Will Wight - Of Dawn and Darkness

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Of Dawn and Darkness: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Calder has survived the battle on the Gray Island, and escaped the Heart of
Nakothi with his sanity intact. The Empire is without a leader, and he’s
perfectly placed to take the reins himself.
But he is not Emperor yet. The world is divided between those who support
Imperial tradition and those who believe no one can take the throne. Calder
must do everything he can to hold the Empire together, even as the Elders lurk
in the shadows, ready to devour mankind. Meanwhile, Shera and her Consultant’s
Guild are stronger than ever. If Calder doesn’t stop them soon, he may never
get another chance.
In the shadows, a woman seeks to divide mankind.
On the seas, a man fights to save it.

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The sound of the strike was a satisfying clang of metal-on-metal, and for a second Calder believed that her armor had saved her. Then he saw the dark scratch on its surface and heard her agonized scream.

He had to shoulder-tackle her out of the way to protect her from Jorin’s follow-up. She never lost her grip on Tyrfang, even as she tumbled to the ground and rolled away.

“You’re the seedling Emperor, then,” Jorin said, panting. “Let’s have you go a round or two.”

Calder attacked first. As Loreli, another Regent, had once put it: “In a duel, the defender is losing.” Jorin swept his black blade in a lazy arc, as though he meant to slice the orange-spotted cutlass in half.

When Calder turned the hit, Jorin’s eyebrows climbed up into his hat. “Here now, where’d you get that sword?”

Instead of responding, Calder attacked the man from the left, opening up some space, trying to force him away from Teach’s body. If he gave her some time, she might recover, though her low, pained moans didn’t give him much hope.

The Regent tolerated that for a few exchanges, then he lost patience. He reversed the sword in both hands, driving his blade into the ground.

All around Calder, the earth blasted away into loose black grit. He lost his footing, tumbling to the ground, shielding his mouth and eyes with his arm. Even when the air cleared he couldn’t find purchase, coughing in the rising dust-cloud, trying to clear the dirt from his eyes.

Jorin walked up, a hazy figure, calm and unhurried. “If you survive, we’ll have a chat about your sword. But I don’t mean to pressure you. Life is such a brief candle.” He raised his blade.

And, as Calder had experienced several times before, he was suddenly somewhere else. The world shifted around him, as quick as a vanishing stage curtain.

Now, he stood on a floor of polished white marble, and he was feeling remarkably better: he was warm, and clean, and not at all covered in blackened grit. He stood in a shrine of some kind, though where there would usually be a statue of the Emperor was instead a towering marble figure of some kind of warped fish-creature. There were no walls, only rows of columns looking out onto the sea.

The sea stretched all around him. This shrine must have been on some tiny island on the Aion, because he didn’t see any other land, only black storm-tossed waves. The wind outside was wicked, stirring up wild surf, as black clouds danced and lightning lit the night.

Other than the lightning, the scene was illuminated only by a smoky torch dimly flickering over the statue’s head. Calder felt that he should have been freezing, but somehow the wind stayed a perfectly comfortable temperature.

“I once intended to have this built,” Kelarac said. “It’s in the center of what you now call the Aion Sea.” He stood looking up at the statue, just as Calder remembered him: a fashionable Heartlander, his thin beard neatly trimmed, clothes just as the Emperor would have worn them, rings on every finger and waves of jewels on his neck. A few of his teeth gleamed gold as he smiled, and his most prominent feature—the polished band of steel over his eyes—reflected the strikes of lightning.

“Why didn’t you?” Calder asked politely. He was still trying to be considerate, out of respect for a massively powerful being, but in truth his frustration had grown. Kelarac was behind Jerri’s actions somehow, but he still pretended to be Calder’s friend.

“Timing. It’s all about the proper place, isn’t it? The right time, the precise location. Temporal or spatial, if the place is off even slightly, then it might as well have never existed at all…”

Calder let the Great Elder muse privately. In their previous meetings, he had never waxed philosophical, instead sticking close to business. It could mean he was ready to give Calder a gift, or to eat him alive.

“You didn’t destroy the Optasia,” Kelarac noted.

“Yet.”

“You believe it would destroy you.”

“Would it?” Not that Calder would take the word of the Soul Collector, but a straight answer would be nice.

Kelarac’s golden teeth flashed. “That depends on a number of shifting factors. Place, as I said. However, I can assure you that even though the throne might be unsuitable, the rest of the network is very much intact. I can find a use for it.”

“Of that, sir, I have no doubt.” Calder made the words sound respectful instead of wry.

“In exchange for your word that you will deliver the Optasia to me, I can deliver some immediate help. Allies that can save you from your current situation.”

Calder’s mind flashed to the strange Navigator ship, the one decorated in gold. “Those were your people waiting outside the Gray Island?”

Kelarac folded ringed fingers together. “They’re nearby.”

“And they can actually save me from the Regent?”

“Oh yes.”

Calder had been trying to stretch the time as much as possible, but he only had one answer. “I’m sorry. I can’t.” The price was too high.

Delivering the Heart of Nakothi was one thing; he’d given a piece of one Elder to another. If Kelarac had been willing to dig a little, he could have excavated a heart on his own. But as far as Calder was concerned, that had been an equitable trade…and even now, it didn’t weigh easily on him. He often wondered what horrors Kelarac could perpetrate with a piece of the Dead Mother’s power.

But instead of flying into a rage, as Calder had half expected, Kelarac nodded. “Too high a price. I think you estimate the value of the Emperor’s device too favorably. Soon, it may not be worth the metal from which it was cast. But I wouldn’t be much of a collector if I didn’t know how to haggle, would I?”

Kelarac’s smile was friendly, but Calder reminded himself that it came from a Great Elder. “Did you have another price in mind?”

“Always, Reader of Memory. Always. You recall, I’m sure, the Consultant called Shera.”

There were a few scenes in his life that Calder would never forget. They were burned into his brain as if by acid. One of them, to his eternal regret, was the image of Shera pushing Jerri over The Testament’s railing and into the ocean. He could still see Jerri’s eyes as she fell; they were locked on his, still carrying shame and terror.

“I do,” he said.

“Then perhaps you’ll find this price more palatable. I will send you my allies. In exchange, you and they will cut your way through the Consultant’s Guild and execute Shera without mercy or compunction.” His calm had slipped briefly, his voice vicious. “Afterwards, if her body were to find its way down to me, I would be…even more generous.”

Calder watched the Elder, chewing on what he’d just heard. What did it mean that Kelarac valued Shera only slightly less than the Emperor’s throne? That he would give up possession of a worldwide network of Intent amplification that could turn any Reader into an army, in exchange for guaranteeing Shera’s death?

What did the Elders care about one Consultant?

“The last time I saw Jerri,” Calder said quietly, “she asked me much the same thing.”

“In some ways, she is a wise woman. In others, she is still foolish, but here she is wise.”

What had Jerri said? That someone had warned her how dangerous Shera was. Someone who had gotten to her in her cell, and who had returned her Soulbound Vessel to her.

Kelarac. It had been Kelarac all along. Calder wasn’t surprised, but he felt as though his eyes had been opened for the first time. He broadened his smile until it was almost painful.

“I think…not. I think I’ll take my chances against Jorin.”

The Great Elder’s own smile had faded, until he looked regretful. “There are wiser courses, Calder Marten.”

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