Read Blood and Iron: The Book of the Black Earth (Part One) Online
Authors: Jon Sprunk
Horace struck the wardrobe, shoulder first. Wood exploded as he burst through the door panel and fell, half inside and half out of the cabinet. Heavy footsteps slapped on the floor behind him. Pulling himself out of the wardrobe, Horace felt a sharp pain jabbing him under the ribs. Looking down, he saw a piece of wood sticking out of his right side. Blood soaked into his clothes. He pulled on the end of the giant splinter and hissed as it came free. He swayed back against the frame of the wardrobe just as a line of raw agony ripped across his abdomen. More blood dripped from a set of three parallel cuts that ran across his stomach from hip to hip like he'd been attacked by some wild beast.
With memories of the
kurgarru
fresh in his mind, Horace twisted away and flung himself toward the door. Something thin and ropelike caught his ankle, and he sprawled headlong onto the floor. His blood was everywhere, coating his hands and making it difficult to find traction on the slick tiles. He clawed his way to one of the bed's foot posts. He was hauling himself up it when a scream rang out from elsewhere in the suite.
Alyra.
His fear vanished. Fingertips tingling, Horace opened himself to the power. The pain of his injuries was shoved away. All he could feel was the
zoana
, urging him to lash out. He turned around. A huge shape rose before him, the top of its head almost brushing the ten-foot-high ceiling. Although he couldn't make out many details in the dark, Horace knew at once it was nothing human. And nothing like any animal he'd ever seen either. Rubbery appendages hung from its head, wriggling like a nest of serpents, and horn-like projections rose from the backs of its long arms. The awful stench rolled off of it.
Clenching his teeth to keep from vomiting, Horace thrust out his right hand. The power inside him hesitated for an instant, like a hiccup, and then
erupted, not from his outstretched hand, but from his chest. The pain flared inside him, so powerful that his vision dimmed and his muscles locked up in an agonizing rictus.
Strangest of all, he didn't see anything happen. No ray of fire shot across the room, no orb of ice or stone, no gust of wind. Nothing at all like the elemental dominions he'd been taught about. And yet the creature staggered back as if it had been struck by a battering ram. A titanic roar resounded off the walls. Horace winced as he poured out more of his power, concentrating through the rising pain. Starlight filtered through a cloud of dust forming behind the creature where his power was chewing a hole in the wall. The monster tried to resist the invisible force, growling and swiping at the air with its hooked talons. Tile crackled as its horned toes dug into the floor. Yet it could not reach him. Horace looked around. He could hold the creature at bay, it seemed, but it would be on him the moment he let up. He didn't see how he could get to Alyra without releasing it.
A large shape loomed in Horace's peripheral vision. He ducked, but too late as the chair crashed into him, heaved by his attacker. The heavy furniture struck him on the side of the shoulder and spun him completely around. Horace grasped the bedpost to keep from falling. His right arm felt like it had been torn from the socket.
He shoved away from the post as the beast's shadow towered over him. With no time to think, he just reacted. His power flared again, and again there was no visible effect, but he sensed a sudden and dreadful connection to the creature, throbbing in his hand as if he held the creature's beating heart. He could feel the blood pumping through that mighty muscle, strong and fierce. Horace wasn't sure what he was doing, but in that instant he didn't care. He squeezed his fingers.
The creature halted, grasping its chest with both hands. Horace tightened his fist, and the creature teetered back, tearing its own flesh away in bloody strips to dig inside. Spurred on by this behavior, Horace twisted his fist sideways and yanked. A hollow gurgle issued from the creature's mouth as it fell on its side with an impact that shook the floor. A crystal candleholder rolled off the sideboard table and broke. The creature didn't move.
Horace ran for the door. The sitting parlor was dark, but enough starlight came through the large window for him to navigate between the divans. He kicked open Alyra's door. Candlelight flickered against the walls and cast deep shadows in the corners of the small room. Alyra stood against the far wall, her white tunic drenched in blood from long scratches across her upper chest. She waved a long knife back and forth as if fending off something she could not see.
Horace reached for his powers again. He found it more difficult this time, like trying to exercise a fatigued muscle. The magic came back slowly instead of the instant rush he'd felt before. Once it came, though, his view of the room changed. A horrible, squat shape appeared in front of Alyra. It hissed from a dog-like snout as it pawed the air, trying to get past her weapon.
Ignoring his throbbing shoulder, Horace snatched up the chair beside Alyra's desk and approached the creature from behind. Alyra glanced up, and her eyes grew wide as she looked over his head. “Behind you!”
A heavy weight dropped on his back. Claws dug into his shoulders as he was knocked to the floor. The chair clattered out of his grip, and Horace found himself pinned face-down by what felt like a small pony perched on his lower back. He tried to push up, but his right arm was useless, and his left lacked the strength to move both him and his assailant. Alyra yelled as deep scratches opened across her knee and slashed with her knife, but the creature stayed beyond her reach. Then Horace's vision was wrenched away as the thing on top of him yanked his head back by the hair. Thin claws grasped for the front of his throat.
Horace struggled to buck the creature off his back, but he was held fast. Blood dribbled down his neck as the claws dug deeper. Then the grasp holding him went limp, and the weight slid off his back. Horace scrambled away. Another small demon lay on the floor with a knife hilt protruding from its throat. Alyra had jumped up on her bed as the other creature swiped at her ankles. Horace lunged and grabbed it by the bony leg. A fierce heat erupted inside him, filling him with tremendous strength. He jerked his arm and flung the creature across the room. Its impact dented the stone wall and knocked mortar loose from the ceiling. The dog-faced thing dropped beside its brother and did not move again. Yellow ichor dripped from its head, which was caved in down to the bridge of its snout.
Horace rolled over onto his back. The fire inside him was dwindling, leaving him wrung out and exhausted. Alyra sat on her bed, her chin drooping to her lacerated chest. He crawled over to her and touched her leg, careful not to aggravate her wounds. “Are you all right?”
She nodded, looking as tired as he felt. “I think so. What about y— oh, your arm!”
His right arm hung slack, leaking blood from several cuts and a deep tear where it joined to his shoulder. Oddly, it didn't hurt too badly. Then his sense of balance abandoned him without warning. Alyra caught him by his good arm as he fell back against the wall with a minimal amount of jarring.
Horace took a deep breath. His chest ached behind the breastbone. “I'm okay. Just give me a moment.”
Alyra grabbed a sheet from her bed and tied it around his injured arm. “I've heard about your powers, but I never believed…I mean, to see the
zoana
in action…. It's amazing.”
Horace sighed as the pressure dug into his wound. “I'm still trying to wrap my head around it. One day I'm a normal guy, and the next I'm a…I don't know. A freak.”
“You're not a freak!” She brushed a hand through his sweaty hair. “We would be dead if not for what you did. I was so scared. I couldn't control it.”
“You didn't look scared to me. You looked brave, like an angel of vengeance. All you needed was a flaming sword.”
Her laughter was a good sound. One he wanted to hear again. Horace started to close his eyes when a loud crash echoed from outside the room. The front door had been forced open. He stood up, grimacing as the room tilted around him. “I'll take care of it,” he said through gritted teeth. “Barricade the door behind me.”
But Alyra had already retrieved her knife from the dead demon. “No. We're both going out there together.”
“Alyra—”
She opened the door, and Horace had no choice but to go with her. He felt shaky, and the fire of the
zoana
no longer tingled in his veins. He clenched his fists, willing it to return as he stepped into the sitting area. Bright light shone
from the foyer. With Alyra beside him, Horace lifted his good hand, intent on unleashing whatever power he had left on the first thing that walked through the archway. They both sighed in relief when a pair of the Queen's Guard shouldered their way into the room with swords bared.
While the soldiers searched the bedchambers, Horace sat on the arm of a divan. Alyra curled up beside him. “They say people heard horrible noises throughout the palace,” she said.
“Those things made enough racket to wake the dead. What in the Almighty's name were they?”
“I don't know. When they appeared, all I could think of was…”
“Demons,” Horace finished for her.
“Yes. Just like the stories my mother told me when I was little.”
“I've seen the images carved on the walls of the basilica at Arnos. They don't look anything like those creatures.”
She shivered as she pressed against him. More soldiers entered the suite, until the rooms were filled with men in armor. All of them held a weapon ready as if another attack was imminent. Eventually, a flock of royal physicians entered. Horace reclined on the divan and closed his eyes while the doctors worked on him. After a few minutes, the sounds of their voices faded away, and he drifted back to sleep.
“O Sippa, lady of the moon, watch over your city, for we are beset by darkness in the night and need your light to guide our footsteps. Protect us from the evils of the world until we return to the safety and comfort of your breast.”
The alabaster statue of the goddess towered over Byleth as she whispered the supplication in the inner sanctum of the Moon Temple, where only royalty and the high priestess were allowed to enter. Though not as grandiose as the Temple of Amur on the other side of the Street of Gods, this shrine was larger than most palaces. It had been the spiritual heart of the city since its founding, whatever the Sun Cult might choose to believe.
When she was a girl, she hadn't paid much attention to the priestesses or their teachings, which had seemed out of touch with the real world. Yet as she grew older, the gods seemed nearer to her every day, especially the patroness of her city.
Lady goddess, tell me what to do. What advice would you have given my father?
She had been thinking about her father more and more in recent days. After years of hating him for throwing his life away, she finally felt she had begun to understand him. The throne was not as comfortable as it appeared from afar. Almost all the noble Houses had abandoned her over the past few weeks as her wedding day approached. Oh, they replied to her overtures for assistance with polite words, but she could read the truth behind the pretty phrases. They had been seduced by the Sun Temple. She was alone except for a handful of viziers and court functionaries.
With a sigh, Byleth bowed to the goddess and turned away. Mother Iltani stood in the doorway. Her bright white robe gleamed like polished alabaster. Though her face was lined with deep wrinkles, her smile was warm and vibrant. “Someone is waiting for you, Majesty,” she said. “In the nave.”
Byleth had known the high priestess of Sippa for most of her life. “Thank you. I'm done here.”
The priestess joined her at the center of the room and took her hands. Mother Iltani's fingers were thin and bony with paper-fine skin, but their grip was still firm. She looked up, and Byleth followed her gaze through the round hole in the ceiling. The three-quarters-full moon shone down on them.
“I've been praying for you, Majesty,” Mother Iltani said. “Right here every night, a prayer to the Silver Lady to deliver you from the forces that threaten our city.”
“I appreciate that. I hope the Lady answers, and soon.”
“She will or she will not. As I told your father many times in this very chamber, it is not for us to command the gods, but to listen and bend to their wishes. That goes for kings and queens as well as for the farmers in their fields and the cooks in the kitchen.”
“And what would you have advised my father if he was in my position?”
Mother Iltani patted Byleth's hands. “That even the tallest tree must bend before the storm, or be broken by its fury.”
But I'm not fighting a storm. I'm battling schemers and plotters who want to steal my throne.
Byleth kissed the priestess's cheek and left the chamber. She found Lord Mulcibar in the temple's main chamber, standing before a marble frieze. “I didn't think I would see you again this night, my lord.”
Mulcibar bowed to her and straightened up slowly. “Forgive me for intruding on Your Majesty's devotions.”
“I was finished anyway. I'm not much for kneeling and praying, even though I could use the divine assistance. What of our new First Sword?”
“I saw him back to his rooms at the palace. He may have celebrated his good fortune a bit too much.”
Byleth caught the evasive sideward glance. “You still don't approve of his promotion.”
“It is not for me to—”
“Forget decorum, Mulcibar. Speak plainly.”
He cleared his throat. “No, I don't believe it was in the best interests.”
“Whose best interest? Horace's or my own?”
“Both. Lord Horace is very powerful, but he's not in full control of his
zoana
. Furthermore, he doesn't possess the knowledge or political acumen to act as a proper First Sword. Lord Hunzuu—”
“Lord Hunzuu failed to protect his queen.” She lowered her voice as it echoed through the large stone chamber. There was no one else here, but you could never be too careful. “He was given a warrior's death, which was more than he rightfully deserved after the catastrophe in the desert.”
“That much is true. Yet Lord Horace isn't prepared to handle this responsibility. He has no allies and no protection outside of Your Majesty's favor.”
“What about you? I was under the impression that you thought highly of our visitor from across the sea.”
“I do. He is intelligent, thoughtful, and not at all what I imagined a man from the West would be like. However…forgive me, Majesty, but elevating Lord Horace to the
zoanii
caste will not solve your impending troubles.”
She sighed and rubbed her fingers together. “Am I that obvious, my lord?”
“Only to someone who has known you since birth. Forgive my candor, but your court will never accept Lord Horace as your royal consort, much less their new king. And, if I may, it would only make your situation more untenable.” He bowed his head. “If I have spoken too freely, please accept my sincere apology. But you are my primary concern, Majesty. Your protection and the continuation of your line.”
“Yes, yes. No one is questioning your loyalty, Lord Mulcibar.” She didn't look down at his lame leg, which would have shamed his pride, but she allowed the tilt of her head to convey that she was aware of it. “You've given more than anyone has a right to ask. Have you found out anything new about the crash?”
When they had returned to the city, Byleth charged Lord Mulcibar with discovering the author of the attack. No one knew the city's politics better than her father's trusted vizier.
“Nothing of note, Majesty,” he replied. “I've placed Lord Gilgar's family and acquaintances under surveillance, including his brother. I don't expect to find anything. House Mamaunothos had nothing to gain by Your Majesty's demise and everything to lose.”
She agreed privately. When they had returned from the crash, her first action—after bathing away the stink of sweat and river mud—had been to
summon Xantu and force him to submit to a thorough mind-sifting. She'd found no hint of disloyalty in him, nothing that tied him to Gilgar's treachery. In fact, when she had informed him of the events on the riverbank, he had been genuinely enraged that his twin could do such a thing. But she was no closer to understanding why Gilgar would betray her. She had known both brothers since they were children. The treachery was a bitter knife in her breast.
“What about the other nobles?” she asked.
“They are restless, Majesty.”
“A result of naming a savage as my First Sword, without a doubt.”
“Quite possible. But I would have heard if any of the city's major Houses were planning an attempt on this scale.”
She turned to face the frieze. It showed a huge, round moon hanging over the city's skyline. She assumed it was intended to be soothing, but it made her feel lonely. “Forgive me, my lord. We both know who was behind both attacks.”
“You mean the Cult of Amur.”
“Of course. Who else has the means and the audacity to strike at the crown? I'd wager that slug Rimesh was behind it.”
“That is a bold accusation. One that should not be voiced in court without some form of proof. There have already been demonstrations in the public squares, Your Majesty.”
“Riots?” she asked.
“Not as yet, but the temple soldiers do nothing to quell the civil unrest. And so it grows. If you'll heed my counsel, now is not the time for a confrontation.”
“Then what? Shall I ignore that the menarch tried to have me killed?”
“I'm only suggesting that we proceed with care. Allow me to make more inquiries, gather evidence. If the Sun Temple was behind these attacks, I'll find out.”
“Fine.” Byleth wanted to pull out her hair, but instead she placed a gentle hand on his shoulder. “We'll do as you suggest, for now. But time is running short.”
He bowed nearly to his waist. “I will do everything in my power.”
“I know you will. Come to me the moment you learn anything.”
“Of course. And there is one other matter I wished to discuss.” He took a breath. “This is a matter I am loathe to discuss with Your Majesty, but I feel I must.”
She didn't like how this sounded, but she nodded for him to continue. “Go on, my lord.”
“It concerns Lord Astaptah, Majesty.”
Byleth lifted her right eyebrow to let him know he was treading on dangerous ground.
Mulcibar cleared his throat, which turned into a choking cough. When he recovered, he said in a reedy voice, “Majesty, I fear you might have entered into an unsafe arrangement with his lordship. Please forgive an old man, but I swore a sacred oath to your father, to watch over you and protect you in all matters. I clearly failed in regard to Lord Gilgar, but I do not wish to fail again.”
Byleth studied her oldest counselor. How much did he know? Or was this all based on suspicion? What would he do if he learned the truth about her pact with Astaptah? “I appreciate your concern, my lord, but my dealings with Lord Astaptah do not fall under your purview.”
“As you say, Majesty.”
As the old nobleman started to leave, two soldiers in royal uniform entered the temple. They knelt when they spotted her. “Majesty!” one said.
Byleth opened a pathway to her
zoana
as she strode toward them. Since the crash, she had lost much of her trust in her servants, seeing a potential assassin in every face. “What is it?”
“The palace,” the soldier said. He was sweating profusely. “There's been an attack.”
“On the royal residence?” Lord Mulcibar asked. Byleth noticed that the old man had nonchalantly stepped between her and the soldiers. The gesture was touching.
“No, my lord,” the soldier answered. “In the First Sword's rooms.”