The day your book is published is an exhilarating and nervous one. You sigh with satisfaction because you've somehow managed, after a lot of sweat and tears, to achieve something you could only dream of ten years ago. Then, with your fifth (or is it your sixth?) coffee in hand, you check the websites, make sure your promo links work, and check the websites again, knowing you'll be doing this all day.
Okay enough with the introspection, here's the first chapter of Stars & Ashes, Book One in the Saoirse Saga. If you like it, here's the link: https://tinyurl.com/y8ronwh4 The book is $0.99, and I'd love it if you enjoyed the first chapter enough to pop over and follow Kia's thrilling journey!
Okay enough with the introspection, here's the first chapter of Stars & Ashes, Book One in the Saoirse Saga. If you like it, here's the link: https://tinyurl.com/y8ronwh4 The book is $0.99, and I'd love it if you enjoyed the first chapter enough to pop over and follow Kia's thrilling journey!
Chapter One: Invasion
The class of
eight and nine-year-old girls and boys, their faces rosy with effort and eyes
shiny with pleasure, straightened their thin brown tunics, wiped a hand or two
across a sweaty forehead, stood tall, and bowed to the teacher.
Kia returned the bow. They were eager to please, and it took nothing
but a kind word of encouragement for them to blossom. “Thank you, disciples,”
Kia intoned the solemn, formal dismissal, then couldn’t hide her smile. “Okay,
you’re dismissed, off you go. Don’t forget your homework.” Her eyes twinkled
with satisfaction.
The ordered formation broke and became a fluid mass of grinning
children surging for the practice hall door.
Little Diago threw her a wave and a wink as he went, making her laugh.
The lad showed a lot of promise, and Kia thought he had a bright future if he
practiced, which she could tell he didn’t always do. A swift glance around the
hall—neatly stacked mats, the floor swept—and satisfied everything was as it
should be, she tossed her waist-length pale-blonde plait over her shoulder and
headed out pleased with the afternoon’s class.
The srilao hall was in the older section of Sestris amid the narrow,
cobbled twisting streets near the port, and the temple was close by. Late
afternoon and the city dozed, dreaming slow dreams in the warm lull between
noontime and evening, though the streets were never completely silent.
She had time to stop and make an offering to Cossanta, the golden
four-armed patron Goddess of srilao devotees before buying the sweetfruit and
berries for the tart her mother wanted to make that evening.
Training for the Southern Continental Championships last month was the
hardest thing she’d ever done and winning had been beyond her expectations. The
Goddess deserved as many offerings as Kia could manage. Returning to Sestris,
standing in the packed town square under the blazing midday sun, and hearing
the roaring cheers as the Head Elector—her proud father—placed the golden
medallion around her neck, had been dizzying. Yet the class of under
ten-year-olds was the most rewarding assignment she’d been given in her
training to become a srilao teacher.
Srilao was both a martial art and a dance form, and practitioners were
fighters, gymnasts, and dancers who could earn their living performing and
teaching in any of the three branches: champions were those who proved they
possessed superior skills in all the forms.
She’d put the key in the lock and was studying the round metal symbol
on the door, her gaze tracing the three whorls emanating from the center, about
to turn the key when the siren screamed, sending every startled seabird in the
vicinity flapping into the air. Later she would remember that moment; how the
city crouched, waiting, how time elongated, the feel of the cool gray metal in
her hand, the grain of the pale ashwood door, the warm breeze stirring the
hairs on the back of her neck. When birds
fly, something this way comes. Beware, the old saying went. Her other hand
clutched the medallion underneath her tunic. She would remember because nothing
was ever the same afterward.
At first, the ear-piercing shriek confused her. Then the world stopped.
This rhythm of wailing blasts meant one thing—invasion. The thought ignited a
chain reaction, and she twisted the key, hearing the lock click, stilling as a
fleet of low flying craft skimmed the rooftops, and a wave of heated air
buffeted her. A single thought. Home. She needed to get home. Her mother was
strong and capable, but the twins would be scared.
The synchronized regulated thud of boots was loud in the thrumming
silence after the siren, and she froze at the sight of the menacing line of
black uniformed soldiers. They marched, six abreast with weapons raised, along the narrow street toward her, herding a
bewildered frightened crowd in front of them.
“Citizens of Sestris, this is the Nadil-Kuradi Empire taking control,”
an emotionless voice boomed. “Please leave your houses, head for the main gate,
and wait outside the city walls. Those disobeying this order will be shot.” The
soldiers marched closer.
She was too late. Dark visors hid their faces, but she’d no doubt one,
or more, had their phaserifles trained on her. Kia thrust the key in her
pocket. How polite and typical of the Xaruntian conquerors to say please as
they ordered you to surrender or die, she thought, fighting the blind panic
threatening to overwhelm her. She recited the pre-fight invocation under her
breath, pulling on every bit of training she’d learned since childhood to stay
calm. Bit by bit the black wave receded, and she continued putting one foot in
front of the other.
The srilao practice hall was near an intersection, and as she passed
the shops and houses, doors opened and more people joined the shuffling fearful
throng, accompanied by the loud, monotonously repeated command to comply. As they
neared the main gate out of the city, the streets were packed. The normal city
smells of street flits, food stalls, sea or sand—depending on the wind; the mix
of innumerable odors given off by a city full of people was replaced by the acid scent of fear. Everyone had seen the
holovid or heard about the Urkat massacre where every house, village, and city
on the planet had been obliterated on the orders of the Emperor Teyrn because
its inhabitants had defied the might of the empire. The message was clear, and
no Sestrian was foolish or brave enough to try that stunt.
Kia shot a look behind her. She saw a second, and then the third row of
armed soldiers. She heard doors being smashed as the invaders went house to
house, checking for anyone hoping to avoid detection. The soft pff of a weapon
firing, followed by the cutting off of a child’s sobbing followed her along the
street. Had they captured her father? Dear Goddess, please let him have
escaped. Kia kept moving, her fists clenched and her jaw aching from gritting her
teeth too hard.
She thought of little Diago, worry shivering through her. She had to
trust all the children had made it home. Why hadn’t they been warned? The entire
population had known one day the emperor’s spaceships would appear in the pale
lavender sky like a plague of dusky aljarads out of the desert. The insects
appeared every few years and stripped the city’s trees and gardens. However, unlike
the insects, these aggressors wouldn’t fly out over the ocean and disappear.
The vast amount of accessible rich mineral deposits had guaranteed that, even
with Emankora’s position at the far end of a galaxy arm, the world was too rich
a plum not to be plucked. Accordingly, some of those in positions of power,
including her father, had made plans for this eventuality, always with the hope
they would never be needed.
Kia staggered as the realization hit her. A traitor in their midst must
have uncovered the Elector's schemes and sold them out to their enemies. Her
father had refused to disclose his plans to her, saying he’d bring her in after
she started the Electoral training program the following year. Yet the
invader's sudden appearance demonstrated their sleepers must have already been
in position. She stumbled and would have fallen, but the woman next to her
reached out and steadied her.
“Be strong. This is no more than the beginning.” The woman was lean and
worn down with hard work, and her lined sun-browned face gave nothing away.
“Life will get a lot worse before it gets better.” Her harsh expression softened
for a moment before she strode ahead.
As the multitude reached the large tree-line square adjacent to the
Main gates, they came to a standstill, the sheer mass of people making it
impossible to move any farther.
Kia could see the elaborately decorated pink sandstone arch, but the
enormous crowd filling the square milled in confusion with mothers clutching
children’s hands, soothing their cries, huddling beside their husbands, and
both old and young afraid of what was coming next. Most of these people had
been among those who celebrated her triumph, as her success was their success.
These were the citizens who had voted for Madaxa Xefe over the previous twenty
years, first as councilor then as Head Elector, but today their gazes slid
elsewhere, and they trembled, scared for themselves and their families.
Judging by the number and positioning of the troops, Kia estimated
they’d first encircled the town and moved inward, sweeping everyone before
them: another sign that no matter what defensive measures the resistance had
organized, the empire’s agents had eliminated them. Her father and his cohorts
had seriously underestimated the enemy’s ability to neutralize their strategy.
Or they’d overestimated their people’s loyalty. If she had to choose, she’d
favor the former. The sun had moved low toward the horizon by the time Kia,
trapped in the midst of the thirsty hungry crowd, stumbled forward, at last
able to see what was causing the blockage.
A three-row-deep line of
soldiers, with their weapons trained on those passing before them, stood on
both sides of the short road leading to the gates, where two men, who looked
more like officers than regular infantry, questioned everyone and tapped
answers into their comunits.
If they’re here, they’ll target
my family, her father had said, and
here’s what you’ll do.
When her turn came, the black-visored man stared at her. “Name?”
She studied her red leather sandals. “Kia O’Afon.” O’Afon was her
mother’s family name, and afon meant river. Her mother came from the remote
south where the land was green and forested, unlike the central desert that
stretched out and covered half the southern continent behind Sestris. The
mineral rich desert, mined by the Sestrians for centuries, provided a living, trade,
and was the reason for the port’s existence.
“Age.”
“Twenty-three.” At least Jared wasn’t here. Her older brother had gone
north on a trading expedition with Keyon, his best friend. Brown eyed, serious
Keyon, who last time they’d talked had told her if she didn’t say yes to his
offer of partnership soon, he would always love her but would look elsewhere.
The questioner leaned in, snapped his fingers in her face. “I asked you
your status?”
She flinched. “Single.” Focus, she told herself. This wasn’t the time
to daydream about what ifs.
“Family?”
“None.”
“None?”
“I’m from the south, and I'm here for work.”
“Guess that explains your coloring.”
Kia took after her mother and with her pale blonde hair and irises so
dark the pupil was barely discernible, her looks marked her out. Native
Sestrians had darker hair, green or blue eyes, and paler skin. He held a
scanner to her eyes and checked his comunit again.
Kia held her breath.
“That way. Go left.” He pointed through the gates.
Altering the civic records to give her a new identity had held up under
inspection. She breathed out.
Outside the walls, another avenue of black-visored figures waited.
Kia subtly altered her posture, slumping her shoulders and scuffing her
feet instead of striding. One-on-one in unarmed combat, she stood a chance. Her
average height and slender build were deceptive because she was well-trained
with lightning fast reflexes and hadn’t yet met an opponent whose body she
couldn't read. As she walked, she sensed the hidden eyes assessing her. Tales
of the Nadil-Kuradi Empire’s cruelty toward its new vassals were endless. Crush
and crush again, until there was nothing left but blind obedience to the emperor.
Far too quickly she reached the end of the intimidating gauntlet, and a
phaserifle directed her left. On the flat expanse of dun-colored sands beyond
the town, she caught a brief glance of the fleet of spacecraft that had brought
their vanquishers. Teaching in the hall, she hadn’t heard their arrival over
the excited cries of the children practicing. Some looked bigger, most likely
troop carriers, and nearby were a dozen or more fighter craft. As if Sestris
possessed the capability to fight anything military, let alone an interstellar
space fleet of any size. She hitched a breath at the thought of the same
scenario happening all over Emankora.
Kia joined a large group of young men and women sitting on the ground
guarded by yet more soldiers. They were separating people into groups. Where
were her mother and sisters? She scanned the area, but it was several minutes before
she spotted the women and younger children.
“You.”
Kia looked up to find the barrel of a phaserifle about a handspan from
her face. She swallowed.
“Look down and don’t talk. See him.” The soldier pointed his weapon
over to the right.
Kia’s gaze alighted on the body of a young man who lay unmoving as
blood pooled beneath his head.
“He did what you’re doing. Looking for his kinfolk. Don’t. From here
on, you are nobody. You have no family or friends. You belong to the emperor
body and soul.”
Kia looked down. Body, maybe, soul, never.
The sky darkened, the temperature dropped, Osupa rose in isolated
splendor, and still they sat on the cooling earth as the invaders catalogued
the townspeople. The youth’s lifeless body was eventually dragged away, and
while they were all were aware of what was happening, they were powerless.
Kia passed the night in a frozen stupor listening to the faint
intermittent wails of children or the barking of a command. If you needed to
relieve yourself, a soldier escorted you past the outer line and trained his
phaserifle on you as you did your business. Animals, Kia thought, raising a
hand when her bladder was about to burst. Animals. That’s all we are to them.
Rumor had it the empire used neural implants to boost the speed of their
reactions, physical strength, and endurance. The soldiers’ behavior, impervious and vigilant throughout the night,
appeared to confirm the story.
As the predawn sky turned gray, then pink, she heard hammering in the
distance. Sweet Goddess, what was happening?
With shouts of ‘Stand,’ and swift use of phaserifle butts to ensure
compliance, the guards harried the cold, stiff prisoners to their feet. They
soon found out what the noises meant. A raised platform had been thrown up,
high enough that even those at the rear could witness whatever was about to
take place.
Kia’s heart drummed faster, and she glanced at those standing near her,
meeting the frustrated gaze of a tall young man. She blinked in
acknowledgement, and he returned the signal, but any further communication
stopped as a sleek dark airship flew low over the gathering.
“The Emperor Teyrn’s Heir,” one soldier hissed, “Lord Rialoir himself!”
The guards nearby stood straighter as their eyes tracked the small fighter, but
movement on the makeshift stage drew their attention away from the new arrival.
Kia watched, blinking hard, not wanting to believe what she was seeing
as four men and four women were marched onto the platform.
A groan of collective sorrow rose from the townsfolk.
Kia’s heart stopped. Her legs trembled, and she locked her knees as she
recognized the figure in the center. Her father. She couldn’t look away. He
would want her to witness. To witness and remember.
“These people are all traitors. Their families have been executed.”
Kia gasped, the breath leaving her lungs in a rush as sobbing broke out
in several places. She’d have fallen if a hand hadn’t gripped her upper arm,
holding her upright. All she could see was her mother’s face: one minute
chiding, cross with her rebellious daughter, the next, smiling and proud of
that same daughter’s achievements—and always loving. But Lilia and Alsling, her
curly-headed lively young sisters, always up to mischief, and the sweetheart
twins of her parents’ later years, would have been with her mother. This wasn’t
possible; it couldn’t be happening. They should have had enough warning to flee
before the invaders arrived. What had gone wrong? No, no, no, her mind
reiterated, refusing to accept reality.
“Hey!” A soldier thrust the butt of his weapon into the young man's
chest, shoving him away from her. He staggered backward and quickly raised his
arms high in the air.
The guard turned toward her, and her muscles shivered with the effort
of controlling herself.
“These men will be executed.” The speaker announced.
Kia’s attention jerked back to the dais. Her father was too distant to
be sure, but she would swear his gaze roved the silent tense citizens, and
rested on her, before passing over his people.
A soldier walked out and stood at the edge of the platform facing the
city’s Elected with his back to the captive Sestrians. He raised his phaserifle
and eight soft pffs sighed through the air.
Kia burned the image of her father slumping to the platform with a
small circular mark in the middle of his forehead into her mind, and her heart
broke at the knowledge that his bright intelligence and the warmhearted gaze he
turned on the world and its antics were gone forever.
***
Click the link to buy this enthralling story today: https://tinyurl.com/y8ronwh4
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