I had hoped the ‘Sigl Fashion’ option would have scored higher… I figured with the nobility and ultra wealthy type of folks, sigl jewelry would almost reach a ‘crown jewels’ sort of function. You become head of house, or the heir apparent, you get something like a signet ring, like the official ducal seal worked into the ring Paul inherits from his father as Duke Atreides in Dune. Or the signet ring Hadrian wears in the Sun Eater series, as a sign of his status and rank as a Palatine. The King still wears the three feather signet ring of Wales, like he did as Prince of Wales. The new heir or head of house would get the ring, just getting a new sigl created and mounted in the antique setting.
Also, I figured with the younger crowd and the fact some sigls need to be worn close to the skin, that sigl jewelry piercings would be more widespread than they apparently are in the series so far.
Thank you for kind comments and support this week. Usually we post scene by scene, but today we will do the whole chapter.
Hugh stepped out of the woods and started up the road to Baile. The old castle rose atop the low hill like some ancient fort built by a Norman knight intent on keeping all he surveyed clenched in his iron gauntlet. It had been born in England, then transported stone by stone to Kentucky and reassembled on a whim of a man with too much money. The Shift had restored its original purpose. It was both a fortified base and a symbol of power.
He once told Elara that the point of the castle wasn’t to hide within the walls but to be worthy of it. The man who controlled the castle controlled the lands around it.
He needed to be that man. Not because he wanted the headache but because maintaining control of their immediate surroundings was the only path to safety. They were too far from any regional authorities, and in the great scheme of things, his fighting force was laughably small. By the latest count he had 348 Iron Dogs. During his time as Roland’s warlord, he commanded 2,400 trained soldiers. Almost seven times what he had now.
The familiar rage shivered deep inside him, hot and angry. He had built the most elite force on the continent and Roland had dismantled it out of cowardice.
Hugh pushed it aside. He needed a cool head for what waited ahead.
Aberdine presented a problem. The small town controlled the only leyline point within twenty five miles. The magic current was the fastest and safest way to reach Lexington or any of the other cities, and Baile depended on trade. Herbs, cosmetics, medicine, all of that flowed out through the leyline and returned as cash and supplies. In the past, Aberdine proved less than cooperative, despite relying on Baile’s medical supplies and booze.
Given a choice, he would have done whatever he could to take charge of Aberdine. In the old days, when Roland’s magic seared all doubt, guilt, and compassion from his mind, he would’ve set the town on fire, built a fort on the ashes, and put a detachment of Iron Dogs into it.
Those days were behind him now. He was a different man, less powerful, without immortality or backing of Roland’s magic, but he had his freedom. It was hard won. He could still feel the void, swirling on the edge of his consciousness, ready to sink its teeth into him if he faltered.
He was also married and charged with defending about 5,000 civilians who depended on his protection and ability to negotiate. The fact that Aberdine sent someone over and asked to see him meant both would be required.
His lovely wife was waiting for him by the castle gates. She wore a light lilac dress today, and her white hair, gathered into a plait, wrapped around her head like a crown.
He’d half expected her to have been deep in negotiations with whoever Aberdine sent. For some reason, he was happy that she waited for him.
Hugh walked through the gates. She gave him a weary look.
“I heard we have guests,” he said.
“Nick Bishop and two others,” she said.
She looked like something had been eating at her. It bothered Hugh.
“Where are they?” he asked.
“Waiting inside.”
They started toward the keep, walking side by side. The bailey was crowded with people hurrying back and forth. A team of villagers hung fall garlands on the walls. Another trio had brought a cart filled with bright orange pumpkins and were now arguing over the most picturesque location to position it while an old pinto horse patiently waited for them to make up their minds. A gaggle of tweens carried baskets of chestnuts. The castle was getting ready for Harvest Day.
“What do you think they want?” Hugh asked.
“I don’t know, but Bishop’s arm is in a sling and the other two have bruises on their faces. Whatever it is, it can’t be good.”
Nick Bishop was Aberdine’s chief of police, National Guard Sergeant, and Wildlife Response Officer, all of which put him in charge of the same six people. He’d met Bishop during the battle of Aberdine. The man kept a cool head and was capable.
If Bishop had showed up, Aberdine had a problem. One that required an Iron Dog kind of solution. This wasn’t about herbs or beer. This was about violence.
Ah. “So it’s that kind of visit, then.”
Elara didn’t respond. She was walking fast, her gaze dark, her lips a thin firm line.
“The herbs?” he guessed.
“That too, but mostly it’s Aberdine.”
They entered the main keep and Elara turned left, down the hallway leading to the visitor room. He remembered it well. When he first came to Baile a few months ago, half-starved and only barely sane with the void gnawing on his soul, she’d put them in that room. And then she made them sit in there, smelling delicious bread baking in the kitchen for half an hour before she came to negotiate.
“What about Aberdine?”
“They sent their Chief of Police. They’re going to ask you for help. They’re going to expect you to take the Iron Dogs, leave the castle, go source alone knows where, and fight.”
“That’s what people usually want from me.”
She stopped and turned to him. “I don’t want you to go.”
Interesting. “I seem to remember a certain woman who demanded that I drop everything and take our troops to defend Aberdine not that long ago. And when I argued against it, she tried to shame me by pointing out that Aberdine was full of babies.”
She raised her head. “That was then and this is now.”
“I’m going to need a little more than that.”
Elara sighed. “Then Aberdine was about to be wiped off the face of the planet. You saved them because it was the right thing to do. But now, since Aberdine survived, they should have the decency to handle their own problems.”
“That depend on the type of problem. There will be times when Aberdine’s issues could become ours.”
“And that’s exactly what I don’t want. I don’t want you getting hurt, I don’t want any of our people getting hurt, and I don’t want to take in anymore of their people. I just want to celebrate Harvest Day in peace. I’ve had enough of blood and gore.”
Ah. He got it now. For him, blood and gore were business as usual. The battle with Nez, terrible as it had been, was just another fight. He had personal stakes in that one, and he’d almost died, but at the core he was a soldier. An enemy attacked, they fought, they won. Next.
Elara didn’t fight those kind of battles. She avoided them unless she was backed into a corner, which was why she and her people migrated from place to place until they found Baile. Any time they came in conflict with the locals, they picked up and moved on. She married him to break that cycle.
His prickly wife, as tough as she pretended to be, was scared.
“They’re here,” he said. “Let’s hear them out and then we can decide, together, if we’re going to do anything about it.”
She gave him a suspicious look.
“I promise you that if you really don’t want me to go, I won’t.”
She took a step forward, closing the distance between them, and put her hand on his forehead. Her fingers were cool and dry, and he had the absurd urge to take her hand and kiss it.
The swirling, writhing chaos spreading, engulfing him…
Nope.
“I don’t have a fever.”
She stepped back. “I’m not going to tell you what to do.”
“Noted.”
They looked at each other.
He raised his eyebrows at her. “Wait, are we acting like a married couple?”
“Oh, shut up.”
She turned and stomped down the hallway. He followed her.
The scent of freshly baked bread floated on the draft. He could practically taste the crispy crust.
“Loving couple in three, two….” He murmured.
“One,” she finished.
The doors of the visitor room stood wide open. He let her enter first and stepped inside behind her. The long rectangular room held an oversized table built with old wood. The Aberdine delegates, Bishop and the two other men, sat at the table, helping themselves to a platter of fresh bread, cheese, sausage, and fruit.
There was a subtle psychology at play here. She brought them in, she made them wait, she fed them. It wasn’t just hospitality. Elara was positioning Baile as the benefactor of Aberdine. There was something almost feudal about it. The lord and lady of the castle receiving vassals in need of assistance. If they chose to grant their ask, the relationship between Baile and Aberdine would be cemented. Not neighbors. Not equals. Protector and protected.
Hugh hid a smile. That’s my girl.
He couldn’t let all of that effort go to waste.
#
Hugh raised his large arms and gave Bishop a big toothy grin. “Bishop! It’s been too long!”
Elara almost winced. She should have been used to him by now, but his instant transformations still took her by surprise. A moment ago, in the hallway, he was quiet and serious, and he sounded sincere. And now he’d turned into a loud, affable, slightly oblivious bro host with the emotional depth of a wooden spoon.
Hugh squinted at the table. “Love, couldn’t we get the guys some beer?”
“Of course, honey.” She nodded at Natasha waiting in the other doorway.
Hugh landed in a chair and spread out. She stood next to him. The nervous energy inside her roiled. Sitting down wasn’t in her right that second. She could barely keep from pacing.
Hugh grabbed a bread roll, tore it in half, stuffed some cheese into it, and took a bite. “So, what are you guys doing here?”
Bishop gathered himself, as if preparing to jump over a pit studded with spikes. His left arm was in a sling and his face was bruised, his dark brown skin almost purple over his left cheek. The other two didn’t look much better.
The unease spun inside her like an animal with sharp claws. When Nez captured Hugh at the end of the battle, his vampires had dragged him to some old building in an abandoned town miles away. She had gone to get him, and when she tore into that building, she found him chained and bleeding. They had hung him by his arms, and his body looked battered beyond repair. They had beaten him to the very edge of death. When she wrapped her power around him, he was almost gone and she carried him, limp like a ragdoll, all the way back to Baile hoping against all odds that he would live. He was so strong, the strongest man she’d ever met, and she had felt his life slipping through her fingers. He could have been gone forever.
Never again.
Hugh frowned. “Wait a minute. Bishop, what happened to your arm? Have you guys been having fun without me?”
Fun? You ridiculous oaf. She almost clenched her fists and forced herself to smile instead. “Hugh, dear, maybe we should let them tell us why they’re here?”
“Oh, yes.” Hugh rearranged his face into a serious expression. “To what do we owe the pleasure?”
The two men with Bishop stopped eating. The Chief of Aberdine’s police cleared his throat.
“We’re being extorted.”
Her stomach dropped. She hated that, hated the anxiety and how it made her feel. It was so much simpler before, when Hugh was an irritating but necessary jackass she had to tolerate. Somehow he had become her jackass. And now they would try to drag him into their mess.
“Extorted by whom?” Hugh asked.
“The Drakes. Mercenaries from Indianapolis,” Bishop said.
“They came down from up north three weeks ago,” the man to Bishop’s left said. He was in his forties, broad and blond. “At first they asked if they could pitch their tents in the fallow field by the wall. Now they want us to put them up and feed them through the winter.”
“How many?” Hugh asked.
“Seventy to eighty people,” Bishop said. “They’re armed and trained. Apparently the other half of their outfit is on its way.”
Eighty people. Even if they minded themselves, Aberdine couldn’t support that. And they wouldn’t mind themselves. Aberdine didn’t have a police force strong enough to keep them in check. They would start to swagger. They would start to demand and take. There would be theft, there would be assaults and rape. Then there would be murder. Here, isolated in the Knobs, there line between mercenary and bandit was very faint.
“Have you petitioned Lexington?” Hugh asked.
Bishop nodded. “National Guard won’t come unless there is an incident. Right now, it’s just squatting. A civil matter. Non-violent.”
Elara knew exactly where Aberdine stood. She and her people had been in a standoff just like that more than once, when someone wanted them to leave. Somebody would have to die or be seriously injured before the authorities intervened, and it wasn’t worth it. Her people were precious. She had chosen again and again to just move on. But Aberdine didn’t have that option. Where would the whole town go with winter a month away?
They would have to rescue Aberdine. She saw it with crystal clarity, and she hated it. First, they couldn’t allow the Drakes to control the leyline. Second, they couldn’t permit Aberdine to turn into a mercenary town. Those places popped up from time to time, lawless settlements that drew every lowlife in the state until it became too much and either National Guard or DCI, Department of Criminal Investigations, busted them. If they let Aberdine devolve into that, sooner or later the mercenaries would start eyeing Baile. They would need space and a good defensible position, and the castle would prove too tempting.
All that aside, morally they couldn’t allow Aberdine’s people to be run off their own land. As Hugh pointed out, there were children in that town. Families. They didn’t deserve any of that.
A careful knock sounded through the room. Lamar paused in the doorway. Hugh waved him in without turning.
“Who is running the show?” Hugh asked.
“A man named Polansky,” Bishop answered.
“Calls himself the Falcon,” the dark-haired man to Bishop’s right said.
Lamar leaned to Hugh and murmured something in his ear. Hugh nodded.
“Ex-marine, big guy, always sunburned, looks like he bites bricks for a living?” Lamar asked.
“That’s the one.”
“I thought once you were a marine, you were always a marine?” Hugh said.
“They kicked him out,” Lamar said. “Conduct unbecoming.”
“Meaning?” Hugh asked.
“His definition of acceptable civilian casualties was too broad for the Corp.”
Hugh looked at the three men. All humor had disappeared from his face. His gaze was hard and heavy. “And what would you gentlemen like us to do about this unfortunate development?”
“We’ve been authorized by the town to pay you a substantial sum to help us resolve this crisis,” the blond man said.
A mistake, Elara thought. They should not have opened with that.
Bishop gave him a warning glance. The man clamped his mouth shut.
“We are not for hire,” Hugh said.
He spoke in an unhurried, almost lazy way, but the temperature in the room had dropped by about ten degrees.
The blond man paled.
“And if we were, you couldn’t afford us.”
Silence claimed the room, siting on the table between Hugh and the Aberdine men like a cement block.
Bishop cleared his throat again. “We know you’re not for hire. The money would be just to offset any costs.”
That was her cue. “We don’t need Aberdine’s help with that.”
Hugh reached for her hand, took it, and brushed his lips on her fingers.
Ridiculous. She’d make him pay later.
He was still holding her hand and showed no signs of letting go. “My wife is quite right, gentlemen. We are not destitute. We can cover our own costs.”
“We would be happy come to an agreement regarding our western woods,” the dark-haired man said.
She knew exactly what they were talking about. The land between Baile and Aberdine was almost all dense forest, but there was a stretch of meadows right near the property border, on Aberdine’s side. The meadows produced particularly good blueflower.
It was one of those plants that popped up after the Shift, nourished by magic. Blueflower provided relief from arthritis. They had tried to cultivate it before and failed. It could only be gathered in the wild and no matter how long they searched, they never found another spot on their own land. She had tried to license foraging rights, and Aberdine had turned her down cold. They hadn’t been pleasant about it, either.
It would be nice to have that plot. But there were bigger things in play. Aberdine always viewed them as unclean and lesser. There was a reason why they opened with the money. If they agreed to be hired, it would put Aberdine and Baile in employer and employee positions, with employer holding power. Now that that attempt failed, they were trying to bargain as equals.
No, this could not be a transaction. It had to be a favor. Aberdine had to owe them. That was the only way they would be secure.
High squeezed her hand gently. She looked at him and saw a silent question in his blue eyes. It almost killed her, but she gave him a tiny nod.
A hint of a smile tugged on the corner of his mouth.
“Do we need any more woods, love?” he asked.
“Not particularly.”
“You’ve tried to get foraging rights before,” the blond man said. He had to be their comptroller or something.
“I did. As I recall, Aberdine doesn’t want dirty, pagan witches in its woods. Isn’t that right?”
The delegation winced in unison.
“That was the old mayor,” the dark-haired man said. “He has left town. Aberdine doesn’t not condone that sort of small-minded prejudice.”
Since when?
“As I recall, we tried to help you before. We sent people to reinforce your magic wards, and you blocked their way and threw rocks at them,” she said mildly.
The delegation stared at her. At least they had the decency to look uncomfortable.
“We apologize,” the dark-haired man said.
“That’s very nice of you,” she told him. “I will let Will know. He has a scar from the rock on his forehead. Your apology will be a great comfort.”
More silence.
“That was then, this is now,” Bishop said.
Hugh looked at her.
Don’t even think of saying anything.
“Look, I’ll level with you,” Bishop said. “We can’t get them out ourselves. We’ve tried.”
He pointed to his arm.
“They’ve stopped pretending to be polite. They’re going to start looting and pillaging next, and there’s not a damn thing we can do to stop them. Will you please help us?”
Silence stretched for a long moment.
Hugh grinned. “All you had to do was ask. Of course we’ll help you. After all, we’re neighbors, aren’t we, honey?”
“We are,” she said.
“There you have it. My wife is a very forgiving woman.”
He would leave right away. She could feel it. “Will you be back in time for dinner?” Go there, do your Hugh thing, and come right back.
He kissed her fingers again and gazed at her, his face a picture of adoring devotion. “Will you make me something delicious to eat, love?”
“Of course.” She had plenty of poisonous herbs left over…
Hugh rose to his full height. “Let’s go see about these mercenaries of yours.”
The post It’s Hughday Again! Chapter 3 first appeared on ILONA ANDREWS.
In our defense I thought Byron implied that knowledge about the Winged was known in the Drucraft world, I believe he mentioned the Mountains and the Cathedrals to Lucella and there seems to be mythological figures mentioned like Ogun and Perun that seem to be gangs/criminals/pseudo Cults. So just general information that isn’t too spoilery since they are so powerful and influential some information must be known to the average drucrater without going to overboard, kinda of how the average person knows Special Forces exists but not know how and where they function.
But aside from that looking forward to learning about the Corporations Essentia capacity Branch affinities and the rest!
(I will miss learning about the Drucraft branch affinities with their cultural associations plus what planets the rest are associated with, I want to know how far out we get possibly to Uranus or Neptune or if the Moon and Earth count for ones.)
1. Essentia Capacity
2. The Board
3. Sigil Recycling
4. Attunement
In a few short days, Prince of Thorns becomes a teenager and will be the same age as Jorg himself for the first few pages of the novel!
I never expected to be an author. I certainly never expected this guy to pay off my mortgage. And I absolutely didn't expect to still be signing copies of the book in my local Waterstones 13 years after it was published.
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