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Authors: Morgan Rice

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Epic

BOOK: Rise of the Dragons
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She nodded back.

“It was,” she replied flatly, loving Anvin
for giving her recognition, and finally feeling vindicated.

“And the shot that felled it,” he
concluded. It was an observation, not a question, his voice hard, final, as he
studied the boar.

“I see no other wounds besides these two,”
he added, running his hand along it—then stopping at the ear. He examined it,
then turned and looked at Brandon and Braxton disdainfully. “Unless you call
this grazing of a spearhead here a wound.”

He held up the boar’s ear, and Brandon
and Braxton reddened while the group of warriors laughed.

Another of her father’s famed warriors
stepped forward—Vidar, close friend to Anvin, a thin, short man in his thirties
with a gaunt face and a scar across his nose. With his small frame, he did not
look the part, but Kyra knew better: Vidar was as hard as stone, famed for his
hand-to-hand combat. He was one of the hardest men Kyra had ever met, known to
wrestle down two men twice his size. Too many men, because of his diminutive
size, had made the mistake of provoking him—only to learn their lesson the hard
way. He, too, had taken Kyra under his wing, always protective of her.

“Looks like they missed,” Vidar
concluded, “and the girl saved them. Who taught you two to throw?”

Brandon and Braxton looked increasingly
nervous, clearly caught in a lie, and neither said a word.

“It’s a grievous thing to lie about a
kill,” Anvin said darkly, turning to her brothers. “Out with it now. Your
father would want you to tell the truth.”

Brandon and Braxton stood there,
shifting, clearly uncomfortable, looking at each other as if debating what to
say. For the first time she could remember, Kyra saw them tongue-tied.

Just as they were about to open their
mouths, suddenly a foreign voice cut through the crowd.

“Doesn’t matter who killed it,” came the
voice. “It’s ours now.”

Kyra turned with all the others,
startled at the rough, unfamiliar voice—and her stomach dropped as she saw a
group of the Lord’s Men, distinctive in their scarlet armor, step forward
through the crowd, the villagers parting for them. They approached the boar,
eyeing it greedily, and Kyra saw that they wanted this trophy kill—not because
they needed it, but as a way to humiliate her people, to snatch away from them
this point of pride. Beside her, Leo snarled, and she laid a reassuring hand on
his neck, holding him back.

“In the name of your Lord Governor,”
said the Lord’s Man, a portly soldier with a low brow, thick eyebrows, a large
belly, and a face bunched up in stupidity, “we claim this boar. He thanks you
in advance for your present on this holiday festival.”

He gestured to his men and they stepped
toward the boar, as if to grab it.

As they did, Anvin suddenly stepped
forward, Vidar by his side, and blocked their way.

An astonished silence fell over the
crowd—no one ever confronted the Lord’s Men; it was an unwritten rule. No one
wanted to incite the wrath of Pandesia.

“No one’s offered you a present, as far
as I can tell,” he said, his voice steel, “or your Lord Governor.”

The crowd thickened, hundreds of
villagers gathering to watch the tense standoff, sensing a confrontation. At
the same time, others backed away, creating space around the two men, as the
tension in the air grew more intense.

Kyra felt her heart pounding. She
unconsciously tightened her grip on her bow, knowing this was escalating. As
much as she wanted a fight, wanted her freedom, she also knew that her people
could not afford to incite the wrath of the Lord Governor; even if by some
miracle they defeated them, the Pandesian Empire stood behind them. They could
summon divisions of men as vast as the sea.

Yet, at the same time, Kyra was so proud
of Anvin for standing up to them. Finally, somebody had.

The soldier glowered, staring Anvin
down.

“Do you dare defy your Lord Governor?”
he asked.

Anvin held his ground.

“That boar is ours—no one’s giving it to
you,” Anvin said.

“It
was
yours,” the soldier
corrected, “and now it belongs to us.” He turned to his men. “Take the boar,”
he commanded.

The Lord’s Men approached and as they
did, a dozen of her father’s men stepped forward, backing up Anvin and Vidar,
blocking the Lord’s Men’s way, hands on their weapons.

The tension grew so thick, Kyra squeezed
her bow until her knuckles turned white, and as she stood there she felt awful,
felt as if somehow she were responsible for all this, given that she had killed
the boar. She sensed something very bad was about to happen, and she cursed her
brothers for bringing this bad omen into their village, especially on Winter
Moon. Strange things always happened on the holidays, mystical times when the
dead were said to be able to cross from one world to the other. Why had her
brothers had to provoke the spirits in this way?

As the men faced off, her father’s men
preparing to draw their swords, all of them so close to bloodshed, a voice of
authority suddenly cut through the air, booming through the silence.

“The kill is the girl’s!” came the
voice.

It was a loud voice, filled with
confidence, a voice that commanded attention, a voice that Kyra admired and
respected more than any in the world: her father’s. Commander Duncan.

All eyes turned as her father
approached, the crowd parting ways for him, giving him a wide berth of respect.
There he stood, a mountain of a man, twice as tall as the others, with
shoulders twice as wide, an untamed brown beard and longish brown hair both
streaked with gray, wearing furs over his shoulders and bearing two long swords
on his belt and a spear across his back. His armor, the black of Volis, had a
dragon carved into its breastplate, the sign of their house. His weapons bore
nicks and scrapes from one too many battle and he projected experience. He was
a man to be feared, a man to be admired, a man who all new to be just and fair.
A man loved and, above all, respected.

“It is Kyra’s kill,” he repeated,
glancing disapprovingly at her brothers as he did, then turning and looking at
Kyra, ignoring the Lord’s Men. “It is for her to decide its fate.”

Kyra was shocked at her father’s words.
She had never expected this, never expected him to put such responsibility in
her hands, to leave to her such a weighty decision. For it was not merely a
decision about the boar, they both knew, but about the very fate of her people.

Tense soldiers lined up on either side,
all with hands on swords, and as she looked out at all the faces, all turning
to her, all awaiting her response, she knew that her next choice, her next
words, would be the most important she had ever spoken.

CHAPTER FOUR

 

 

Merk hiked slowly down the forest path,
weaving his way through Whitewood, and he reflected on his life. His forty
years had been hard ones; he had never before taken the time to hike through a
wood, to admire the beauty around him. He looked down at the white leaves
crunching beneath his feet, punctuated by the sound of his staff as he tapped
the soft forest floor; he looked up as he walked, taking in the beauty of the
Aesop trees, with their shining white leaves and glowing red branches,
glistening in the morning sun. Leaves fell, showering down on him like snow,
and for the first time in his life, he felt a real sense of peace.

Of average height and build, with dark
black hair, a perpetually unshaven face, a wide jaw, long, drawn-out
cheekbones, and large black eyes with black circles under them, Merk always
looked as if he hadn’t slept in days. And that was always how he felt. But now.
Now, finally, he felt rested. Here, in Ur, in the northwest corner of Escalon,
there came no snow. The temperate breezes off the ocean, but a day’s ride west,
assured them of warmer weather and allowed leaves of every color to flourish.
It also allowed Merk to sojourn wearing but a cloak, with no need to cower from
the freezing winds, as they did in much of Escalon. He was still getting used
to the idea of wearing a cloak instead of armor, of wielding a staff instead of
a sword, of tapping the leaves with his staff instead of piercing his foes with
a dagger. It was all new to him. He was trying to see what it felt like to
become this new person he yearned to be. It was peaceful—but awkward. As if he
were pretending to be someone he was not.

For Merk was no traveler, no monk—nor
was he a peaceful man. He was still, in his blood, a warrior. And not just any
warrior; he was a man who fought by his own rules, and who had never lost a
battle. He was a man who was unafraid to take his battles from the jousting
lanes to the back alleys of the taverns he loved to frequent. He was what some
people liked to call a mercenary. An assassin. A hired sword. There were many
names for him, some even less flattering, but Merk didn’t care for labels, or about
what other people thought. All he cared about was that he was one of the best.

Merk, as if to fit his role, had gone by
many names himself, changing them at his whim. He didn’t like the name his
father had given him—in fact, he didn’t like his father, either—and he wasn’t
about to go through life with a name someone else slapped on him. Merk was the
most frequent name change, and he liked it, for now. He did not care what
anyone called him. He cared only about two things in life: finding the perfect
spot for the point of his dagger, and that his employers pay him in freshly
minted gold—and a lot of it.

Merk had discovered at a young age that
he had a natural gift, that he was superior to all others at what he did. His
brothers, like his father and all his famed ancestors, were proud and noble
knights, donning the best armor, wielding the best steel, prancing about on
their horses, waving their banners with their flowery hair and winning
competitions while ladies threw flowers at their feet. They could not have been
more proud of themselves.

Merk, though, hated the pomp, the
limelight. Those knights had all seemed clumsy at killing, vastly inefficient,
and Merk had no respect for them. Nor did he need the recognition, the
insignias or banners or coats of arms that knights craved. That was for people
who lacked what mattered most: the skill to take a man’s life, quickly,
quietly, and efficiently. In his mind, there was nothing else to talk about.

When he was young and his friends, too
small to defend themselves, had been picked on, they had come to him, already
known to be exceptional with a sword, and he had taken their payment to defend
them. Their bullies never tormented them again, as Merk went that extra step.
Word had spread quickly of his prowess, and as Merk accepted more and more
payments, his abilities in killing progressed.

Merk could have become a knight, a
celebrated warrior like his brothers. But he chose instead to work in the
shadows. Winning was what interested him, lethal efficiency, and he had
discovered quickly that knights, for all their beautiful weapons and bulky
armor, could not kill half as fast or effectively as he, a lone man with a
leather shirt and a sharp dagger.

As he hiked, poking the leaves with his
staff, he recalled one night at a tavern with his brothers, when swords had
been drawn with rival knights. His brothers had been surrounded, outnumbered,
and while all the fancy knights stood on ceremony, Merk did not hesitate. He
had darted across the alley with his dagger and sliced all their throats before
the men could draw a sword.

His brothers should have thanked them
for their lives—instead, they all distanced themselves from him. They feared
him, and they looked down on him. That was the gratitude he received, and the
betrayal hurt Merk more than he could say. It deepened his rift with them, with
all nobility, with all chivalry. It was all hypocrisy in his eyes,
self-serving; they could walk away with their shiny armor and look down on him,
but if it hadn’t been for him and his dagger they would all be lying dead in
that back alley today.

Merk hiked and hiked, sighing, trying to
release the past. As he reflected, he realized he did not really understand the
source of his talent. Perhaps it was because he was so quick and nimble;
perhaps it was because he was fast with his hands and wrists; perhaps it was
because he had a special talent for finding men’s vital points; perhaps it was
because he never hesitated to go that extra step, to take that final thrust
that other men feared; perhaps it was because he never had to strike twice; or
perhaps it was because he could improvise, could kill with any tool at his
disposal—a quill, a hammer, an old log. He was craftier than others, more
adaptable and quicker on his feet—a deadly combination.

Growing up, all those proud knights had
distanced themselves from him, had even mocked him beneath their breath (for no
one would mock him to his face). But now, as they were all older, as their
powers waned and as his fame spread, he was the one enlisted by kings, while
they were all forgotten. Because what his brothers never understood was that
chivalry
did not make kings kings. It was the ugly, brutal violence, fear, the
elimination of your enemies, one at a time, the gruesome killing that no one else
wanted to do, that made kings. And it was he they turned to when they wanted
the
real
work of being a king done.

With each poke of his staff, Merk
remembered each of his victims. He had killed the King’s worst foes—not by
poison—for that, they brought in the petty assassins, the apothecaries, the
seductresses. The worst ones they often wanted killed with a statement, and for
that, they needed him. Something gruesome, something public: a dagger in the
eye; a body left strewn in a public square, dangling from a window, for all to
see the next sunrise, for all to be left in wonder as to who had dared oppose
the King.

When the old King Tarnis had surrendered
the kingdom, had opened the gates for Pandesia, Merk had felt deflated,
purposeless for the first time in his life. Without a King to serve he had felt
adrift. Something long brewing within him had surfaced, and for some reason he
did not understand, he began to wonder about life. All his life he had been
obsessed with death, with killing, with taking life away. It had become
easy—too easy. But now, something within him was changing; it was as if he
could hardly feel the stable ground beneath his feet. He had always known,
firsthand, how fragile life was, how easily it could be taken away, but now he
started to wonder about preserving it. Life was so fragile, was preserving it
not a greater challenge than taking it?

And despite himself, he started to
wonder: what was this thing he was stripping away from others?

Merk did not know what had started all
this self-reflection, but it made him deeply uncomfortable. Something had
surfaced within him, a great nausea, and he had become sick of killing—he had
developed as great a distaste for it as he had once enjoyed it. He wished there
was one thing he could point to that triggered all of this— the killing of a
particular person, perhaps—but there was not. It had just crept up on him,
without cause. And that was most disturbing of all.

Unlike other mercenaries, Merk had only
taken on causes he believed in. It was only later in life, when he had become
too good at what he did, when the payments had become too large, the people who
requested him too important, that he had begun to blur the lines, to accept
payment for killing those who weren’t necessarily at fault—not necessarily at
all. And that was what was bothering him.

Merk developed an equally strong passion
for undoing all that he had done, for proving to others that he could change.
He wanted to wipe out his past, to take back all that he had done, to make
penitence. He had taken a solemn vow within himself never to kill again; never
to lift a finger against anyone; to spend the rest of his days asking God for
forgiveness; to devote himself to helping others; to become a better person.
And it was all of this that had led him to this forest path he walked right now
with each click of his staff.

Merk saw the forest trail rise up ahead
then dip, aglow with white leaves, and he checked the horizon again for the
Tower of Ur. There was still no sign of it. He knew eventually this path must
lead him there, this pilgrimage that had been calling to him for months now. He
had been captivated, ever since he was a boy, by tales of the Watchers, the
secretive order of monks/knights, part men and part something else, whose job
was to reside in the two towers—the Tower of Ur in the northwest and the Tower
of Kos in the southeast—and to watch over the Kingdom’s most precious relic:
the Sword of Flames. It was the Sword of Flames, legend had it, that kept The
Flames alive. No one knew for sure which tower it was in, a closely kept secret
known by none but the most ancient Watchers. If it were ever to be moved, or
stolen, The Flames would be lost forever—and Escalon would be vulnerable to
attack.

It was said that watching over the
towers was a high calling, a sacred duty and honorable duty—if the Watchers
accepted you. Merk had always dreamed of the Watchers as a boy, had gone to bed
at night wondering what it would be like to join their ranks. He wanted to lose
himself in solitude, in service, in self-reflection, and he knew there was no
better way than to become a Watcher. Merk felt ready. He had discarded his
chain mail for leather, his sword for a staff, and for the first time in his
life, he had gone a solid moon without killing or hurting a soul. He was
starting to feel good.

As Merk crested a small hill, he looked
out, hopeful, as he had been for days, that this peak might reveal the Tower of
Ur somewhere on the horizon. But there was nothing to be found—nothing but more
woods, reaching as far as the eye could see. Yet he knew he was getting
close—after so many days of hiking, the tower could not be that far off.

Merk continued down the slope of the
path, the wood growing thicker, until, at the bottom, he came to a huge, felled
tree blocking the path. He stopped and looked at it, admiring its size,
debating how to get around it.

“I’d say that’s about far enough,” came
a sinister voice.

Merk recognized the dark intention in
the voice immediately, something he had become expert in, and he did not even
need to turn to know what was coming next. He heard leaves crunching all around
him, and out of the wood there emerged faces to match the voice: cutthroats,
each more desperate looking than the next. They were the faces of men who
killed for no reason. The faces of common thieves and killers who preyed on the
weak with random, senseless violence. In Merk’s eyes, they were the lowest of
the low.

Merk saw he was surrounded and knew he
had walked into a trap. He glanced around quickly without letting them know it,
his old instincts kicking in, and he counted eight of them. They all held
daggers, all dressed in rags, with dirty faces, hands, and fingernails, all
unshaven, all with a desperate look that showed they hadn’t eaten in too many
days. And that they were bored.

Merk tensed as the lead thief got
closer, but not because he feared him; Merk could kill him—could kill them
all—without blinking an eye, if he chose. What made him tense was the
possibility of being forced into violence. He was determined to keep his vow,
whatever the cost.

“And what do we have here?” one of them
asked, coming close, circling Merk.

“Looks like a monk,” said another, his
voice mocking. “But those boots don’t match.”

“Maybe he’s a monk who thinks he’s a
soldier,” one laughed.

They all broke into laughter, and one of
them, an oaf of a man in his forties with a missing front tooth, leaned in with
his bad breath and poked Merk in the shoulder. The old Merk would have killed
any man who had come half as close.

But the new Merk was determined to be a
better man, to rise above violence—even if it seemed to seek him out. He closed
his eyes and took a deep breath, forcing himself to remain calm.

Do not resort to violence
, he told
himself again and again.

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