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Authors: Sasha L. Miller

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What Matters Most

BOOK: What Matters Most
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What Matters Most

By Sasha L. Miller

Standing up for what is right, Kyros has found, is a lonely endeavor. It's also a dangerous one, as the people he's fighting have already killed his friend, threatened others, and are now going after Kryos' mother to finally force him to stand down.

Knowing full well his mother won't listen to the men he's sent to take her to safety, Kyros reluctantly returns home to the village he has not seen in years. But returning home means encountering the man he never forgot, and Kyros find himself forced to choose between doing what is right and what matters most…

Published by Less Than Three Press LLC

Edited by Tanni Fan

Cover designed by Megan Der

This book is a work of fiction and as such all characters and situations are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual people, places, or events is coincidental.

First Edition May 2012

Copyright © 2012 by Sasha L. Miller

Printed in the United States of America

ISBN 9781620040041

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner without written permission of the publisher, except for the purpose of reviews.

Part One

Frost covered the ground liberally, coating the grass and frozen dirt path with a layer of icy white. This late in the year, snow should have already covered the ground, but Kyros wasn't going to knock the good fortune. Snow would have made travel more difficult and slower, and slow travel wasn't something he could afford. He was already taking far too many risks.

Ourenville was a quiet village, far from the beaten path of anyone but the occasional peddler. Kyros mentioned the name of it a few times when he'd first arrived in the capital five years ago, but after the first few baffled reactions, he'd switched to just saying he was from a small village near the eastern border.

That was accurate enough, and there were many of those and no way for the council to track him to any single village quickly.

Ideally, he should be headed for the southern border and the freedom that offered, not headed east, but he knew his mother. She wouldn't be persuaded to leave her home, her neighbors, her life by a mere letter. He also didn't trust that such a letter would arrive without being intercepted, and that would put her at even more risk.

At least no one knew about Raslin. Cold comfort that, especially considering that not even Raslin knew that he could be used against Kyros. Gripping the reins of his stolen horse tightly, Kyros resisted the urge to spur the horse to move faster.

Laming his horse would only slow him down and make things worse.

If he had his bearings, he should be reaching the outlying farms that surrounded Ourenville soon, but he wouldn't really be home until he reached the ruins on the outskirts of town. His mother's house wasn't far from the ruins; he and Raslin had spent many an hour exploring them for ancient treasures when they were younger, though they'd never found more than a bit of carved rock here and there.

Would Raslin still be in Ourenville? Would he remember Kyros, or want anything to do with him? It didn't matter, Kyros thought bitterly, his mouth twisting unhappily. He couldn't stay in Ourenville and he couldn't take Raslin with him, so there was no point in asking those questions.

Kyros just hoped he wasn't a fool for trusting the men who were coming to transport his mother to the coast; that would ruin his entire plan. Jallen and Ambry were good men, though, and they had no loyalty to the council. It didn't hurt that they both had plans to leave the continent before year's end, to start anew in a country that wouldn't consider them as little more than mud on the bottom of its boot.

Kyros rode on. The sun rose higher, but the chill of encroaching winter wasn't dissuaded by the bright sunlight.

Kyros could see his breath misting in the air with each exhale, and the frost stubbornly refused to melt along the edges of the road. The trees he rode by had already shed their leaves, and the fields were empty and idle for the winter.

Smoke rose from the farmhouses, but there was little sign of people out and about. The time of year meant the men would be out hunting or gathering firewood in the woods, with some farmers smoking meat for the winter stores. Kyros frowned, looking up at the clear skies. Hopefully they would stay clear for as long as it took to get his mother safe.

If they had to travel through snow, though, then so be it.

Nudging the horse to move more quickly, Kyros rode towards the ruins ahead. They grew larger and more detailed as he approached, and Kyros was surprised at how much they'd stayed the same. The ruins weren't anything spectacular, just a large circle of stones, carved with intricate runes that made no sense to anyone. There were a few crumbling walls here and there that might have been buildings once, but the only thing that was recognizable was the arch that led into the clearing around which the rest of the stones were situated.

Kyros started to see people here and there as he rode into town. He slowed the horse to a walk, not wanting to cause any alarm or draw any extra attention. He was already getting plenty of attention; more than a few people stopped to stare at him as he rode by. He doubted anyone recognized him. He'd been twenty-five when he'd left Ourenville, and five years was a long time.

His mother's house looked the same as ever. It was a short, traditionally built cottage. The door had been painted a bright green when he'd been seven, but the paint had faded with the years. The curtains were pulled open, and they were still the same: beige-colored and bland. The roof looked like it could use new shingles here or there, and were they staying, Kyros would take care of that. There was a new garden in the front of the house; like the fields Kyros had rode past, it was barren for the winter.

Guiding the horse to a stop in front of the house, Kyros dismounted stiffly. He ignored the aches and pains that came from riding for nearly two weeks straight. Typically, the trip would have taken nearly three weeks, and he was paying for pushing so hard. There was no stable at the house, nor a barn, so he'd have to see about properly stabling the horse later. For the moment, he led it over to a small tree and tethered it there.

Then he grabbed his saddlebags and headed for the house.

He was halfway there when the front door opened. His mother looked the same and much older at the same time. He was abruptly hit with a wave of homesickness, which was entirely stupid considering he was home. The scowl on his mother's face—probably for riding a horse right up to the house—faded away as he approached.

"Kyros," she said, wiping her hands on the flour-covered apron she wore. "Why on earth didn't you write to tell me you were coming?"

Kyros grinned, because that exasperated tone was exactly as he remembered. "It wouldn't have gotten here before I did."

"I suppose," she said, studying him critically. "Well, come in then. You'll have to stable the horse over at the MacRaflin's stable. Pariles' stable burned down last year."

Kyros reached the front stoop, dropping his bags to pull his mother into an embrace. She was smaller, frailer than he remembered, and he hoped she wasn't going to be too upset with him when he told her what was going on. His mother wrapped her arms around him, hugging him tightly before pulling away.

"Leave off that now, you've probably got flour all over your nice jacket there," she scolded, stepping back and eyeing Kyros'

jacket.

"There's too much dust on it to tell," Kyros said, brushing ineffectually at the front of his travel-stained jacket.

"I suppose," she repeated, obviously not satisfied. "Lunch will be ready shortly. There shouldn't be any problem stretching it to feed three." She turned to head back into the house, as though she hadn't said anything strange at all.

"Three?" Kyros repeated, leaning down and picking up his saddlebags. Had she remarried and not told him? Given the reliability of the post, however, she might have written and the letter gotten lost. A new husband would make things more difficult, in more ways than one.

"Yes, three," his mother said, clicking her tongue. "I know I sent you a letter last month … though at that, you were probably gone before it arrived. You remember Raslin, yes?"

"Yes," Kyros said, dread growing in the pit of his stomach.

Surely Raslin hadn't married his mother…

"His sister got married last year and since I have no one to help me with this old heap of a house, we came to the agreement that he could stay here if he helped out around the place. That way, his sister could have their parents' place to start her new family." His mother headed into the house, and Kyros followed her, trying to make sense of that.

"Nikla got married? To who?" Kyros asked as he looked around the house. The house was built to a simple design: a single downstairs room that contained the kitchen, living room and bedroom all in one. The bed was shielded by a simple set of paneling that hadn't been there when Kyros had left. A large fire burned in the kitchen fireplace, heating the house thoroughly and throwing light throughout it. The loft was shadowy and dark, and to Kyros' disappointment, Raslin was nowhere in sight.

"Angelos," his mother replied, her nose wrinkling in distaste.

"Why?" Kyros asked, his eyebrows rising in surprise. He always thought Nikla had better taste. Angelos was well known for trying to get into the bed of any woman who crossed his path.

"She didn't say," his mother said. She shrugged as she headed towards the kitchen table, where a mess of flour and dough was spread. "She was getting older, you know. She was nearly nineteen when he proposed, and no one else in the village had offered."

"Still, Angelos?" Kyros dropped his bags next to the table.

He didn't sit down, though the temptation was there. After all the riding he'd done in the last few weeks, however, he preferred to stand.

"I don't pretend to understand it," his mother said, shaking her head. "That girl hasn't been the same since her parents died, but even still I thought no one was stupid enough to take Angelos."

"When did they die?" Kyros asked quietly, wondering what else he'd missed. Raslin's mother had been severely ill when he'd left—one of the reasons Raslin hadn't come with him—but his father had been in perfect health. No one had mentioned anything different in the few letters he'd received.

"Carly died a few months after you left. Gorge a year or so later, after he was injured helping out on the Whelin's farm and it turned septic," his mother said, pursing her lips. "It was just the two of them for the last few years, and I know Raslin tried to help Nikla find a better husband, but that girl's got a stubborn streak a mile wide."

"I remember," Kyros said. When the three of them had been younger, Nikla had thrown fits—very extensive fits— whenever Raslin and he tried to do something without her.

Nikla had also been very particular about how she wanted to play, and arguing with her never worked. Perhaps her stubbornness was how she'd been able to make a marriage with Angelos work?

"In any case, what's done is done." His mother clucked her tongue, wordlessly stating her disapproval. "You should go get your horse settled; we can catch up properly when you return.

Raslin should be back shortly; he was spending the morning patching some of the holes in Whelin's chicken coop so he might keep his chickens through the winter."

"All right. I'll be back shortly," Kyros said, his heartbeat taking up a notch at the thought of seeing Raslin again. He wanted to see Raslin, even if he was only going to be in town until Jallen and Ambry showed up to escort his mother to the coast. Maybe seeing Raslin again would be enough to finally put his feelings for Raslin to rest, though Kyros doubted it, considering they hadn't faltered in the five years he'd been away from Ourenville.

Leaving the house, Kyros headed towards the tree where he'd tethered his horse. It was still there, with a few young children gawking at it from nearby. Kyros smothered a grin, ignoring them as he approached the horse. One of the children shoved another, and there was a short tussle before the one who'd shoved first took off running down the road. That prompted the other one to yell something about not fair and take off after the first. Kyros shook his head, wondering who they were off to tell that there was a stranger in town.

It took him far too long to walk the horse across town, and then endure the small talk that MacRaflin's wife wanted to engage in—she finally grudgingly accepted that he would stop by for a chat later, after he properly caught up with his mother.

The MacRaflin boy helped him settle his horse, though he was too small yet to do more than fetch things when Kyros asked after them.

Finally, he headed back to his mother's house. As he drew close, his steps slowed. What was he going to say to Raslin?

How did he get his mother to leave? What if the council didn't believe Raslin knew nothing, and tried to get information from him using their more "creative" means? What if his mother told Raslin? Kyros had already accepted he'd have to tell her everything, but he couldn't justify telling Raslin and putting him in danger, too.

BOOK: What Matters Most
8.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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