The Wizard King

The Wizard King

by Julie Dean Smith
The Wizard King

The Wizard King

by Julie Dean Smith

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Overview

As the battle for the soul of Caithe rages on, a magical enemy from outside poses a new threat in this fantasy saga by the author of Call of Madness.

Princess Athaya Trelane has become a champion of the Lorngeld, beseeching them to embrace their gifts and defy the laws forbidding their magic. For this she sacrificed everything—family, friendship, love, and even her own sanity. Though her followers still face the terror of King Durek’s ruthless Tribunal, a far greater now threat closes in on all of Caithe.

Brandegarth, the Sage of Sare, is leading an army of wizards against the king and Athaya both. Brandegarth believes the Lorngeld are superior to other men and are destined to rule the earth. If he succeeds in his rebellion, all the wealth and power of Caithe will belong to him, and non-magical citizens will be crushed under his reign.

Athaya’s quest to end centuries of Lorngeld persecution seems closer than ever, but Brandegarth threatens to obliterate all that she’s gained. With her mission, her people, and her kingdom on the line, Athaya must confront her greatest adversary yet—and this time, her magic may not be enough to save her.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781625670199
Publisher: JABberwocky Literary Agency, Inc.
Publication date: 11/01/2019
Series: The Caithan Crusades , #4
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 361
Sales rank: 785,299
File size: 981 KB
Age Range: 13 - 18 Years

About the Author

Julie lives in southeastern Michigan with her artist husband, Rob, and their highly evolved cat, Darwin. She is an avid sports fan (Go Tigers! Go Blue!) and also enjoys camping, cooking, crosswords, and squandering time on Facebook.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Sloughing the cloaking spell from his shoulders, Couric of Crewe moved to the doorway of the shabby brewhouse and surveyed its interior with a pinched look of repugnance. Muttering a Sarian expletive under his breath, he stepped gingerly over the threshold, squinting through stagnant woodsmoke at the assortment of ragged, foul-smelling men hunched over games of dice and cards, and exchanging vulgar jokes with one another when they weren't actively picking fights. Couric ducked under a low ceiling beam and was promptly greeted on the other side by a buxom serving wench sporting a brazen, if somewhat gap-ridden, smile.

"I'ent seen you in here afore," she said, batting a pair of lashes liberally coated with dust. The tea-colored eyes beneath them slowly inspected him, brushing over the glossy black hair, down each of his muscled limbs, and finally coming to rest upon his deceptively plain but well-crafted tunic and cloak, as if rapidly trying to estimate their combined worth. "I'd have remembered one so handsome."

Had Couric been in the mood for a quick and inexpensive tumble — without her two front teeth he doubted she could charge full price — he might have found the woman's admiration mildly appealing. As it was, he had business to attend to. He answered her flattery with a noncommittal shrug and settled into a splintered chair near the door of the common room. "Bring me whiskey if you have it. If not, I'll settle for Evarshot wine; I'm told it's the best to be found in Delfarham."

The barmaid sauntered away with a greedy glint in her eye, and Couric instantly knew he would be drinking the Evarshot no matter what the status of the tavern's storeroom — it cost twice what Sarian whiskey did, and these sorts of establishments always sold you the most expensive thing they had if they thought you could afford it. But he could not go elsewhere. Keep to the meanest places, the Sage had counseled him. The rebellious fruit is ripest there and ready to be picked. Even Athaya Trelane had known as much, having launched her fateful crusade in the looca-dens of Kaiburn rather than the gilded halls of the nobility.

Couric sighed his resignation; at least he would soon be free of such squalor and able to return to the more comfortable existence he had led until two months ago, when he was set upon this latest mission for his lord. Or more accurately, he would attain a far more comfortable existence than he had ever known, for once his business was accomplished, all the wealth and power of Caithe would belong to the Sage and his loyal apostles. And at the risk of immodesty, Couric knew that as one of the Sage's most talented protégés, he would earn a larger share than most.

The barmaid delivered the expected flagon of Evarshot wine and a dented pewter cup, surreptitiously flicking a roach out of the bowl with a greasy corner of her apron before setting it before him. Couric handed her a pair of silver coins for the cost of the wine, then held a third coin before her, just out of reach.

"I've another crown for you if you can answer a question for me and then forget I ever asked it."

The woman's saucy demeanor quickly changed to one of guarded apprehension. Yes, Couric had seen that look often enough since his arrival on the mainland. Most Caithans were so damned afraid of this Tribunal — this infernal inquisition of the king's — that they were terrified to tell you what day of the week it was much less anything useful.

Of course, one could hardly blame them, Couric conceded. Any agency with the power to carve out a man's intestines and set them afire before his still-living eyes does tend to intimidate people.

"Tell me, do you know most of the people that come in here?" he asked with artful candor. The wench might be nervous, but the coin was a lodestone, keeping her close by his side. "Know much about them?"

"This 'n that," she answered evasively. Although she was trying to conceal it, Couric caught her scanning his garments for some half-hidden badge of office, for some sign that he was in the employ of the Tribunal.

"Oh, come now, do I look like a priest to you?" He flashed one of his most charming smiles and, just this once, returned a measure of the wench's suggestiveness.

The ploy worked like a well-cast spell; a toothless smile broke across the woman's ruddy face. "If you're a priest, my love, then I'm gonna start goin' to church more often." Cocking her head to one side, she somehow managed to survey the common room without tearing her eyes from the silver coin in Couric's hand. "Most of 'em as come here are regular folks," she said in answer to his query. "Farmers, tanners, tinkers, and such. A few thieves, but Oren throws them out right quick if he catches them plyin' their trade in here. But once, not two years ago, the princess herself come in here. Gave Oren's daughter a whole crown, she did, and all for bringing her some Evarshot, same as you. My, yes, I remember that night right well." The barmaid propped her hip against Couric's shoulder as she gradually relaxed into her tale, eyes glowing like candles as if she recounted the most exciting event of her life. "The fellow her Highness was dicing with tried to make her pay up with something other than money, if you take my meaning, but she handed him his head in a handbasket, she did. 'Course, his friends came back to rough her up some, but they'd only just got started when the King's Guard up and hauled them off and took her Highness back up to the castle."

A covert smile crept across Couric's lips as he pictured that high-born lady swilling wine among the human dregs of Caithe's capital. But princess or no, one could sink to any depth during the mekahn, and more than a few fledgling Lorngeld had sought the numbing powers of wine in an attempt to subdue the magic burgeoning within them — a task they inevitably found as futile as pushing the tide back out to sea. Couric raked his eyes across the tavern with seeming indifference. Overindulgence in spirits was common enough in new wizards ... and an easy way of locating them.

He didn't particularly need the wench's help; he could just as easily sit here all night and dip into the mind of each besotted wretch around him. But it would be far more efficient — and pleasant — to be guided in a likely direction first. Too many such dabblings would muddle his mind almost as much as wine itself, and he could not afford to blunt his senses overmuch. He didn't have much time left; it was already the first week of May, and gathering an army man by man was no small task. The Sage would be angry indeed if he arrived in Caithe to find that all had not been prepared in accordance with his orders.

Absorbed with these thoughts, it took a moment for Couric to realize that his reverie had badly unnerved his companion; the barmaid was biting her lip with what teeth she had remaining, fearful that his silence meant something far more ominous. "'Course, Oren's careful not to let any wizards in here — not if he knows 'em for such," she added hastily. "He's a good Caithan, y'know, and loyal to the king."

"Of course he is," Couric agreed amiably, setting aside the woman's fears with another winning and slightly lecherous smile. "Tell me ... have you noticed that any of your patrons seem to drink a bit more than they used to?"

"Ever'body drinks more'n they used to these days," she said, the unexpected candor of her words both grim and revealing. Though not a Justice was in sight, Couric glimpsed the shadows of the Tribunal looming over her. "But Rob ..." The woman tilted her head toward a disheveled young man slumped on a stool beneath the cobwebs rimming the underbelly of the staircase; his head was bent so low over a mug of beer that his bangs dipped listlessly into the foam. "He's the worst. Prickly as a thistle these days, and not a one of us can figure out why. That's his brother Dickon next to him." Couric's gaze shifted to the older but equally rumpled man whispering urgently in Rob's ear — whispers that Rob was patently ignoring. "At first we all thought Rob might be a wizard," the wench added softly. "They act that way sometimes, y'know, just afore they go all amuddle. But Rob only just turned eighteen, so that can't be it. Must be some girl or another that's got him low."

Couric narrowed his eyes, fixing his concentration on young Rob. True, eighteen was young for the mekahn to arise, but it was certainly not unheard of; some Lorngeld developed the power as young as sixteen, others as late as thirty, although either of these extremes was quite rare. Couric extended his senses and probed the boy's mind with minimal subtlety; drunk as the boy was, there was little need for caution. And there they were: the channels and caverns of newly developing paths, taking hold like the tangled roots of a willow tree inside the young wizard's mind. Already, Couric could sense the building pressure of the boy's untrained magic yearning to be channeled, and the confusion and fear of Rob himself, suspecting the malady that ailed him but not knowing which of the damning cures to take.

Death or treason, Couric reflected. Truly an unpleasant dilemma. Then his eyes warmed in anticipation. Soon the Lorngeld in Caithe would have a third alternative: wealth, power, and veneration. Which choice, he thought with dry confidence, would they make then?

"My thanks for your help," Couric muttered distractedly. He dropped the silver coin into the barmaid's grubby palm and gave a slight nod of dismissal. She murmured her thanks but departed reluctantly, as if hoping for some other sort of offer — perhaps one that involved several more coins and an hour or two in one of Oren's upstairs rooms.

Couric picked up his cup and flagon and strolled casually to the shadowed alcove under the stairs. He was met with neither an objection nor a greeting as he hooked a stool with his foot and sat down beside the young Caithan. He only managed to elicit a distracted and somewhat bewildered grunt of thanks when he handed Rob a generous serving of his costly Evarshot.

"You look bleak, my friend," Couric observed, swirling the wine in his own cup and savoring the heady aroma.

"Look, this here's a private conversation," Dickon said at last, looking up irritably once he realized that Couric had no intention of leaving. "If you —"

"I was talking to your brother," Couric replied, in the cool but civil tone of a nobleman scolding a neophyte servant. With no magic of his own, Dickon was immaterial to his purposes.

Rob lifted his chin an inch, revealing a pair of morose blue eyes framed by a mass of black curls. "We don't have enough money to play cards, if that's what you're wanting. Try one o' the others." Rob sniffed at his wine and took a sip, bloodshot eyes widening in response. "But if you've got the coin for stuff like this, ain't nobody here with the money to take a game with you."

Couric smiled indulgently. "I'm not looking for a card game, Rob. Yes, the barmaid told me your name. Yours, too, Dickon." He leaned forward, forearms resting on his thighs, and lowered his voice markedly. "I'm looking for something far more interesting than a card game." He took a thoughtful taste of wine and rolled it around his tongue for a moment, swallowing leisurely before dropping his voice down to a whisper. "I'm looking for wizards."

Couric's disclosure sobered his companion quicker than if he had lit the boy's trews on fire. Rob's face was utterly guileless; had anyone not suspected what he was, his reaction to the accusation brandished it for all the world to see. Dickon lurched protectively in front of his young brother, eyes blazing with indignation, while Rob jerked to his feet, ready to bolt for his life. Unfortunately, Rob moved more quickly than the beer he'd drunk would allow; a wave of nausea overtook him and he crumpled into a puddle of stale beer on the floor, his eyes squeezed tightly closed as he clutched his head in abject misery.

Dickon gave Couric a rude shove backward. "I don't know what you're up to, friend, but I'll be damned if I'll let you go about insultin' my brother like that." His voice was barely above a whisper, but it shook with fear-induced rage.

"What's the trouble there, Dickon?" a man at the next table called out. He scanned the subtle embroidery edging the collar of Couric's rust-colored tunic and belched his opinion of it. "This peacock 'ere botherin' you?"

Couric refrained from rolling his eyes at the absurdity of the insult; he was only thought a peacock because his clothes were not soiled and riddled with holes, his face was reasonably clean-shaven, and his nails were not crusted with a half-year's worth of grime. But the man's pointed words did not go unnoticed by his companions at the gaming table; all five laid down their cards and turned to stare, sensing that the tension between Dickon and his well-dressed friend was the harbinger of an eagerly awaited skirmish. Couric didn't think the men had heard anything of importance, but the last thing he wanted right now was to draw undue attention to himself. Fortunately, it was the last thing Dickon wanted, too.

"N-no, no. He's ... I know him," Dickon stammered. "Go on back to your game."

"And pay closer attention to it if you don't want to lose every coin you've got," Couric advised, gesturing indistinctly to the other men seated at the pockmarked table. "Somebody just tried to slip you a deuce instead of a knave."

Whipping his eyes back to the table, the man snatched up his cards and howled in drunken indignation at the crime. In the space of a single heartbeat, Couric and his offending tunic were forgotten and a bloody six-man fistfight was well under way. Couric's thin lips curved up in satisfaction as he turned his back to the brawl. Remarkable how easily these Caithans are duped by a simple spell of illusion ...

Dickon, however, was not so easily diverted and gave Couric another shove toward the door. "Now get your arse out of here before I —"

"Leave him be, Dickon," Rob murmured from behind him. He struggled back onto his stool, rubbing dejectedly at a foul- smelling blotch of grime on the knee of his trews.

"Why should I? Hell, Rob, the man's a damned liar!"

Rob's only reply was a lengthy stretch of eloquent silence.

As Dickon slowly turned to face his brother, the outrage on his face was transformed to barely concealed terror. "But you told me it was all because Belle married the saddler's son. You said —"

"It was for your own good, idiot," Rob snapped as he massaged his throbbing temples. "What was I supposed to say? That I thought I was a —" He broke off just before uttering the damning word, then continued more softly. "Thought I was one of them? That could've gotten the whole family killed. At best we would have lost what little land we've got. And at worst ..."

The mere mention of such a fate sent Dickon's eyes darting rapidly around the common room in search of black- robed priests. "God's grace, man, don't look so confounded guilty!" Couric roughly turned him around and prodded him back into the darkened alcove under the stairs. "Just sit down and hear me out. I'm sure you'll both be very interested in what I have to offer."

Then, moving his lips only slightly, Couric laid a light spell of sobriety over the hapless Rob. It was only a temporary solution — the boy would simply feel the effects of his beer later rather than now — but at least he would remember the rest of the night's conversation. When Rob's nausea mysteriously passed, he refocused his artless blue eyes and studied Couric again. His fear wasn't gone, but it was subdued. Dickon, however, remained wary and kept his eyes securely locked on Couric as if expecting that the wizard might change himself into a flesh-eating demon at the slightest opportunity.

"How did you know?" Rob asked simply. "About me, that is."

"Your symptoms aren't very advanced, but they're far enough along so that I can tell what you are," Couric replied. The dispute at the next table had escalated, and he swiftly ducked a dented tin cup that whizzed past his ear and crashed into the wooden slats behind him. He had to speak louder than he liked to make himself heard over the shouts and curses of the combatants. "There's nothing for you to fear from me. Why would I turn you in to the Tribunal when I'm a wizard myself?"

"You —?" Rob's brows arched their surprise for a moment, then knitted themselves tightly together. "Well, I can't say as you look much like a Justice."

Couric's nostrils flared in abhorrence. "I most certainly am not."

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "The Wizard King"
by .
Copyright © 1994 Julie Dean Smith.
Excerpted by permission of Jabberwocky Literary Agency, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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