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    Innkeeper Chronicles 3.5: Sweep of the Blade

    Page 24
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      hunt, a large vaguely feline beast the size of a rhinoceros with dark green

      fur marked by splotches of deep rust red. The House Krahr Huntmaster

      was tracking it, but the main hunting party, and she, had no idea where

      it would come from. The vampires didn’t like hunts with training wheels.

      It really was a beautiful planet, Maud decided. The soft green grass with

      flashes of turquoise and gold lined the floor of the plain. The mesas rose

      on both sides, the grey stone of their walls weathered by rain and sun to

      almost white. The sky was tinted with emerald green, the golden sun

      shone bright, and the wind smelled of wildflowers. It was so easy to lose

      herself in it all and just breathe.

      282

      The mesa on her left curved, protruding. Maud rounded it. Far ahead a

      long procession trotted across the plain, the massive vihr stomping

      forward like they were trying to crush the ground with every step like

      oversized tan Clydesdales. She was too far off to hear the hoof beats,

      but her mind supplied the sound all the same, boom boom boom. They

      were moving kind of fast. They must have sighted the prey.

      Her personal unit chimed, synchronizing and projected a stylized map,

      tagging the individual vampires in the party. Eight people in the lead

      represented by red triangles, followed by a larger group of white

      triangles, followed by a smattering of green circles. Red signified the

      killing team, white indicated adults, and green was reserved for children.

      “Tag Helen.”

      Among the green circles, one turned yellow. She was in the center of the

      child group. Likely protected by several sentinels and perfectly

      safe. Still, the fights were unpredictable.

      I really am getting too paranoid.

      As if on cue, the hunting party split. The red group at the front peeled

      off, the slow vihr speeding up. The white group remained steady,

      holding to their original course.

      If she didn’t hurry, she would miss the kill. She couldn’t offer

      congratulations to the soon-to-be-married couple unless she actually

      witnessed them bringing the beast down.

      Maud gave a short harsh whistle, and Attura surged forward.

      A distant roar shook the air. A huge creature burst from between the

      mesas, running for the killing team, his green fur blurring with the

      grass. Damn it.

      283

      The killing team fanned out, seeking to flank the beast. It would be over

      in a matter of minutes.

      Her personal unit screamed, the shriek of alarm piercing her. Something

      was happening in the main procession. The formation broke, too chaotic

      to see. On her display, a big red dot appeared in the mass of green

      circles.

      Panic punched her. Maud threw her weight forward almost lying on

      Attura’s neck. The beast galloped with all its might.

      Individual riders shot out of the procession in all directions. She chanced

      a quick glance at the projection. There were three red dots now. The

      children were fleeing, while the adults bunched at the center, trying to

      contain the threat. The yellow circle indicating Helen angled south west,

      another green circle in her wake.

      Maud shifted her weight to her left, and the savok angled west.

      The group of vampires broke, bodies flying, and through the gap Maud

      glimpsed a creature. Enormous, mottled grey and stained with dirt and

      reddish clay, the hulking beast bellowed, swinging its huge scaled head

      side to side. It caught a knight and the force of the blow hurled him off

      his mount. The orphaned vihr screamed. The beast’s great jaws

      unhinged and shut on the vihr. The creature swung away and a bloody

      half of the vihr toppled to the ground.

      What the hell was that? It looked like a dragon. A huge scaled dragon.

      She had to get to Helen. She had to get to Helen now.

      Another dragon, this one pale and yellowed like an old bone, tore out of

      the clump of the vampires, and charged south west. The two riders on

      juvenile vihr kept fleeing, oblivious to the danger.

      It’s going after the children.

      284

      Maud screamed. Helen’s head whipped around. She looked over her

      shoulder and shrieked.

      Maud fused with Attura as if they were one creature, willing him to go

      faster.

      The vihr were running for their lives, the kids bouncing in the

      saddles, but they weren’t fast enough. The dragon came after them,

      paw over paw, like a sprinting crocodile, jaws gaping, a forest of fangs

      wet with its drool.

      It was gaining.

      Faster. Faster!

      They were almost there. Almost. A few dozen yards.

      The dragon lunged, roaring.

      The little boy’s vihr shied, screaming in panic, and stumbled. The boy

      and the beast went tumbling into the grass. The dragon loomed over

      them. Maud saw it all as if in slow motion in painful clarity: Helen’s

      terrified face, her eyes opened wide, her hands on the vihr’s reins, the

      vihr turning, obeying her jerk, and then she was on the ground, between

      the boy and the dragon.

      Twenty yards to her daughter.

      A sound ripped the air around Maud, so loud it was almost deafening. A

      small clinical part of her told her she was howling like an animal, trying

      to make herself into a threat.

      Helen drew her blades.

      The dragon opened its mouth. Its head plunged down and Helen

      disappeared.

      285

      Something broke inside Maud. Something almost forgotten that lived

      deep in the very center of her being, in the place where Innkeepers drew

      their power when they connected to their Inn. She had no Inn. She had

      nothing, except Helen and Helen was inside the dragon’s

      mouth. Everything Maud was, every drop of her will, every ounce of her

      strength, all of it became magic directed through the narrow lens of her

      desperation. It tore out of her like a laser beam and she saw it, black,

      and red, and ice cold, committed to one simple purpose: stop!

      Time froze. The dragon halted, locked and immobile, the bulge about to

      travel up its neck stopped in its tracks. The vihr, one fallen, the other

      about to bolt, stood in place, petrified. The vampire boy sprawled in the

      grass, unmoving.

      This is the magic of ad-hal, that same clinical voice informed her. You

      shouldn’t be able to do this.

      But she was moving through the stillness, her sword in her hand, and as

      Attura tore into the dragon’s hide, Maud slit a gash in its cheek. Blood

      gushed, red and hot. Maud thrust her arm into the cut. Her fingers

      caught hair and she grabbed a fist full of it and pulled. She couldn’t move

      it, so she planted her feet, dropped her sword, and thrust both arms into

      the wound. Her hands found fabric. She grasped it and pulled.

      The weight shifted under her hands.

      The edges of the gaping cut tore wider.

      Her daughter fell into the grass, soaked in spit.

      Is she dead? Please, please, please, please…

      Helen took a deep, shuddering breath and screamed.

      The magic shattered.

      286

      The dragon roared in pain and swiped at Attura clinging t
    o his neck. The

      savok went flying, flipped in mid-air, landed on all fours like a cat, and

      charged back in.

      The realization slammed into her like a train. There were two children

      behind her and she was the only thing between them and the dragon.

      Maud attacked.

      She tore at it with all the savagery of a mother forced into a corner. She

      stabbed it, she cut it, she pierced it, her blood blade the embodiment of

      her rage. There was no fear left. She’d burned it all in the terrifying

      instant she saw Helen swallowed. Only fury remained and icy

      determination.

      It struck at her and she dodged. When it caught her with a swipe, she

      rolled to her feet and came back in, her teeth bared in a feral snarl. She

      stabbed it in the throat. When it tried to pin her with its claws, she cut

      off its talons. She wasn’t a whirlwind, she wasn’t a wildfire; she was

      precise, calculating, and cold, and she cut pieces off of it one by one,

      while Attura ripped its flesh.

      The dragon reared, a bleeding wreck, one eye a bloody hole, paws

      disfigured, and roared. She must have lost her mind, because she roared

      back. It came down on her, trying to trap her with its colossal

      weight. She had a crazy notion of holding her blood blade and letting it

      impale itself, then something hit her from the side, carrying her out of

      the way. The dragon smashed into the ground, and in a lightning flash

      of sanity, Maud realized she would have been crushed.

      Arland dropped her to her feet. His mace whined. He charged the

      dragon, huge, his face a mask of rage, she laughed and dove back into

      the slaughter.

      287

      They cut and slashed and crushed together. At some point she caught a

      glimpse of the children stabbing at the crippled dragon’s legs. Finally, it

      swayed like a colossus on sand feet. They drew back and it crashed to

      the ground. Its eye closed. It lay unmoving.

      Maud gripped her sword, unsure if it was over. She had to make

      sure. She started forward, aiming for its face.

      Arland rose out of the gore, jumped up onto the dragon’s head, and

      raised his mace gripping it with both hands. They hit it at the same

      time. She sank her blade as deep as it would go in its remaining eye,

      while he crushed its skull with repeated blows.

      They stared at each other, both bloody.

      Helen hugged Maud’s leg, her lip trembling. Arland slid off the dragon’s

      ruined head and clamped them both to him. Nearby, Attura raised his

      head, pawed the ground and bayed in triumph.

      Arland’s voice came out strained. “I thought I lost you both.”

      Maud raised her head and kissed him, blood and all, not caring who was

      watching or what they thought.

      288

      Chapter 16 Part 1 and 2

      October 15, 2018 by Gordon

      We are gently reminding you that because of the nature of this story

      being posted on the internet, where minors can read it, we keep things

      PG-13 until the story is revised for publication.

      Maud knocked on the door separating Arland’s quarters from the tunnel

      leading to her rooms. Yesterday she would have hesitated. Today she

      didn’t even pause.

      The door swung open. Arland stood on the other side, barefoot and out

      of armor, wearing a black shirt over loose black pants. His hair was

      damp, and he’s pulled it back into a loose horse tail. He must’ve just

      stepped out of the shower. The afternoon had turned into an evening,

      289

      and the light of the sunset tinted the room behind him with purple, red,

      and deep turquoise.

      His gaze snagged on her. She was wearing a white robe of fonari spider

      silk, its fabric so thin and light, she barely felt it. The wide sleeves fell

      over her arms like a cloud. She’d cinched the robe at the waist with the

      belt, but it was cut so wide that the voluminous skirt swept the ground

      behind her, the gossamer silk swirling around her at the slightest breeze

      and when the light caught it just right, it shimmered, translucent.

      The robe was a Christmas gift from Dina. She’d handed her the gift,

      smiled, and walked away, giving Maud her privacy. Maud opened the

      gilded box, touched the silk, and sank on to the floor next to it. At the

      time it seemed like an unbelievable luxury. On Karhari it would have paid

      for a year of water for her and Helen, and Maud had cried over it quietly,

      alone. She’d cried like that the first night of her exile, when she

      butchered her waist-long black hair. The dark locks had fallen to the

      ground and she had mourned the life she lost, but at Christmas, when

      Maud held the delicate fabric in her fingers, it had touched off something

      in her, something gentle and fragile she had hidden deep inside to

      survive, the part of her that loved beautiful clothes, and flowers, and long

      soaks in the bath. It came aware and it hurt, and she cried from pain and

      relief.

      She wished so much she’d had her hair now.

      Arland opened his mouth.

      Nothing came out. He just looked at her. An exhilarating flash of female

      satisfaction surged through her.

      Silence stretched.

      290

      “Arland?”

      He closed his mouth and opened it again. “How is Helen?”

      “Very tired. We washed all of the blood off and she fell asleep.”

      “Understandable. She was fighting for her life.” His voice trailed off.

      “Arland?”

      “Yes?”

      “Can I come in?”

      He blinked and stepped aside. “Apparently, I have lost my manners

      somewhere on the hunt. My deepest apologies.”

      She swept past him into the room.

      He shut the door and turned to her. “Have you sustained any inju—”

      She put her arms around his neck and stood on her toes. Her lips met

      his, and he held very still.

      Does he not want me?

      Arland’s arms closed around her. He spun her, and her back pressed into

      the door. His rough fingers slid along her cheek, his fingers caressing her

      skin. She looked into his blue eyes and caught her breath. His eyes were

      hot with lust, need, and hunger, all swirled together and sharpened with

      a hint of predatory anticipation.

      291

      His lips trembled in the beginning of a growl. He smiled wide, showing

      his fangs, and lowered his mouth on hers. Her instincts screamed in

      panic, not sure if she was mate or prey, but she had waited for so long

      for this and she met him halfway.

      They came together like two clashing blades. His mouth sealed hers and

      she opened for him, desperate to connect, to feel him, to taste… His

      tongue glided over hers. He tasted of mint and warm spice. His fangs

      rasped against her lip.

      Her head swam. She felt light, and strong, and wanted…

      He kissed her deeper, his big body bracing hers. She nipped his lip. A

      snarl rumbled deep in his throat, the sound of predatory warning or

      maybe a purr, she wasn’t sure. He kissed the corner of her mouth, her

      lips, her chin, her neck, painting the line of heat and desire on her

      skin. She was shaking with need now.

      “I’ve wanted
    this for so long,” he groaned.

      “So did I.”

      “Why now?”

      He was kissing her neck again, each touch of his lips a burst of

      pleasure. She could barely think, but she answered anyway. “We almost

      died today. I can’t wait any longer. I don’t want to be careful, I don’t

      want to think about the consequences or things going wrong. I just want

      you. I want you more than anything.”

      “You have me.”

      “Always?”

      292

      “Always,” he promised.

      #

      Maud stretched, sliding her foot along the heated length of Arland’s

      leg. He pulled her tighter to his body. Her head rested on his chest.

      “What were they? The creatures?”

      “The closest thing to Mukama in my generation. On the vampire

      homeworld, there were predatory apes, like us, but not quite us. A

      distant relative, less intelligent, more feral, more vicious.”

      “Primitive?”

      “Yes. The Mukona, the creatures that attacked us, are the Mukama’s

      primeval cousins. They are to the Mukama what feral apes are to us. An

      earlier evolutionary branch that didn’t grow. This is the birth place of the

      Mukama, after all. The Mukona possess rudimentary intelligence, more

      of a predatory cunning, really, and inhabit caves deep below the planet’s

      surface. When we took over the planet, we had hunted them to

      extinction, or so we thought.”

      “There were three of them,” Maud said. “A mated pair and an

      offspring?”

      “I don’t know. Possibly. I’d never seen one before today. I’d heard

      stories.” He made a low growl. “Once this damn wedding is over, we’ll

      have to send survey drones into the caverns. Find out how many of them

     


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