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“Have you been on your travels for long?” Ellerie asked Shavala as the two walked through the market district.

Melithar—or whatever his name was—hadn’t had any updates on the investigation, so Ellerie had volunteered to help the other woman buy supplies while Boktar and Corec were looking for horses. The dorvasta woman made Ellerie feel self-conscious. Shavala was quiet and contemplative, like an elven elder, while Ellerie was aware she herself was neither of those things. And the other woman was a druid born among the tershaya trees, no less. Ellerie was half-tempted to explain who she really was, just so she could stop feeling like the bumbling cousin.

“Not long,” Shavala said. “About two months. I’ve never met a nilvasta before.”

“You haven’t?” Ellerie said, surprised. “I thought my people visited the forest regularly. I’ve seen many dorvasta in Terevas and Matagor. For a while, I had a ... friend among them.” The elven word for friend could be inflected in a dozen different ways to convey different meanings. She included the inflections for female and intimate.

Shavala nodded. “I’ve heard of visitors, but Terrillia is very spread out and I was just a child when I lived there. Since then, I’ve been living in a border camp on the other side of the forest. I did see some nilvasta in Tyrsall, but I didn’t stop to speak to them. Did you know there’s an entire elven quarter there?”

“In Matagor, as well. Not all of us wish to live in Terevas.”

“Terevas is one of the places I would like to see before I return to the forest. Is it true that it’s made of palaces of glass and metal?”

Ellerie smiled at the memory. “The Glass Palace, yes. The outer levels were all built that way so the sun can shine through, but the inner quarters are stone and wood. Some of the other buildings in the center of the city followed the same design.”

“How does it stay up?”

“Our artisans discovered how to make large sheets of glass, and the steel frames are able to hold the sheets in place naturally, but it was all reinforced magically to ensure it could never fall.”

“But no tershaya?”

“There are tershaya! There’s one right in front of the palace! There are some others, too, we just don’t live in them.”

Shavala smiled sadly. “I didn’t mean to offend.”

They were quiet for a moment, then Ellerie said, “Why do you travel with the humans?”

“They’re my friends.”

“Even after what he did to you?”

“What do you mean?”

“The binding spell!”

“Why worry about something that can’t be changed? I like my sigil—I just hide it in the city now because too many people were curious about it.”

“Well, I think it can be changed, and I’m going to find a way to do it.” Thinking about the spell reminded Ellerie of the itching, and she had to stop herself from reaching for her forehead.

“For your sake—and Treya’s—I hope so,” Shavala said. “I’d like to keep mine. I’m not sure about Katrin. She still complains about it, but I’ve seen her use it to find Corec when she’s nervous about him being away.”

Ellerie shook her head. “I’ll see what I can do, but if I have to banish them all to banish mine, I will.”

“I understand. Why did you leave Terevas? Do the nilvasta go on travels, too?”

“I don’t think that word applies,” Ellerie said. In elven, the word that translated as travels held the connotation of a young person going out on his or her own for the first time, then returning home permanently. “Our people come and go from Terevas all the time—some of us, anyway.”

Shavala nodded. “What about you?”

Ellerie sighed. “Terevas isn’t a very nice place. It looks pretty, but the people ... I got tired of all the secrets and lies, so I left.”

“Is that why you don’t use your family name?”

“I don’t have a family name.”

“What about di’Valla?”

Ellerie swallowed nervously. “You know who I am?”

“I spent the last eight years patrolling the border zone with the rangers. When you left Terevas, we were given your name and description and told to watch out for you, and to make sure you were brought home safely.”

“I’m a hundred and eleven now!” Ellerie said, panicked. Unlike Melithar, Shavala wasn’t Terevassian and wasn’t sworn to obey. “You can’t take me back!”

The other woman burst into startled laughter. “I wasn’t planning to. I was just curious.”

“Oh. Did you tell anyone?”

“Should I? I didn’t think it was important.”

“I would appreciate it if you didn’t mention it. Boktar knows, of course, but it’s just easier to not tell anyone else.”

Shavala shrugged. “If you wish. You and Boktar ... are you together?”

Ellerie laughed. “No. He’s not interested in women any more than I am in men. It makes us good partners—no complications.”

“Partners?”

“We work together. When I left Terevas, I didn’t really understand how much things actually cost in the real world. Somebody else had always handled that for me. I didn’t bring enough money, and by the time I reached Matagor, I realized I’d need to find a job. I tried to work as a wizard, but I wasn’t very experienced back then, and it didn’t turn out well. After that, I worked as a bodyguard for the head of a merchant family. The guard captain didn’t want to hire me, but I bested him, so the merchant insisted. I got paired with Boktar because they thought it was funny for the elf and the dwarf to work together. We didn’t stay there long—the merchant was a bloodworm—but we remained partners.”

Shavala nodded, then stopped in front of a store. “I think this is the one the innkeeper suggested.”

The store sold the dry staples they’d need for the journey—rice, beans, flour, oats, tea. Ellerie pulled the shopping list from her pocket. She didn’t need a list, but Boktar had insisted on writing out the amounts of everything they’d need for seven people. Sometimes, he acted like her mother. Well, not her mother, but some other mother who was better at the job.

As she followed Shavala through the door, she wondered if Melithar planned to come with them, but decided he’d just have to bring his own supplies.

“You didn’t have to come with me, if you want to do something else,” Katrin said. “Circle Bay is my home; I’ll be fine.”

“And you spent a lot of time around dockside taverns while you were here?” Treya asked.

“No, but that doesn’t mean I need a bodyguard.”

“Corec thinks you do.”

“Since when do you do what Corec asks?”

“I agree with him. And it was either this or go with him to look for horses. I don’t know anything about horses, and I’d rather spend the day with you than with him.”

“Thank you, I guess.”

Treya grinned at her.

Katrin led her into the tavern below Felix’s apartment, then stopped in surprise when she saw an old friend sitting alone at a table.

“What’s wrong?” Treya asked from behind her.

“Nothing. I don’t see Felix, but I do see someone I know. Do you want to meet her?”

“Of course.”

They walked over to the table.

“Ana?” Katrin said.

The young woman looked up. “Katrin!” She stood and the two hugged. “Barz said you were back!”

“This is my friend, Treya,” Katrin said. “She’s a priestess.” Treya frowned, but it was easier to explain a priestess than a mystic or the Three Orders.

Ana’s eyes grew wide at that. “Oh!” She ducked her head. “Hello, miss. Do you two want to join me?”

The three of them took seats around the table.

“Why are you in a place like this alone?” Katrin asked Ana.

“Oh, umm, I’m waiting for someone. What about you? Why were you gone so long?”

“I was trying to earn enough to pay Barz’s penalty.”

“He mentioned you’d paid it. That was really nice of you. I tried to get everyone to pitch in so we could get him out, but only a couple of people wanted to help. Where are you going to live now? I heard your uncle gave up your old apartment.”

“Actually, I’m not planning to stay in Circle Bay.”

“You’re not?” Ana looked worried for her.

“No; I met someone. He and I are traveling with Treya and some other friends, and then we’re going to settle down in Tyrsall, but I’ll be sure to visit here as often as I can.”

“Barz said you were with someone, but he didn’t seem very happy about it.”

“Why are you talking to Barz so much, anyway? I thought you left the crew.”

“I did, but he and I ... umm...”

“You’re seeing my brother? Since when?” Katrin wasn’t sure how she felt about that. Barz had been involved with a number of women, but he’d never been with one of her friends before.

“We started about two months before he was arrested.”

“Two months! Why didn’t you tell me?”

“I didn’t know if you’d be mad.”

“I’m not mad, but why didn’t you ever tell me you were interested in him? He’s a good man, but I’m worried he’s just going to end up in prison again.”

Ana looked down. “I don’t know. He said he’s going to look for work—real work—like the magistrate told him to, but he’s talking to the crew, too. I want him to quit, but, well, you know how Barz is. He doesn’t like to be told what to do.”

Katrin nodded. “Maybe once he’s got a job, he’ll realize he can make more money that way than he ever did as a thief.”

“That’s what I told him! I was making good money at ... oh.” Ana blushed. “I was working at Miss Sabina’s when I ran into him again. I never told you about it because I thought you’d yell at me.” Miss Sabina’s was a high-end brothel in the city center. Ana turned to Treya. “I’m sorry, miss. I didn’t mean to offend.”

Treya waved her off. “Don’t mind me, you two should catch up.”

“I wouldn’t have yelled at you,” Katrin said. “Sabina tried to recruit me, too, but I told her no. But what about you and Barz?”

“He didn’t want me working there after we got together, so I’m serving tables at the Five Gulls. It doesn’t pay as well, so I’m rooming with some of the girls from the crew, but Barz wants to get an apartment together once he has a job. He says he doesn’t want to stay with your uncle any longer than he has to.”

That wasn’t a surprise. Although Katrin had lived with Felix, Barz had moved in and out, getting his own place any time he could afford it, or sometimes staying with friends.

Just then, Felix and Barz came down the stairs together. They had matching black eyes, and Felix had a scrape across his left cheek.

Ana jumped up from her seat and hugged Barz, not commenting on the black eye. Apparently she’d already seen it.

Katrin introduced them to Treya, then said, “What happened to the two of you?”

“Why didn’t you tell me he abandoned you?” her brother said angrily. “He’d said you were caught by that bounty hunter, but you never said that Felix left you behind first!”

“You told him?” she asked Felix.

“I assumed you’d already told him,” he replied as the two men sat down. “It slipped out.”

“You didn’t answer my question,” Barz said to her.

“I didn’t want you two arguing,” Katrin said. “Not with me going away.”

“I don’t want you leaving with that man.”

Felix nodded in agreement, while Ana just looked back and forth between them, biting her lip in worry.

“I don’t need you to make my decisions anymore,” Katrin said. “Either of you. I’m happy with Corec, and that’s all you need to know.”

Ana laid her hand over Barz’s, calming his fidgeting.

“Why not stay here?” Barz said. “Even if it’s with him.”

“I’ve already promised a friend we’ll travel with her for a while, and then I need to find a bardic teacher. After that, I don’t know what’s going to happen. We’re planning on going to Tyrsall, but it’ll depend on where we can find work. Maybe we’ll end up in Circle Bay after all.” Katrin doubted that, but she had to give them some reason to stop arguing with her.

“A bardic teacher?” Felix said. “I thought you gave up on that.”

“I gave up on the northern schools, but the southern schools are still an option. Right now, I’m hoping to find a bard who was trained in the south and who wouldn’t mind teaching me outside of the schools. That’s why I’m here, to see if you know whether there are any traveling bards in the city.”

“Yosep is the only one I know of, but he’s from Larso, so I imagine he attended the school in Telfort. And the bards that live here in the city all follow the rules of the school here, I’m sure.”

Katrin sighed. “I’ll have to keep looking, then.”

“You really think you’re going to find someone like that?”

“If I don’t, then I’ll look farther south, but I don’t want to keep talking about me. Barz, what sort of work are you looking for?”

“Dockworker, I suppose. I don’t really know how to do anything else.”

“You’re smart, and you can read and write and figure. Maybe you could work in a shop.”

He laughed. “Me? A shopkeeper? They’d be fools to hire me.”

Katrin frowned at her brother. He was still different from what she remembered before his prison stint—more sullen and angry. She couldn’t think of how to improve his mood, and when Ana whispered in his ear and he smiled down at her, Katrin felt left out.

It was more than that, though, and as the conversation continued, it seemed like a gulf had grown between herself and Barz and Felix, and even between herself and Ana. They were still her family and friends, but she’d been away for a long time and she had new friends now. Was this what it was like to grow up and leave home? She’d have to ask Shavala and Treya—Corec didn’t like to talk about his early life.

Soon, she ran out of things to talk about. After a few awkward silences, she stood and said, “It’s getting late. We should get going. I think we’ll be here at least one more day, so I’ll try to stop by again if I can.”

After saying their goodbyes, they headed for the door.

On the way out, Treya said, “I’m going to visit a friend at the Assembly Chamber. I’ll stop by the inn on my way back to the chapter house tonight to see if they’ve decided when we’re leaving.”

“All right, I’ll see you then.”

When Shavala made it back to the inn, Katrin was already there.

“Did you find your uncle?”

“Yes,” Katrin replied. “My brother, too. They were at the tavern where Felix plays.”

“Did he have any suggestions on finding a bard?”

“He thinks all the bards in the city at the moment were trained in the northern traditions, so they’re not likely to take on a female student. I’ll have to keep looking. How did things go with Ellerie?”

“She’s not what I expected from a nilvasta. And she’s ... very young.”

“She didn’t look any younger than you.”

“She’s an adult, but I’m not sure she’s ready to travel on her own. It is good that she has the dwarven man to watch out for her, but I think she’s used to getting her own way—she may not react well when she doesn’t.”

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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 23

The refugees had set themselves up in family groups in the cavernous building in which they’d taken shelter. Ellerie made her way between them, careful not to step on the few who were still sleeping. The villagers’ mood was subdued after everything they’d been through. Their headman’s death the previous afternoon had just been one more shock added onto all the others, but the plainsmen were a hard people, and they were already organizing the indoor camp for an extended stay. They were in no...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 8

They arrived in High Cove after dark. Ellerie was riding at the front of the procession with Boktar and Venni when they reached the outskirts. There was nobody out on the streets, but lights could be seen through windows. As they rode past a cottage, an old woman opened her shutters to stare out at the noise, then closed them with a bang. “This is strange,” Venni said. “I’ve never seen it like this. Where is everyone?” “Asleep?” Boktar guessed, though his voice was uneasy. “It’s late, but...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 34

The battle was over, but Katrin and Shavala hadn’t made an appearance yet. As soon as Corec could get away, he went looking for them, heading into the building where they’d been positioned, taking the stairs as quickly as he could in his armor. Reaching the top, he found Marco sitting alone on the floor with his head in his hands. “Where are they?” Corec barked. Had something happened? “Katrin’s helping Shavala back to the camp. She got hurt during the fighting.” “Hurt how?” “I don’t...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 10

“No!” Ellerie snapped, after Marco had asked her the same question for the third time. “I’ll tell you where we’re going when you need to know, and not before.” “Then how do you expect me to plan for the trip?” the factor asked. He was a tall, slender man with a carefully groomed mustache and black hair that had started to gray. “I don’t. You’re here to handle the finances and to translate. We’ll listen to any advice you want to give, but Boktar and I will take care of the planning, with...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 24

“There’s too much to explore, and now we’ve missed the whole afternoon,” Ellerie said, speaking to a small group after the sun had fallen. “Without Leena, I guess we’ll have to go back and resupply before we can do any more looking around.” Boktar said, “Even if Leena was here, we couldn’t stay much longer. She can only carry so much, and we’re already running low on oats for the horses again.” Ellerie sighed. “We need to have more time. Even another trip would only give us a few days. It’s...

3 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 5

“I remember there being more people here,” Sarette said as she and Katrin wandered through the market stalls. “You’ve been to Lanport before?” the other woman asked. “Once, years ago.” Her parents had taken her so she could see the ocean. “Well, it’s cold and wet today. It’s not a surprise that the market’s quiet.” Sarette hadn’t considered that. She hadn’t even noticed it was raining, and the temperature would have to drop much lower before she’d be bothered by it. Cold rain was a fact...

1 year ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 24

“Change the world how?” Rusol asked, narrowing his eyes. “You’re a son of Larso,” Leonis said. “You know the scripture. Magic is too dangerous to be allowed loose, uncontrolled. It’s only safe when it’s granted as priestly blessings.” “What does that have to do with anything?” Leonis smiled again. “What if all magic was priestly magic, given only to those the gods deem worthy?” “That’s impossible. The gods have no say over elder or arcane magic.” He just barely stopped himself from...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 25

Constables escorted a line of gang members down the street toward the city center, past a row of jeering citizens. Razai stood amongst the crowd in her Vash-like disguise, grinning widely at any of the thugs who looked her way. She’d had nothing to do with their arrests, but if they were set free, she wanted them to come for her rather than the divers. As the last of them passed, she saw a flash of a familiar face through a window across the street. Renny Senshall—and if the girl had known...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 26

When the guard opened the door to the cell, Ellerie realized she’d been scratching her brow again. She forced herself to stop. “We’re ready for you now,” the guard said, waving her through. He’d taken the redheaded girl away thirty minutes earlier, and Ellerie hadn’t seen her since. “Is Boktar all right?” she asked as she followed him out of the room and down a corridor, past other guards who watched her curiously. “Who?” “My friend! He was shot!” “I don’t know, miss. I heard some people...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 28

The nearest peaks in the Coastal Range were visible even from Circle Bay, and it hadn’t taken long to reach the foothills south of the city. Corec was setting up his tent when Ellerie and Boktar returned from climbing the nearest hill for a better look. “Did you see anything?” he asked. “The road curves around to the east,” Ellerie said, “but if my maps are right, we don’t want to go that way. There’s not enough land between the sea and the mountains for what I’m trying to find. There’s...

1 year ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 13

While Corec and Bobo went into the city, Katrin spent the day practicing on her harp and getting to know Shavala. The elf girl talked about her training as a druid, her brother and his wife and their young son, and a friend named Lele who Katrin eventually figured out was a squirrel. For her part, Katrin admitted she’d been a thief, and that the penalty Shavala had overheard them talking about was a way for her to stay out of prison. Shavala knew what a thief was, but it was clear from her...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 16

The stop at Dalewood was uneventful. Corec had asked at The Smiling Jester, but there hadn’t been any packages needing delivery. He was starting to believe that working as a courier wouldn’t pay any better than being a caravan guard, unless he could get hired on full time by one of the houses. They got back on the road the next morning. At the edge of town, the West Road split into the Trade Road, which led to Four Roads and then through the hills into Larso, and the Old Road, which led into...

3 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 21

“It doesn’t make any sense!” Ellerie exclaimed, shutting the ancient book and setting it to the side. “I have no idea if we’re in the right place or not. It’s just miles and miles of dead land!” “Things change over time,” Bobo said. “Not this much! There aren’t any landmarks left. I don’t even know if the river we crossed yesterday is the right one. There was no bridge, and it was miles from where it should have been.” “Rivers can change course,” Josip said. “I’ve seen it happen.” “I...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 15

“Where’re ya headed?” the man with the missing tooth asked. He wore chainmail and carried a mace on his belt. There was a small shield strapped to his back. “And why don’t you got any shoes?” “Four Roads,” Treya replied. “I’m visiting some friends. I’ve got shoes in my pack; I’m just not wearing them.” “Four Roads?” the other man said as he looked her up and down with a wide smile. He had long blonde hair and a bushy beard, and wore a leather breastplate. There was an arming sword sheathed...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 25

Ellerie shined her lantern over the fallen stone and dirt. “This one’s blocked too,” she said with a sigh. It was the third tunnel they’d found leading away from the southern area of the city to what they expected would be another section on the east side of the mountain, but just like the first two, it was blocked by a cave-in. Boktar rapped on the tunnel wall, then shouted and listened for the echoes. “This one’s man-made, so it sounds different, but I don’t think there’s any point in...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 16

Shavala woke up the other women, then rolled her bedding back into a tight bundle. She’d volunteered to sleep on the floor the previous night after having gotten a look at the sorry state of the room’s straw tick mattress. Sarette and Treya had joined her, leaving the bed, such as it was, for Katrin and Ellerie. The tiny inn they’d found in the village of Elmsford only had two rooms for guests, but it was worth it to stay indoors and get out of the biting cold. In the nine days they’d been...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 18

“It’s done,” said Cenric, a bulky, brown-haired man who’d become the spokesman for the former red-eyes. He spoke in a dull, tired tone. He and his remaining men had spent the entire morning building two massive funeral pyres, one for the red-eyes who’d died and another, larger one for the villagers. Corec looked up from where he’d been conferring with Sarette. “Then line everyone up. I want to speak to them.” Cenric trudged back to where the others were standing in a dispirited group, with...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 21

Shavala and Katrin rode Socks and Flower to the elven quarter, since Katrin had suggested it was too far away to walk. After two hours, Katrin finally said, “We’re getting close. I think.” Shavala glanced back at the way they’d come, confused. She didn’t know her way around the city, but she had a good sense of direction, and it felt like they’d taken a roundabout route. “Couldn’t we have just come through there?” she asked, pointing. “I led us around some bad neighborhoods,” Katrin said....

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 11

“It reminds me of Circle Bay or Valara,” Leena said, gazing at the whitewashed buildings surrounding the market square. “I think settlers from Circle Bay built up Kitish after they drove the pirates out a hundred years ago,” Boktar said. Leena nodded. Kitish was one of the larger islands in this part of the Gilded Sea, and the only one with a deepwater port, making it a frequent stop for ships heading between Tyrsall and Nysa. There were other islands where ships could stop along the way,...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 2

Katrin hummed to herself, then played the same tune on her harp before marking it down on the sheet of paper before her. While she hummed the next few notes, Shavala came into the room and greeted her. “Back to trying to write a song?” the elven woman asked. “Now that my fingers aren’t constantly frozen, I figured I should. I just can’t think of the lyrics. I’ve finally got two decent melodies, but they’re not good enough to stand by themselves. I need to put words to them, and I just can’t...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 17

Six days after meeting Treya—and fighting the red-eyed men—the group reached Four Roads, a town of thirty-thousand people in the middle of the free lands, halfway between Tyrsall and Telfort. They’d met Jak’s caravan along the way, which was heading back east carrying wheat from the beginning of the harvest season. The caravan had been accompanied by dozens of farmers hauling their own, hoping for better prices in Dalewood or Tyrsall than they could get in Four Roads. As Corec had expected,...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 20

After over a week of staying in inns on the way back to Tyrsall, they ran into a stretch of road where they wouldn’t reach another village in time for nightfall, so they camped out. Following the same pattern they’d used before reaching Four Roads, Shavala took the early morning watch. Sometimes Bobo or Katrin kept her company, but she liked the quiet watches, too, when there was no one awake but her. An hour after she’d relieved Corec, she decided to make another circuit around the camp,...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 21

The blizzard arrived just before dawn, with enough force that it almost extinguished the bonfire despite the windbreak. Fergus trudged over to Sarette. “Come help me!” he shouted over the howling of the wind. “If we move the firewood and build another wall closer to the fire, it’ll keep it from going out!” “I’ll do it!” she yelled back. “You should be in your shelter!” “The work will keep me warm!” Other than Sarette, Fergus was the last person still out and about. A few of the other...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 22

Shavala kept watch during the early morning hours on their fifth day out of the city, while the air grew an autumn chill and a thick fog rolled in. She’d bought thicker tunics while she’d been in the elven quarter, but she would need to find a replacement for her old human-style winter coat the next time she was in the city. She liked the pockets that came with human coats. Setting her bow to the side and rubbing her hands on her arms to warm up, she felt the comforting weight of her new...

4 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 23

Treya heard a metallic clicking sound as she scraped the shovel through the layer of dirt and grime on the floor. “I think I found something,” she said, then looked up. “Are you all right?” Sarette was leaning against a collapsed stone structure. Her eyes were closed and she was rubbing her temples. The two of them were exploring the middle of the cavernous room while the rest of the group navigated around the edges, searching for tunnels and stairs. “I just don’t like all this rock over...

3 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 2

The chilly autumn rain poured down as the horses trudged along the South Road, nine days north of Circle Bay. For the first seven days, the road had followed the coastline and they’d stayed in fishing villages when they could find one, but then the main road had curved west, cutting through a forest. It wasn’t the Terril Forest—they were too far east and the trees weren’t tall enough—but the area was heavily wooded. According to their maps, the reason the road had turned inland was to go...

1 year ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 8

Present day... “Thank you for allowing us to camp out here,” Corec said to the farmer as he handed over five copper coins, on top of the two silver he’d given the man the night before for additional supplies. With the pack mule to carry everything, and by supplementing their meals with what they could find or catch along the way, they’d have enough food to get to the elven border camp and then back to the West Road before needing to buy more. After saying their farewells, Corec and his...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 1Chapter 18

The plan fell apart before it even got started. Early in the morning, Corec had tracked down some of the fishermen who worked the local lakes, and found one that was willing to sell him a large net. Then he’d bought a heavy crossbow, wishing he hadn’t sold the last one. While he was doing that, someone at the Three Orders chapter house helped Treya find a local farmer who knew where the drake was nesting, and could take them to it. Bren, the guide, led them north up the Farm Road for an...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 29

The visions from the staff had repeated themselves several times before Shavala realized they were gradually being stretched out over longer periods. Now, after carrying it for hours, a scene that had once been just a brief glimpse might last for over a minute, without showing anything more than it had the first time. The things she was seeing had to be elder magic, and likely druidic, but the visions didn’t give her any indication of their purpose. The arms she occasionally saw holding the...

2 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 3Chapter 35

“I wish you’d stop messing with that thing.” Shavala looked up from where she was sitting cross-legged with the staff laid across her lap. “It’s not saying anything now,” she told Katrin. “It’s a hunk of wood—it shouldn’t have said anything at all! It’s creepy.” Shavala stood and leaned the staff against the wall, then went to sit next to the other woman. “It was more like it was thinking than talking. It just didn’t like what I was doing.” “What if it happens again?” She didn’t have an...

3 years ago
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The Eighth Warden Book 2Chapter 9

“Maybe you should go back and wait at the inn with Bobo,” Corec said to Katrin as the group headed to the constabulary building. “But what if I can help?” she said, hefting the flute she held in her left hand. He sighed. “The only weapon you’ve got is that dagger. I worry about you.” “I wasn’t the one that rushed straight at a group of five ogres.” “That’s different.” She raised her eyebrows. “Oh?” “I trained for that sort of thing, and you don’t wear any armor.” “The armor didn’t seem...

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