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Triane's Son Reigning
Triane's Son Reigning
Triane's Son Reigning
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Triane's Son Reigning

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Sequel to Triane's Son Fighting
Bitter Moon Saga: Book Four

From the moment Torrant Shadow realized Consort Rath murdered his family, he’s lived a dual identity: a healer and poet by nature, a predator out of necessity. It’s not just exhausting, it’s perilous.

In the deadly city of Dueance, Torrant must succeed in both lives, because while the predator may save the Goddess’s folk from Rath’s brutal policies, it is the poet who will sway the minds of the people to revolt against the oppressive government. As his cause falters, Torrant finds his worst nightmares come to pass as the people he loves most—his family from Eiran, his former lovers, and his moon-destined, Yarri—all come to his aid, despite the danger.

They must succeed—there is no other option. If they fail, Rath will eliminate joy from the heart of the lands of the three moons, and all that Torrant and his family cherish will be lost. But success could exact devastating cost, one Triane’s Son was never prepared to pay.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 27, 2014
ISBN9781627983440
Triane's Son Reigning
Author

Amy Lane

Award winning author Amy Lane lives in a crumbling crapmansion with a couple of teenagers, a passel of furbabies, and a bemused spouse. She has too damned much yarn, a penchant for action-adventure movies, and a need to know that somewhere in all the pain is a story of Wuv, Twu Wuv, which she continues to believe in to this day! She writes contemporary romance, paranormal romance, urban fantasy, and romantic suspense, teaches the occasional writing class, and likes to pretend her very simple life is as exciting as the lives of the people who live in her head. She’ll also tell you that sacrifices, large and small, are worth the urge to write. Website: www.greenshill.com Blog: www.writerslane.blogspot.com Email: amylane@greenshill.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/amy.lane.167 Twitter: @amymaclane

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    Triane's Son Reigning - Amy Lane

    Readers Love Amy Lane’s

    Bitter Moon Saga

    Triane’s Son Rising

    This first book in a young adult story has magic, shifting, friendship, tragedy, and coming of age all wrapped up in a well written fantasy saga divided between the gifted and non-gifted.

    —World of Diversity Fiction Reviews

    For me this book was perfect and I can’t wait for the next one. Recommended? Not only that, I think it’s a must read and ought to be on everyone’s to-read list.

    —MM Good Book Reviews

    Triane’s Son Learning

    …maybe I’m biased, but I can’t recommend this book enough.

    —MM Good Book Reviews

    …I truly look forward to the next part with great anticipation, having been treated to an exhilarating ride thus far.

    —Greedy Bug Book Reviews

    Triane’s Son Fighting

    This book left me too raw and the anticipation it generated nearly unbearable, but one thing is for sure; I absolutely loved it and it felt like yet another brick was put into that wall of worship I have for this author. Her brilliant writing always makes my day.

    —MM Good Book Reviews

    COPYRIGHT

    Published by

    Harmony Ink Press

    5032 Capital Circle SW

    Suite 2, PMB# 279

    Tallahassee, FL 32305-7886

    USA

    publisher@harmonyinkpress.com

    http://harmonyinkpress.com

    This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of author imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

    Triane’s Son Reigning

    © 2014 Amy Lane.

    Cover Art

    © 2014 Nathie.

    creationwarrior.net

    Cover content is for illustrative purposes only

    and any person depicted on the cover is a model.

    All rights reserved. This book is licensed to the original purchaser only. Duplication or distribution via any means is illegal and a violation of international copyright law, subject to criminal prosecution and upon conviction, fines, and/or imprisonment. Any eBook format cannot be legally loaned or given to others. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the Publisher, except where permitted by law. To request permission and all other inquiries, contact Harmony Ink Press, 5032 Capital Circle SW, Suite 2, PMB# 279, Tallahassee, FL 32305-7886, USA, or publisher@harmonyinkpress.com.

    ISBN: 978-1-62798-343-3

    Library ISBN: 978-1-62798-345-7

    Digital ISBN: 978-1-62798-344-0

    Printed in the United States of America

    Second Edition

    March 2014

    First Edition published as Bitter Moon II: Triane’s Son Reigning by iUniverse, 2009

    Library Edition

    June 2014

    To the students I left and the ones who left me—you’re important,

    and I miss you.

    To my family, whom I leave sometimes too—you’re important,

    and I rejoice in you.

    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

    IT WAS a risk, taking a quiet, unacknowledged set of books and putting time and effort into rereleasing them. I cannot thank Dreamspinner Press and Harmony Ink and their amazing team of professionals enough for making this series new again. This last book is Marv and Jino’s, but it’s also Elizabeth’s and Nessa’s. Bless you all.

    PART XVIII—THE CHANGING MOON

    TRIANE’S SON WAITING

    TRAGEDY—TRIANA the innocent, falling from the sky in a crash of blood and bone; her lover, Djali, heir to Clough, eviscerating himself in the river, defiling his own corpse, precluding burial.

    Torrant, baring his soul and his name to the regents who followed him—

    And who followed him still.

    Tragedy, loss….

    Rebuilding.

    Torrant and Aylan, swearing the vows of friends turned lovers, that they would not desert their task.

    And Torrant’s dream that his beloved was coming, coming to aid him, coming to bear him up when his own heart failed.

    And Torrant agreeing to let her come.

    Tragedy.

    Rebuilding.

    Faith….

    A WEEK after he dreamt that Yarri was coming, Torrant patrolled under a single, chilling moon and thought a little yearningly of Aylan, asleep in Torrant’s bed. He wished he could insist Aylan sleep in his tiny, crumbling flat with the sprung couch—he knew he should. But no one had noticed yet, or if the maids who came in periodically and cleaned the bathroom and swept the rug had noticed, they certainly hadn’t reported that another man was living in the same room as Ellyot Moon, the newest almost-regent.

    He told the other regents he didn’t think it necessary to push for a majority vote. For the moment, they’re listening. Rath’s milking the sympathy for everything it’s worth, but….

    He hadn’t needed to finish that sentence—the evidence that something was amiss in the consort’s house had been all too damning, bleeding on the courthouse steps. Not even Rath attempted to maintain the fiction that Djali was still alive.

    So it wasn’t necessary for Ellyot Moon to officially become a regent, and although nobody said it, he could tell they were all relieved they wouldn’t have to force their fellow regents to believe a lie.

    That was fine—they were making progress. He and Aylan still patrolled at night, but the guards had thinned out enough that they were able to split up the work, and the five young regents had taken turns working in pairs in the early parts of the night to simply patrol the area. Some of the others on the floor who had been sympathetic in their voting had started to come along. A sudden influx of blankets and food had found its way into the clinic the last rest day, and Torrant, at least, was encouraged.

    But the giant structure on the hill above the city continued to grow like a stone wart, and they still hadn’t found a solution to the problem of guarding the people they were smuggling out to the secretly reestablished Moon Hold. He hadn’t discovered where Rath was keeping the Goddess’s gifted who kept trying (at unexpected times) to force his hand on the floor, and as of yet, he could get no other regent to publicly accuse Rath of abducting Triana. These complications were not encouraging.

    In fact, they were downright frustrating, and as Torrant was visited with dream after dream of Yarri’s progress toward him, he could only marvel that she seemed to be able to accomplish anything, while he was stuck on just these two problems.

    Do you know who’s coming now? Bethen’s big ‘surprise’ at Wrinkle Creek?

    Torrant woke Aylan out of a sound sleep in the wee hours after this dream had visited him. He’d enjoyed the dream at first—had, in fact, been taking an inordinate amount of pleasure in the dream from just looking at Yarri. She was so beautiful. Her brown eyes sparkled, and her lovely autumn-colored hair rippled past her full hips. Her yellow dress all but sang of the brightness in her soul, and her body was so lush…. Was it because he had been surrounded by nothing but regents or sick people for the past months, or was it just her? He didn’t know, but he knew that as the true dreams continued and she started to get closer to him, he had begun fixating on her body or her face in total enchantment.

    Breasts. His beloved had soft, pillowy, sweet breasts. When was the last time he had looked at a woman for that feature when it hadn’t been purely functional? The answer was easy—it had been the last time, the one time, he’d been in her arms.

    When Trieste entered the dream, dressed simply and fine in a dress of dark blue linen, he hadn’t noticed her breasts at all. She made an unlikely, gracious presence in the red-dusted cedar woods of Wrinkle Creek. In the background of the dream, he could see the house he had roomed in with Aldam for nearly four years as they’d served the people in the hills. Aldam had been upset, he could tell, because there was an added room over the center of the house—the part with the best foundation and sturdiest walls. Aldam always did his best carpentry when he was unhappy.

    Yarri, Trieste, Roes, and Aldam were packing four wagons for the lot of them. Trieste even had a retinue of servants, including a sturdy, practical steward who was discussing with Roes how to pack so that when Roes and Aldam swung south to head for Moon Hold, they didn’t have to split up belongings. Aldam had been calmly taking direction from Trieste in the easiest way to cover his white streak, which was nearly unnecessary since his hair was almost white-blond on its own. When he’d pointed that out, a look of pain crossed Trieste’s features, and she and Yarri had met eyes in a clear plea on behalf of the Queen of Otham to see if Yarri could keep her beloved friend out of danger.

    Yarri had shaken her head firmly, saying, No. It’s not going to happen. Not for Torrant, and not for you.

    And that was when Torrant had sat up in bed and awakened Aylan.

    Aldam and Roes? And Trieste? It will be quite the reunion! Aylan was grinning, his white teeth flashing in the moonlight from the patio window, and therefore he was not anticipating Torrant’s smack on the back of his head. What was that for?

    All of them? Damned bloody all?

    "Well, not all of them here. Aldam’s not stupid, you know. He’s heading for Moon Hold, using, I might add, the same deduction you used to establish the new colony there."

    Torrant had blown out a breath and thrown himself back against the pillows, goose bumps rising around the scars on his bare chest. Oueant’s tears, what in the name of the stars’ dark are they thinking? he asked the air in general.

    Aylan frowned, not caring for the way Torrant shivered outside of the blankets as he pulled the comforter up under his friend’s chin. Torrant scowled at him, and Aylan shrugged, completely unrepentant at his fussing. Perhaps they’re thinking what the regents and I have already figured out, brother. You may be the one man who can save the world, but it’s going to take a bunch of us to save you.

    Torrant snorted then and curled up on his side, burrowing into Aylan’s smooth-skinned comfort. Their legs tangled under the blankets, and Aylan’s arms came around Torrant’s shoulders, his palms skimming the ridges of the scars that had so appalled Eljean.

    So, Aylan murmured against Torrant’s shorter hair, how did she look?

    Torrant didn’t have to guess which woman Aylan was referring to. Lovely, he replied, falling back asleep even as he answered. She has the most amazing breasts.

    THREE NIGHTS later, in the dank recesses of the rough-cobbled alley between crumbling red and yellow brick walls, Torrant could hear the warmth of Aylan’s chuckle in his memory, and it kept him still. He wondered, then, at his hubris, that he thought he could come to this city all alone and make a difference, when in truth he could hardly do it even with the help of all his friends.

    He heard a sound then and shrank back farther into the shadows, waiting to see who it was. He could smell the sweat on metal and hear the clink—had, in fact, scented the guard coming for some minutes now. But he wanted a glimpse of him, to see if it was the guard he had been thinking of.

    Soundlessly, he reached above him and hauled himself up onto the roof of the building next to him. He crept above on the shingles, thankful for once that all three moons were down. It was hard to be quiet on the roofs of the ghetto—most of the buildings were falling apart. The roofs were in disrepair, and the shingles slid out from under his feet if he trod even a little wrong. But he and Aylan had been moving quietly in the ghetto for months, and he was good at it now. In silence and shadows he trailed the man from the rooftops, wanting to see where he was going.

    The guard suddenly stopped, looked behind him and around him, and then made an abrupt turn. Apparently he was going into a dead-end alley.

    Torrant crept along the edge, waiting for the man to come out.

    The guard started talking to the crumbling mortar instead. Hullo… whoever you are?

    Torrant fought the urge to yelp, and the man kept talking, as though fully aware he had an audience.

    The man who has been knocking me on the head for months? I know you’re out there. I don’t know how—but I can tell by now. The guard looked around, tried looking above but couldn’t; his helmet impeded his vision. It had made things very simple for Torrant and Aylan these past months, but for right now, the lack of visibility didn’t matter. He continued to talk to the dark night chill.

    I know which nights I’m going to be belted on the head, whether I have a partner or not. My partner’s drunk, you know—I left him several alleyways back, weeping in the shadows. If he gets one more whack on the skull, the local leech said he may never wake up. Not that he’s a good man, but I thought you’d like to know. It’s nice of you not to kill us when you have the chance, but it is taking its toll.

    Torrant took a deep breath and for a moment felt the weight of all the deaths on his soul. Poor mad Ulvane, fragile Djali, innocent Triana, gallant old Jem… the nameless, faceless men who hadn’t been so lucky as to merely get knocked on the head.

    Without knowing who he would be when he stood, he leapt….

    And landed, his face alone partially changed as a disguise as he poured out of the shadows behind the guard.

    Well then, what would you suggest? he growled. He was unprepared for the guard to jump, run, trip, and land on his right shoulder with his hand scrabbling on his left hip for his sword. With exaggerated gentleness, Torrant brought his sword tip down on the man’s hand, stopping the scrabbling. He kept his sword within touching distance as the guard swept off his dignity and stood up, chuffing a little from his spectacular crash.

    What was the question again? the poor man asked from behind the face guard on his helmet. He was obviously miserably embarrassed.

    Torrant tried to keep from laughing, and it wasn’t a pleasant sound. I asked what you would suggest. It’s not like you wear signs. ‘This guard rapes children.’ ‘This guard does not rape children, but he does rape the men in the boys’ brothel.’ ‘This guard rapes no one, but he’ll steal anyone who is hot on the black market for child servants right now,’ or, my favorite, ‘This guard looks for excuses to kill anyone in the ghetto because he’s a sadistic bastard who—’

    Enough! There was a furtive swipe of a hand below the nose guard of the helmet. Do you think I’m proud? Do you think I watch children run from me and I dance a jig?

    I think you wear a uniform, and it’s been disgraced so often that you have to get what comes with the uniform. Torrant was aware that his voice was angry and bitter, and he questioned the wisdom of starting this conversation. It seemed like the compassionate thing to do at the time, but now… his voice was growling in his chest, and he started to doubt his ability to let this man live.

    I wear a uniform? Would you be interested in seeing what’s underneath that uniform? Defiance, hurt.

    Torrant sighed. Why not? Just once I’d love to be proved wrong about what a cesspool this place is.

    The guard reached under his chin and unbuckled the strap, then swept the helmet from his head. Torrant looked at the back of his head curiously, then he saw a faint shimmer around the guard’s face. Oh… oh Goddess.

    Turn around, he commanded roughly. The guard turned around—he was about Torrant’s age, with swarthy skin and bluish black hair cut short around his head. At the top of his short-cut hair was a spot of white against the darkness. Torrant reached out and stroked the buzz of hair, feeling the tingle of magic that made it real. At once, the weight of his terrible deception seemed to triple, as he imagined years—ten or fifteen years—of the same deception he endured, only worse, a thousand times worse, because instead of showing his gift at night, or in the privacy of his friends’ company, this man went onto the streets and persecuted his own people to hide who he was.

    You haven’t changed my opinion of this shitehole of a town, Torrant said roughly. What is your talent?

    The guard flashed a humorless quirk of a strained mouth. Children. I’m a protector of children.

    Dueant’s tears. Do you have any?

    Two boys. My oldest is six—I figure he’s got about six years before I have to teach him how to hide who he is.

    Would you like to get the hell out of here?

    He looked at Torrant with bright and burning eyes and didn’t flinch at the furry distortion of his face. For the sake of sweet Triane, please?

    I can’t just trust you, you know that?

    Those burning eyes—maybe brown, in the light?—didn’t flinch. Anything. I’ll do anything you ask. I’ll leave my wife; I’ll kill my silly drunken partner in the next alley—anything, but don’t sentence my boys to this.

    Torrant sucked air in through his teeth. All I really need, sir, is a handshake. He extended a hand, covered in a light sheen of fur, and shook the trembling hand across from him. There. Now tell me truly, do you mean to betray us? Because if you do and you lie about it, I wish you all of the agonies I bear in my flesh at the moment, in truth and for real.

    The man blinked, probably because he too felt the shimmer, the tingle of magic as it crossed his palm and burned into his body. I will not betray you, he said and shivered again as the tingle passed through him.

    Good. Will your wife?

    She may. I wasn’t planning to tell her.

    Are you the kind of man who would just leave a woman, then?

    No… ouuuu…. His knees buckled a little. Fine. Yes, I am. She would probably turn me over to the consort, and our children too when they come of age. I thought I could look past her blindness of the Goddess’s children. I was young and stupid, but I won’t abandon my babies to her. I won’t.

    Good. Torrant nodded. At the very least, the spell was working.

    Tell me something. The guard panted, leaning his weight a little on the crumbling wall next to him.

    If I can, when I’m finished. It turns out I need someone like you—military training, a stout heart. But you’re going to be in charge of families: women, children, half-starved men. I won’t give them to you if I think you’re a danger to them.

    They’re my people…. He whined then. It was not a full-out lie, but a truth he didn’t believe. Right—they should be my people. But my father made me hide myself—he knew what was coming.

    So, would you kill one of your mates? Your fellow guards, the men you diced with, confided in, your brothers? Could you kill someone if he came at you while you were defending these people you don’t know are yours?

    He sucked in a breath. If I was protecting my children, even somebody else’s children, I could kill anybody—maybe even you…. Ah, sweet Dueant, I was kidding! That last groan made Torrant smile. Good. He had a stout heart and a healthy fear of Triane’s Son—all in all, one of the first fortunate things to happen since a stolen sunlit hour at Moon Hold.

    Right, then. Can you meet someone, first rest day, at the smaller western gate? Have your sons, important things—winter clothes, as much food as you can carry, maybe small items of comfort. Don’t tell them they’re going forever, but make sure they kiss their mother good-bye. Behind his matter-of-fact growl, he was trying not to do a victory dance. Finally… finally an answer to one of the problems he and Aylan had been chewing over in the last few weeks. If nothing else, he’d like to tell Yarri that Roes and Aldam would be safer than naked in the abandoned home of their family.

    There was a terrible pause, and for a moment, Torrant wondered if he had misjudged the man. Then he realized—this had been a gamble. The man had been speaking the truth in theory, but he had to come to grips with the reality of saying good-bye.

    What’s your name, sir? Torrant asked after a terrible, fraught moment, when the guard’s wide cheekbones and shadowed eyes glimmered in what was left of the starlight.

    Fredy.

    Fredy, I’m offering you a way out. It may or may not be more successful than what you’ve been doing so far, and I’m not going to lie to you—there’s going to be danger. But you know what Rath’s doing on the hills above Dueance, don’t you?

    Fredy shook his head. Apparently this was not common knowledge.

    A giant oven, Fredy. A kiln, to cook our brethren into ashes and memories. And since Rath’s killed off our poets and forbidden us to read and write, only a few songs will survive us. Are you ready to go now?

    Oh Goddess….

    Are you ready?

    Triane’s sweet breath… yes. Get my sons out of here. Let me protect them like a man and not a coward….

    Good, then. There will be someone to meet you, first rest day, right?

    Right…. There was a hesitation in the man’s voice, a one more thing.

    Fredy, Torrant asked with a light heart, was there something you wanted to ask me?

    Triane’s Son, you inflicted me with all your pain. For a minute. For a lie I didn’t know I told. It hurt so bad I wet myself, you know that?

    Torrant did, although the smell had blended in to the stench of the alleyway.

    How do you bear it? I bore it for a moment. How do you bear it, night after night?

    Ah… ah Dueant’s breath. One cut at a time, brother. One cut at a time. Now, should I dent your helmet again, or will your partner buy it if you just wander to another quarter of the ghetto and take a nap?

    "How’s ’bout you dent it when it’s not on my head, yes? Enough of us have been bashed enough times, no one will check for a bruise—but it sure would be nice not to get one tonight."

    Torrant almost laughed and complied with the request. Now stay there, and I’ll bring your friend. You can wake up together and forego the rest of your night’s walk.

    He made to swing himself up to the rooftop when Fredy stopped him. You promise, right? I get my children up on rest day, and they tell their mother good-bye, and you’ll get us out of here?

    Torrant turned his Goddess-blue eyes toward his new defender of Moon Hold and extended his hand. Truly, Fredy, if your intentions are true, then you have all the protection I can extend, although most of it is on your shoulders. A tingle passed along their nerve endings, and Fredy’s eyes widened. It was the truth, and no one could doubt it.

    And with that, he swung himself onto the rooftop above his head and set about to fetch the guard weeping drunkenly to himself about three blocks over.

    HOLDING BREATH

    WHEN TORRANT had visited the consort’s palace for that one disastrous dinner, he had been escorted into the entryway and conducted up a set of stairs to Rath’s personal apartments. The great blond doors to the ballroom, more than four times the height of a tall man, had been closed, and Torrant hadn’t bothered to peer inside. On this night they hung open, and he stood in the shadows of the door and the stairs, trying to get a glimpse into the glittering white ballroom, its chandeliers lit with a thousand candles, and the women dressed in their great swooshing dresses inside the room itself.

    Yarri was in there.

    So, are you going to go in? said Aylan at his elbow, and Torrant turned to him in a panic.

    Oueant’s bloody eyeballs, are you mad? What if somebody sees you? Oh Goddess, all the precautions they had taken to make sure nobody from Aylan’s crowd of three years ago had seen him, and here he was, in full view of Rath and the fickle gods. Had the man no sense?

    I flirted with— There was a pause while Aylan fought the urge to spit on the white marble. "—Essa’s maid. Her entire party is planning on coming late. You and I will be long gone by then."

    Torrant shook his head. The discreet orgies Aylan had attended three years before had ceased. Most of the people involved had either run away to their family estates in the country or renounced all their friends and claimed they’d been coerced.

    Essa, the vindictive bitch who had started the public outcry against them, had gotten everything she wanted. She became one of the twin gods’ chosen, the poor victim of the Great Whore’s turpitude; she kept all the friends who sided with her anyway and had a chance to publicly disparage the ones who hadn’t licked her pretty toes; and she had married the betrothed of the girl she had driven to suicide, while the body of Brina’s brother cooled beside her. Aylan had been in the room, a step away from the blade Brina sank into her own throat.

    In spite of his original plans, Torrant had no time to spare for the socializing that was supposed to come with his station—he had attended no parties, seen no shows, danced at no balls. He did not regret these things; they had never appealed to him anyway. But if he had ever been tempted, even the least little bit, all it would have taken was one thought of running into the twisted excuse for humanity that had wrought so much terrible havoc in Aylan’s heart.

    He wasn’t sure what he would say to the woman. The more time he spent as the snowcat, hiding from the anguish of his heart as a human, the less he was certain he could live with what he would do to her.

    And now Aylan was standing there, next to him, putting himself at risk of recognition.

    Torrant shook his head, tempted to grab the man by his curly hair and drag him back to his flat in the ghettoes, where no one could touch him. You need to get out of here. I told you we would meet later for the job.

    They had followed Dimitri one night, figuring that as Rath’s new favorite foot washer, he might have a line on the wizard who had been pushing at the regents during the last month and a half on the floor. They hadn’t seen the gifted one, but they had heard his name dropped by a scornful Dimitri to an indifferent guard. Torrant had asked a distraught and tearful Olek and had the rumor confirmed.

    It was Duan, brother to the dead girl, and he had volunteered.

    He was apparently moved on a nightly basis, but they knew which guards fed him—and, thanks to the gratefully relocated Fredy, they knew that two of them would be in the ghettoes tonight. Two guards, alone, on their turf—they would have Duan’s location by the time the night was out.

    They planned to have taken care of Duan, one way or another, before the Regents’ Hall reconvened.

    Do you think I’m leaving you until I’ve seen Yarri’s hand on your arm? Aylan was saying now, shaking him a little bit at the shoulder. If you were shouting at her from across a crowded ballroom, you might—just might, mind you—still keep up the madness that she should go back home. But the moment she touches you, it’s over. Either she’s here to stay, or you’re on the next wagon out, but either way, I don’t have to watch you kill yourself with your own damned heroism, and hey, hello! I can sleep again.

    Aylan had a self-satisfied smile on his face, and Torrant glared and fought the urge to kick him in the shin like a child.

    What are you two arguing about? Eljean asked, sauntering up indolently wearing a slickly cut black huntsman’s vest over a black tunic and very tight black breeches. Although their brief interlude had faded like moonlight on a shadowed river, even Torrant (hell, even Aylan) had to admit he looked good.

    Aylan—whose presence here puts his life in danger, I might add—is trying to give me away like a girl’s father at a handfasting, Torrant replied sourly, and Eljean’s immediate laugh was silenced by Aylan’s grim look.

    That’s exactly what I’m trying to do. I would really like to see the two of us ride out of this shitehole alive, if you don’t mind, and I think Yarri improves our chances dramatically.

    Oh, Aerk said, walking up to the three of them with Keon at his elbow. They were both dressed in their best huntsmen and breeches, but Aerk’s shaggy hair was too long to go without a queue and too short to stay in it. Keon had combed his own dark, wiry hair, but the cowlick in the back remained the same.

    Yarri’s here. Keon finished Aerk’s thought. That’s why you’re attending tonight!

    Torrant looked at both of them in confusion. But I thought you two weren’t.

    Well, we are if you are! Keon responded with a grin, and Torrant shook his head and went back to studying the crowd for signs of Yarri and Trieste.

    Are you going to just stand there? Jino asked, Marv on his heels. Torrant felt a vague ache at his temples.

    Has it occurred to you all that maybe I didn’t want you here? he asked a little desperately.

    Not really, Marv responded, fidgeting with the lace at his collar. Jino stopped him with a frustrated tap on the shoulder and pulled a hunk of it out of his huntsman and fluffed it, ignoring Marv’s slapping hands. Why wouldn’t you want us here?

    Torrant flashed a faint smile at their byplay and was about to answer when: Oh Goddess….

    He’d seen her.

    Unlike many of the other women, who were wearing great full skirts fluffled with satin and lace, Yarri was wearing a rather simple dress in a sumptuous autumn color. The waist started right below her full breasts and skimmed her hips and thighs, and suddenly all he could think of was the way her mouth had tasted and her eyes had glinted and her skin had swaddled his body in radiance one early summer night.

    Ellyot, Aylan prompted. "Ellyot…. Torrant!"

    Torrant expelled a harsh breath and dragged another one through his burning lungs. What?

    Breathe, dammit!

    Oh. Torrant nodded. Yes. Breathing was a superlative idea. Couldn’t beat breathing for keeping a person alive. Oh gods, oh Triane, she was looking his way! On his next breath, he dodged behind the great doors again, flattening himself against the wall.

    What’s the matter with him? Marv asked Aerk, who rolled his eyes and shrugged.

    "I think he’s nervous. Would you quit bouncing? You’re making me nervous now!"

    I look like hell, Torrant said desperately.

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