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The Elysian Chronicles:
Out of the Shadows
Sample Chapters
Prologue
Davian stumbled and
fell. His knees, chest, and elbows scraped over dirt and rocks while
leathery-skinned mornachts dragged him across the ground. Blood matted
his hair, and a wing-lock encased his wings, preventing him from flying.
He struggled against his chains, ignoring the painful scabs covering his
wrists and ankles.
Davian’s thumb
instinctively rubbed the fifth finger on his right hand, but his
father’s ring was gone. Why did they take it? he wondered.
They got what they wanted when they handed me over to the mornachts.
To the east,
moonlight glistened off the snowcapped peaks of the Enbed Mountains—a
surreal backdrop for the grotesque mornachts with their stooped posture
and knobby stubs for wings. Ahead, two lone Morvenian guards stood at
attention near the base of a hill. Davian froze. He knew what lay inside
the mountain behind the guards.
Davian yanked against
the chains once more, binding every ounce of his strength to one goal:
escape. A whip cracked, and Davian yelled when its sting penetrated his
back. The whip cracked again. And again.
A metallic creak
sounded inside the earth. The mountainside opened.
Davian roared and
pulled against his chains, reopening the gashes on his wrists. One of
the mornachts banged a club against his shins; Davian fell to the
ground. The mornachts dragged him inside the mineshaft, beating him
until he collapsed in a pool of mud. The cracks of other whips echoed
deep inside the shaft, followed by screams, more whips, and then
silence. A moment later, Davian heard only water running along the
wooden beam above, dripping in a puddle next to him. A cool drop hit his
forehead.
“Drink it now,
Seraph,” hissed one of the mornachts. “That’s the only water you’ll get
in here.”
Davian obeyed,
letting a few grimy drops hit his tongue.
The mountain creaked
once more. The mornachts cackled and pulled him to his feet, forcing him
to watch the door swing shut. The last sliver of moonlight disappeared,
and the sound of the door colliding with the mountain thundered through
the shafts.
The mornachts yanked
Davian’s chains. For the first time since his capture, Davian followed
without a struggle. Why should he? The prophecy most cherubians had
forgotten was now fulfilled; the evil one had taken over Elysia. Now
Davian, locked in a dungeon from which few cherubians ever escaped,
wondered how he and Elysia had been so blind.
Chapter One: The Prophecy Forgotten
One week earlier...
Maurice wiped the
Treetop Inn’s bar for what felt like the fiftieth time. The lacquered
counter already sparkled, but Maurice preferred wiping to gazing across
the tavern of empty tables that should have been full of patrons talking
or playing jalonga. The usual twinkle in Maurice’s brown eyes had
dimmed. Even the smile that once greeted all of his customers—including
his least favorite—had disappeared.
A drop of sweat
trickled down Maurice’s cheek and into the folds of skin between his
chin and neck. He glanced across his tavern and shook his head. Though
the sweltering weather kept him from lighting fires in the fireplaces,
his Treetop Inn still felt cold. He filled two mugs of honeywine and
flew them to two textile merchants who talked quietly in a booth across
the way.
Maurice forced a
smile. “How are you fellas doin’ this fine day?”
“I’ll be better once
the senate votes in favor of a king tomorrow, and the people start
buying cloth again,” muttered one of the merchants. He raised his mug to
Maurice and gulped his honeywine. The other merchant raised his mug in
agreement.
Maurice hid his
frown. Scandal after scandal had characterized the late Prime Minister’s
term, souring the Elysian people on the democratic process. Most of the
senators were now urging a vote to eliminate the office of the Prime
Minister and reinstate a monarchy, which they believed would help Elysia
win the Tri-Millennial War against their enemies, the mornachts.
Although Maurice understood the Senate’s logic, he disagreed with their
timing, and he especially disagreed with the Senate’s choice for king.
“People will start
buying again,” said Maurice. “With or without a king. It’ll just take
time.”
“Ah, but it will take
less time if we’ve got a king, and my family needs food,” said the first
merchant.
“No argument there,”
muttered Maurice. He wished otherwise. “You two call me if you need
anything.” He returned to the bar, grabbed his rag, and furiously wiped
the counter.
The Treetop’s door
swung open, then shut. A brief chill flowed into the tavern. A tall
cherubian dressed in white robes and a white cloak flew inside. The
cloak’s hood was pulled over his head, hiding everything but his nose
and graying goatee.
“Good day, stranger,”
Maurice said. He strained to catch a peek at the stranger’s eyes but saw
only a shadow. “I assume you’ll be wanting a place to stay tonight.”
“I need no room.” The
stranger’s voice rang clear and strong.
Stronger than most
cherubians, nowadays,
thought Maurice.
The stranger reached
inside his cloak and pulled out a scroll. “Seraph Davian will be
arriving in less than half-an-hour.” He handed the scroll to Maurice.
“Give him this.”
Maurice frowned,
caring little for the visitor’s curt tone. How did this stranger know
Davian’s comings and goings? “If you’re that sure he’s coming, you might
as well wait for him.”
“I’m short on time.”
The stranger turned to leave. “Make sure Davian gets that scroll.”
“What’s your name, so
I can tell the seraph who this is from?”
The stranger looked
over his shoulder at Maurice, and Maurice caught a glimpse of his
eyes—bright blue with pupils that resembled a multi-pointed star. “My
name is of no consequence. Tell him the message on the scroll is from
Cassadern.”
Maurice raised his
eyebrows. “Cassadern? That doesn’t sound like a cherubian name.”
“It isn’t. And I have
a message for you, Maurice. Davian will request your help in the future.
Do not hesitate to give him what he asks.” The stranger spun, and with a
shove of the door flew out.
•
The summer sun’s rays
bounced off the crystal Palace of Ezzer, which sat atop the trees in the
center of the city. It illuminated the charred trunks and branches,
burned during the Third Battle for the City of Ezzer only three months
earlier. Upper-class cherubians, dressed in their finest robes, talked
and laughed, but fear, possibly of Elysia’s economic future, clouded
their eyes.
The talking continued
until a cherubian who wore a black breastplate and a silver kilt barged
out the palace’s gates. His sea-green eyes flashed with anger, and his
lips snarled, accentuating the scar on his clean-shaven chin. A ring of
white metal on the fifth finger of his right hand flashed in the
sunlight. Elysian citizens on the streets stopped and stared. Women
blushed; children watched with wide eyes. Men tipped their hats, and
soldiers saluted as he passed. The seraph nodded back, silently wishing
he could fly the streets of the City of Ezzer in anonymity the way he
could before the Third Battle.
“Are you all right,
Seraph Davian?” asked a herald, who sat next to a blond boy in a
light-green robe.
Davian landed and
forced himself to smile. “Just fine, young Bradford.”
The other boy
whispered something to Bradford.
“Ask him, not me,”
Bradford told him.
The younger boy shook
his head and turned red.
Bradford sighed and
turned to Davian. “My brother wants to know why you aren’t wearing any
of your medals.”
The boy hid his head
behind his brother’s back.
Davian knelt on one
knee and looked around Bradford into the boy’s eyes. “I don’t wear my
medals because I don’t like them clinking against my breastplate. Don’t
want to let the mornachts know I’m coming, do I?”
The brothers shook
their heads.
The younger boy took
a deep breath. “Did you really kill all of those mornachts during the
Third Battle?”
“Of course he did,”
said Bradford. “Seraph Davian saved the City of Ezzer.”
Davian shifted his
weight. He hated discussing the Third Battle, and he especially hated
people saying he saved the city. “The army of Elysia saved the city,
lads.” He patted the young boy on the head. “Lots to do today. No time
to rest.” He spread his chestnut-colored wings, and with a few flaps,
lifted into the air.
A breeze blew through
the city, temporarily cooling it and making the blackened trees sway.
Davian hated the trees; they reminded him of how his best friend Eric
formed a conspiracy of soldiers and tried to take over Elysia’s
government. Eric and his soldiers joined forces with the mornachts and
attacked the City of Ezzer, assassinating most of the senators and
military officers. Eric himself slaughtered the Prime Minister, High
Seraph Octirius, and Davian’s close friend and mentor, Arch-Seraph
Zephor.
At least the city
doesn’t smell like smoke anymore,
Davian thought. Only now, three months after the Third Battle, had the
smell of damp soil after the morning rain replaced the smell of burnt
wood. Pale green leaves—leaves that usually showed themselves in early
spring—started poking through the blackened branches, covering the city
like a green mist. Only one tree in the City of Ezzer, the tallest and
oldest tree, retained its large, pre-battle leaves. The Treetop Inn, a
tavern made of wood darkened with age and stained glass windows that had
warped over time, lay nestled in the top of that tree, and Davian headed
directly for it.
Davian removed his
helmet and burst through the carved wooden door, barely noticing its
creak as it swung back and forth. Usually, the Treetop’s wood-paneled
walls made him feel cozy and comfortable, but not today—especially with
the sterile aroma of soap instead of food filling the inn. He flew to
the bar and hopped on a perching stool, ignoring the two merchants who
strained their necks to peek at the Treetop’s newest patron. Davian
glanced at Maurice, who wiped the far edge of the bar’s counter,
muttering to himself.
“How many times are
you going to clean this counter, Maurice?” asked Davian.
“Till after
tomorrow’s vote.” Maurice looked up, startled. “Um… You don’t usually
come around this early, Seraph.”
“No, I don’t. But
that’s not why you’re surprised to see me, is it?”
Maurice sighed. “No
foolin’ you.” He reached under the counter and pulled out a scroll. “A
cherubian arrived about fifteen minutes ago and said you’d be in. He
told me to give you this.”
Davian’s brow
wrinkled. “That’s strange. I didn’t tell anyone I was coming.” He took
the scroll. “What was his name?”
“Wouldn’t give me his
name. Said the message on the scroll was from someone named Cassadern.”
Davian’s heartbeat
quickened. Cassadern was a seer—a unicorn who knew the future. Davian
met Cassadern before the Third Battle but had not seen the unicorn
since.
“You look worried,
Seraph. If this Cassadern’s loony messenger returns, should I make sure
he doesn’t bother you?”
Davian pocketed the
scroll. “No need for that. Cassadern is just an old friend.” He set his
helmet on the bar. “How’s business?”
“Good. But I don’t
think that’s so good.”
“How’s that?”
“Cherubians used to
come to this tavern to enjoy a good time with their friends. Now it’s a
watering hole they flock to so they can drown out that scandal you’ve
been uncovering.” Maurice sighed. “Elysia may have rebuilt this city,
but its residents still need repair. Your usual?”
Davian nodded.
Maurice grabbed a mug
and filled it with Davian’s favorite drink—a dark lager with a splash of
amber. He set the honeywine in front of Davian. “You look like you could
use more than one of these.”
“I could. And maybe a
good many more.” Davian sipped the honeywine and smiled, savoring the
lager’s sweet, smooth tingle. His frown returned the moment he set the
mug down.
Maurice eyed Davian,
turned to the back room, and yelled, “Halden!”
A freckle-faced boy
flew out. “Yes, sir?”
Maurice pointed to
the two merchants. “Check on those customers while I entertain the
seraph here.”
Davian nodded at the
boy. Halden immediately looked at the floor.
“It’s just the good
Major in a seraph’s uniform, Halden. Same cherubian who used to help you
switch the labels on my honeywine barrels as a joke. Now go help those
customers.” Halden flew to the merchants, and Maurice turned to Davian.
“Bet you didn’t know I knew you did that.”
“I didn’t, but I’m
not surprised.” Davian sighed. “Majors can have more fun than seraphs.
It will only get worse after tomorrow.”
“The idea of a king
doesn’t thrill you, does it?”
Davian shook his
head. “The senate’s proposal gives too much power to one cherubian—more
than even Ezzer had. I know the Runes tell us we will have a king again,
but I don’t like it.”
“I think you and I
are the only ones who still believe the Runes, Seraph,” said Maurice.
Davian’s frown
deepened.
Maurice raised his
eyebrows. “So you think the senate’s motion for a king will pass?”
“Your guess is as
good as mine, Maurice.”
“Ah, but I trust your
perceptions better than—”
“You should know
better than to trust my perceptions by now. All the senators who would
have voted against a king were killed in the Third Battle because
of my misplaced perceptions. Because I chose to trust him.” He
was Eric, the name Davian refused to let escape his lips.
A splash of cold
liquid hit Davian’s leg, and plates, mugs, and silverware crashed
against the floor. Davian turned and saw Halden standing next to the
bar, holding an empty tray, looking as though he wanted to throw up.
“I’m sorry, sir.”
“What do you think
you’re doin’?” bellowed Maurice. “You should pay more attention, and—and
you even spilt honeywine on the good seraph, here!”
Davian placed his
hand on Maurice’s arm. “It’s all right, Maurice.” He hopped off the
perching stool and helped Halden pick up the mess.
“It…it wasn’t your
fault, Seraph,” Halden whispered.
“Now don’t you go
troubling the seraph,” said Maurice. “He knows he had nothing to do with
you droppin’ this. He’s just helpin’ you because that’s who he is.”
“I, I mean, the Third
Battle,” said Halden, placing the last shard of ceramic on the tray. “It
wasn’t your…” Halden’s voice trailed off. He picked up the tray and
scampered into the honeywine cellar.
“I don’t know what’s
gotten into him,” said Maurice. “Been shaky ever since the Third
Battle.” Maurice turned back to Davian. “He’s right, though. It wasn’t
your fault. You trusted your friend. No crime in that. Sometimes, the
people we’re closest to can fool us best. Eric had all of us fooled—not
just you. And the rest of us are still alive because of you. I’ve heard
at least a third of the Senate—possibly more even—are trying to name you
king instead of—”
“I’m no king,
Maurice.”
“Well you’d make a
better one than—”
Davian held up his
hand. “A few senators already mentioned it to me, and I told them the
same thing. I don’t want the crown. I belong in battle. Not wasting away
on a throne.” Davian rubbed the four-pointed seraph star on his helmet.
He scowled and turned the helmet around, facing the star away from him.
“And I certainly don’t belong inside the palace, researching a battle I
should never have let happen.” For the past three months, Davian had
been investigating Eric’s conspiracy, all while the mornachts were
taking advantage of Elysia’s weakened forces in the south. I should
be fighting mornachts instead of our own people. Davian took another
swig, set down his mug, and sighed.
Maurice grabbed
Davian’s mug and refilled it. “Well, let me tell you, a lot of folks
around here, myself included, don’t exactly feel safe knowing you’re
here while all the lieutenants Salla promoted to seraphs are leading the
fighting. Bad use of resources if you ask me.” He set the mug in front
of Davian. “You should ask Salla to let you return to battle. Especially
since the two of you are finally getting along.”
Davian lifted an
eyebrow and took a quick sip of honeywine. He and Salla were two of the
few high-ranking officers who survived the Third Battle. Salla became
high seraph over all Elysia’s military, and he promoted Davian to
arch-seraph. The two of them vowed to work together for the good of the
nation, but those peaceful days only lasted six weeks.
“Oh. That’s what’s
bothering you,” said Maurice. “Things are back to normal again between
you and Salla.”
Is it that obvious?
Davian thought. He took another gulp of honeywine. He had stormed into
the Treetop just after a discussion with Elysia’s high seraph. Salla had
told Davian his patience with the investigation had worn thin and
threatened to assign Davian to another project if he failed to turn up
any new evidence. That prompted Davian to let a few of his thoughts
escape, and the two engaged in their most bitter argument ever.
Davian set the
honeywine mug down and wiped his mouth. “You have the best honeywine in
all Elysia, my friend.”
Maurice laughed. “You
still don’t lie as well as Zephor.”
“No one could hide
his feelings as well as Zephor.” Davian hopped off the perching stool
and grabbed his helmet. He glanced at the seraph’s star and scowled
again. “The only thing that keeps me from going crazy as I rot away in
that palace is my promise to Zephor on his grave that I would track down
his killers.”
“Oh, that you’re doin’,
sir. The magistrate’s just letting them go on petty loopholes—and don’t
you think the rest of the country hasn’t noticed. We have. I’m hearin’
people talkin’ about it daily. It frustrates us just as much as it
frustrates you.” Maurice sighed. “I guess that’s one of the reasons
they’re clamoring for a king. They want the politics to stop.”
Davian donned his
helmet. “Politics never stop, Maurice.” Only Davian knew Salla was
actually the force holding the magistrate at bay. He suspected that
Salla hesitated to file charges for fear of the powerful senators,
officers, and businessmen on Davian’s list of traitors. “Just keep the
honeywine flowing. And if you’ll excuse me, I have a policy meeting I
have to attend.”
Davian flew out the
tavern door and stood in the shade of the Treetop’s porch. He reached in
his pocket and fingered the parchment scroll from Cassadern, wondering
why the unicorn chose to send him a written message through a cherubian.
He pulled the scroll out and opened it. The time we spoke of before
the Third Battle is at hand. Do not give up your faith or your hope.
The message sent
chills down Davian’s wings. The Runes’ Book of Prophecy foretold
of a cherubian dictator who would rise to power and enslave Elysia.
Davian leaned against the balcony, running the prophecy through his
head. During a third battle for the crown city, there shall be a
great tragedy. The public will cry for change, but the one who answers
it will not be the one the people thought.
“The great tragedy
was the death of our leaders,” Davian whispered. “And the public is
crying for change.” He groaned, wondering how he had missed it. Before
the Third Battle, Cassadern had even told Davian that the dictator would
soon arise. But how soon? And who is he? wondered Davian.
And will anyone else figure it out? Davian knew even those
cherubians who still believed in the Runes either ignored or forgot that
particular prophecy.
“Um, excuse me… Uh,
Seraph?”
Davian turned around
and saw Halden looking at his feet. “What can I do for you, young man?”
Halden wrung his
hands. “Are you still investigating that…the Third Battle, sir?”
Davian gave Halden
his full attention. “I’m still investigating.”
Halden glanced back
and forth. His hands started to shake, and his voice fell to a whisper.
“I need to speak with you, sir. Now.” He glanced over his shoulder.
“Please.”
Chapter Two: Unmasking the Truth
Davian raced through
the Palace of Ezzer’s gates and into the palace courtyard. He flew down
the main path until he reached the fifty-foot tall, quartz Statue of
Ezzer. Davian knelt and crossed his fist over his chest in salute. He
kissed his hand and touched the base of the statue. “I wish you were the
one we were electing,” he whispered. He glanced at the inscription on
the statue’s base. In times of darkness, let faith be your guide. Let
your hope never fail.
Davian’s worry
increased. The statue’s inscription reminded him of Cassadern’s message:
Do not give up your faith or your hope. The last time Cassadern
told him not to give up hope, the Third Battle had begun only hours
later. Davian stood up and flew through the palace’s crystal doors and
down its ornately-carved halls. He passed through the sapphire-encrusted
Command Chamber doors, barely noticing the two guards who saluted him.
Davian paused a
moment and stared at the hall. Two rows of pillars supported the vaulted
ceiling and led past the statues of Elysia’s ancient rulers to an empty
crystal throne sitting upon a dais. It won’t be empty for long,
Davian thought. He turned to the immense table in the center of the room
where High Seraph Salla and the other seraphs perched. Children,
thought Davian. Most of the seraphs sitting around the table had taken
orders from majors only three months ago, and they held onto Salla’s
words the way boys hold onto candy. They stared at Davian with disdain.
Davian landed in
front of Salla and knelt.
Salla frowned.
“You’re late. I expected my senior arch-seraph to set a better example.”
“Something came up,
sir.” Davian’s voice dropped to a whisper. “I need to speak with you
alone as soon as possible.”
Salla lifted an
eyebrow. “If you wanted to talk to me, you should have come to the
meeting on time instead of continuing research on a project you know I’m
going to order you to stop tomorrow.” He turned to the other seraphs.
“That concludes this meeting.” He hopped off his perch, turned away from
Davian, and headed for the door. The rest of the seraphs followed.
Davian looked around
the Command Chamber for something to punch instead of Salla, but he
dared not touch anything in what he still considered the hallowed hall
of Ezzer. He flew after Salla. “Sir, I really need to talk with you.”
“I’m a busy
cherubian, Davian. I only ask that you respect my time, which you can’t
even seem to do.”
Davian flew in front
of Salla, forcing him to stop. “I was late, sir, because I discovered a
possible threat on your life. I could have arrived at your meeting on
time and allowed you to be assassinated, or I could have traced the
threat to make sure it was valid. Which would you prefer I do next
time?”
“I’d prefer you
adjust your tone and show me proper respect.”
Any other seraph
would have cowered and apologized. Davian crossed his arms. “Of course,
sir. When you have time to realize you don’t want to die tonight, please
find me.”
Davian turned to fly
out of the Command Chamber, but Salla blocked his path. “You have five
minutes.”
“Thank you, sir.
Remember how you and I assumed Eric led the Third Battle Conspiracy? We
were wrong. Eric was a blind. He was the face of the leader, but not the
leader.” Davian reached in his pocket and pulled out a charred note
Halden had given him. He passed Salla the note, which said:
Eric, proceed with
your plan to keep Davian on Earth—but do not harm Gabriella more than
necessary. Either recruit her, or make it look like an accident. I want
Davian out of our wings, not on a rampage. And be patient. You will have
the pleasure of killing him once everything settles down. Give the
senator my command crystal and tell him to take those who have joined us
out the northern canaf before the sun sets on Friday. Once you finish
with Gabriella, return and await my orders.
The letter had no signature.
Salla frowned. “Where
did you get this?”
“A source, sir. He
overheard the traitor and Senator Starchel discussing it a few
days before the Third Battle. He pulled this out of the fire after they
left.”
“And he’s been
holding onto it for three months without telling anyone?”
“He was too scared.
You should have seen him today, Seraph. His face was whiter than a
unicorn’s once he finished telling me everything. His hands never
stopped shaking.” Davian sighed. “I think the guilt of not coming
forward until now will haunt him more than his fear of retribution.”
“Who is this source
of yours?”
“I promised not to
reveal him yet, sir. Not even to you.”
Salla stared at the
note. “You believe him?”
“I believe him. The
information he gave me matches my research, and he would not have known
Starchel leads my list of conspirators.”
“Do you recognize the
writing?”
“I haven’t had time
to analyze it, sir.”
“What’s this got to
do with an assassination attempt on my life, Davian? It looks more like
you’re trying to stall for time so I won’t take you off the
investigation.”
“I’m not done yet,
sir,” snapped Davian.
Salla’s eyes
flickered. “You will adjust your tone. Or do you only obey orders from
Zephor?”
“I don’t have time to
explain this, sir, but… I think the dictator of our Runes is about to
try to take power.” Davian held up the letter. “I think he wrote
this, and if I’m right, you’re in danger.”
“According to this
letter, you’re the one who should be worried.”
“Killing me won’t get
anyone into power. Killing you will.”
Salla chuckled.
“Davian, you’re talking about a little-known prophecy, and the scribes
don’t even agree on its implications. And that’s if the Runes are even
true, which most cherubians now doubt.” Davian bristled, but Salla
continued. “Besides, if you take the Runes literally, a unicorn seer
will precede the evil one, and all the seers of Capral are dead.”
Not all,
thought Davian. Cassadern was a direct descendent of Capral. Davian
toyed with telling Salla about Cassadern, but the unicorn’s life
depended on Davian’s secrecy. He refused to break the unicorn’s
trust—even if it meant hiding Cassadern’s existence from Salla. “The
Runes say Capral’s line will reemerge,” Davian said. “I have other
reasons for believing the cherubian prophesied by the Runes is about to
take power, but the lives of my sources depend on my not divulging them.
Give me the authority to arrest Starchel and question him. I know you
want me to wait until we have more information, but I need to find who’s
behind this before whoever it is turns on you.”
Salla looked Davian
in the eyes. “You really were late because you were checking out this
threat on my life?”
“That’s correct,
sir.”
“I apologize. I
thought your intentions were different.” He stared at the note and
pocketed it with a scowl. “Let me question Starchel first. The traitor
trusts me. I might get more out of him than you.”
“Should I go with
you, sir—for protection?”
“No, the sight of you
will probably keep him quiet, but I appreciate the gesture.”
“If you think you can
get more information than me, then that’s fine.”
Salla studied Davian
for a moment. “Are you all right, Davian? You look worn.”
“I want this to be
over with—and… Never mind.”
“And what?”
Davian ran his
fingers through his hair. Too short. His hair was much too short, and
his hand always left his hair before he completed his thoughts.
“Something’s not right, sir. The pieces aren’t fitting together. It’s
like…it’s like I’m missing something—and it’s staring me right in the
face. Be careful when you talk to Starchel.”
•
Davian trudged out of the Command Chamber
and flew to a balcony overlooking the palace courtyard. He leaned on the
railing and closed his
eyes. Halden’s tip reminded him of how he felt during the Third Battle,
fighting an enemy he could not see. Davian shifted his gaze to the
courtyard, concentrating on a vine of lavender starlilies winding up a
crystal pillar, and his thoughts wandered to a woman who loved
starlilies above all other flowers. It worked; he relaxed for the first
time in weeks.
Below, a gigantic, grimy
major limped into the courtyard. He towered over the rest of the
cherubians and wore the bronze breastplate and kilt of the
Reconnaissance and Sabotage Order (RSO), the Elysian military’s special
operations division. The major’s scraggly black hair poked out under his
helmet. Davian envied his rough, semi-bearded chin, and wished to cast
aside his silver seraph’s kilt and wear the Bronze (as RSOs referred to
their uniforms) again. He watched the cherubians in the courtyard rush
out of the major’s way and chuckled. He suspected their exodus had
little to do with the major’s gargantuan form and more to do with his
presumably foul stench. This particular major had just returned from a
two-month assignment, and Davian knew from personal experience that he
rarely bathed while on a mission. Davian leapt off the balcony and flew
down to greet his most trusted soldier. “Marcus!”
Marcus surveyed the
cherubians in the courtyard, who stopped the moment Davian landed and
gazed at their favorite arch-seraph. He eyed Davian, who tried to ignore
their stares. Marcus shot Davian an evil grin and put on a flamboyant
show, bowing so low his forehead almost hit the ground. He straightened
up. “Seraph Davian.” He fell to the ground in mock-humility.
Davian reddened. “Get up,
Marcus!” he whispered. “I’m still not used to that.”
Marcus grinned. “I know.”
Davian gave him a playful
punch, and the two embraced. Strangers might have thought it odd to see
a clean-cut seraph hugging a smelly, dirty major without fear of soiling
his own uniform. Strangers knew little about Davian, however. Marcus
smelled like sweat, smoke, and a hint of sulfur, reminding Davian of his
own days on assignment. He actually hoped some of Marcus’s dirt would
rub off on his own uniform and make it look—and smell—more as a
soldier’s uniform should.
Marcus pulled a scroll out of
his pocket. “Done!”
Davian smiled and led Marcus
back to the Command Chamber where they perched at a corner of the
conference table. Marcus opened the scroll, revealing a grimy,
hand-scrawled map. “We’ve got the whole thing, including a little more
of the Swamp of Death.” He passed the map across the table to Davian.
Davian fingered the map.
“Well done, Marcus.” This marked the first time any cherubian laid eyes
on a complete map of Morvenia, the enemy country to Elysia’s southeast.
Davian knew the news should have excited him, but instead he felt his
stomach twist around. He turned his head to hide his scowl from Marcus.
“You wish you were there with
me, don’t you, Seraph?”
Davian gave Marcus a wry
smile. “You know me too well.”
“Well, this’ll cheer you.
You’ll never guess how we got out.”
“How?”
“Your way. Out the port.”
Marcus beamed. “It’s the best way. I’m not taking a unit through
minotaur territory in the south any more than I have to.”
“Bet you didn’t summon a
unicorn and alert all of Morvenia’s wolves once you got out,” Davian
mumbled, remembering their last mission together.
“No, sir. Learned not to do
that from you, too. Won’t find any unicorns down south nowadays,
anyway.”
Marcus sighed, and his joking
demeanor disappeared. “Lost two on the way in, Seraph. Minotaurs, you
know. And one inside. Wolf pack.” He frowned. “Now I’m starting to
understand why you always got so moody.”
“You didn’t lose Theo, did
you?” Theo had saved Davian’s life twice during the Third Battle.
“No, sir. The runt made it
back alive. You like him, don’t you?”
“You and he are the only
soldiers in Heaven’s Realm I trust, Marcus.”
“You don’t trust Gabriella?”
“She’s not in Heaven’s
Realm.”
“Ah. The other reason you get
so moody.” Marcus grinned at Davian. “You’ve now got the arch-seraph
power to assign her to WET.” WET, the Weapons and Technology division of
the Elysian military, handled research, statistical analysis, and
weapons development. Elysia reserved assignments to WET for soldiers who
either showed immense intelligence (and little common sense) or soldiers
too injured to fight.
“That would be an abuse of my
position and an insult to her,” muttered Davian, hoping Marcus would not
suspect just how often he considered it.
“Come on. All seraphs abuse
their position—especially Salla. It’s one of the perks—and you don’t
even try to use that star on your helmet to get yourself free lager. Get
her off Earth, bring her back here and marry her—at least so I don’t
have to watch you mope around all the time.”
“Stop tempting me, Marcus.”
Marcus chuckled. Then he
frowned.
Davian suspected the loss of
his men still upset him. “The longer you command, the more soldiers
you’ll lose. It’s the way of the commander. Don’t beat yourself up over
it. Your mission was a success. You accomplished your objective. That’s
the important part.” Davian rolled up the map and handed it to Marcus.
“Get me copies for all the seraphs.”
“Yes, sir.”
“On a lighter note, did you
meet your quota?” Marcus always set a quota of enemy kills for himself
before each assignment.
Marcus sighed again. “Don’t
set quotas for myself anymore. Not when I’m the commanding officer,
anyway. I’m turning into you.” He scowled. “I liked it a lot better when
you were my commanding officer, and all I had to do was follow orders
and kill scabs.” Scab was the RSO nickname for mornachts—a
nickname that spread to many of the other divisions.
“Me, too, Marcus. Me, too.”
Davian knew neither of them
said what he wanted to say. They both wished things remained as they
were before the Third Battle, before their own countrymen slew over half
of their officers and senators. Before their closest friend betrayed and
almost killed both of them. Neither Davian nor Marcus discussed the
battle, especially their final fight with Eric in the munitions cellar,
where Eric gave Marcus his new, permanent limp and Davian his new,
permanent scowl.
Davian hopped off his perch.
“Get yourself and the rest of your unit a bath and a shave. Then you are
all to meet me at the Treetop Inn. Lager’s on me.”
Marcus raised his huge arm
and put it around the seraph’s shoulders, making sure his sweaty, hairy
armpit nearly hit Davian’s nose. “Do I have to take a bath?”
Davian grimaced. “Ugh! You
could kill a scab with that move, Marcus. Now get going.”
Marcus limped to the door,
then turned and cast Davian a worried look. “Is it true what I’m
hearing? The Senate is thinking of reinstating a king?”
Davian nodded.
“Him?”
Davian nodded again.
Marcus snarled. “I never
thought I’d see the day when the Elysian people would willingly give up
freedom for false security.”
“Neither did I,” mumbled
Davian.
•
Davian flew
into the Treetop Inn holding a list of the open positions in WET. He
scanned the list, wondering which position might suit Gabriella the
best. Weapons Tester. No. Archives. No. Statistical
Analyst. Definitely not. She had too much personality for that.
Davian’s eye fell on Battle Analyst. That might work. She was
definitely smart enough, and soldiers in active duty rarely scoffed at
battle analysts. And she would report directly to me. The thought
made
Davian smile—until he pictured Gabriella’s face when she found out
Elysia reassigned her to WET. Salla would see through it anyhow.
Besides, she currently guarded Earth’s most important child, and Davian
knew a former archery champion was exactly who needed to be guarding
Tommy—the child the Runes foretold would save Earth.
“Didn’t know
I’d be seeing you twice today, Seraph,” said Maurice, snapping Davian
out of his thoughts. Maurice gave Davian a look of concern. “Doing all
right?”
“Just fine,”
Davian lied. He scanned the half-full tavern. “Has Seraph Salla dropped
in tonight?”
Maurice
shook his head.
“What about
Senator Starchel?”
Maurice
wrinkled his nose. “Not him, either.”
Maurice’s
answer worried Davian. He had yet to hear from Salla after his talks
with the senator and hoped the high seraph was safe. “Is Marcus here
yet?”
“He’s at
your usual table in the back, sir. I’ll take you there.”
Davian
followed Maurice, scanning the tavern. “Did you give Halden the night
off, Maurice?”
Maurice
scowled. “Little sprite disappeared this afternoon and hasn’t returned
yet.”
Davian
raised his eyebrows. “Doesn’t Halden skip work often?”
“No, that’s
Rutger you’re thinking of, Seraph. Halden never tries to cut work—but
I’ll still have to lay into him when he gets here so it won’t happen
again.” Maurice glanced at Davian. “You’re lookin’ a little green,
Seraph. You sure you’re okay?”
Davian
forced a smile and patted Maurice on the back. “Nothing’s wrong with me
that some of your brew can’t cure.”
Maurice led
Davian to the back corner of the tavern where three RSOs with scraggly
hair and chins were perched around a table. Elysia required its soldiers
to shave and keep their hair cut close unless they were in RSO and on
assignment, and RSOs preferred looking as though they were always on
assignment. They cut their beards close but not all the way so they
could say they shaved, and they kept their hair longer than Elysian
rules dictated simply on what they called a matter of principle. The
Elysian military gave up trying to enforce the hair rule with RSOs and
used peer pressure to keep the soldiers in Elysia’s conventional
military division, the Land and Air Force (LAF), in line. “You don’t
want to look like a bunch of RSO ruffians, do you?” LAF officers often
asked their soldiers.
“No, sir!”
the LAFs would yell, secretly wishing they could look like ruffians in
bronze.
Marcus,
still scruffy but clean, raised his mug to Davian as he approached. Theo
perched on Marcus’s right. His straight hair fell just below his collar,
and his beard only grew around his chin and under his nose. Tyce, who
was almost as tall and wide as Marcus, perched next to Theo. Tyce
sported a full black beard—one-fourth an inch of one, anyway—and he had
pulled his wavy, black hair into a one-inch, defiant ponytail.
Davian set
his WET list on the table and hopped on a perch next to Marcus. He
yanked the band out of Tyce’s hair. “Don’t flaunt it, Tyce.”
“Told you,”
Theo whispered to Tyce.
Marcus eyed
the list. “So you’ve decided to do it?”
Davian shook
his head. “She’d hate me for the rest of my life.”
“Not if you
told her why you did it.”
“I won’t
abuse my position, Marcus.” Davian crumpled up the list and threw it in
the fire.
“Well, I
wouldn’t think any less of you if you did.”
Davian
surveyed Marcus, Theo, and Tyce and grinned. “Whoever taught you three
how to shave needs to learn how to use a knife.”
Tyce grinned
back. “That would be you, Seraph. We just don’t look as pretty as you
when we shave.” He glanced at Davian’s mid-section. “So, do you have a
gut to match that LAF baby-face of yours yet?”
“I can still
make you call for your mother, Tyce.”
Tyce hopped
off his perch. “I’d like to see you try, Seraph.”
Marcus shook
his head. “Not again.”
“Tyce, what
are you doing?” asked Theo. “You haven’t beaten him yet!”
“Ah, but
he’s out of practice,” said Tyce. “Now’s my chance.”
Marcus
glanced at Theo. “Did you put him up to this?”
Theo shot
Marcus a look of innocence. “Let’s just say my drekels are on the
Seraph.”
Davian stood
up, and Marcus grabbed his arm. “The boy’s ego has soared a little too
high. Make sure this hurts for me, will you?”
Davian
winked. Marcus had no idea he still kept his daily workout regimen in
hopes of wearing the Bronze again. He landed in front of Tyce. “It’s
your turn to replace Maurice’s tables if we break any this time.”
“Yes, sir,”
said Tyce.
The tavern
patrons gathered around, watching Davian and Tyce circle each other.
Tyce lunged
at Davian, who flipped over his head and landed on the young soldier’s
shoulders. Davian rammed his thumb into Tyce’s sarin juncture, a
pressure point where a cherubian’s wings met his back. The giant
cherubian gasped in pain. Davian kicked Tyce’s legs out from under him
and slammed him to the ground. The thud echoed throughout the Treetop,
and the patrons cheered.
“Is that
enough pain for you, Marcus?” Davian yelled.
Marcus
lifted his mug and nodded.
“You owe me
one hundred drekels, Tyce!” yelled Theo.
Davian
pulled his thumb out of Tyce’s sarin juncture, and Tyce pressed the skin
between his thumb and his forefinger to stop the pain. Davian helped
Tyce up. “Watch your back. Always watch your back. Your wings are your
most prized weapon, and the scabs know it. Let’s try again. When you see
me leap, assume I’m going for your wings, and don’t let me.”
Tyce set his
jaw and faced Davian. “Yes, sir.”
“That’s not
fair!” said Theo. “He insults the seraph and gets a free grappling
lesson.”
“He won’t be
smiling like that tomorrow,” said Marcus.
Davian leapt
over Tyce again, only this time Tyce spun around and tackled Davian.
Sweat flew as the two of them wrestled until Davian pinned Tyce to the
ground. The onlookers yelled, “Ten, nine, eight…” Davian’s face turned
red. Drops of sweat raced down his forehead as he tried to keep Tyce
from throwing him off.
“One!”
yelled the patrons, and the tavern erupted in cheers again.
Davian
helped Tyce up. “Don’t press for advantage while you’re off balance. A
soldier the size of Theo can take that risk, but not you. Gain control
first. You’re big enough to take the advantage later. It’s all about
control. Once you learn control, I won’t be able to beat you.” Davian
wiped the sweat off his forehead. “Again?”
Tyce flung
his head back and forth, letting his hair fling drops of sweat in all
directions. “Again.”
Salla’s
herald burst into the tavern. “Seraph Davian?” He beckoned to Maurice.
“I’m looking for the arch-seraph. Is Davian here?”
Davian’s
heart did a somersault. “Later,” he told Tyce. He flew to the herald.
“What’s wrong?”
“High Seraph
Salla needs you right now. It’s an emergency!”
•
The herald
led Davian out the southern gates, and Davian narrowed his eyes. Why was
Salla outside the city gates? They flew across the meadow for fifteen
minutes and entered a dark wood.
“Where are
we going?” Davian asked.
The herald
ignored him and continued flying.
Davian
stopped and landed on the ground. He smelled sulfur, meaning a mornacht
lurked nearby. Davian reached for his sword, and ten cherubian soldiers
jumped out from behind a boulder and pulled him to the ground. They
ripped off his armor and his weapons, including the dagger he always
kept in his boot, and one soldier yanked off his ring. The others forced
his wings into a wing-lock and chained his wrists and ankles. A soldier
with greasy hair, black eyes, and a familiar sneer held a knife to
Davian’s throat and said, “I’ve been waiting a long time for this.”
…to be continued in Out of the Shadows: Book II of the Elysian
Chronicles.
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Copyright © 2006 M. B. Weston. All rights reserved.
Revised:
10/09/09
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