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Tempest (The Scribes of Medeisia)
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The Scribes of Medeisia Book II
Tempest
By
R.K. Ryals
Copyright © Regina K. Ryals, 2013
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
To my husband who supports me with a ferocity I'm sure I don't deserve.
To my children, who are the very reason I wake up each day with stars in my eyes and a story in my heart.
To my sisters, I love you.
And to my father, who is as stubborn as they come. I'm so glad I take after you.
Acknowledgements
I have had the privilege of working with the most amazing people on this project. The Scribes of Medeisia has been such an intense and amazing series to write. Thank you to everyone who has been involved. To my editor, Melissa Ringsted, who is such an amazing woman with a beautiful personality. To my wonderfully talented photographer and best friend, Audrey Welch, who gives me just the right kind of encouragement. I love you. To my cover artist, Laura Wright Laroche, who puts up with my picky nature. You are incredible. To Christina Silcox, who is a personal assistant extraordinaire and one heck of a cheerleader. You rock! To Melissa Wright, who is an amazing writer, a great friend, and an awesome beta reader. To Whitney Deboe, who is always there when I need an opinion about something. To the women of YATR, who are amazing on so many levels. And to my awesome readers! You are the reason I keep putting my writing out there. I love you all!
Prologue
Booted feet marched heavily down an ivory marble hall, the sound echoing along the walls in an eerie cadence that sang of determination. There was no fear in the walk, only purpose and confidence. The marble floor shone so brilliantly that the walking man’s reflection met each step in an odd mirrored manner, as if the floor was made of glass rather than marble. But if the floor was magnificent, it was nothing compared to the man.
Large black boots covered strong calves before blending into a pair of tight, tawny breeches stretched over muscular thighs. The man was tall and large, his frame broad, his height over six foot. A plain, billowing white tunic covered his torso, the rippling muscles in his chest obvious where he left the shirt untied. A large black ink tattoo covered one side of his exposed chest, the design foreign and odd. But it was his face that captured the eye and held it.
His face was like the marble he walked on, all hard planes. He was too rugged to be pretty, too wicked looking to be elegant. According to an upstairs maid, who often tended his room during bathing, he was simply sinfully dangerous, like the massive wild cats that prowled the humid forests of Yorbrook, a country most in Sadeemia had never seen but had often heard of. Mahogany-colored hair streaked with sun-kissed gold brushed the tunic’s collar in a careless manner, as if the man spent more time running his fingers through it than he did brushing it. His brilliant blue eyes were piercing, his gaze both intimidating and deadly, and he knew it. He knew it because he’d spent years shaping himself into the man he was now, a man of irony whose personality often contradicted itself.
Sinfully dangerous. It was a good description, and the floor’s reflection made servants stationed along the wall shiver as he passed; their heads bowed, eyes on the face in the marble.
The man’s stride took him down a wide receiving hall with high vaulted ceilings. Other than the marble floor, there was no decoration. Liveried soldiers and servants lined the unadorned stone walls. The ceiling above had been outfitted with a thick glass window, and sunlight poured down into the room, the glow highlighting a massive golden throne at the end of the hall.
An equally formidable—yet older—man sat upon the velvet-padded throne, his calculating eyes on the man approaching him. His head lifted, and he spoke, his words booming.
“How severe you look, son,” he said
The man on the throne had the bearing of a king, and rightly so, for King Freemont Horan Bernhart VIII had ruled the country of Sadeemia now for over fifty years. The only outward sign of his increasing age was the white that now streaked his light brown hair and beard.
The younger man paused a few feet away from the throne’s dais before going down on one knee on the marble.
“Your Majesty.”
He had a low, smooth voice that commanded attention.
The king lifted one jeweled hand, waving it dismissively. “We won’t stand upon ceremony today. Rise, Cadeyrn. Deliver your news.”
Prince Cadeyrn Forsen Bernhart, the second son of Freemont, stood. His movements were as fluid as his voice, and he raised his head, his piercing eyes meeting the king’s evenly.
“There is something brewing in Medeisia, Father. I want to send a spy into the country.”
The king stared over his son’s head, momentary silence reigning before he stood slowly, his eyes hard.
“Out!” he bellowed, his hand gesturing at the silent servants and guards stationed along the hall.
Cadeyrn never flinched. Within moments, the hall was empty.
Freemont’s gaze returned to Cadeyrn. “You are a foolish man, son.”
Cadeyrn’s eyes glinted. “Am I? Says the king who has been turning a blind eye to his Western border for years.”
Freemont stepped down from his throne, moving off the dais so that he stood on even ground before his son. The movement only emphasized Freemont’s aggravation, for at twenty-five turns, Cadeyrn had bypassed his father in height by several inches. It irritated the king to look up at anyone, particularly his son.
“Says the man who has been telling me for years that Medeisia wishes our country ill will. Where are the soldiers, Cadeyrn? Where are the invading armies?” Freemont shot back.
The prince stared down at his father.
“I have been leading your army into war for eight years. Eight years! Eight years I have been sailing the seas, strengthening your foreign relations, commanding your armies in skirmishes history will never tell about, watching good men die under my command so that Sadeemia could prosper and Arien could remain home with his bride to produce your heir. Eight years. I know war, Father. I have built your kingdom with the blood of your men, with my blood.”
“And this makes you an expert on my Western border?” the king asked. “No one would attempt to cross the Ardus, and Raemon doesn’t have the man power to come at us from the sea.”
Cadeyrn shook his head.
“We have nothing to base those presumptions on. There is only silence from Medeisia. Raemon has cut himself off from most trade. There hasn’t been a foreign emissary inside his borders in years. We have no idea how strong, or weak, he is.”
Freemont was silent, his eyes searching his son’s gaze before he moved once more onto the dais, perching carelessly on the edge of his throne.
“Something has happened to bring you to this sudden conclusion,” Freemont remarked. He knew his son better than Cadeyrn liked to admit. If Cadeyrn was approaching the king now, then he had good cause.
Cadeyrn took a step toward the throne.
“I had only one contact in Medeisia. Garod Consta-Mayria. He was the only man in Medeisia permitted any dealings with me or my men, and even he is not from Sadeemia. Do you not think it odd that Raemon allows no foreign representatives within his country?”
Freemont’s eyes narrowed. “Get to the point, son.”
Another step forward, and Cadeyrn’s boots rested against the dais’ bottom step.
“I’ve received word that Consta-Mayria is no longer the envoy for Sadeemia. His position has been dissolved and no one has re
placed him.”
Freemont’s hand came up to the throne’s armrest, his fist tightening around the gilded frame. He knew as well as Cadeyrn what dissolving an ambassadorship meant.
Cadeyrn took a step up onto the dais.
“Raemon is shutting down relations between our countries. I was raised on our histories, Father. If you wouldn’t believe me before, then believe me now. Something is happening in Medeisia, and Sadeemia is the closest country to its borders. You wear the other half of the dragon pendant. I don’t trust Raemon.”
Freemont closed his eyes and sighed, his brows creasing. The king suffered from massive headaches. They had gotten worse as he’d aged, and he felt the sharp twinges of pain in his temple that signaled an oncoming spell.
“Do not let your past color your assumptions,” Freemont said carefully. “It could be Raemon has closed down relations with all countries, not just our own.”
Cadeyrn was silent. The king didn’t have to open his eyes to see the pain hidden in his son’s gaze. It was always there, just beneath the surface. Cadeyrn had suffered much in his young life.
Born with a magic so strong even the mages who attended his birth were afraid of him, the prince had been plagued with hardship. He was viewed with awe by his countrymen, but viewed with fear by his enemies. Cadeyrn was only five turns when the first attempt on his life was made by a foreign assassin from Freesia. It had nearly killed him. Since then, Freemont had taken every possible precaution to ensure his son’s safety. Cadeyrn was trained from childhood to fight with all weapons available to the king. It helped that Cadeyrn’s magic somehow seemed connected to steel. No one had ever bested the prince with a sword. But even that had not eliminated tragedy. So much tragedy.
“Mark my words, Father,” Cadeyrn finally insisted, his voice hard. “Raemon is planning something.”
The king opened his eyes, his gaze going to his son’s strong face. Cadeyrn may be his second son, but he was the strongest. The differences between the king’s heir and spare were stark. Where Cadeyrn was large, Arien was small. Where Cadeyrn was fierce, Arien was quiet … pensive even.
Arien was a thin, awkward man married to a princess from Yorbrook. The birth of their first child, a son, had cemented the relationship between Sadeemia and Yorbrook, ensuring the Bernharts had a direct male heir to the throne.
Cadeyrn, on the other hand, was a strong military leader, and his upcoming marriage to a Greemallian princess would make Sadeemia one of the strongest nations in the region. A king could not ask for more.
Freemont’s gaze turned critical. “I hope your mother hasn’t seen you since your return.”
Cadeyrn’s jaw tensed. “She has not.”
Freemont nodded. “Good, good. You know how she feels about loose attire. Make sure you don a coat and restrain your hair before she receives you.”
Cadeyrn inclined his head.
“I will take my leave then,” the prince said, his voice tight.
Cadeyrn turned, his gaze on the hall. He wore a sword at his side, and his hand went instinctively to the hilt. His magic responded immediately to the steel beneath his grip, and he used it to calm himself. He didn’t wait for his father to dismiss him.
The prince was halfway down the hall when Freemont called to him. Cadeyrn paused, his gaze straight ahead.
The king spoke loudly. “Send your spies, Cadeyrn.”
One corner of the prince’s lips quirked. It wasn’t quite a grin, but it was close. Cadeyrn didn’t smile. He wasn’t sure he even remembered how.
Part I
Chapter 1
“You are no good at war, girl!” Lochlen grumbled, his massive, golden tail swinging in behind me as I exited the tree cave, the hollow trunk that led down into the caverns at the base of the Mystic Mountains.
I stared up at the dragon, shielding my eyes against the rays of sunlight just now beginning to glint through the foliage.
“Been flying today?” I asked him.
Smoke curled from the beast’s nostrils. “Been reading today?” Lochlen responded in return.
I shrugged sheepishly. “The dragon Archives are amazing.”
Lochlen laughed, flames shooting down from his mouth. The heat was uncomfortable, but I bore it.
“Hence why I say you are no good at war,” Lochlen pointed out. “They are fought on battlefields. Not in books.”
I barely spared the dragon a glance as he curled around the tree, his large frame disappearing before he reappeared suddenly on the other side of the trunk behind me, his body no longer reptilian. It was replaced instead by a young man not quite six feet tall with long, russet hair and gleaming gold eyes. He leaned casually against the bark.
“That’s a disconcerting trick, you know,” I scolded.
Lochlen grinned. “I prefer intimidating, remember.”
“Dragons are an arrogant lot,” Oran grumbled as he slunk out of the undergrowth, the wolf’s silver fur gleaming and full.
Winter was upon the Medeisian forests, the trees having spent the last two full moons shedding old leaves for bare limbs. But it didn’t stop their chatter. Even naked, the trees were never quiet.
“Arrogant, yes,” the trees murmured.
I slipped through the undergrowth, my eyes on the trailing grey smoke from the fires I knew waited beyond the tree cave. The marked rebels and their camp.
“I see I am, as always, underappreciated,” Lochlen complained, his steps so light behind mine, I barely heard him.
Oran growled in agreement, the trees rustled, and a low, amused kek, kek filtered down through the foliage as the rebel camp ahead suddenly exploded in a flurry of commotion. Hoots and hollers made me raise my head, and a branch lowered, the limb sweeping my shoulders.
“Kye has returned.”
My heart tripped. Kyenar Grenville Berhest, the illegitimate son of Medeisia’s tyrant king. I felt too many emotions around him, overwhelming emotions. Kye had once been a rebel spy, a secret prince who’d rescued me from the king’s soldiers. But, in the process, he’d watched as my nurse, the only mother I’d ever known, was burned at the stake. I’d learned to forgive him for it. I’d made peace with the past. Months in the forest will do that. Now, I felt only respect with a touch of sadness and something deeper, something terrifying.
“Did they all make it back unharmed?” I asked the trees quietly.
The same branch swept my shoulders, and I knew by the odd sense of grief radiating from the forest that some of the group hadn’t returned. The sensation surrounded my heart and squeezed. I had once held myself aloof from the other rebels, but a jaunt into the capital with Kye had changed that. I’d grown close to them recently, learning as much as I could about each one. There wasn’t a name I didn’t know.
I didn’t ask which rebel had fallen. I slunk along the edge of the clearing instead, keeping just within the protection of the trees and watching as the returning group was greeted by the revelers. There was a scream, a cry, and tears. I knew, when I saw Frenda Brenner fall to her knees on the ground, that her husband had not returned. A tear slipped from the corner of my eye.
Abruptly, there was fur under my hand, and I let my fingers slide into Oran’s coat without looking down. The wolf pushed his cold, wet snout against my side, and I gripped his fur harder than was necessary. He didn’t complain.
“He’s a hero now, Stone,” Lochlen whispered from behind me.
My jaw tightened. “There are too many heroes lately, Lochlen.”
The dragon didn’t disagree. His human hand touched my shoulder briefly before he ducked out of the undergrowth and into the clearing. Most of the rebels didn’t notice. They were used to Lochlen moving silently amongst them, his constant half-amused expression and sharp eyes comfortable rather than intimidating. I should have followed, but I stayed back a little longer, my eyes playing over the group.
The child, Nikalia, skipped amid the rebel party, and I watched as Kye caressed the crown of her head fondly, my stare fixed on his hand. It
mesmerized me, and my gaze traveled up his arm to his face, my eyes finding the scar at the edge of his temple. I knew that scar well. I had even kissed it once in the dungeons in Aireesi when he’d been near death. I wondered if Kye remembered that, if he thought of it at all. I did. Often. My dreams were a strange mix of nightmares and triumph.
“Kye!” someone yelled, and I looked up to see Maeve moving toward him, a sword held over her head, her eyes bright.
Maeve looked unharmed and healthy. She had traveled with Kye’s party on a mission into the capital to release more rebels, while trying to find a route into Sadeemia that wouldn’t involve the Ardus. I envied her the trip. I’d hated being left behind, but my wounds had been too obvious, my face swollen, and my body battered. No disguise could hide that.
Kye accepted the sword grimly, his gaze finding Frenda at the edge of the group. The rebels parted as he moved toward her, his head held high.
“Frenda Brenner,” he announced, his deep voice confident but sad.
The young woman looked up from the ground where she knelt, her face swollen and blotchy. She tried getting up but failed, her grief crippling. I knew that feeling, and I began to step out of the trees. Oran stopped me.
“Not now,” the wolf said.
I paused as Kye stepped in front of Frenda before going down on one knee, the sword balanced in his open palms.
“Your husband died a hero for this country, for people who will one day rule. I give you my word, he did not die for naught,” Kye promised. He lowered the sword, placing it in the soil before her. Frenda was a young woman, maybe twenty turns at most, but war had aged us all. She touched the metal tentatively. Kye placed his hand over hers on the blade too quickly for her to object.
“I give you this sword,” he said softly, “in the name of your husband, Sean. One day, he will be knighted for his sacrifice.”