on one of his tirades, he remained silent, waiting for dismissal, but none came. The count appeared lost in thought. Relieved, Winslow waited.

“I was so sure they would see this as an opportunity not to pass up,” the count muttered to himself. “So why do nothing? What are you planning now? I cannot afford for anything to interfere with our day.” He shook his head and focused on Winslow once more. “Anyway, I will decide which Blade you will apprentice under in a day or two, but do not get your hopes too high. You will learn the basics and nothing more.”

“Yes, Count Cardiff.” Winslow turned to leave.

“Oh, before I forget, have a messenger sent to Antelen Hill. Tell Gaston I wish to speak to him immediately.”

Winslow merely nodded. He’d already gone over their story with his friend. The count would discover nothing new about Keedar. And he’d find a way to convince the boy to teach him all he knew.

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