A Curse of Blood & Stone – Fate & Flame Read Online K.A. Tucker

Categories Genre: Fantasy/Sci-fi, New Adult, Paranormal, Romance, Vampires Tags Authors:
Advertisement1

Total pages in book: 152
Estimated words: 145704 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 729(@200wpm)___ 583(@250wpm)___ 486(@300wpm)
<<<<113123131132133134135143>152
Advertisement2


Fearghal looks to a brawny man gripping a mace with two hands. “What did ya do, Elsten?”

The man—Elsten—sets his jaw. “What we needed to do. What the Ybarisans told us to do.”

Zander moves in, making them adjust their stances. “And what did they tell you to do?”

Elsten stiffens his posture. “When the elven bastards start screamin’, cut their throats to dull the sound until they bleed out or the poison finishes ’em off.”

“You did all this in one night?” I cringe at the gruesome piles. Fearghal had said there were fifteen elven here, out of sixty villagers. Many of these men wear soiled bandages on their arms and legs, across their foreheads. They must have battled. Not all the elven died so easily.

His face is stony as he considers me, like he’s deciding if he wants to answer. “They fed on us every night. We’d had enough.”

“This type of killing would have taken planning, coordination.” Jarek’s footfalls are slow, measured, and ominous as he paces.

“They been trading our kids to the saplin’s!” a woman cries out from the shadows.

“Is that true?” Zander asks, his eyes on Elsten.

The mortal swallows hard. “The saplings never bothered us before, but lately, they been showing up, demanding a vein. Corbett didn’t like bein’ someone’s regular meal, so he pulled a few of our children out of bed one night, turned ’em into your kind, and handed ’em over to the saplings to buy them a few months. Gave ’em something to live off in whatever hole they crawl into durin’ the day. Doubt they’re still alive.”

Zander curses. “And what did the other keepers do about this?”

“A few o’ them were angry with Corbett, but in the end, they didn’t do nothing, didn’t punish him at all. Said that’s the way things are, livin’ up here. That’s our risk. Not theirs. Ours. So when the Ybarisans showed up with those little glass bottles and told us the keepers would never be able to do that again if we listened to ’em … we listened.”

Of course they did.

I would have too.

Zander absorbs this as he studies the burning corpses. “Have many Ybarisans have come through here?”

“The whole lot of them at first, when they were headin’ north with their supplies. But then a few would come south, and the keepers started shutting the gates on ’em. Didn’t like ’em coming through.”

“And what was your arrangement with them?” Zander uses a conversational tone rather than accusatory, the usual cold edge when he’s questioning those who have wronged him absent. It’s smart; we need information.

Still, the man balks.

“We’ll get the answers from you one way or another, so you may as well tell him what he wants to know.” Jarek weaves through the men, towering over them.

Another speaks up, a wiry man with a scruffy face. “We helped ’em get those vials out.”

“How?”

“We’d meet ’em in the eastern woods, past the summer crops. They would give us the vials, and we would take ’em with us on our trade routes. Find others who were sick of Islor’s ways to pass ’em along to.”

“And where have those trade routes led since the Ybarisans arrived?”

“Everywhere. Bellcross, Lyndel, Cirilea …”

I think of that massive ten-day fair, all those people from all over Islor, coming in to sell their keepers’ wares.

The poison was already all around us.

And now it must be making its way across Islor, tucked into wagons and pockets as disgruntled mortals head home.

“How many of those vials has this village moved?” Zander’s voice has turned gruff. He must have come to the same conclusion.

The man scratches his head. “I don’t think anyone ever kept count. A lot. Hundreds? Maybe more?”

Not enough to pollute every mortal’s blood, but enough to cause hysteria.

“What other instructions did they give you?” Zander asks.

“They told us to wait until Hudem to take the drops.”

“But you didn’t.”

“Nah. Like Elsten said, we’d had enough.”

“I’d bet all my chickens in my coop that Flann was helpin’ move some of it. He’s back and forth all the time, cartin’ skins and the like. And those fellas that got your men would have no trouble collectin’ coin from Isembert in one hand while passin’ out this poison to stick it to the elven usin’ the other. There’s a lot of folks comin’ in and out for trade this time of year.” Fearghal shakes his head at these villagers. “So, you got your dream of bein’ a real Woodswich now, huh? Except it’s through cold-blooded murder!”

I can’t tell if Fearghal is going along with our way of thinking, or if he honestly finds what these mortals have done appalling.

Elsten sets his jaw. “None of them did anything to stop Corbett. You think they wouldn’t do the same if it came to them or us for those saplin’s?”

To that, Fearghal can only shrug. He knows as well as I do that Elsten has a point.


Advertisement3

<<<<113123131132133134135143>152

Advertisement4