Friday, December 26, 2014

Excerpt From "Son's Betrayal", Book 5 of the Imperial Series, by LA Quill

Just released in November of 2014, Son's Betrayal is the fifth and final novel in the fantasy-based Imperial Series. Follow the misadventures of Emperor Damuk's youngest child, Rowan. What starts out as a harmless boyhood crush quickly turns into something much more dangerous. Son's Betrayal is available in trade paperback and as an ebook (in most formats, including Kindle, Kobo, and Nook).

Read on for an excerpt from the book:

Hearing his mother’s voice echoing through the garden, Rowan moved further into the bush. It was dark under the foliage, but enough sun made its way through the leaves to allow him to read well enough. He had to squint, but he could read. He lowered himself further, laying on his belly and bringing his nose closer to the open book. He could hide and read at the same time.

“Rowan!”

He glanced over his shoulder at his feet, making sure his boots wouldn’t be visible from the garden path. Under normal circumstances, he didn’t mind being caught reading, but these weren’t normal circumstances. He was supposed to be studying for his history exam. And since the book in front of him wasn’t his history text, his mother wouldn’t be at all pleased.

“Rowan! Come here this instant!”

She was right on top of him. Taking a deep breath, he hunched a little more, hoping she wouldn’t look in the bushes. Just in case she did, he slid the book under his chest. He wasn’t supposed to have this particular book, and not just because it wasn’t his history text.

He could hear his mother moving about, could even see her bright blond hair through the leaves. He said a quick prayer and blessed his own raven locks. He’d blend right in with the dark undergrowth and would hopefully pass unnoticed. Hopefully…

But then she turned toward him and he knew it wasn’t to be.

“Rowan, come out of that bush right now.”

She didn’t sound happy. Knowing he was well and truly caught, he crept out of the bush, leaving the book behind. He did not want her to see that book.

“What were you doing in there?” his mother asked, arms folded over her chest.

Rowan frowned. Never in all his fourteen years had he had to think so fast. What could he possibly be doing in a bush that didn’t involve reading forbidden books?

“Well?” Her green eyes flashed, revealing her rapidly-retreating patience.

“Nothing.” Swallowing hard, Rowan prayed she would believe him.

She clearly didn’t. “Nothing? You were hiding in a bush, ignoring me for a quarter candlemark, all the while doing absolutely nothing?”

Rowan flushed and looked at his boots. It wasn’t easy, lying to his mother. Even his father couldn’t do it successfully. He swallowed hard.

With a disgusted sigh, his mother dropped to her knees. Rowan went to stop her, but was halted by a slender finger pointed straight at him.

“Don’t,” was all she said.

When he had backed up a step, she reached into the bush and withdrew an ancient and weathered book. A look of horror spread across her face as she turned its pages.

“Where did you get this?” she whispered.

Knowing better than to answer that question, Rowan kept his mouth shut. Neither lie nor truth would help him now. His eyes stayed on his boots and he kept his feet planted. All the while he was searching for a way out of his current predicament and trying to escape the feeling of impending doom that had settled in the pit of his stomach.

His mother scrambled to her feet, book clutched to her chest.

“Myron,” she called. “Myron!”

Rowan turned to see Admiral Myron pause, then head toward them.

“Your Majesty.” He gave her a low bow. “Your Highness.” A smaller bow was given to young Prince Rowan.

“Take my son to his bedchamber and make sure he stays there.” She clutched the book to her chest. “I have to find my husband.”

“Mother—”

“No.” That finger came out again, halting the words he would have spoken in his own defense. “I don’t want to hear it. I’m going to discuss this with your father. Until then, you will stay where Myron puts you.”

Anger raced up his spine and he had to resist the urge to snap something rude and unflattering at the woman who had given him life. Straightening his back, Rowan stomped away, smacking a bush and kicking a few pebbles along the way.

Myron followed at a brisk pace.

***

Empress Arianna watched as her very-angry youngest son stormed off in the general direction of the palace. She trusted Myron to do as she’d asked, but she still kept a wary eye on Rowan until he was beyond her view. When he was gone, she turned away, green eyes sparkling with frightened tears.

Since she did not want to encounter her son while he was on his way to his bedchamber, she moved through the gardens and around the stables. From there she cut through a small wooded area, emerging onto a marble walk. Turning right, she spotted just the young man she was looking for.

“Payton,” she called, raising her voice so he could hear her.

Payton turned, saw who was calling him, and moved straight toward her.

“Majesty,” he greeted with a low bow. He also took her hand and laid a gentle kiss upon it. Only a few guards enjoyed such a privilege, and he was one of them.

Arianna waved a nervous hand and clutched the book harder. “Where is my husband?”

“In the throne room.” At her startled look, he chuckled and shrugged his shoulders. “I know, I know. He hates it in there just as much as you do. But he’s receiving those elven envoys this morning. Can’t do that in the study. Not properly, anyway, and we do want to impress the elves.”

Nodding her understanding, she let out a frustrated sigh. “Can you quietly inform him that I need to see him at his earliest possible convenience? I don’t want you to interrupt, but get the message to him.”

Her tone set off an alarm in Payton’s head. “His earliest convenient or as soon as possible?” He was her eldest son’s best friend. He knew her too well to be fooled by her attempt at serenity. She was scared and he knew it.

She clutched at the book again, unsure of how to answer Payton’s deliberate question. How urgent was it? Enough to pull her husband away from official business? She’d only rarely interrupted him while he was working, but she’d only rarely been this upset.

Seeing the Empress freeze in indecision, Payton took the liberty of placing one hand at the small of her back. He guided her up the wide marble steps and into the palace. Ignoring the inquiries of a nearby guard, he kept walking, moving directly to the Emperor’s study. He kept his hand on the Empress’s back while he opened the door and ushered her inside.

Closing the door softly behind them, he led her to the long couch against the wall. When she was seated, he walked straight to the sideboard and poured her a glass of sherry.

“Here,” he murmured as he pressed the glass into her hand. “Do you want me to send for Tristan? I don’t think he’s doing anything all that important.” And her eldest son might be of some use right now.

But she shook her head. “Just my husband.”

Payton nodded and left the room.

Left alone, Arianna sipped her sherry in silence. It calmed her nerves but did nothing to assuage her worries. The book in her hand burned, urging her to throw it to the floor, but she clung to it stubbornly. She watched the timing candle on her husband’s desk, silently begging him to appear with each flicker of the flame.

A quarter candlemark had passed before the door swung inward and Damuk, Emperor of the Abital Empire, sailed into the room. He saw his wife’s pale face and tense expression, but that wasn’t what worried him. It was the fear coursing across the bond they shared that raised the hairs on the back of his neck.

“What is it?” he demanded as he settled himself beside her and took her into his arms.

By way of an answer, Arianna released her death grip on the book. He caught it before it hit the floor, opened it, and let out a healthy stream of curses.

“Where did you find this?” he growled as he flipped a few pages.

His ire was already aroused, so she didn’t want to answer him right away. “It’s one of yours. It’s marked.”

Damuk checked the inside front cover and saw his seal. It was indeed one of his own books from his own private collection. Again he cursed, this time louder and more fluently.

“This was taken from the cabinet in our chambers.” He let out a sigh as his hands turned the yellowed pages. “From the locked cabinet protected by one of my own spells.”

“Have you lent any out?” Arianna asked, hoping Rowan had come by the tome by honest means. Perhaps he’d found it in the library or in his father’s study.

“Some, mostly to Calinda, but not this one.” Damuk showed her one of the pages. “This one details blood magick. Everything from how to efficiently gut sacrifices to how to weave death spells powerful enough to destroy an army. I only have it because my father had it, and he only had it because it once belonged to his sister.”

Arianna trembled at her memories of Cybil, but she quickly refocused on the problem at hand. “You’re sure this one never left the cabinet?”

“Not in years. And even then it was only to show Tristan what true blood mages are capable of.” He shook his head. “Should have destroyed the damned thing.”

He was so sure that Arianna had no choice but to believe him. Rowan had not found the book lying around the palace or carelessly left out on his father’s desk.

“Where did you find this?” he repeated.

A great sadness filled her. “I caught Rowan with it. He was in the gardens, hiding from me and hoping I wouldn’t notice he was reading one of the few books forbidden to the children.”

Damuk himself was rarely sad; anger was his default emotion. He defaulted to it now.

"Where is he?”

Cuddling closer, she ignored his rising tension. “I had Myron escort him to his bedchamber. And gave him orders to keep our dear youngest son from running off.” She grinned up at him. “I think he gets that from me.”

Clearly not amused, Damuk frowned at her.

She only blinked at him. “You do know that forbidding scowl has no effect on me?”

He shoved a hand through his hair. “What happened to…” There was no point in that particular conversation. “Never mind that. Are you sure Rowan will stay put?”

“If he knows what’s good for him.” She stroked a finger over the forbidden book. “How did he get it?”

Not having an answer quite yet, Damuk rose and took her hand. “Come.”

Arianna walked beside her husband, thoughts consumed by the book he carried. That book detailed magicks only the foulest of blood mages would dare touch. The very idea that her youngest son might have some interest in such things tore at her heart. The only blood magick she’d ever known had been wielded by her husband’s aunt, and that woman had tried to kill her. Oh, first she’d have used her as an incubator, but Cybil had wanted her dead. And now her own youngest son…

“Stop thinking about it,” Damuk whispered.

“How do you know what I’m thinking?” she snapped back. “Are you invading my thoughts?” As a mage, he was fully capable of doing so.

He’d have been offended if her arm hadn’t been shaking. “I would never,” he replied evenly. “But after thirty years, I think I know you well enough to guess at your thoughts.”

“And what are my thoughts?”

He dropped a kissed on her temple as he opened the door that led to their chambers. “You’re thinking about Cybil, about those things that still give you nightmares.”

Not wanting to talk about it, she strode into the outer chamber and moved to sit before the expansive fireplace nearest the windows. It was unlit, but since it was still warm in the chamber, she was grateful. Crown City was always too warm during the day. Kicking off her slippers, she waited for her husband to join her.

Damuk glanced from his trembling wife to the cabinet behind the large desk that graced one end of the outer chamber. Eventually he tossed the book on the desk, pulled a blanket from a nearby chair, and went to sit by his wife. She was stressed, and it wasn’t just about the book or the trouble they’d been having with Rowan. Their daughter-in-law was pregnant with her fourth child, their daughter was pregnant with her seventh, and neither one was having an easy time of it. As a skilled healer, his wife had been caring for them both. She was justifiably tired.

She was so tired that when he sat beside her, she curled up against him, closed her eyes, and promptly fell asleep. When he was sure she wouldn’t wake, he lifted her in his arms, kicked open the door to their comfortable bedchamber, and laid her on the bed with the greatest care. She turned on her side and he took the opportunity to loosen the laces of her gown. When she didn’t move, he realized she wouldn’t wake until at least evening. It was possible she would sleep until morning. He drew a blanket over her and dropped a kiss on her cheek.

Chuckling to himself, Damuk moved back to the outer chamber, closing the door softly behind him. He was sixty years old and he was still carrying his wife to bed. At least she was willing now. That thought made him laugh outright.

He spotted the book on the desk and all thoughts of laughter fled. He’d almost forgotten about it. He’d almost forgotten about Rowan and his most recent transgression. With a heavy sigh he moved toward the cabinet. In here was where he kept all the most forbidden material. Some of the more innocuous texts were kept in his study for any of his children to read, but the book his wife had brought him was far from innocuous. It belonged in the cabinet in his private chambers.

Calling a spark of magick to his hand, he touched the lock. He knew immediately it had been tampered with, and that it was Rowan who had done the tampering. Impressed, Damuk ran his hands over the locks. Rowan was a mage, but not a powerful one. For him to get past Damuk’s simple protection spell… he shook his head at the direction his thoughts had taken. He should be furious, not impressed.

He flung the cabinet doors wide and ran his fingers over the books within, studying the titles and counting tomes. Only Advanced Blood Magick was missing, and that one was lying on his desk at the moment. When he was sure all the other books were exactly where he’d left them, he exerted his magick once again. There was a hidden drawer he just had to inspect, so he magicked it into its open position. He slid the drawer out and reached inside.

It was immediately apparent that a few things were missing. The most obvious was his aunt’s ritual dagger. It had been used for more sacrifices than he cared to count. For many years, he had thought she didn’t have a dagger, but eventually her spells had faded. Most spells faded with the caster’s death, and hers were no exception. When hers had gone, he’d found the dagger hidden in a wall. As soon as he’d found it, he’d placed it in this drawer and there it had remained. Until now.

There were other items missing as well. A few candles. An amulet. Three charms he probably should have destroyed. A deck of cards that weren’t actually magickal but his wife swore were cursed. The only other thing missing was a piece of rock Damuk had found attached to his youngest daughter’s shift four years ago. Why would Rowan take that? He didn’t know of its existence. His daughter Calinda didn’t know about it. Even his wife didn’t know about it.

Frowning heavily, Damuk closed the drawer, shut the cabinet, and took a seat at his desk.

He picked up the book and started to turn the pages. He examined each page, trying to determine which pages Rowan might have been reading. Knowing where Rowan’s interest had been focused would tell him how to react when he eventually confronted his youngest child.

A knock on the door interrupted him.

‘Father?’ came his eldest son’s respectful mind voice.

‘Come,’ Damuk responded, trying not to sound annoyed.

The door eased open and Tristan stuck his head in. “Am I interrupting?”

Damuk shook his head and waved his son forward. When Tristan was nearly at the desk, Damuk kicked out the chair nearest him, indicating that Tristan should sit beside him instead of across from him. Tristan obliged.

“Where’s Mother?” he asked, leaning back in his chair.

“Asleep.” Damuk scowled at his son. “Leave her be. Between Marella and Jewel, she’s exhausted.”

“Jewel’s really not feeling well,” Tristan complained. “She really could use Mother’s help.”

The book shut with an audible snap. “Why don’t you try looking after your wife yourself for an afternoon? And tell William to do the same.”

Tristan shrugged. “I’m not very nurturing. And William just stands there wringing his hands.”

“Can neither of you take care of your women?”

“Talk to him.” Tristan was more than a little defensive. “He’s the one with four daughters he can’t control.”

Damuk raised a dark eyebrow. “And yet it was your daughter who broke three lamps and a mirror in my study just the other day.”

Tristan laughed. “Yeah, but she can get away with it.”

“She does look remarkably like your mother.” Which explained why he hadn’t cared about the mirror. He couldn’t stay angry with Ally any more than he could stay angry with his wife. “Still, you’d be well advised to marry her off as soon as possible.”

“She’s five.”

Shrugging, Damuk fingered the book. His mind immediately turned back to Rowan.

Tristan studied his father for a moment before leaning forward. “What is it?” When his father only looked at him, Tristan frowned and ran a hand through his raven hair. “Something is bothering you, and I don’t think it’s Ally and the broken mirror.”

Without another word, Damuk pushed the book toward his son. He watched Tristan’s green eyes widen as he flipped through the ancient tome. Finally, Tristan looked up.

“Did you just take this out?”

Damuk shook his head. “Your mother caught Rowan with it. He was hiding in the gardens.”

Green eyes blinked at him. “He took it from the cabinet?”

“I was just as surprised. He shouldn’t have been able to get around my enchantments.” The idea that his son might already be practicing blood magick was a chilling one.

Tristan put the book back on the desk and wiped his hands on his breeches as if he felt unclean. “I will say this. If any one of us would turn to blood magick, it would be Rowan.”

The Emperor’s blue eyes flashed. “I would have thought Calinda.”

But Tristan shook his head. “Callie only used blood magick to save herself, and she never spilled the blood of another. She might be attracted to blood magick, but her conscience wouldn’t allow her to actually hurt someone.”

“And Rowan?” Damuk knew his eldest son could be amazingly insightful when it came to his siblings.

“Rowan is a worry.” He tried to put his feelings into words that made sense. “Rowan is the jealous type. He resents the fact that he’s not as powerful as Callie or even me. He wants power, and his morals are a little questionable right now.”

“Because he’s an adolescent.” Damuk sighed and leaned back. “And adolescents want what they want, and they want it now.”

Tristan nodded. “And right now, he wants power. Blood magick might be the only solution he can see.”

None of that made Damuk feel any better.