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The Dark of the Moon (Chronicles of Lunos Book 1) by E.S. Bell (35)

 

 

 

Undefeated

 

 

Accora walked among the rows of fauna in her greenhouse. Dawn’s light seeped through the multi-colored glass panes to drench the greenery in jeweled hues. She trailed her fingers over the broad-leafed plants and the feathery ferns, but kept her hands to herself near the blood roses. They had a tendency to snap. But she talked to them. She talked to herself. A habit born of long years in service to Bacchus. One did not converse with Bacchus. One heeded. One cowered. One begged and pleaded for mercy and was answered with pain. He did not know her worth. None among the Bazira did. High Vicar Zolin threw her to his mongrel and then walked away. Accora stopped and returned to the stand of blood roses.

“If Selena is half as strong as I think she is, Bacchus will die, surprised that such a delicate little flower has such a strong bite.” She teased the flower; it craned on its stalk for her flesh. “And Zolin will know it was a mistake to favor his rabid cur instead of its master.”

But Zolin was a tiny speck on the horizon of her thoughts. Bacchus loomed, obscuring all. She had thought of little else but his death over the last twenty years.

“I will gladly suffer Selena’s sword if I can watch that soulless monster bleed first.”

She let out a cry and snatched her hand back from the snapping blood rose. It tilted its bloom up, like a closed tulip, to let her blood slide down its stalk.

“Careful,” she murmured, dabbing her fingertip to her tongue. “She has lessons yet to learn.”

Accora continued down her greenhouse, arriving at the tray of insects impaled on pins. As Selena’s did, her gaze went first to the stowaway mantis.

“I had thought that Skye would’ve been the one to end him. She was powerful. Aluren. The High Reverent even.” She sneered. “The Aluren are blinded by their desperation.”

 She thought to what she had read in Selena’s mind the night of the kafira ritual. That Skye had ordered their deaths—hers and Bacchus’s. Bacchus, she understood. But her?

“After all I have taught her.”

The betrayal stung but was not unexpected. She let her fingers trail over the glass, tracing the mantis’s body and smiled despite herself. “Such is her nature.”

And if Skye was as Accora believed her to be, then Accora was but a pawn in a much larger game. “Selena too. All of us.” Her smiled faded. “But Selena will kill Bacchus and Skye’s game board will be absent one pawn.”

Selena will kill him. The thought gave her a pleasant shiver as she recalled how her pupil had mastered the healing. The shattered ampulla. It had cut the girl, but the wounds would heal and she would be stronger for it. Free of lies, Selena would know real power and she would need power in abundance to face Bacchus. But she had distractions. Ilior was one. Her captain was another.

Julian Tergus. A false name. Accora would stake her life on it. He’d resisted the water and in so doing, remained as a blank piece of parchment.

“And so dangerous to me. A captain with a mute crew has secrets, secrets that he gladly suffers beatings and broken bones to preserve.”

She thought of the mute crewman who was not mute. Such an interesting story she’d read that night when he drank from the darkpool waters. A story gleaned in bits and pieces but bloody enough for her to know that ‘Julian Tergus’ was up to no good. No good at all.

And the girl who called herself Cat. Accora moved to a shelf of vials and bottles. Her eye picked out the pumpkin oil easily. Its bright orange color was a beacon among the drabber concoctions. She turned the vial over in her hands.

“She is not his crew,” Accora mused. “She is something else altogether and dangerous. But not to me.”

The air shifted behind her. She smelled acrid, oily smoke, and a stench beneath that: the scent of hot blood. Accora dropped the vial of pumpkin oil; it shattered over the floor, splattering a sunburst over the planking. Quickly, Accora picked up a blown glass bottle from the table before her. It was sea blue with gold veins wound in and a stopper at the top, all exquisitely rendered. She’d kept it close, ever since Ori had found the crew on her beach and had had to escape a great, hungry beast that served the captain.

“Tergus is dangerous,” she said loudly, “to Selena and to me. I am right to suspect him.” She brought the bottle close, cradling it in both hands. “Aren’t I…Svoz, was it?”

Accora started to turn but her instincts screamed. She threw herself to the ground, rolling and cradling the glass jar, as the sword came down. It cleaved the small worktable beside her, and she was showered with soil and broken pottery. Her heart fluttered in her narrow chest and she scrambled under the closest table as fast as she was able. The ground was hard on her knees but she hardly felt the pain. The sword came down again with a deafening crack. Splintered wood and more dirt wafted down but the table held. The sirrak bent to peer under. He twiddled his fingers at her.

“Halloo!”

Accora fumbled at the stopper on the glass jar she still cradled as the table was torn away as if lifted by a fierce wind. Svoz held it with one hand and hurled it at the greenhouse wall. Accora flinched at the cacophony of shattering glass, and then scrabbled backward as the sirrak loomed over her. Blood-red and hulking, he gripped a long curved blade that was as long as his arm and he licked a forked tongue over his lips.

“Fast or slow? Which shall it be, witch? Slow would be my inclination. It’s been so long, I don’t wish to rush this unless I have to.”

“You think me feeble?” Accora said. “You think me a tired old woman, easily disposed?”

“If you have fight in you, old one, I welcome it. My orders were only to kill you.” He smiled wickedly. “My new master has not yet learned to be specific.”

“Your master. Of course.” She slowly got to her feet, her joints aching, her robes torn and dirty. “Well, I have fight in me, sirrak; more than you could guess. Bazira are trained from childhood in swordcraft. But alas, I have left my blade in my sleeping chambers.”

Svoz retrieved a slender short sword from the pack of weapons strapped between his wings. “Let it be known in your afterworld that I was honorable to the aged.” He laid it on the ground between them. “Go ahead. Take it. I swear upon my honor I will not slice you to ribbons until you are armed.”

“A sirrak’s honor,” Accora sneered. Still clutching the glass jar, she closed and then opened her other hand. “Krystak!”

Water, culled from her own body, rushed to her hand instantly, and her magic morphed them into daggers of ice that lanced out of her open palm. She did not wait for them to find their mark but scrambled to her feet and ran down the narrow path, Svoz’s screams of pain chasing after her.

She was almost at the door when a plume smoke burst in front of her. Her instincts—honed years ago in training with the Bazira—flared again, and she ducked as the curved sword arced out of the smoke, whistling just above her head. It struck a wooden support beam and was held fast. The smoke dissipated and Accora’s breath caught in her throat to see Svoz, his face contorted with rage and pain. On his midsection a white-gray splotch of frozen skin stood out from the red like snow in a puddle of blood. Accora turned and ran back the other way.

Another plume of smoke barred her way and another sword strike came at her own midsection. She curled away but wasn’t so fast this time and felt the agony of the sirrak’s blade bite her in the meat of her shoulder—what little she had left.

Blindly, she screamed, “Krystak!”

Svoz answered with his own roar of pain that seemed like to burst her eardrums. As the smoke cleared, she saw another patch of white, this time on his neck. He swung his sword back, shattering the glass tray of pinned insects hanging on the wall beside him. Accora fell at his feet to duck the return swing, and called ice again. From her prone position on the floor, the shards struck Svoz in his groin and he staggered backwards, unable even to scream, before toppling over a broken bench to land on his rump.

The magic was draining her. A terrible thirst wracked her and her skin felt tight and hot. She worked frantically at the stopper on the glass jar but the damned thing was stuck fast and her fingers trembled so she could hardly control them. Just as she was certain she hadn’t the strength to pull it free, the stopper loosened ever so slightly.

Svoz was climbing to his feet, scraping his sword along the ground as he picked it up. She expected a scream of rage or curses, or threats. She didn’t expect to hear him laugh. A bone-chilling chuckle that seemed to originate from the ground.

“Oh, very good, old one,” he chortled. “A low blow…I can appreciate that.”

“I have more…if you want them,” she panted.

He cocked his head at the glass jar she cradled. “What is that? A souvenir of the days when you were young and had more years ahead of you than behind? I’ve heard the aged are fond of knick-knacks.”

“Knick-knacks, yes.” Accora said. “This one…very valuable. It is from the desert isles of Juskara. Have you heard of them?”

“There is nothing that is unknown to me, witch.”

“Then you know the Juskaran isles are serviced by djinn. Djinn are like your kind: subservient and weak. Like you, they are beholden to their human masters. Like you, they are slaves.”

“A slave, am I?” Svoz scoffed lightly enough, but rage boiled beneath the surface. “Slaves are not permitted to indulge in their thirst for blood.”

“Aye,” Accora said. “Bound by blood instead of chains, but bound just the same.”

The sirrak’s face contorted into a horrifying snarl. “I’ll show you blood…”

Svoz lunged, his blade swinging, but Accora lifted the stopper out and held the crystal jar before her. Immediately, the sirrak dissolved into his customary plume of vile-smelling smoke and Accora feared he was escaping her. But the smoke rushed for the mouth of the bottle and poured itself inside. Svoz’s final scream of rage sounded as if it came from a great distance. With a satisfied tilt of her lips, Accora returned the stopper with trembling hands.

“You talk too much,” she told the bottle. “I’m certain I’m not the first to tell you that.”

The dusky smoke inside the bottle churned and rolled. The brilliant blue of the crystal was made dull by Svoz’s’ vapor and the jug no longer caught the eye with its beauty. It felt as if it weighed a thousand stones, and she thought to take it to the shore that night and send it to the Deeps.

“But I may yet need him. A bartering tool to keep the captain’s own sword from my back.”

“Accora?” Selena called from the front of the greenhouse. “I heard a crash…” Booted footsteps rushed toward her.

“Here, child. I’m here.” Accora set the jug behind two other vases deep on the shelf so that it was lost to shadow. “The gods be damned, I’m still here.”

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