In His Arena 1: Slave Eternal

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Authors: Nasia Maksima

Tags: #LGBT; Epic Fantasy

BOOK: In His Arena 1: Slave Eternal
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Table of Contents

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Epilogue

Loose Id Titles by Nasia Maksima

Nasia Maksima

In His Arena 1:

SLAVE ETERNAL

 

Nasia Maksima

 

 

 

www.loose-id.com

In His Arena 1: Slave Eternal

Copyright © November 2014 by Nasia Maksima

All rights reserved. This copy is intended for the original purchaser of this e-book ONLY. No part of this e-book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without prior written permission from Loose Id LLC. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author's rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

 

Image/art disclaimer: Licensed material is being used for illustrative purposes only. Any person depicted in the licensed material is a model.

 

eISBN 9781623006174

Editor: Larke Butler

Cover Artist: Fiona Jayde Media

Published in the United States of America

 

Loose Id LLC

PO Box 806

San Francisco CA 94104-0806

www.loose-id.com

 

This e-book is a work of fiction. While reference might be made to actual historical events or existing locations, the names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Warning

This e-book contains sexually explicit scenes and adult language and may be considered offensive to some readers. Loose Id LLC’s e-books are for sale to adults ONLY, as defined by the laws of the country in which you made your purchase. Please store your files wisely, where they cannot be accessed by under-aged readers.

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Dedication

To all those who love a good Spectacle.

And to the real Athanasia Maksiminia. Thank you for allowing me to be your identity thief.

Acknowledgment

In addition to the historical aspects of this book (with which I have taken liberties), I must claim some inspiration from Suzanne Vega’s song, “The Queen and the Soldier,” and an attempt to explore how a society might spring up that justifies all manner of atrocities in the name of sovereign and Spectacle.

Prologue

Of all the sorcerous powers in Arena

The most terrifying were those

Of the Vulpinius slaver-priests.

It was said that only true love could break their enslavement.

—Prio Vulpinius of House of Vulpinius, the Slaver-Priests

Dawn came, molten and stifling, threading silvery fingers through the iron grates of the dungeon at the Ludus Magnii, and wakening the captives beneath the courtyard. Soon their moans and mutterings would be overpowered by the shouts of men-at-arms—novice gladiators and their masters—risen at first light to train at Arena’s most glorious sport.

But until the sun crested the high tier of the ruling House of Zaerus and shone down on the main amphitheatre, the captives—yesterday’s vanquished—had only their shame to keep them company.

Shame and the knowledge that their conquerors would come to stake their Victor’s Claim anon.

Lucan moaned, the shadow of the iron lattice like a brand across his face. Even the dank dimness of the Claim was no proof against the scorching temperatures of Arena, Land of the Desert Kings. The heat needled Lucan to full wakefulness, but it was the heavy rattling of his chains that sank dread deep into his gut.

This was not the first time he’d been jailed in the dungeon of the Claim.

It was not the first time he’d been granted the Mercy.

As a gladiator, he was an expensive commodity, and the Empress, blind though she was, did not believe in wasting life. At least not a life that brought the masses to her Grand Amphitheatre to spend their bronze
triens
and
quadrans
. In the gloom, he twisted, chained to the sweaty stone wall, alone with his humiliation—the humiliation of losing to an opponent, of being left alive.

It would not be the last time.

He would suffer the Mercy again before his career ended—when he finally took the iron of another, better man into his flesh. Until that time, and for as long as the blind Empress sat the throne of Arena and ordered Spectacles for her amusement, Lucan’s life was not his own.

If only I could compete in a
true
Spectacle as a real gladiator instead of as one of the Unnamed.
Lucan’s heart soared at the very idea.
A real Spectacle with real honor attached. Not just these second-rate Diversions.

But Lucan had no notion of how to change his fate. His house had neither the
denarii
nor the trainers to mold him into a proper gladiator. Oh, he fought with net and trident like a
retiarius
gladiator, but he was not skilled enough to be worthy of that title.

The morning’s heat cast him in sweat, making his wrists slippery in the manacles, giving him the illusion of being able to escape. He groaned as he remembered the blasting sun of the Empress’s Theatre, the screams of the bloodthirsty throng in the stands. The theatre’s curved walls augmenting each shout, each cry, until it seemed he was swathed in victory. How they’d cheered for him as he struck his opponent a devastating blow with the haft of his trident, dropping the man to his knees.

How those cheers had turned against him when the man—a lowly
noxii
criminal— recovered. A quick lash of his spear, and down Lucan went. The impact stole his breath, dazing him just long enough for the battle to turn, for his opponent to seize the day.

Two rapid punches. His victory dashed in the brightness of shooting pain.

And then it had been Lucan struggling in the sand, choking on the blood from a broken nose.

I should have used the prongs instead of the haft. I should have spilled his guts
. The masses always wanted guts and gore. They had screamed for Lucan’s gory death. But the Empress had denied them.

The arena was fickle.

The Empress even more so.

Even now, her white image was branded in his mind—her skin so fair it was marble in the sun, her chestnut-brown hair flowing in a breeze so high it touched only her; her jade-green eyes sightless yet all-seeing, for it was said the Empress was touched by the Doomsayer, Master of Souls, and that she kept his secrets behind her eyes.

She had raised her left hand, palm level with the earth, and in the deafening hush of the crowd, had tilted her thumb downward.

“To the ground!” came her herald’s shout.

Lucan’s opponent had obeyed, and his gladius speared the ground instead of Lucan’s nape.

He had avoided the iron. It had been narrow, his escape from death, and the masses had not liked it. Lucan, slave and man-at-arms of House Pineus, was favored only for his beauty in the arena. Once that had been spoiled by blood and the broken nose, the plebes had turned.

Now, the injury throbbed, lighting Lucan’s skull in dashes of pain, dull and then sharp. The manacles bit into his wrists, and he chided himself for his poor showing. To allow a downed man to take him! If only his initial cast with his net had been true. Lucan’s cheeks burned. He knew what the plebes said in the back alleys—that
retiarii
like him were inferior fighters, better at snaring women with their looks than they were at snaring trained men with their nets. Humiliation seared through him, hotter than the sting of his wounds, harder than the throbbing of his broken nose.

If only I could somehow afford proper training!

Then he would prove them all wrong, prove that he was a true retiarius, worthy of being among the ranks of gladiators, worthy of being Named, and just as skilled as the shield-bearing
secutor
gladiators and the flashier myrmidons.

I am more than just a pretty boy with a net and trident.

“Golden,” the masses called him in homage to his fairness—blond hair and golden eyes, the likes of which were rare in Arena. “Golden!” they screamed when he was victorious in the Diversions.

It was not enough.

Lucan wanted to compete in a full Spectacle—a real contest of arms between trained gladiators. He wanted to earn his name. To hear them shout “Lucan! Lucan!” instead of “Golden!”

At eighteen years, he was strapping, muscular, and quick. All he lacked was the training that would catapult him from the ranks of lowly Unskilled man-at-arms to celebrated gladiator. The truth stung.

Lucan of House Pineus was good, but he was not great.

He would never win his freedom in the Empress’s Theatre. When his beauty faded, he would die like countless others before him, his body hooked and dragged through the sands by the jackal-headed priests of the Doomsayer, stripped and burned, his ashes boiled down into tinctures squabbled over by the weak and infirm. His armor sold to the diseased, the leprous, the depraved, and the dissolute.

His soul would go to the Doomsayer’s Abyss a failure, to be a slave even in the underworld and wander the Harrowing at the behest of the victorious. That was the fate of Lucan of House Pineus.

And as for House Pineus itself…it was two triens from ruin.

The morning sun beat down through the grates, and the stench of burning wood and flesh crept across the courtyard of the great Ludus Magnii, and into Lucan’s cell. Even now, the Doomsayer’s priests burned the bodies of those who had been denied the Mercy.

With a groan, Lucan writhed in his chains. He would almost rather be among the vanquished dead than this—shackled in the Claim, his humiliation to be witnessed by the passing students of all the gladiatorial schools.

Any moment now, the novices would throng the courtyard, fresh from their morning exercises, and jeer and poke at yesterday’s defeated. Thankfully, the grates were too narrow for stones, but it was not uncommon for the novices to urinate on failures of the arena, especially the Unskilled. Lucan could only hope his victor would want a more private claiming and close the privacy screen below the grates.

If he pleased his victor, he would be released.

The thought brought a taste of copper to his mouth. He remembered his last victor, a hulking man named Agrippa. He’d held Lucan down by the back of the neck while he’d plowed him in hard, fast strokes. Lucan had been deliciously sore after the pounding. Fire scalded his cheeks.

He hated losing in the arena, but sometimes the punishments were worth it.

His cock stirred beneath his loincloth, and he licked his lips, breaking the crust of sand and blood from the arena. He hadn’t been plowed like that for a long time.

He needed it.

His arms stretched over his head, he could not even touch himself to bring relief. He struggled uselessly, but struggling only increased his need. The chains were heavy and thick, designed to be burdensome. He rather doubted that even his strength could pull them from their moorings high above. His wrists ached from supporting his weight while he slept. He flexed his fingers to restore the blood flow. Sweat crawled down his back and shoulders.

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