Home > Dragon Unleashed(7)

Dragon Unleashed(7)
Author: Grace Draven

   “Do you wish for him to apologize for his rudeness?” She pivoted to face the speaker, discovering a man taller than average height leading a sleepy-eyed horse by its reins. He tilted his head toward the trader striding away from them. “I can make him do so.”

   Her defender was handsome, though not in the way some might think of male beauty, like Gilene’s husband with his refined features. This man’s face was sharper, harsher, with a beakish nose and a thin-lipped mouth creased on either side by unforgiving lines. His eyes reminded her of the ink Galedrin scribes made from oak and walnut galls—a brown so rich and dark, it looked black in certain lights, with streamers of sunlight swirling in its depths. His attractiveness was more memorable than traditional. His clothing and accented Common reminded her of the two mercenary-traders Hamod had dealt with earlier in the day, though he dressed far better than they.

   The similarities alarmed her. Halani wasn’t a believer in coincidence, and while this market had drawn people from all parts of the Empire and territories outside its reach, she hadn’t seen many dressed like him or the trader pair. She had warned Hamod the engraved claw was sorcerous, and she didn’t think it too far-fetched that this man’s appearance in the Goban market wasn’t a matter of chance.

   He waited for her answer, unconcerned that the Guild trader had put a fair distance between them by now. To Halani’s mind, he wasn’t worth the trouble of chasing down just to extract an empty apology. Such a thing offered momentary satisfaction followed by days of petty retributions. She wanted no trouble from the Guild.

   She bowed briefly. “I thank you, but no. He means nothing to me; therefore, his opinion means nothing. Besides, an apology only has value when it’s sincerely given.”

   And she didn’t want to be in a stranger’s debt. He might mean well, a noble gesture toward someone he considered unjustly wronged. Or his offer might come with expectation of repayment, something Halani had no intention of giving.

   “A wise way to look at it,” he said and returned her bow. “Then I wish you well, madam, and bid you good evening.”

   He led the horse past her, and Halani stiffened, hearing in her spirit a hum of earth magic, purling like a wave toward the shoreline with a tune she’d never heard until now. As if he heard the same from her, he paused, turned, and stared at her for several moments, saying nothing.

   The nearby shout of a drunkard demanding a refill from one of the pub stalls snapped Halani out of her stupor. She retreated without returning the farewell, seeking a different way to the caravan camp, hoping the stranger wouldn’t follow her. He didn’t, though she felt the heavy weight of his gaze on her back long after the market stalls hid her from his view.

   Hamod. She had to warn Hamod, of what she couldn’t say. A man with a horse and the feel of sorcery about him? Garbed like the traders who so wanted to get rid of the engraved claw? Her uncle might scoff at her suspicions, but he might not. He didn’t always listen to her advice, but he trusted her instincts enough to take them into account. Halani picked up her pace until she jogged along the paths, urged to greater speed by the certainty that if Hamod had purchased the ivory, he’d brought trouble to their camp.

 

 

CHAPTER THREE

 


   The Spider of Empire perched on her throne, swathed in gauzy silks that did more to enhance her nudity than to cover it. Most of the colorful fabric spilled in a waterfall over her right shoulder, hiding the fact that she no longer possessed her right arm.

   She crossed her legs, idly tapping the air with one foot as she pinned her best henchman with a flat stare. “If I thought you might be anything other than bored with it all, I’d invite you to the entertainment I have planned for later.”

   As Dalvila’s favorite go-to minion for everything from a pie delivery to an assassination, Gharek had learned long ago not to show emotion to his liege and give her the opportunity to use it against him. She already had him by the balls as it was. The gods only knew what that “entertainment” entailed. Sex, torture, a combination of the two. He hadn’t heard any screaming when the guards escorted him into the receiving chamber to wait, but it only meant Dalvila hadn’t yet left a victim on her bedroom floor, insensate, insane, or in pieces.

   “How may I serve you, Your Greatness?” The right voice modulation, that sweet-spot combination of interest and willingness without overt fawning, took practice and years for him to get it just right. And it had saved his life more than once when dealing with the Spider.

   She motioned to a slave kneeling on the lowest step of the dais on which her throne sat. The man knee-walked up the remaining treads, carrying a large tome in his arms, which he carefully deposited on the small table next to the empress. A brief touch of his forehead to the marble floor, and he knee-walked backward down the steps to resume his former place. Gharek was impressed with the man’s dexterity in keeping his balance. Had he fallen, Dalvila likely would have punished him for the offense.

   Dalvila casually flipped the book open, turning pages as if time stopped to await her pleasure. She finally closed the book and returned her attention to Gharek. “This book was taken out of Midrigar by a pair of thieves. Or one thief at least. The other didn’t survive the race to the gates.” Gharek quashed the urge to roll his eyes. Only the stupid and the greedy braved haunted Midrigar to steal artifacts. Even the desperate knew better. There were worse things to suffer than death, and they lurked in the ruined city, waiting for foolish prey that always, always fell into their trap. “The book must be of great value for someone to risk so much in obtaining it.”

   “That, or there are those who’ll filch anything not nailed down.”

   She tapped the book with the tip of one brightly painted nail. “This is an alchemist’s grimoire from the age of Emperor Vorhesian. Within it, recipes for an elixir and a salve I intend to have. The elixir grants long life and youth. The salve heals all wounds and even restores missing limbs. Both are made of gold and draga blood.”

   Were this anyone except the empress telling Gharek such a thing, he’d scoff at them, advise they toss such nonsense into the nearest fire and stop wasting his time. This was not just anyone, so he waited, holding his tongue.

   Dalvila searched his features with a serpent’s gaze, looking for any mockery there. Finding none, she relaxed in her seat and continued. “I have plenty of gold. I need a draga, and I want you to get one for me.”

   You must be fucking joking, he wanted to snap at her. Whatever bizarre game she’d chosen to play with him this warm summer afternoon, she was the only one to find it amusing. Gharek, on receiving her summons, had assumed she had an assignment for him. Kill and get rid of a general who dared to question her, drown a woman she perceived as a rival for the terrified affections of a lover she’d probably hang in a fortnight once she tired of him. She’d once sent Gharek on a journey halfway across the Empire to bring back a culinary delicacy whose name he still couldn’t pronounce and which she declared disgusting after taking one bite. He’d dispatched her rivals, garroted her rebellious commanders, and delivered sugarcoated sweets to her without complaint and with alacrity and efficiency, earning her admiration if not her trust. Dalvila trusted no one. It was why she still held the throne in an iron grip, even after her husband, the emperor, was reduced to an ash heap in Kraelag’s god-fire conflagration.

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)