- Book info
- Sample
- Media
- Author updates
- Lists
Synopsis
The Last of the Renshai is the first volume of a sword-and-sorcery saga that is enormous in conception, and full of complex and arresting fantasy detail. The adventure arises from the trials of a lone warrior, a champion driven to avenge the genocide of his race. The magic lies with the immortal realms: this is a world controlled by four wizards whose strife not only presages the conflicts and wars of humans, it also threatens consequences and destruction on a world- wide scale. And the last Renshai is doomed to take on all - he will be the key for humans, wizards and gods alike. Throw in a fabulously detailed, rich fantasy world, and you have a tremendous, value-for-money, page turning epic
Release date: January 7, 1992
Publisher: DAW
Print pages: 640
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
Reader buzz
Author updates
The Last of the Renshai
Mickey Zucker Reichert
(Year 23 of the Reign of Buirane)
The Eastern Wizard, Shadimar, did not know how long he had sat with his elbows propped on the table in the Cardinal Wizards’ Meeting Room and his bony chin cupped into his slender, wrinkled palms; but his hands had gone numb and long since ceased to register the cottony cascade of his beard between his fingers. The movements or stillness of his three colleagues had grown familiar beyond notice, and the only true mortal in the room, the bard Davrin, sat on the floor in his usual deferential silence, his mandolin cradled in his lap.
For the last seventy years, from the day Shadimar had become one of the four true mages, chronology had lost all meaning for him. At one time, a bird’s flight across a meadow seemed to take days while, at another, an infant might come of age between Shadimar’s breakfast and lunch. At first, these lapses had terrified him; a mad link in the chain of Eastern Wizards might harm the system that Odin the AllFather had created at the beginning of time and nurtured in the hundreds of centuries that followed. By his law, each of the four Cardinal Wizards selected his time to die in a glorious ceremony that passed his memories, and those of his predecessors, to his chosen successor. Thus, over time, the Wizards became stronger, more knowledgeable, and more powerful.
So far, that system had operated with reasonable precision. The original Wizards had been weak, essentially oracles and prophets. With Odin’s guidance, they shaped and studied the world and its forces, found the best or most necessary courses of action, and created prophecies that their stronger successors would need to fulfill. Over eons, those visions had become clearer, and the abilities of the Wizards had grown to allow them to fulfill their own predictions. Now only the oldest and most unclear of the prophecies remained, spouted but little understood by the first Wizards, scrawled on cave walls, passed down in the legends of generations of mortals, or simply funneled through the memories of previous Wizards.
Shadimar remained unmoving, recalling how his near-immortality had muddled his time sense, making him fear that his contribution to the line of Eastern Wizards would be insanity. But, drawing on the memories of his predecessors, he discovered that nearly all of them had experienced a similar period of adjustment. Over the years, as he became more comfortable with his position as Wizard, Shadimar had grown accustomed to the leaps and pauses in time. He had learned to focus instead on the functions of the current Eastern and Western Wizards: to fulfill a handful of prophecies, to keep the mortal populaces believing in the gods and Wizards without violating Odin’s laws of noninterference, and spreading the cause of neutrality by mediating between the Northern and Southern Wizards, who championed good and evil respectively.
The Southern Wizard, Carcophan, ceased his pacing and slammed a meaty fist on the tabletop. ‘Enough of this waiting. He’s not coming back. I say your man has failed the Tasks.’
Startled from his reverie, Shadimar jerked erect in his chair, riveting his steely gaze on the keeper and sower of the world’s evil.
In the seat directly across the empty table, Tokar, the Western Wizard, remained still. His gray mane of hair and beard framed creased features and knowing, dark eyes that remained distantly fixed. Only a brief downward twitch of his lips revealed that the oldest of the Cardinal Wizards noticed Carcophan’s interruption.
To Shadimar’s right, the Northern Sorceress, Trilless, scowled with a revulsion aimed more at her impatient opposite than his sudden, violent gesture. She wore layers of silky white robes that frothed and folded around her slender frame, emphasizing her fair, Northern features and snowy hair. Pale from head to toe, she looked the epitome of the goodness she championed, almost to the point of caricature. Though the wait involved Tokar’s apprentice, it was Trilless who answered the Southern Wizard’s challenge. ‘Be patient, Carcophan.’ She cut off the words abruptly, as if to stay a natural urge to address the Evil One with an insult. It would accomplish nothing, except to make her seem the pettier of the two. Odin’s laws forbade the Wizards from harming one another, especially on such impartial territory as the Meeting Isle, but the enmity between the Northern and Southern Wizards had grown beyond all proportion. ‘I’m more than twice your age, yet I still remember when I underwent the Seven Tasks. The gods never made them easy. Don’t begrudge Tokar’s apprentice the time he needs to think.’
Shadimar nodded absently at the wisdom in Trilless’ words. As intermediaries between the gods and men, it fell to the Wizards to select their apprentices, to choose not only for power and dedication to their god-assigned causes, but for stability and strength of character as well. To aid in the judgment, Odin had designed a series of seven god-mediated tasks to assess the worth and survivability of apprentices. Failure at any one resulted in death. According to Shadimar’s predecessors, more than half of those sent to the Tasks did not return, yet Tokar’s chosen, Haim, was the first to be tested since Shadimar himself. The Eastern Wizard was not quite certain what to expect, but patience seemed crucial.
Lost in his thoughts, Shadimar did not notice that Carcophan had come up beside him until the Southern Wizard stood only a hand’s breadth from Shadimar and spoke into his face.
‘And we wouldn’t have to sit here in dark ignorance if you had placed the Pica Stone in capable hands.’ The Southern Wizard’s yellow-green eyes seemed to bore through his companion’s gray ones. ‘Through it, we could see every move that he makes, hear every syllable.’
Rage suffused Shadimar, the tragedy of Myrcidë still raw enough to incite anger in him. Before the Eastern Wizard had chosen him as successor, he had lived among his people, a reclusive race of priests, oracles, and minor magicians. During his apprenticeship, a Northern tribe of warriors, called Renshai, had rampaged through the Westlands, devastating the Myrcidians and leaving the world with no wizards except the Cardinal four and a handful of charlatans and fakes. He had left the clairsentient Pica Stone in the hands of his people, believing it safe there. The Renshai had plundered the huge sapphire, and it would violate Wizards’ vows for Shadimar to take it back by force. He gathered breath to barrage Carcophan for his insensitivity.
Before Shadimar could speak, a presence touched his mind. Though calm and peaceful, it startled him into silence. Only the Wizards could communicate in this fashion, and then only with other Wizards. Yet it was considered disrespectful to the point of assault to enter another’s mind without invitation.
Tokar did not probe or search. His voice filled only a tiny, shallow portion of Shadimar’s mind. ‘Best not to imitate the Evil One’s weaknesses. You are above that.’ Then the presence disappeared.
Shock shattered Shadimar’s anger. Though Tokar had phrased his warning carefully, it still came as a surprise. It made sense for the oldest and wisest of the Wizards to advise the youngest and weakest, especially since the Eastern and Western Wizards shared the burden of balancing good and evil and protecting the peoples of the area known as the Westlands. Yet Tokar, like the Western Wizards before him, was the most powerful and aloof of the four. He had never previously chosen to communicate with Shadimar in this manner. The Eastern Wizard could only guess that the tension of discovering whether his chosen successor had passed the task touched Tokar more than his quiet exterior revealed.
Subdued and forgotten on the floor, Davrin strummed a string of chords on his mandolin, the sound barely audible in the silence that followed Carcophan’s accusation. A square-cut shroud of gray-flecked brown hair hid the bard’s dark eyes and placid features. He had no purpose in the ceremony except to observe and record like his mother before him and her father before her.
Put off by Shadimar’s lack of response, Carcophan whirled toward Trilless, with a suddenness that sent his salt-and-pepper hair whipping into a wild tangle.
The Sorceress remained still, not sparing the Southern Wizard so much as a glance.
Carcophan edged toward her, presumably to agitate. But before he could take a second step, a door that had not existed a moment before opened in the far wall, and Tokar’s apprentice appeared through it. Haim’s normally rosy Pudarian features looked a waxy yellow. Though only in his mid-twenties, he now had white hairs hanging conspicuously among his dark curls. He seemed to have aged a century since the combined Wizards’ magics had sent him to the Tasks earlier that same day. He tottered forward, eyes moist and features shaken.
Shadimar recalled his own success with the Tasks of Wizardry, remembered feeling triumphant, confident, and revitalized at the conclusion, despite the difficulty of the challenge. Scanning the memories of his predecessors, Shadimar found the same remembrance of their own trials. Concerned by Haim’s weakness, Shadimar frowned, glancing at his colleagues questioningly.
Tokar and Trilless had raised icy lack of expression to an art form. Reading nothing on their faces, Shadimar turned his attention to the least patient Wizard. He glanced at Carcophan just in time to see the keeper of evil draw a dagger from the folds of his cloak. Carcophan lunged at the returning apprentice.
Haim recoiled with a gasp. Slowed by fatigue, he did not move quickly enough. Carcophan’s knife jabbed through his robes at the level of his heart.
Instinctively, Haim clasped his chest, staring at the Southern Wizard in wide-eyed horror. He fell to one knee.
But the knife emerged bloodless, as Shadimar knew it must. There could be no wound. Those who survived the Seven Tasks could not be harmed by any object of Odin’s world. Like the Cardinal Wizards, nothing short of the conjured magical creatures called demons or the Swords of Power could harm Haim; though, until Tokar’s passing, Haim could still fall prey to mortal illnesses and old age.
Carcophan returned his knife to its hiding place. Turning on his heel, he calmly strolled to his seat at the farthest end of the table from Trilless, chuckling beneath his breath along the way.
Haim rose with a slow shakiness that caused Shadimar to worry that the youth had survived the attack, only to die of fear. Trilless scowled, but she did not come to the aid of Tokar’s apprentice. Any lessons or comforting must come from the Western Wizard.
The room lapsed into uncomfortable silence. Concerned by the weakness and insecurity of the one who would become trained to the position of Western Wizard, Shadimar discarded propriety and extended his mind to touch Tokar’s. He hoped to catch a thread of the reason why Tokar had chosen Haim as his successor.
But Shadimar’s projection entered only the most superficial corner of Tokar’s mind, neatly enclosed by mental defenses he could never hope to defeat, even if he had wanted to enrage his stronger ally.
What is it you wish from me, Shadimar? Tokar kept his thought as patient as his person, yet the undertone rang through clearly. Shadimar’s entrance into his mind was an ill-mannered intrusion.
Shadimar kept his answer general, not wanting to speculate too much while linked with Tokar. I only wondered if there were things I should know about Haim. He emphasized the pronoun to explain his use of nonverbal communication.
I think not. There was veiled annoyance beneath the response that quickly turned to bland caution. I know him well enough to see things you do not. Haim is young. I have three or five decades to work on experience and confidence. The Western Wizard made a subtle, dismissing gesture that bid Shadimar leave his mind.
Shadimar obeyed, not wholly satisfied with the explanation. As he withdrew, he thought he caught a faint feeling of doubt, but he could not be sure whether it came from the Western Wizard or as backlash of his own concerns. Tokar’s composure did little to ease Shadimar’s mind; tranquility was the Western Wizard’s trademark. Should the newest in the line of Wizards prove too weak, the memories of his predecessors might overwhelm him. Of them all, this was especially true of the Western line. For reasons Shadimar could not fathom, Odin had decreed that it would always have the most power, while the Northern and Southern lines should stay equal, and the Eastern should remain the weakest.
Perhaps Tokar wants his successor to be feeble, so that he can overpower Haim from within and remain in control past his time. The thought seemed ludicrous. Why would he do such a thing when he could simply wait to choose an apprentice and remain in power several more centuries? Tokar had served as Western Wizard for longer than six hundred years; but according to Shadimar’s inherited memories, others had remained in power nearly a millennium. Since each Wizard chose his own time of passing, there was no specific criterion for such a decision. At some point, each Wizard simply found the time right to expire, and only a rare one had lost his life early to demons or to one of the Swords of Power.
The silence grew unreasonably long, even for a meeting of near-mortals. Davrin did not strum, though his lips moved as he composed a song. Haim stood with his head bowed, waiting for his master to speak. Even Carcophan sat in stony quiet.
At length, Tokar broke the hush. ‘You have finished the Seven Tasks of Wizardry.’
Shadimar frowned, even his vast patience tried. It seemed nonsensical for the Western Wizard to wait so long to voice a self-evident statement.
‘I have,’ Haim replied as formally.
‘And the eighth task?’ Tokar continued.
Now all the Wizards shifted forward to hear the answer, the rustle of robes and cloaks disrupting the stillness.
‘There is no eighth task.’ Haim parroted the instruction given to him just before the Cardinal Wizards’ magic had sent him to face his destiny.
Tokar questioned further. ‘But one was offered to you?’
‘Yes.’ Haim looked at the Wizards uneasily, specifically avoiding Carcophan’s piercing, cat-like stare. ‘The Keeper of the eighth task offered me a chance at ultimate power, even over the gods. As you advised, I refused it. There is no eighth task.’
Though often quoted among the Cardinal Wizards, the final statement was not wholly true, at least in Shadimar’s experience. The decision to refuse or accept the task itself seemed a test of judgment. In the millennia since Odin had created the Tasks of Wizardry, no survivor of the tasks had ever chosen to attempt the eighth one. Shadimar had no way of knowing for certain, but it followed that some of the potential Wizards had tried the task. And it followed equally as naturally that every one who tried it had failed and died. Each Wizard held his or her own theory, but Shadimar believed that Odin had added the eighth task to protect the gods, the world, and the system of Wizardry. Surely, anyone interested in ultimate power could not be trusted to obey the many laws that hemmed in and restricted the Wizards, and he guessed that the simple act of accepting the eighth task meant failing it.
‘Did the Keeper say anything more?’ Tokar asked.
Every breath and movement became clearly audible as the silence waxed even deeper. Usually the Keeper did nothing more than offer the task. But when he did speak, his words were always of the greatest significance.
‘He did,’ Haim said. His gaze darted from rapt face to face. Apparently intimidated, he chose to focus on his master’s feet as he spoke. ‘He said that the age of change would begin during Shadimar’s reign.’
Trilless gasped. It was the first time Shadimar had seen the keeper of all goodness lose her composure. Davrin clutched his mandolin so tightly his fingers blanched on the frets. Even Carcophan looked pale and shaken.
An ancient prophecy flashed into Shadimar’s mind, words carved on a wall in the Crypts of Kor N’rual by the original Northern Wizard. Committed to writing, this first prophecy had survived the longest, known not only by the Wizards, but by the few adventurous Northmen who happened to explore the cliffs in the wilderness outside what had once been the tribal city of Renshi:
In the age of change
When Chaos shatters Odin’s ward
And the Cardinal Wizards forsake their vows
A Renshai shall come forward.
Hero of the Great War
He will hold legend and destiny in his hand
And wield them like a sword.
Too late shall he be known unto you:
The Golden Prince of Demons.
Not all about the prophecy seemed clear, but one part left little doubt in any Wizard’s mind. The age of change referred to the Ragnarok, the apocalyptic war that would result in the virtual destruction of all life, including the gods. Shadimar shivered. Certainly, against this threat, even Trilless and Carcophan would band together. And Shadimar reminded himself a hundred times in the next second that prophecies did not just occur by destiny; it was the Wizards’ job to see them fulfilled.
Only Tokar seemed unaffected by Haim’s pronouncement. ‘The Keeper said the age of change, or an age of change?’
Haim shifted from foot to foot, looking like an errant child caught daydreaming during an important lesson. ‘Master, I’m almost certain he said the age of change. He said that Carcophan would incite the Great War.’
Forgetting his manners, Shadimar interrupted. ‘The Keeper mentioned Carcophan by name? And myself?’
Haim glanced as Shadimar. ‘Yes, lord.’
‘And us?’ Tokar regained control of the proceedings with a warning glare at Shadimar. ‘Did he say whether you or I would carry out the Western Wizard’s portion of the prophecies?’
Haim whipped his attention back to Tokar. ‘No, master. He did not mention either of us. Nor the Lady Trilless either.’ He inclined his head to indicate the Sorceress. ‘In fact, he said nothing more.’
Shadimar grappled with the information. Each Wizard knew his role in the Great War, though some in more detail than others. Parts of the prophecies had been lost; at least one premature death of a Wizard had interrupted both the Eastern and Southern lines, taking with them all previous memories. By piecing together legends and Wizards’ writings, Shadimar knew that the Great War would pit evil against neutrality in the bloodiest battle the world had ever seen. Trilless’ people, the Northmen, would have little or no involvement. The stories conflicted as to who would triumph.
Long contemplation of the Great War always frightened Shadimar. As the Eastern Wizard, his loyalties lay with the Westlands. Should evil win, nothing would stand between good and evil, and the wars would rage for eternity, or until one or the other triumphed. Yet if neutrality completely defeated evil, there would remain no force to equalize Trilless’ good. The weakest of the Wizards cleared his throat. Should such a thing happen, goodness would lose all meaning, and he could not discount the possibility that the loss of symmetry alone would plunge the world into the Ragnarok. ‘Colleagues, it’s certain that nothing positive can come of the Great War. If either side wins, it would disrupt the very balance we were created to uphold.’
Tokar nodded his support without a trace of the passion that had filled Shadimar’s words. Trilless said nothing. The matter did not involve her. A brief silence followed, shattered abruptly by Carcophan’s laughter. ‘Balance?’ He laughed again, with malice. ‘My Wizard’s vows and duties say nothing of balance. But they do say that I must fulfill the prophecies set up for me by Southern Wizards down through eternity.’ He rose, anticipation dancing in his yellow-green eyes. ‘There will be a Great War, a bloody rampage like nothing your weak mind could imagine. If you choose not to oppose me, I will be disappointed, but it will only make my job that much easier.’ Piece spoken, he rose from his chair and stomped out the only exit from the Meeting Room.
Surprised and crushed by the unexpected hostility of Carcophan’s opposition, Shadimar said nothing. He had misjudged completely, and he needed time to understand his mistake. It had all seemed so clear to him. Carcophan’s refusal is folly. Surely even the Southern Wizard can see the danger. If the Ragnarok annihilates the world, who will remain to espouse his beloved philosophies of evil?
Trilless rose. Though slender and graceful, she maintained an aura of great power. ‘It pains me to side with the Evil One, but he’s right this time. Though he supports the wrong cause, he is as honor bound to Odin as any of us.’ She glanced toward the door, obviously reluctant to remain on neutral territory while her opposite wove his evil into mortals unopposed. But the captain of the ship that carried the Wizards to and from the Meeting Isle was one of her own minions. He would not return Carcophan to the world without her presence to balance his. ‘It’s our duty to the gods to fulfill whatever prophecies our predecessors created. To abandon that duty would mean forsaking our Wizards’ vows and would bring the very Ragnarok you intended to avoid.’ Unwilling to wait any longer, she hurried after Carcophan.
Shadimar went utterly still. His neutral position surely gave him a clearer view of the consequences, and he could see nothing but disaster coming in the wake of the Great War.
Tokar rose, waving his apprentice to his side. ‘Shadimar, don’t let your fears for the masses make you lose sight of details. We are each honor bound to fulfill our own predecessors’ prophecies, but nowhere does it state that we can’t thwart one another. Carcophan can no more choose to suppress the War than you can let the high king’s heir die. Yet we can oppose the Evil One even as we execute our own roles.’ He headed through the door, Haim following in his wake, then turned back to voice a final thought. ‘Odin constrained us so that our followers could remain free, heroes and victims of their own mistakes. We can only motivate; the mortals choose their routes and methods and create their own consequences.’ He continued into the gloom, his last, soft statement nearly swallowed by position and distance. ‘I believe there may be more to this Golden Prince of Demons than any of us knows.’
The Ragnarok in my lifetime. Shadimar let his chin sink back into his palms. Davrin played a gentle song of comforting, passed along and perfected across hundreds of generations. Yet today the melody fell on deaf ears. We can only hope, Shadimar brooded, that my reign is infinite.
Year: 11,224
(Year 10 of the Reign of Valar Buiranesson)
Ten-year-old Rache Kallmirsson leapt and kicked and spun, his sword slicing arcs through the deepening dusk. Light flashed like a signal from the blade, as if it gathered the glow of the stars and crescent moon to scatter them from the silver of the steel or the gold of his close-cropped hair. An outsider might have been hard-pressed to differentiate whether Renshai-child or sword initiated each action, but to Rache every movement was his own, precise and directed. Called Gerlinr, the Renshai maneuver had a proper sequence of motion and balance; every deviation, no matter how slight, was a mistake that could spell the difference between life and death in combat. Each sweep, trip, or thrust was designed to cut down an enemy who had avoided the previous one, or to finish the opponent who had not blocked quickly enough.
Rache whipped the sword in a sidestroke, seeing nothing but the imagined form of an enemy before him, hearing only the crisp whistle of his blade through air. Like all Renshai, Rache was physically immature for his age, his blue eyes relatively wide, his head, body, and legs proportioned more like a seven-year-old than a boy who had reached double digits. Though honed and finely-balanced, his sword was small, lighter than the weapons the adults used, and the leather-wrapped hilt felt snug and proper in fists scarred from practice. Rache’s strokes lacked the power his adult musculature might someday lend them, but it did not matter. The Renshai maneuvers were designed for speed and agility, and Rache had both beyond his years.
Rache sprang into the last sequence, snapped through a wild parry of a fancied enemy attack, then performed the final stroke. He ended in a well-set stance, prepared to cover his mistakes or his enemies’ wiles, to defend or attack again. He held the position as if he had hardened to stone, reviewing each purposeful movement, every twitch. I’ve mastered Gerlinr. Self-esteem flooded through Rache, the innocent, shameless pride of a praised child. Tonight is the night I move to the next class. He sheathed his sword with reverence. The promotion would make him only the third of the ten children his age to advance to daylight training sessions. He knew a few younger ones had already surpassed him; one girl, scarcely five, had left her peers far behind. But the gods had granted her a rare natural dexterity and competence. Rache’s progress pleased him.
Gradually, Rache lowered his concentration to let the remainder of the world in. The familiar scenery of Devil’s Island filled his vision: swatches of evergreen woods interrupted by the cleared patches for cottages, cook fires, and sword lessons. Rache practiced too far inland to see the sheer cliffs enclosing the fjords or to hear the ceaseless crash of waves against shore, but he knew those things like the sight and sounds of his own parents. Across the Amirannak Sea, on the northern mainland, the other Northland tribes kept a wary truce with the exiled Renshai they hated.
Rache glanced at the moon through the thickening night, and its position in the sky drove all other thought from his mind. Modi’s wrath, I’m late! Fear gripped Rache and swelled to self-loathing. He had never arrived late for a sword practice before. He ran, swerving between the towering trunks, shed needles crunching beneath his feet as if in accusation. His lateness went far beyond careless folly, it demonstrated disrespect for his teacher, his torke. So many years, Rache had pushed himself, hoping someday to earn the chance to be trained by Colbey Calistinsson, the most skilled sword master of the Renshai and, therefore, the best in the world. Now that dream had become reality, and Rache had proven himself unworthy of the honor.
Colbey! Tears pooled in Rache’s eyes. The wind of his run splashed the liquid from his lids, and sweat trickled, salty, on his tongue. He sprinted toward discipline, and he was glad of it. It’s nothing more than I deserve. An adult thought in a child’s mind. For the Renshai, war training began in infancy, and it left no time for youthful play or fantasy. Rache was as much a man as a ten-year-old could be. And though he could not fathom the reason, he knew punishment would absolve his guilt.
Rache second-guessed Colbey’s inflicted penalty. Probably a one-on-one after practice. The thought made Rache smile. A spar with the master served as a proper punishment for adults, especially those who had experienced combat and knew the importance of maintaining control at all times. Colbey’s easy victory made them feel helpless and wretched, reminding them of the Renshai’s second worst sin, disrespect for a torke, only one step below cowardice. But to Rache the idea seemed as much a treat as a penalty. He held Colbey in too high esteem to revile him as an enemy, even for the duration of the one-on-one. A spar would give Rache the opportunity to watch the beauty of Colbey’s perfect dance, the grace of a live, golden flame in flawless harmony with his sword.
Guilt and anticipation blinded Rache to a growing red glow from the southern corner of the town. Even the acrid odor of smoke passed unnoticed. He skidded from the edge of the forest between two aging pines and into the practice clearing. Blurred by wind, tears, and sweat, Rache’s gaze bypassed the massed group of flailing student swords, and he ran straight to the leader at the front, gathering breath for apology.
Rache slid to a winded stop. Damp grass mulched beneath his sandal, an agile sidestep all that spared him from a fall. He wiped moisture from his eyes and took a clear look at the torke. Instead of Colbey’s cruel, gray eyes beneath a fringe of white-tinged golden hair, Rache met a glance as soft and blue as his own. Though blond as all Renshai, this torke sported the long braids of the warrior Northmen. Rache knew her as one of the finest sword mistresses on Devil’s Island, but she was not Colbey. Rache stared, assailed by a mixture of confusion and unconcealed horror.
She stiffened, outrage etched into her features. ‘You’re late.’
Rache gaped. Her anger scorched him. He wanted to accord this torke all the honor she deserved, but she was not his torke. Colbey was beginning his sixth decade, ancient for Renshai, whose love of war rarely brought them through their thirties. Colbey’s sick; he’s dying. The worst possibility rushed to Rache’s mind, filled it, and could not be banished. He could conjure no worse fate. Renshai died in glorious battle, their souls taken in honor to Valhalla to serve as Odin’s Einherjar. Cowards died of illness and withered in Hel. Colbey is a hero. The consummate hero. Surely he would have stumbled from his deathbed and challenged one of us. We could have given him the death in battle h
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...