To Whatever End (Echoes of Imara Book 1) (8 page)

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Authors: Claire Frank

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Fantasy, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Thriller & Suspense, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Epic, #Sword & Sorcery, #Thriller, #Metaphysical & Visionary

BOOK: To Whatever End (Echoes of Imara Book 1)
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Daro pushed his mug away and slammed his hand down on the table. “And what do you think you know about my wife?”

“Hey, easy, Daro,” said Callum, putting a hand out toward him. “He didn’t mean anything by that.”

Daro glared at both of them. They didn’t know the first thing about her, or how to make her happy. “Leave her out of this.”

“Fine, fine,” said Alastair. “But think about it. We both know Rogan wants you here. Why won’t you at least consider it?”

Callum tossed his coin in the air and caught it with deft fingers. “You’d have better luck talking him into wearing one of Cecily’s corsets.”

They all laughed, even Daro. He had to admit, the image of himself cinched up in a corset was more than a little bit funny.

Alastair smiled. “Truly, Daro, I’m not trying to cause trouble. But you were both made for bigger things. You always say you don’t belong, but you never saw yourself. How many people looked to you during those times of uncertainty, when things turned sour and we all feared for our lives? When we were out in the wilds, or on the streets of this very city, you led. We should have died many times over, but somehow you always found a way to pull through. It’s a shame to see that all go to waste.”

“He has a point, you know,” said Callum. Daro looked at him in confusion. It wasn’t often that Callum and Alastair agreed. Callum looked back and forth between the other two men again. “What? I’m just saying that it seems crazy for a man like you to be living out in the middle of nowhere making tables and chairs, or whatever it is you do.” He leaned in and rested his elbow on the table. “I know this fellow who could really use a man like you. Completely legitimate, I assure you, and it would pay extremely well.” He trailed off, raising his eyebrows at Daro.

“You know a fellow?” Daro said. “Thank you, Callum, but no, I’m not sure I want to know who this ‘fellow’ might be.”

“Oh no, it’s nothing like that,” Callum said with a dismissive wave of his hand. “Completely legal.” Alastair snorted. Callum smirked at him. “I’m fairly certain my offer would be a bit more enticing than that of our good king.”

“You’re both idiots,” Daro said and shook his head. “What others believe isn’t important to me. You can think I ran away or I’m hiding or whatever you want. I just want to live in peace and love my wife, simple as that.”

The door opened as Alastair opened his mouth to reply. Cecily appeared in the doorway and Daro stood. Her long hair was windblown and her blouse hung loose around her body, her unbound corset clutched in her hand. She met Daro’s eyes from across the room and he knew something was wrong. He pushed the chair away from the table and walked to her, no further thought for his friends. She took a few steps toward him and threw herself into his arms.

He drew his arms around her protectively and kissed the top of her head. “Cecily, what happened?”

“I’m okay. I don’t want to talk about it here.” He brushed the hair back from her face. She gave him a small smile and reached down to take off her shoes. “These shoes are terrible.”

He rubbed her back gently and walked her toward the stairs as anger rose up like bile in his throat. He should have gone with her. He didn’t know what they had said to put her in this state, but he was furious with himself for not having been there to protect her. As he mounted the stairs, he looked toward the friends he’d left at the table and had a passing thought for them and those still due to arrive. They could bloody well wait. Her face was so pale and her eyes red.

He hadn’t seen her look like that in a long time.

7. COMPANIONS

Daro shut the door with a soft click, followed Cecily to the bed, and sat on the edge next to her. “What happened?” he asked, his voice soft.

She took a deep breath. “I shouldn’t let her get to me like this. I don’t know how she does it, but she always knows exactly what to say to get under my skin. She always did.” She paused and Daro stroked her back, waiting for her to continue. “Everything was going fine, just the usual from my mother. My sister is getting married. I gave my mother the chest and she accepted it with a decent amount of grace. Then as I was leaving, she asked about having a family. She said it was ‘for the best’ that we don’t have any children.” She choked out the last few words, put her hand to her mouth, and breathed deeply to stop herself from crying. “I just left. I didn’t say anything else. And I walked back here.”

Daro closed his eyes and kept rubbing her back gently.
Damn that woman.
“Oh, love,” he said. He never really knew what to say, especially about this. “She was just trying to upset you.”

Cecily sniffed a little. “I know. I reacted badly. I shouldn’t have let her see how much that hurt.”

Daro shook his head and wrapped his arms around his wife. “No, it doesn’t matter what she saw or what she thinks.”

Cecily leaned into his arms and sat quietly for a moment. Then she pulled away to look up at him. “Is it terrible that I want to have a baby to spite my mother? Just to see the look on her face when I tell her that her precious noble blood will be mingled with that of a half-Imaran mountain man?”

Daro smiled. “Now, that’s my girl.” She smiled back and he relaxed a little. Her face had returned to its normal color and her eyes were bright. He brushed the hair back from her face. “Always remember, they can’t take anything away from us. We’re out of their power now.”

Cecily smiled wider. “This is why I love you. It’s impossible to stay upset when I’m with you.” She kissed him quickly and got up to change her clothes.

He leaned back on the bed and braced himself with one arm as he watched her dress. He could sense her relief as she discarded her formal dress and donned her typical attire. Tonight she wore a cream tunic, cut to flatter her feminine shape. She pulled on her dark leggings and high brown leather boots. She added a wide belt and smoothed out her shirt. Her bearing still made her clothing look a bit regal; perhaps it was the ease with which she stood. Or maybe he was always a little drunk with her beauty. Cecily claimed she wasn’t considered particularly beautiful, but he couldn’t imagine anyone more so. She had a delicate jaw and a small nose, her eyes brown against her fair skin.

She straightened her necklace and brushed her hair back with her hands. She turned toward the small mirror and braided two small braids at each temple, pulled them to the back of her head, and pinned them in place. She fluffed out the rest of her hair, letting it hang down her back.

“There,” she said as she turned to him. “I feel better.”

He smiled again. “You look perfect.”

“I suppose we should go downstairs. The rest of them will be there by now, I expect,” she said. “Besides, I’m famished.”

***

Their table was nearly full when they made their way down the stairs to the back room. Edson had returned and sat listening to Alastair with wide eyes. Daro wondered what rubbish Alastair was filling the lad’s head with this time. Griff and Serv had joined the group, Griff’s hearty laughs audible from the upper floor. Callum leaned in toward Mira, a tall and lanky woman dressed in the uniform of a king’s guard, the king’s sigil embroidered across her chest. Mira was a Precision Wielder, whose abilities made her an uncannily accurate archer, and had joined King Rogan’s personal guard after the war.

On Callum’s other side sat Sumara, a sultry woman with silky black hair and a full mouth. She wore a long, sleeveless white dress, with braided straps crossing her shoulders and a loose leather belt draped at her waist. Originally from Sahaar, a kingdom to the south of Halthas, Sumara had never changed her style of dress to adopt Halthian fashion. She was a Lightning Wielder and a former classmate of Cecily’s at the Lyceum, now under the patronage of one of the high noble houses of Halthas.

Everyone stood at their approach. Daro placed his hand on the small of Cecily’s back and led her to the table. They smiled at their friends, and Cecily stepped forward to embrace them each in turn. They greeted each other warmly, no one resting on formality. These were the companions they had fought with, bled with, and trusted with their lives during the war—people who were much more like family than mere friends. Daro sat down, leaning back in his chair. It was good to see the companions again.

There were others who wouldn’t be joining them for their annual gathering. Merrick hated the city more than Daro, preferring the solitude of his cabin in the woods outside the city. He and Cecily would pay him a visit on their way home. Rogan was king now. He had more important things to attend to than a gathering of friends at an inn. And Daro wasn’t sure they could find an establishment large enough for his retinue of guards. There were others as well, those buried and gone, who had given their lives in the struggle against Hadran.

When everyone had settled into their chairs, their mugs and goblets refilled, Griff rose, mug in hand. “A toast to our king. To His Majesty, King Rogan!”

Everyone raised their glass in agreement. “To the king!”

Griff remained standing. “And to us. May we all live long and happy lives, free of the misery of war.”

“Hear, hear!” came the reply. Daro lifted his mug and drank a heavy swig of dark ale. He could drink to that wholeheartedly.

The innkeeper and several serving girls brought out platters of steaming food. Daro dug in, filling his plate with a pile of tender pork ribs doused in a thick honey sauce, roast pheasant with herbs, and a chunk of soft brown bread. The sweet smell of the honey sauce and the juice of the roasted meat made his mouth water. As he bit into a piece of pheasant, the skin crackled and juice ran down his chin.

A serving girl leaned across the table and filled several mugs from a thick ceramic jug. She wore a long bright yellow dress that laced up the front over a short-sleeved blouse, with a clean beige apron tied at her waist, her cleaning rag tucked into the band. Callum caught Daro’s eye and gave him a quick wink. He flicked the hair from his eyes and held out a coin between the tips of his two fingers. “Keep ‘em coming, darling.” She smiled and took the coin, turning to walk back toward the kitchen.

Callum’s mouth curled up in a crooked smile as he held up her cleaning rag. Daro smiled over his food and glanced up at the girl. She stopped, patted her hip, and looked over her shoulder. Callum held his arm out, the rag hanging from his upturned hand. Her brows drew down as she walked back and snatched the rag from his grip.

“You seemed to have dropped this,” he said as he looked up over his shoulder. She narrowed her eyes at him and started to turn away, but he stopped her, laying a hand on her arm. “Careful, darling, you seem to be missing something,” he said and handed her back the coin.

Her mouth opened as she plucked it from his fingers. “How did you do that?” she asked. The conversations around the table quieted as their heads turned to look at Callum and the girl. Daro took another bite of pheasant.

“You really should be careful with your money,” Callum said. He pushed his chair back and stood up with a smile. “There are a lot of unscrupulous folk who might take advantage.” He lightly touched her hand, placing it palm up, and closed her fingers around the coin. He laid his hand on top of her fist. “I wouldn’t want you to lose any of your hard-earned reward.” He flicked the fingers of his other hand and another coin appeared, held between two fingers. The serving girl’s eyebrows rose, and she smiled.

“I just want to be certain my friends and I have a pleasant evening. I find the best way to do that,” he said as he closed his hand, flipping it open again and showing his empty palm, “is to keep the ale flowing.” He smiled and lifted his hand off of hers. She opened it to find two coins, clinking together in the palm of her hand. “Don’t worry, darling, I’m just having some fun with you.”

She laughed and shook her head as she clasped the two coins. “Have a seat, sir. I’ll be back to fill your mugs.”

Daro chuckled to himself as he filled his plate with more food. The hum of conversation grew as the companions settled into their meal.

Callum looked across the table at Daro and raised his eyebrows. “What’s that in your pocket?”

Daro lifted one corner of his mouth in a smile as he leaned back from the table and patted down his pockets. He felt a round disk and pulled it out. One of Callum’s coins. Daro laughed, shaking his head, and flipped the coin back to Callum. “I don’t know how you do that,” he said.

Callum shrugged his shoulders, caught the coin, and made it disappear again with a flick of his fingers. Daro loved it when Callum showed off his sleight of hand. One might assume Callum was an Illusionist, with a Wielding ability that aided his tricks. He was a powerful Wielder, but his gift was Empathy, the ability to influence and control emotions. Daro didn’t know how Callum had learned to fool people the way he did, but it always made for an amusing evening.

Daro turned to his wife and she smiled, the stress gone from her eyes. He lifted his mug and washed down his food with a long pull of the rich ale.

“Serv and I were in Madrona a few months back,” Griff said and the table quieted at the mention of the town. “The Keep is fully manned again and the town is looking downright lively.”

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