Shannivar Read online




  Shannivar could no longer hear the chanting or feel the bone-deep shivers of her body.

  Winds bore her up as if she were no more than a downy feather from her clan’s totem eagle. Overhead, storm clouds collided, and in their turbulent depths, colors writhed and coalesced. Shapes moved, no—one single shape, man-like and erect, but distorted. She made out a heavy-jawed skull, arms, and legs that reached down into the very marrow of the land. It blotted out half the sky.

  The figure was moving now, emerging from the clouds to stride across a wide green field. A corona of fire surrounded it. Whatever it touched burst into flames and left cinders of frost. Its shadow spawned smaller creatures—stone-drakes, winged snakes, things that might have been wolves except for their many-forked tails and firelit eyes, and many others too dim and misshapen to recognize.

  The mountains glowed, belching molten rock and ash. Shannivar became aware that she was not alone. Rising up behind her, as if she had floated on a banner in their forefront, stood a company of men. One man in particular stood out. Although she could not see his face and his armor and weapons were foreign to her, she knew him. The soldiers chanted in unison, but she paid them no heed. Her attention was drawn to the object the man now raised overhead, a rainbow of colored crystals, shimmering with power. At their heart lay a clear faceted gem, forged for a single purpose—to focus that power. Golden light streamed through it and suffused the face of the man. It glimmered under his skin.

  “Khored! Khored!” the men shouted. Their voices filled the wind . . .

  Also by Deborah J. Ross:

  The Seven-Petaled Shield

  Shannivar

  The Heir of Khored*

  *Coming soon from DAW Books

  Copyright © 2013 by Deborah J. Ross.

  All Rights Reserved.

  Cover art by Matthew Stawicki.

  Cover design by G-Force Design.

  DAW Book Collectors No. 1640.

  DAW Books are distributed by Penguin Group (USA).

  All characters and events in this book are fictitious.

  All resemblance to persons living or dead is coincidental.

  If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book may have been stolen property and reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher. In such case neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

  The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the Internet or any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal, and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage the electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  eBook ISBN: 978-1-101-63567-4

  First Printing, December 2013

  DAW TRADEMARK REGISTERED

  U.S. PAT. AND TM. OFF. AND FOREIGN COUNTRIES

  —MARCA REGISTRADA

  HECHO EN U.S.A.

  Version_1

  Contents

  Also by Deborah J. Ross

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  PART I: Zevaron’s War

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  PART II: Shannivar’s Hope

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  PART III: Shannivar’s Race

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  PART IV: Shannivar’s Hunt

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  PART V: Zevaron’s Conquest

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  PART VI: Shannivar’s War

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  To Bonnie Stockman

  May the Mother of Horses hold you ever in her heart

  PART I:

  Zevaron’s War

  Chapter 1

  DREAMING, Zevaron clutched his chest, kneading muscle and skin to ease the ache within. He heard the whispers of his mother’s words. She was trying to tell him something, but there was no time. She was dying already.

  I will come back, he’d sworn. I will save you.

  And she had answered him as she lay in her filthy prison cell. You have already saved what is most dear to me.

  Gone, she was gone.

  Gone as Maharrad his father was gone, and Shorennon his brother, and Meklavar his country.

  Cinath had done these things. She was dead, and Cinath, may-he-rot-forever, had killed her.

  Her life was worth a thousand Ar-Kings. Ten thousand.

  Cinath will pay—

  His empire would pay. Gelon would burn. By all the gods of Gelon and Denariya, where he’d sailed as a pirate for four long years, by the ancient powers of his own people, he would bring down this accursed land and everyone in it. If he had to make a treaty with his bitterest enemy, if he had to march into the pit of hell itself, he would do it. He would do whatever he had to, for the power to accomplish his revenge.

  Gelon will pay.

  * * *

  Zevaron had not meant to sleep the night through, only to rest for a time, once his first frenzy of grief had subsided. When he opened his eyes and smeared away the gummy residue of tears, pale yellow dawn light was sifting through the tower windows. He washed, packed away his mother’s few possessions, and went downstairs.

  Voices reached him from the garden atrium, Jaxar’s hoarse rumble in counterpoint to Danar’s clear tenor. He should take his leave of them properly, he thought, to honor what they had done for his mother, Tsorreh. At least Jaxar’s wife, Lycian, did not seem to be in attendance. He would not have to witness her gloating.

  In the garden, a freshness hung on the leaves. A hidden bird chirped and then fell silent. It was an oasis, this place. Zevaron hoped his mother had found a refuge here.

  Danar sat across from Jaxar, his father. Sun glinted on his red-gold hair, but his face looked pale, even for a Gelon. Jaxar gestured for Zevaron to take the empty chair, just as if he were a guest invited to break his fast with the family.

  Zevaron chewed a piece of bread, still warm from the oven, and sipped the lightly fermented fruit juice. The bread was surprisingly good, with a thin, crisp crust.

  Jaxar waited until Zevaron had finished eating and then spoke, clearly having prepared his thoughts. “Zevaron, I know you wish to leave Aidon. The city must hold nothing but painful memories for you, after all that has happened. I would offer you a place in this household if it would ease your grief, but I fear that any place in Gelon will quickly become too dangerous for one of your race.”

  Zevaron nodded, thinking Jaxar had never spoken truer words. “I thank you for everything you have done, but I would not impose on you a single night longer.”

  “Have you thought where you might go?” Jaxar asked. “Back to Denariya?”

  Anywhere I can find help.

  “Perhaps,” Zevaron said carelessly. “Yet the way is long, and the passage through the Firelands can be treacherous.”

  “You have made the journey many times?” Danar aske
d with a touch of eagerness.

  “Often enough.”

  “What about Isarre?” Jaxar said. “Would you not have a place there, as Tsorreh’s son?”

  Zevaron sat back, studying the older man. “You are not interested in my travel plans. Tell me straight out what you want, and have done with it.”

  Danar and Jaxar exchanged uncomfortable glances. Danar’s expression turned rebellious, the muscles of his jaw standing out as he clenched his teeth.

  “I wish Tsorreh were still alive, so that I might admit to her face that she was right about Cinath.” Jaxar sighed. “I thought, I foolishly believed, that the devotion he and I once shared as brothers, as well as my own position, would protect those I love.”

  He paused, his eyes desolate. “The only thing I can say in my own defense, and his, is that he was not always so ruthless, so bent on power. He had always been ambitious, yes, but he was reasonable, too. Now he will listen to no one, and any dissident voice—even mine—only provokes him further.”

  Jaxar fears the Ar-King’s retaliation for having defended Tsorreh. “I am sorry,” Zevaron said, aware there was no hint of sympathy in his tone, “but this no longer has anything to do with me.” And it changes nothing.

  “Perhaps, perhaps not.” Jaxar sat back, drumming his fingers on the table. “Sad times have befallen my country. I do not know precisely when or how the change came about. Certainly, the loss of a beloved son and heir is enough to break the mind of any father, even a king. But I think Cinath must have been, if not mad, then gravely mistaken, to send Thessar to Azkhantia in the first place—Azkhantia, the rock on which armies shatter and fall!”

  Isarre was weak, Zevaron reflected, barely able to defend its borders, or he and his mother would not have been taken prisoner at the fall of the port city of Gatacinne. On the other hand, the nomadic horse peoples of the Azkhantian steppe had repulsed wave after wave of Gelonian incursions. Cinath’s own son had met his death at their hands. The possibility of an alliance with the Azkhantians merited further consideration. If he were to have any chance of avenging himself on Gelon, he would need such a force.

  “Perhaps it all started to go wrong when we invaded Meklavar,” Jaxar mused. “Nothing but sorrow has come of that. As happy as I have been to have Tsorreh in my house, to study with me and discuss my work, to teach Danar and become his friend, I would that she had stayed at home in peace.”

  Zevaron had not expected such graciousness. He looked away.

  After a breath, Jaxar went on. “He will come for Danar next.”

  “But not for you?”

  “My life has never been very secure, as you can see.” Jaxar gave a slight, self-deprecating gesture at his swollen body and twisted foot. “The priest-physicians have been telling me I was going to die since before Danar was born. If Cinath comes for me tomorrow, or if this weary heart gives out at last, then I will have had more time than I ever expected. These last four years have truly been a gift.”

  Danar, who might well challenge Cinath’s younger son for the throne—yes, Cinath would see him as a threat, one he cannot permit to live.

  “Father, you must not speak this way.” Danar got up and began pacing. “You cannot ask me to leave you.”

  Jaxar waved him to silence. “Zevaron, I have no right to ask anything of you. We are already deeply in your debt. You saved the life of my son once. Now I beg you to do so again. You yourself must leave Aidon. For the sake of Tsorreh, who loved him too, take Danar with you. Take him to Isarre, beyond Cinath’s grasp. Keep him safe. Keep both of you safe.”

  “Father—”

  “Danar, no more foolish talk! I do not wish to mourn my only son, and that is what will happen if you stay here.”

  “Then you must come, too! I will find a way—Zevaron, help me to convince him! We cannot leave him here!”

  Madness, Zevaron thought. It was bad enough to consider taking a city boy out on the seas, assuming they could make it to the coast, but not an old man, an invalid, someone easily recognized. They would not find a haven in Isarre, and he would not find the allies he needed. It would be sheerest folly.

  “The elder generation must pass away,” Jaxar said, his voice shifting from stern to gentle. “Sooner or later, in the rightness of things, you will lose me. I want to lay down this life knowing that you are free.”

  Danar turned his face away.

  “Someday, if the gods are kind,” Jaxar said, “you will return to Gelon and make it a better place, the place it ought to be. Then the sun will truly shine upon our Golden Land. Perhaps you will be the one to make things right. A free Meklavar and a reawakened Gelon will live at peace, as brothers, even as you and Zevaron will.”

  Zevaron’s heart caught in his throat. Of all the things he had expected Jaxar to say, this was wildest and yet the most true. He had never thought that Danar might have the power to restore Meklavar, that this might be the result of saving his life. It was the one argument Zevaron had no defense against, and it was not even being addressed to him. These words were spoken as a prayer, a father’s hopes for his son, and not as a bribe.

  Jaxar turned to him. “Zevaron, you are the only one I can trust who has the fighting skills and cunning to get Danar to safety. I cannot ask Jonath or Haslar to become outlaws, not even for my sake. Will you help us?”

  Madness, Zevaron thought again. And then: This is what Tsorreh would have done. Tsorreh had trusted these people and had looked to them for protection, but in the end, they had not been able to protect her from Cinath. Jaxar’s pledges of aid for Meklavar might well amount to nothing.

  But, Zevaron thought, Jaxar’s scheme offered a practical way out of the city and a better chance than he would have alone. If he were to find allies—Azkhantian, Isarran, or otherwise—he must search beyond Gelon’s borders.

  “Give me a good sword, some food, and money for passage,” he said. “And both of us shall reach Isarre alive, or neither of us will.”

  Chapter 2

  IT was not much of a disguise, Zevaron thought as he followed Danar along a circuitous path through the aristocratic hill district, angling down to the river. A battered, creased, broad-brimmed straw hat from the gardener’s shed shadowed his face, but his dark hair and honey-gold skin revealed him to be a foreigner, Denariyan or Meklavaran. Danar wore the clothing of a free laborer, but his pale skin and uncalloused hands could not be hidden. If they were stopped and questioned, their escape would be short-lived.

  The plan was to make for the river harbor, where they would take passage to the port of Verenzza, and from there to Gelon-held Gatacinne on the shores of Isarre. Jaxar had supplied them with Isarran as well as Gelonian currency and a small pouch of fine-quality rubies that Zevaron carried in the folds of his belt, along with his mother’s Arandel token. Their packs contained food of the sort that would keep a man going for a long while: nuts, compressed seed bread, dried fruit, and parched barley. Jaxar’s steward had evidently been planning for this escape for some time.

  As they crossed the southern border of the hill district, Zevaron began to feel more confident. They had been keeping to smaller streets, but here they must cross the main avenue, a paved expanse filled with pedestrians, wagons, and old-style carts with solid wheels, drawn by yoked oxen instead of onagers. At least, they would be less noticeable here, among the workmen and servants, many of whom carried panniers or satchels.

  Zevaron nudged Danar, reminding him to slouch, as they merged into the flow of traffic. Despite the number of people, animals, and vehicles, they made good speed. They were not the only ones who wanted to get somewhere in a hurry this morning. Several times, a servant would shove past them, crying, “Make way! Make way!”

  Zevaron had passed this way before, on his way to the harbor in search of men and a boat to take him and his mother out of Aidon, down the river, and then past the boundaries of Gelon. Ahead lay a plaza and the Avenu
e of the Gulls, a straight route south. His skin prickled the instant before he spied a disturbance in the crowd. That swirl that could only mean trouble, and it was coming toward them.

  Zevaron pulled Danar into the nearest open shop doorway, not caring what it sold so long as it got them off the street. Shelves lined the inside walls, displaying small pottery idols—laughing, round-bellied men on donkeys, women slender as willows or hugely pregnant, men with bulging muscles and enlarged genitals, rabbits and frogs, other things he did not recognize. A thin layer of dust gave the merchandise a tattered, neglected air.

  A moment later, a group of armed soldiers marched past, in the direction of Jaxar’s compound. If they had delayed their departure for even a quarter of an hour, Zevaron thought, it might have been too late. For Jaxar, it mostly likely already was. Zevaron did not know what to say to Danar. They had not discussed what Cinath might do when his men found Danar gone. Could Jaxar, as weak and ill as he was, survive another stay in prison? Or would Cinath execute him right away?

  “Good day to you, fine sirs!” A wizened little man in a clay-smeared apron bustled out from the back of the shop. His smile fell as he took in their laborers’ garb. From the look of the shop, business had been poor of late, undoubtedly due to the recent surge in the popularity of Qr, the scorpion god.

  “I wish to buy an offering to The Lady of Mercy,” Danar said, deliberately slurring his words. He added in a low voice to Zevaron, “She is the special protector of invalids. Surely she will watch over him.”

  Zevaron said nothing. He knew that gods—or something very like them—were real. He had spoken to one such, a supernatural king of the sea, and had heard a prophecy from that god. But he did not think a statuette would protect Jaxar, any more than Tsorreh’s prayers had saved her.

  The shopkeeper began taking down one clay idol after another, explaining the provenance and special meaning of each.

  Zevaron glanced uneasily at the street. The commotion had passed, and it was dangerous to linger so close to Jaxar’s residence. “Danar, we don’t have time for this.”