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Authors: M. H. Bonham

Tags: #Fantasy, #Fiction

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BOOK: Lachlei
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CHAPTER Eleven

 

Fialan awoke to darkness. He lay against hard ground and groaned.
How long had he been out?
he wondered.
Not long,
he thought, as he gazed into the dark sky. It had been night when they had been attacked on the King’s Highway. Perhaps it had only been a few hours.

And yet, Fialan’s mind whirled with the inconsistencies. Something was different now. Despite his dizziness and confusion, Fialan felt no pain. The night had been a rare moonless night, but now as Fialan opened his eyes again, he realized that there were no stars. It was truly dark here.

Fialan sat up. The memories flooded back. He had been in a forest when the
Silren
had attacked. No, not a
Silren
, Fialan corrected himself. It had been a demon of some sort. It had killed his entire personal
Chi’lan
guard and their horses with a glance. He had wounded the demon and it had…

No!

Fialan looked around frantically for some familiarity, but saw none. He was no longer in a forest, but instead sat on a cold, windswept plain covered with dry grasses that looked sharp to the touch. The sky was beginning to turn blood red in what he could only guess as being east.

He shut his eyes again as he remembered the demon looming over him. The intense pain as he felt his very life force sucked away to feed it…

“So, you’ve finally come around,” came a voice. A feminine voice.

Fialan turned and saw a female
Chi’lan
standing next to him. She was tall, wearing old-style scale mail sewn into a jack, and a conical helm with a noseguard. She leaned against a polearm as she offered him her hand.

Fialan took her hand and stood up. He could barely make out her features in the dim light, but he could tell she was beautiful. “Who are you?” he asked. “Where am I?”

She looked as if she had answered the questions many times before. “I am Eshe,
Chi’lan
warrior. I died in the Battle of the Nine Worlds, killed by a
Jotunn
. You’re in Areyn’s Realm, called
Tarentor
. You’re dead.”

*****

 

The walk from the mountain to Caer Lochvaren had tired Rhyn’athel. While his body was in peak condition, the god hadn’t expected the limits a mortal body imposed. Rhyn’athel had eaten no food, and he suspected part of the weariness was due to lack of it. He could augment his strength using his own powers, but Rhyn’athel thought it might attract unwanted attention from Areyn. If he couldn’t handle the basics of being mortal without using his powers, what chance did he have convincing Areyn Sehduk he
was
simply a mortal?

Lachlei led the three into Caer Lochvaren, past the guards and the torchlight at the stockade fence, and through the cobblestone streets of the lower grody. Caer Lochvaren had been built on the side of a mountain in the Lochvaren Mountains, ringed by valleys and hills. Outside the city, vast fields of wheat and barley lay cut, already harvested and laying fallow until the spring.

 Merchant shops and taverns lined the streets of the grody. The buildings were wooden or wattle and daub, suggesting a certain amount of recentness or impermanence to the structures. Rhyn’athel noted that while most of the dwellers were
Lochvaur
, there were many other kindreds here and even a few
Ansgar
. Despite the time of night, the buildings were lit and there were people walking about.

“Caer Lochvaren has grown considerably within the past few centuries. Since our truce with the
Silren
, we’ve been able to focus on our lives, not war,” Lachlei said, seeing Rhyn’s interest in his surroundings.

“Indeed,” Rhyn said. The sensations of this world were almost overwhelming, and he realized he was grinning foolishly.

“It’s not much,” she ventured. “But we’ve had so very little time to put up better defenses.”

Rhyn nodded. “It’s larger than North Marches,” he said, trying to sound casual. “How many live here?”

Lachlei smiled. “The city, itself, has only forty thousand or so

but not all are
Lochvaur
, as you can see.” She paused. “The outlying areas, maybe a hundred thousand more. Fifty thousand soldiers; maybe of those, two thousand
Chi’lan
.”

“How many
Chi’lan
are there in North Marches?” Cahal asked.

Rhyn thought of North Marches, his supposed home.
How many were there in that village?
His mind reached out to survey the village and felt the equivalent of a hard slap. He hesitated, trying again to focus on the village…

“Rhyn?” Lachlei asked, breaking the god’s concentration. His eyes had become glassy. They now returned to meet her gaze. “Are you all right?”

Rhyn smiled weakly. “Sorry, I get distracted when I’m tired.”

Lachlei shook her head. “Of course, you’ve had a long ride.” She turned to Cahal. “Can you bring him to the Great Hall and see to his needs, Cahal? I must meet the Council and discuss this vote with them. Kellachan?”

Rhyn was going to object, but nodded instead. He didn’t want to leave her — now that he was mortal. But he didn’t want her to suspect he was anything other than a
Chi’lan
. Not yet. Not now. “I will see you later?”

“I’m sure you will,” she said. Lachlei turned to her cousin and motioned him to follow her.

Rhyn watched Lachlei as she disappeared from sight and felt a tap on his shoulder. He turned to see Cahal grinning at him.

“She is beautiful, isn’t she?” the
Chi’lan
remarked.

“That she is,” Rhyn agreed.

“Come on, let’s get you some food,” Cahal said and led Rhyn in the opposite direction.

Rhyn’athel followed silently, lost in his thoughts. He felt rather foolish at his reaction to her and everything around him. He felt so transparent

it would be simple for Areyn Sehduk to find him if he continued to act as if everything was new. He was a god

he created most of the things in this world. He knew the very secrets of the Nine Worlds

where the Runestones lay, where the Web of Wyrd touched the fabric of this world, where the
Fyr
lay chained

but he gawked at simple things like a village or a woman. Rhyn’athel had thought that knowing was the same as experiencing. He was quickly getting a lesson in the experience area.

“I’d be a little more subtle, if I were you,” Cahal remarked, breaking the god out of his reverie. They halted at the main gates to Caer Lochvaren.
Chi’lan
and soldiers guarded the massive iron gates that protected the fortress inside. They nodded to Cahal as both he and Rhyn’athel passed through.

Rhyn’athel hesitated, but he could see Cahal smiling. “Don’t worry

I won’t say anything,” the
Chi’lan
assured him. “That’s the first time Lachlei has smiled since Fialan’s death. And Rhyn’athel only knows why she decided to accept the throne. Lachlei wouldn’t even consider it before you appeared.”

CHAPTER Twelve

 

Fialan stared at Eshe. “What? I can’t be dead!”

Eshe smirked as she leaned against the polearm. “Really?” she said. “What was the last thing you remember before you woke up here?”

“I was in a battle with a demon that looked like a
Silren
…” he began. He paused as the voices came unbidden to his mind.

“What are you? Demon?”

“Your death. I grow weary of this game.”

“I can’t be dead. What about Lachlei? My son, Haellsil? My kingdom?” He tried desperately to access the mind-link he shared with Lachlei, but it was gone. Fialan stared at Eshe in disbelief. “The mind-link

what happened to it?”

Eshe sighed, looking bored. “They all say this

or something like it.” She eyed him in amusement. “So, you were a king?”

“Heir of Lochvaur,” he said. “First-blood.”

“You’ll find Lochvaur here too,” she said. “I fought for him. Your titles and bloodlines have little meaning here. Your first-blood powers will not work anymore.”

Fialan drew a sharp inward breath and then shook his head. “I can’t be dead

I breathe.”

“You have a body in this world,” said Eshe. “Courtesy of Areyn.” She turned and began to walk away.

“Where are you going?” Fialan called after her, running to catch up.

“Back to the others,” Eshe said. “My job with you is done until Areyn calls me again.”

“Areyn calls you again?” Fialan repeated. “What is that supposed to mean?”

Eshe turned to him and for a moment, she looked as though she might strike him. Instead, something flickered in her eyes

pity?
Her silver eyes then hardened. “You’ll learn soon enough, Fialan.”

*****

 

Lachlei strode into the High Council of the
Lochvaur
. The Council room was a large hall, hewn from oak, with exposed rafters and tall clerestories that brought in light. It was dark and smoky inside. A firepit with a crackling fire sat in the middle with rows of benches arranged before it for the nobles. The ruddy light cast shadows on the nobles’ faces, but she could see that many were still here. A small dais with two thrones sat along the back wall. Red and gold tapestries lined the walls and the
Lochvaur
banners hung overhead. The tapestries depicted heroic battles in
Lochvaur
history.

One tapestry, which Lachlei had always loved, was of Lochvaur fighting side-by-side with Rhyn’athel, the god of warriors. All first-bloods could trace their lineage back over two thousand years to Lochvaur, the son of Rhyn’athel. She gazed at the creatures they were fighting

dark, shadow-like things with teeth and claws. They were demons

creatures of Areyn Sehduk’s creation. Like so many things touched by the god of death, these creatures lived only to destroy.

Lachlei suppressed a shudder. She had sensed the vile magic that had tainted the bodies and wondered about the demons yet again. Lachlei had considered herself a powerful first-blood, and though she was loathed to admit Kellachan was right, she had been Fialan’s equal in many ways.

Her mind strayed to Rhyn for a moment. The handsome
Chi’lan
was a bit of an enigma for her. She had never felt someone with that much defense, nor had her mental probes ever been detected. Could he be the next
Lochvaur
champion?

Lachlei turned and glanced at Kellachan, who nodded to her. She strode in and met the chief of the High Council, Laewynd. Laewynd was possibly the oldest
Lochvaur
alive, being nearly five hundred years. Most
Eleion
were not much older than Lachlei, herself, because of the frequent warring between the kindreds. Despite his age, Laewynd looked only slightly older than Lachlei, but no longer had the hardness of the warrior build.

Lachlei was surprised to see most of the council members present. Six men and one woman made up the
Lochvaur
High Council. Tarchon, Moira, and Kieran sat alongside Laewynd, but Lachlei noted Talar and Elrys were absent. Her cousin Kellachan was the youngest council member, chosen because of his first-blood. All had been
Chi’lan
at one time

each bearing the scars of battle. Of all the council members, the only two Lachlei had known well were Laewynd and Kellachan. Lachlei had known Moira as a
Chi’lan
since Lochalan’s rule. Moira had been a
Chi’lan
when Lachlei had earned her badge, but had left the
Chi’lan
to become a council member soon after. Kieran and Kellachan were the only active
Chi’lan
warriors on the High Council who had served Fialan and now served her.

Lachlei grasped Laewynd’s arms in the traditional
Chi’lan
greeting and noted the softness of his hands as her own fingers brushed the backs of them.
Not the hands of a warrior,
she thought. She wondered if the
Lochvaur
had been imprudent to have someone who wasn’t
Chi’lan
anymore in charge of the High Council.

“My queen, Lachlei,” Laewynd spoke.

“You’ve presumed much, Laewynd,” Lachlei said crossly. “I am
Chi’lan
…”

“I know, I’ve heard,” Laewynd said. “And I want you to stop this foolishness…”

Lachlei stared at him speechlessly.

“We all know that you are the last first-blood with power

save perhaps your son, Haellsil, but he is an infant,” the chief councilmember said. “There is no other choice, Lachlei, you must be queen.”

Lachlei shook her head. “There must be others…” she hesitated as she saw the nobles shake their heads. “There is first-blood in North Marches…” she began.

“And we know nothing of them,” Kellachan said. “Lachlei,” he said, turning to her. “You, alone, know what killed Fialan

I can see it in your eyes. You know what we may be up against. The High Council agrees

those with the Sight have seen darkness ahead. We believe you alone might see us through.”

Lachlei looked around at the familiar faces. They had served her husband well. Now, they were putting their trust in her. As the commander of the
Chi’lan
. As queen. Her gaze strayed back to the tapestry of Lochvaur and Rhyn’athel. Did she really know what killed Fialan? Did they really suspect something as sinister as she did?

Her thoughts turned to her son, Haellsil. If there were a demon out there, as she suspected, the creature might not be satisfied with Fialan’s life. If it targeted Fialan, what was the chance that it might search for Haellsil?

Cold fear gripped her. Haellsil would not have a chance to grow up, much less make
Chi’lan
or become king. She tried to remember the old stories about demons. They didn’t simply go away after they killed

they drank the life force of those who held power. The demon may have killed Fialan because he was a powerful
Lochvaur
. Would she simple sit idly by and let the demon grow more powerful until it came for her and her son?

Lachlei knew the answer. For a moment, she thought of Rhyn and his power. Perhaps he too sensed the demon. Perhaps he knew something she didn’t.

Lachlei sighed and shook her head. “Very well,” she said, meeting Laewynd’s gaze. “I don’t want the throne, but I will take it. At least until my son is old enough to become
Chi’lan
and prove himself.”

BOOK: Lachlei
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