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Preview of Tenets

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Chapter 1: When in Aontus

Veen guided his two fellow mercenaries through the afternoon crowd passing between Aontus’s port and the markets. At the dockside end of the Jervis Bridge, five little gurriers took turns rattling the bones and shouting the latest news. Veen waved for Elanis and Oren to follow him over to a filthy, pale boy. “What’d you say?” Veen asked.

The sight of a tawny-skinned Caperi stole the boy’s tongue. Oren’s creaseless eyes returned the gurrier’s suspicion.

“Don’t worry yourself, boy,” Veen said. “The Caperi are friendly folk, even if they can’t hold their drink like we real islanders do.”

Oren crossed his arms over his leaf-beetle-shell vest.

The boy grinned before the other four behind him groaned at a knucklebone roll. He looked back to their game as he asked, “Prisoners escaped the Five Snakes?”

A bright-eyed boy rose next to him. “I said that. Take your turn, Fergus. He said . . .”

The second crier shouted, “Gone in the night with no trace, the missing lowlanders now number fourteen!”

“Missing lowlanders?” Veen asked. “Any folk from Teallaigh Te?”

The boy shrugged.

In threadbare clothes to see them through the chilly Lekelithian spring nights, the boys stirred memories of painfully cold toes and the taste of gurr cake on his tongue. Veen dropped a silver before each of them. “Youse get some new shoes and a pie, boys. Shoes first, yeah?”

Wide-eyed for the coin in his fingers, another gurrier halfheartedly shouted, “Albacore sunk between Aontus and Trône d’Argent. Nine Racinian nobles drowned.”

“Good,” barked a fisherman hauling his basket of tuna to the old market. Few Lekelithians believed the war was over or that the Racinian Empire would let their freedom stand, contrary to nearly ten years of peace.

“Veen,” Elanis said through a fistful of her silver mantle. Its hood had been blown back, letting the drizzle sprinkle her spectacles. Her short black hair couldn’t decide where to part as it rode the wind. “If we’re to make ourselves tardier, may we do so away from the reek of the tanning yards?”

“Aye,” Veen answered, waving her and Oren on. Wet sea winds pelted the filigree railings of the Jervis Bridge, named for the river below, and cleaned the stink of the prison’s tanning yards from the air. Mostly.

Oren’s golden-brown hand clasped Veen’s shoulder. “This is your home? Explains your crooked smile. I can hear the cutpurses salivating.”

With an inward sigh, Veen drew up to his full five-foot-two height. “’Tis just the spitting rain. Not ten years back, that was me, down to the shabby shoes. And I doubt they’ve seen a Caperi before.”

Oo,” Oren agreed. “Speaking of shoes, what would Nelis say of your generosity back there?”

“Nothing,” Veen said. “Never a more frugal soul has come out of Lekelith than my brother, but you’ve been fighting by our side long enough to know Nelis has a soft spot for wee ones, yeah?”

Oren thought and replied, “Mercifully, our assignments haven’t involved many children.”

Elanis released her mantle and peered over the bridge’s railing. “I’m surprised to hear you think that is your older brother’s soft spot,” she added with a teasing grin. “You’re sure we should leave Teague behind?”

A warehouse blocked the view of the wharf downhill, where Teague had received a chastising welcome home. Gleaming like the fire opals Teague’s merchant father peddled, an arc of guards had insisted upon their leader’s immediate return to his family estate.

At times like these, Veen very nearly thanked the gods his parents were long dead. “You don’t want to sit there with a stiff lip while he gets scolded. And he told you to lead the meeting. And we’re late, yeah? Let’s strike off! I don’t have to tell you the Towers wait for no man. Neither will Nelis when there’s a paying job to be had.” After hearing the news of missing lowlanders, Veen was far more eager to see his brother than meet with the mage who wanted to employ them. Nelis was fine. Surely.

Striding uphill into the old market, Veen set their path toward the green Tower of Aontus, the tallest building in the capital. After the successful revolution against the Racinian Empire, Lekelith’s magi had converted the large round tower into a windmill, a new symbol for Lekelith, now finally free of war.

Veen pointed to it above the market. Perfectly timed, the sun broke free to shine through the four spinning amber sails. Veen smiled proudly. “There’s the old Amber and Green, El.”

“Now that is beautiful!” Elanis agreed.

The damp downtrodden scattered as soldiers parted the crowd for nobles who dared the alleys of the old market. Rich oil and common water never touched as they flowed along the muck-ridden streets.

Some commoner brutes sharpened their words for Elanis. Veen and Oren flanked her. “I wish I had had time to change out of this dress,” she said, blaming the ruby-red, wide-hipped gown she had needed for the Racinian court, but not her silver mantle.

More voices rose to demean the Racinian in their midst. Oren palmed the short axes lashed to his pack. Veen attempted the limb-breaking expression Nelis always wore before following through with a threat. The laughter thrown back at him said he and his two companions could use Nelis’s muscle about now. Even one of the piks, waist-high men with broad noggins and large noses, belly-laughed at Veen’s expense.

“Where is your brother?” Oren asked.

“Yes,” Elanis said. “Between us, why didn’t Nelis join us to Frysta Avfall?”

The question stirred Veen’s concern. They’d never been apart this long before. “Ach. Youse know yourselves I got the same excuse Teague did.”

Veen scanned the crowd in the old market again. High above the cloaked masses, one magpie stared down from the shelter of an overhang on the rooftops. One for sorrow.

“Well, whatever his reasoning,” Elanis continued, “I hope he honors Teague’s orders. This is my meeting. Frankly, I’m curious as to why a mage from the Tower of Aontus hired a band of the Hook. What could mercenaries achieve that his superiors could not? His grand diviner holds as much weight as Lekelith’s council.”

Past the last tavern spilling fiddled tunes, the three mercenaries breached an iron gate identifying the New Market District. Fine red brick had replaced the irregular cobblestones in the streets. Veen patted his belt to make sure his black steel daggers had stayed loyal to him.

Haberdasheries and jewelers filled in the absence of taverns and temples between the stalls. Veen breathed through his nose after getting a bitter mouthful of wafting perfume. Floral scents and bath powders overtook what whiffs remained of the tanning yard’s stink.

Amber-colored mantles, identical in every way except color to Elanis’s silver achievement, grew more common. The mages eyed Elanis with kinder suspicion than the commoners had.

“Shortcut,” Veen said, ducking into another alleyway. Emerging from behind a fine leatherworks shop, they finally reached the Tower of Aontus’s square. When the amber-filled sails swung low overhead, Veen felt the magic hum through his bones. He nodded up at the Tower. “Nelis told me once that the whole wharf could fit inside the old Amber and Green. Do you think so?”

“I very much doubt that,” Elanis answered.

White-clad men and one woman protected the Tower’s entrance. Spellbreakers. Silent monks. They weren’t warriors, just eerie. Trained to resist magic’s effects, their hard faces betrayed as much emotion as a snake’s before the strike.

Elanis approached the podium next to the Tower’s curved double doors. The paralibrarian on duty adjusted his amber mantle. “Oh, the thrill when a silver mantle from Trône d’Argent graces our presence,” he said flatly to the spellbreaker at his side.

“So much for camaraderie through magic,” Elanis mumbled. “We have an appointment with Mage Dreanen Curtiss.”

Running a disinterested gaze over them, the paralibrarian paused on Veen. “Don’t suppose you belong to that other boggytrotter?”

“Aye,” Veen said gruffly, though his stomach settled some upon hearing Nelis had arrived. He turned to Elanis and Oren. “He means Nelis. Told youse he wouldn’t wait.”

“That was the name,” the mage muttered, scanning his parchment. He let out a curt sigh. “Ye’re late.”

Elanis’s ivory cheeks flushed. “Later by the minute. Give us directions or find someone amenable to assist us. I offer you that choice before I register a complaint with your librarian, your chronicler, and your archivist.”

The paralibrarian’s eyes narrowed at the threat.

“We are here as representatives of the Hook at the behest of your Mage Curtiss. Your actions very well may denigrate the reputation of your Tower.”

He ran a finger down the scroll before him. “Idealistic mercenaries? It doesn’t say.”

Elanis rubbed her forehead with her thumb. “Well I just did.” Her temper was rising, a frightening thing in Elanis. Instead of losing control of her anger, she tended to lose her emotions, locking them away to become an icy being of rationality. Given that Nelis had now taken her meeting, the paralibrarian was unwittingly priming her for a larger fight.

“Yes,” he replied, “though you could have said earlier. Third floor, right off the stairs, second study on the left.”

Veen had been inside the Tower once as a boy when Nelis had dragged him there out of desperation to cure an outbreak of hives; he knew better than to accept those directions in good faith. “Which stairs?”

“East bank,” the paralibrarian barely uttered. He waved them off.

Elanis gave the hem of her mantle a quick jerk beneath her bosom.

The spellbreakers parted and opened the Tower, bathing them in the familiar odor of peat fires. Seven thinner towers hid within. The old round tower’s plethora of stairs created an intentional maze in the reconstructed interior.

“You know,” Elanis uttered as she took it all in, “I may have been wrong. This place is massive.”

Under the spellbreakers’ scrutiny, fully mantled mages huddled in groups while young magi scurried by with tomes and parchments in their arms and packs overflowing with components. Higher up, a myriad of iron chandeliers hung, though Veen suspected the ample light had a magical helping hand.

Spotting EAST on a brass plaque, Veen guided his friends to the stairwell set inside the thick stone of the Tower’s exterior wall.

As their steps echoed upward, Elanis grumbled, “I’ve visited four Towers in my short life, and each has had the rudest, most choleric arse greeting the public. One of these days I’m going to ask an archivist if they simply misunderstand the role of paralibrarian or if they purposely want the people to hate us.”

Veen turned right down the hall on the third floor as instructed. Elanis put her arm out to stop him. With a cautious expression, she wandered toward the closed door of their potential new benefactor’s quarters. “Strange . . .” Her face tensed. The door opened.

Taller than most members of the Hook mercenary guild, Nelis ducked under the doorframe as he exited the quarters in his long gambeson, tattered sleeves, and worn trousers. His right hand vised a bundle of scrolls. A split-second after Nelis’s bald head turned their way, reprimand arched his eyebrow. He shut the door behind him deliberately. “Youse all show up late and without your leader? Making grand impressions, are we?”

Older than the rest of the band at twenty-seven years, Nelis tended to treat them all like pups. Veen hadn’t missed that.

Nelis marched past them. Veen and Oren followed.

Elanis didn’t budge. “We were detained. Shall we meet with Mage Curtiss?” The question was more of a command.

Nelis didn’t break his stride. “If you want to try your luck, go on. I’ve got the missive, the map, and the Lekelithian blood a man like Dreanen trusts. But by all means, force him to explain it all again, yeah? Our benefactors love that. Doubly so for a Racinian.”

“Dreanen?” Veen asked. Gruff as he could be, Nelis wasn’t typically so informal with their benefactors.

Elanis cleared the fog from her spectacles with a kerchief before she finally gave in and joined Veen at the stairs. “Your brother is a massive shite.”

“I’ve heard this somewhere before,” Veen teased.

When the spellbreakers parted for their exit, Veen spied a violation beyond the river-reed thatch of New Market. Between the wealthiest estates in Aontus, scaffolding shielded an affront to the lowlanders: the new Temple of Rethfor. He scoffed. Rethfor knew where his true home was, with the lowlanders, not the coin worshippers.

He’d have asked his brother about their villagers’ opinion of the new temple if Elanis hadn’t continued her squabble with Nelis in the courtyard. Veen stood away from them with Oren and waited. The bickering carried on until Teague’s lean form arrived. Tilting a grin on his vulpine face, he appeared unaffected by his da’s shaming, and possibly downright cheery. Veen suspected he’d lost part of his argument with his father; his leathers had been given over for a dark blue version of the required attire of an elite male: breeches, hose, and an embroidered jerkin.

Nelis went straight to Teague and handed over the rolled parchment.

“Aye, thanks,” their leader said. “We’ll need to go somewhere private to talk this over, and I know just the place, so I do.” Guiding them north along Pearl Street, he leaned close to Nelis and asked, “Is this a five-person job, or should I send for Joseb?”

Elanis cast a sidelong glance. “Teague, luck alone dictates all six of us—”

“Leave the duke to his frilly court and his dying king,” Nelis interrupted. “We can manage a burglary without the sorcerer. Easy lift and go.”

Veen shared a skeptical look with Elanis. The past three years had taught them Hook work was never that simple.

Acknowledgments

As usual, I couldn’t have finished this novella without my loyal beta readers. Shawn, Melanie, and Nicole, you have my sincere thanks. Also, a special thanks to Blue Falcon Editing for proving I get caught up in my own head.

And, of course . . . Thanks, Mom!