Burdens of the Dead Read online

Page 5


  Julianio Gambi chuckled wryly. “Come now, M’lord, you know as well as I do that the Ilkhan could ride in tomorrow and take Trebizond. the sultan’s army wouldn’t last an hour defending the walls, if they fought at all. Why should the Mongols do such a thing? They’d rather have the trade flourish and tax us. Besides they would fair poorly at sea against Venetian ships and seamen.”

  Gambi paused, and took a deep breath. “There is only one place such a fleet of raiders could be coming from—across the Black Sea. The satrapies and princedoms under Grand Duke Jagiellon’s sway could build and man the massive fleet they would need, and provide port facilities for it, without it becoming common knowledge. No one else could do it. It’s the only possibility. Those fifteen raiders were nothing. They were a patrol to keep vessels from venturing across to Crimea, as they do at this time of year.”

  Michael felt like the man who was called to help get a cat out of a loft, but who found a lion waiting for him instead. There was only one real answer—well, other than the fleet not sailing at all—and that would be to sail early. Before the ships were fully laden. That would mean a loss, but not, hopefully, a total loss.

  “Gentlemen,” he said with a calm he was far from feeling, “how much of your cargo can you have loaded and ready to sail in three weeks? Because that is when the fleet will be leaving.”

  The two men nodded together as if they were puppets controlled by the same set of strings. “There’s going to be an almighty outcry,” said Gambi. “But it is the only explanation for the efforts the assassins are making. And the Hypatians are to be trusted. I’ve spoken to the sailor myself. He’s scared near witless, but he’s telling the truth. I recognise him. Big ox of an oarsman.”

  “Maybe there will be less of an outcry than you think, my friend,” said Nestor. “Merchants in a place like this are sensitive to unrest. And it’s been reeking of it here for the last while. And if I know the Baitini, they’ll try to foment more trouble. That’ll play into our hands.”

  “If we live through it,” said Gambi, with morbid satisfaction. “It’s a good decision, though, Podesta.”

  Michael hoped the Council of Ten he would have to answer to in Venice thought so as well. They weren’t here, where the streets smelled of fear.

  Chapter 7

  Venice

  Poulo Bourgo, once a mercenary, and before that one of the bravos for the Casa Dandelo, the slave traders of Venice, had returned to the canals he thought he’d left behind forever. He did not return as a mere tool controlled from afar, however. The Black Brain had learned that such control was a flag of warning to the Lion of Etruria, the elder neutral power that guarded Venice. So Chernobog had instead used the flesh and mind of his sendling to imprint his general commands and desires onto Bourgo.

  In essence, the Black Brain sent Poulo Bourgo back to Venice with a compulsion that over-rode his logic or his fear. He thought himself to be still Bourgo, but he was not the man he had once been, in mind any more than in his appearance or in mind. He now carried a parasite-demon within him, a creature of magic and slime, that was inactive—but there, ready to do Chernobog’s will. The parasite was also something of a protector, giving Bourgo the ability to recover quickly from almost any wound.

  So Poulo was loose and free…apparently. His memory was clouded of just how he’d gotten back to Venice. But he knew where he was going despite the savage scars on his face, scarring that, along with damage to the cheekbones, changed the shape of the face, and left him with a permanent rictus. His hair, once curly thick and black, was now a sparse white fringe around his misshapen ears. Until and unless people looked at his eyes they were inclined to offer the oldster a seat or charity. When and if they did look into his eyes, they went elsewhere in a hurry. If they could.

  “Campo Gallia?” said the gondolier. “No, old man. That’s a part of town that you should stay out of. I don’t go down there myself…”

  He looked up into Poulo’s eyes, then, and found that he’d changed his mind.

  A twist of gulls flapped after them, as they might follow a fishing vessel.

  * * *

  Malaki Molados was a dealer in used furniture. And a fence, procurer, pimp, and a supplier of philtres and various drugs. He was not obviously associated with the now destroyed Casa Dandelo, but the linkage was there.

  He was careful to keep it hidden. Venice was a fairly amoral society, and prostitution was barely considered a vice. The by-product of trying to retain family fortunes by restricting marriage to the youngest son of the Casa had created a large supply of affluent custom, and of course there were the infamous “nunneries” to which daughters of the noble houses were sent along with a suitable endowment, and often no desire to be a nun, or to behave like one.

  Some things, however, even went beyond the pale here in Venice. Casa Dandelo had trafficked in slaves, and were eventually destroyed for it. They’d paid well, though, and that was all that ever interested Molados.

  He was always polite to a potential customer, even if they had apparently come looking for a spare cassone. Sometimes that was indeed what they wanted, sometimes to sell goods of questionable origins, and sometimes to buy…other things. How those customers got in touch with each other, and how they were able to recognize each other was a mystery to Molados. But they did somehow.

  And sent customers to him. So he bowed to the scruffy slightly ill-smelling fellow with the shock of white hair who walked into his shop as if he owned the place.

  He was jerked upright by a harsh hand. “Didn’t recognize me, did you, Malaki?”

  He still didn’t. But he had a sharp answer for anyone who took liberties. This was a bad neighborhood, but no-one tried rough stuff with Molados. Word had got around. They left him alone and didn’t get cut up. He had sewed weights and long razors into the edges of his short cloak, and more razor blades into the edge of his hat. He went for them now.

  The white-haired man slapped Molados’ hat off, and grabbed his wrists. “Even in these parts, Malaki, they’ll kill someone who bought children off the Dandelos. Don’t make me point that out to them. I know too much.”

  Who was this fellow? He was strong as an ox, despite his elderly appearance.

  “I’ve got influence…” Molados tried to put a ferocious edge in his voice. He had a bad feeling he’d failed.

  “With your customers. Yes, you do—and I intend to use it. Now, who is still in business with the black lotos?”

  “I don’t…”

  “Don’t make me use your own razor on you. You’d wouldn’t look good with an extra smile. You know who they are, and the addicts will never give it up.”

  Molados knew that one of the two of them was going to have to die, and he’d rather that it wasn’t him. He talked, playing for time, knowing full well that when the rich and powerful people he’d betrayed caught up with him he was going to be killed for doing so.

  He had to kill this man. He had a final hold-out, the razor in his boot top. He dropped and snatched it out, slashing.

  Blood sprayed.

  Only it didn’t have the effect it normally had. The white-haired man slapped the blade out of his hands.

  And as Malaki watched, horrified, the cut throat oozed a thick clear slime and knitted itself. The bleeding stopped.

  So, very rapidly, did his scream.

  * * *

  The great winged Lion of St. Mark was an ancient and powerful magical creature, and it was as much part of the Venetian lagoons and marshes as the marshes were part of it. It defended and watched over them, and, according to the compact with first four families, the four who had dared to defend the saint, it was a part of them too. Marco Valdosta wore the mantle now—and thus he was suddenly aware of a dark working, somewhere in Cannaregio. It had the reek of the North, of Chernobog, about it. But how could such a thing have passed the wards of the Lion’s territory? The Lion felt unease, which transmitted itself to Marco.

  Marco had been in the act of making love to his
wife, and the reminder that he no longer enjoyed any privacy was hardly a welcome one. But while the loving was sweet, there was, at this time of day, some desperation in it. They had been watching Kat’s cycles carefully, and working on yet another worried attempt at conception.

  His irritation was plainly something the vast otherness was aware of, and amused by. But there was a worry behind that amusement as well. The lion wanted that child too, Marco realized. Was it his mother’s blood, he thought wryly, with Benito and himself both trapped in relationships of three?

  Kat touched his cheek gently. “What’s wrong?” she asked.

  A hard question to answer. While he was still groping, she said in a small voice, “It’s me, isn’t it?”

  “No! A thousand times no.” Marco said, hugging her, holding her. “It’s just…well, something magical and evil stirred in the city.”

  “How…? Oh.” She colored. “Doesn’t he know there are times we need to be alone?”

  “Um… The Lion is part of me, Katerina. Not something I can shut off at will.” Marco felt awkward and embarrassed and not in the least like continuing what he had been doing.

  Which, by the look on Kat’s face, was just as well. She sat up, pulled the cover around her shoulders. “I love you, Marco, but…”

  “If it is any comfort, the Lion really did not want to disturb us. It, er, wants us to succeed. But something very unpleasant and magical that should not be able to happen, just did.”

  “What?” she asked.

  “Someone just died…but lived anyway. And no, I don’t know why that was evil. I just have some idea of where it happened. I’m going to have to go and have a look.”

  “I’ll come with you.” She stood up.

  “It might be a good idea if you put some clothes on first.”

  She grinned, the same widemouthed grin that had told him they were kindred spirits when he’d first seen it across the grand canal. “You too, Marco.”

  It was going to be difficult for Venice’s most famous couple to travel anonymously. Not for the first time Marco wished that he was as at ease as his brother was, on the pan-tiled roofs. They were going, Marco knew, to one of the poorer quarters of Cannaregio, not somewhere that would draw their visit for any reason but charity. That was easily enough believed, although it would never fool the magic-user. Anyway, as Kat was with him, Marco wanted agents of the Council of Ten as bodyguards. He had the strength of the Lion to draw on, but they could both be physically killed, despite that.

  Kat was taking no chances, guards or no guards. She checked her wheel-lock pistol and put it into her reticule, even before the task of dressing herself with Marco’s help. He was at least deft at it, and a fair substitute for a lady’s maid by now, he thought ruefully. By the time that they arrived in the sad, mean, garbage-strewn part of the Lion’s domain, with a basket of goods for the local priest, the Lion in Marco felt that this spell had been worked in…and it was gone.

  The agent of the Council of Ten who was serving as their gondolier spat in the water. That briefly improved its quality. “Bad part of town, M’lord. Someone around here is trafficking black lotos. But we haven’t pinned it down. It’s causing a lot of stolen goods to move round here. If you hear anything, M’lord, in the course of your doctoring…”

  Marco’s heart sank. They’d never quite managed to eliminate the trade. And those who were addicted to it, would do anything, anything at all, when they needed it. Even the blackest of blood magic. And somehow one form of corruption always sought out another.

  They went past the buyers of old furniture and on to the local church. The priest was a sad, rather beaten-looking man, stoop-shouldered and beginning to go bald. It was plain that the last thing he had been expecting this afternoon was a visit from the Doge’s ward. His front parlor was a little untidy and he himself was rubbing sleep from his eyes. He was amazed, and suitably grateful and not a little suspicious and puzzled at the visit.

  “I’ve seen several patients lately from his area,” said Marco, by way of an explanation. “I was wondering…are there any problems? Above and beyond the normal poverty?” He probed delicately.

  The priest nodded. “There are, M’lord. I think lotos. But really I can’t say where it comes from.”

  Can’t or won’t? Marco wondered. The blue was fairly cheap and grew—or could be grown—in the freshwater parts of the marshes. It was only mildly addictive, and frequently provided rather unpleasant side-effects. Oddly, it left more of a mark on its users than the black. Little things the observant physician could pick up, a nervous tic, bloodshot eyes. That wasn’t something he’d seen a lot of here in the city, despite the availability and the price. This wasn’t the sort of neighborhood you’d look to find addicts of the black. It was too expensive.

  They talked a while of the medical problems, and the issues with water, and the poverty and—because they were Venetians—of the trade situation. But if the priest knew anything about practitioners of dark arts in his parish he wasn’t saying. Marco did not wish to seem like the fanatical Bishop Sachs seeing witchcraft under every bed. He knew Venice had its share. But he had thought—from his own involvement in it—that it was fairly benign.

  They left after polite farewells and promises to see if anything could be done about the shortage of potable water.

  Back in the gondola, Marco noticed that Kat was frowning. “What’s wrong?” he asked.

  “He wasn’t pleased to see you.”

  “I don’t suppose everybody has to be,” said Marco with a smile. “You know I do have some enemies, Kat. Some even blame me for Benito. Recchia’s family, the Capuletti. The Brunelli relations and by blows…I don’t try to be their foe but they are better at grudges than reconciliation. And this is Venice. Everyone is related to someone.”

  “Maybe that’s it. But you’re loved by the populi minuta, Marco. He must know that. And his house smelled odd.”

  “Odd? In what way, Kat?”

  “Of fear, I think. It has a smell,” said his beloved, seriously.

  Chapter 8

  Venice

  The news of evil magic might be well-hidden from Marco Valdosta, but there were a fair number of canalers who brought Marco the news that a new quack-healer had come to town.

  They didn’t see him lasting too long, though. “He doesn’t know much,” said Alfredo, scornfully. “Ignatius went to see him about that tightness of his chest, and he told him to try opening his windows. No potions or anything, and then he wanted to charge Ignatius a copper too. You can imagine just where Iggy told him he could look for it. Mind, the fellow’s got a shelf of foreign-tongue books. He looks the part. Just knows nothing. Everyone knows the air is full of poisonous humors, especially at night.”

  Marco had by now a good insight into the working of the minds of the popula minuta of Venice’s canals. He’d learned, early, that people needed to believe, and to have something to hang that belief onto. He always gave a measure of help to that belief these days. Marco’s patients often got better and that helped people believe…but so did some of the victims of the frauds and the charlatans that the desperate poor took themselves to. Even the better off and well-educated could believe in the most blatant fakery, and not all of the eminent and expensive physicians were anything but ignorant charlatans themselves. Marco had come to realize that the human body was a resilient thing, which would heal itself as often as not. Still. It was a wise physician who gave the mind something to use to work on the body with,

  Marco had been inside Ignatius the pewter-smith’s noisesome little workroom. It sounded to him as if the new healer’s advice might have been quite good. But he’d delivered that advice without the trappings that made it palatable, and thus to be rigorously obeyed. A cantrip on a scroll, which the patient was told needed to flutter in the breeze to be effective, would have achieved the same thing, and the patient would see the visible spell moving in the open window and feel that it was working. How not? There were the magic words, right
there, clearing the air that passed them! Marco wondered about the books though. If the man thought to use props like that…

  A few days later, another story about the new charlatan reached Marco’s ears. The scornful verdict was that the new fellow was nothing but incompetent. “He wanted to know my cousin’s weight, and then he went and peered in those books of his. A real doctor, like yourself, M’lord, knows how to treat a man’s sickness. This one had to go and look inside his books and then weighed out some rubbish on a little scale, like one that the goldsmiths use.”

  In the minds of the ordinary folk, books were a powerful testimony to intellect. Using them was not.

  Contrary to his informant’s intentions, Marco was impressed rather than amused by the fellow’s “incompetence,” and had added two traces together. The man had showed up—admittedly not in the right part of town—at the time that the Lion had detected the use of some dark magic. He made a decision to look him up, and more importantly to see what these books were. Marco knew full well that neither he nor any other physician knew everything, and the weight of the patient and precise weight of the dose sounded like the advice in Alkindus, that he had been reading himself not two weeks back.

  He found the man in his rooms above the Marciano sotoportego, customer-less, with his feet up, reading, and drinking beer. Marco had not often seen the latter two things being done together, and particularly not in this part of town—and even more particularly reading a book that was not in Frankish or even a western script. The rooms were neat enough, and more than clean enough, and breathed an air of shabby gentility. More to the point, they did not stink, neither of chemicals nor of dark magic, nor of rotting things, and no more than was normal of the smell of the canals.

  The man appeared more irritated with being disturbed in his beer and reading, than in need of customers or impressed by the quality of the person who just walked in. “And what might I do for you, M’lord?” he asked, lazily, not leaping to his feet to bow. Not in fact moving at all, his eyes going back to the book.

 

    Apex: A Hunter Novel Read onlineApex: A Hunter NovelChoices Read onlineChoicesBy Slanderous Tongues Read onlineBy Slanderous TonguesSpy, Spy Again Read onlineSpy, Spy AgainEye Spy Read onlineEye SpyBeyond Read onlineBeyondThe Snow Queen Read onlineThe Snow QueenBriarheart Read onlineBriarheartBedlam Boyz Read onlineBedlam BoyzThe Mage Wars Read onlineThe Mage WarsCloser to Home: Book One of Herald Spy Read onlineCloser to Home: Book One of Herald SpyA Tale of the Five Hundred Kingdoms, Volume 2 Read onlineA Tale of the Five Hundred Kingdoms, Volume 2The Case of the Spellbound Child Read onlineThe Case of the Spellbound ChildThe Gates of Sleep em-3 Read onlineThe Gates of Sleep em-3Oathbreaker v(vah-2 Read onlineOathbreaker v(vah-2Valdemar 06 - [Exile 02] - Exile’s Valor Read onlineValdemar 06 - [Exile 02] - Exile’s ValorBeyond World's End Read onlineBeyond World's EndTo Light a Candle Read onlineTo Light a CandleBlade of Empire Read onlineBlade of EmpireThe Outstretched Shadow ou(tom-1 Read onlineThe Outstretched Shadow ou(tom-1REBOOTS Read onlineREBOOTSFrom a High Tower Read onlineFrom a High TowerMusic to My Sorrow Read onlineMusic to My SorrowCrucible Read onlineCrucibleSilence Read onlineSilenceSword of Ice v(-11 Read onlineSword of Ice v(-11Crossroads and Other Tales of Valdemar v(-101 Read onlineCrossroads and Other Tales of Valdemar v(-101Under The Vale And Other Tales Of Valdemar v(-105 Read onlineUnder The Vale And Other Tales Of Valdemar v(-105Moving Targets and Other Tales of Valdemar v(-102 Read onlineMoving Targets and Other Tales of Valdemar v(-102The House of the Four Winds: Book One of One Dozen Daughters Read onlineThe House of the Four Winds: Book One of One Dozen DaughtersValdemar 06 - [Exile 01] - Exile’s Honor Read onlineValdemar 06 - [Exile 01] - Exile’s HonorJolene Read onlineJoleneNovel - Arcanum 101 (with Rosemary Edghill) Read onlineNovel - Arcanum 101 (with Rosemary Edghill)Tempest Read onlineTempestShadow of the Lion hoa-1 Read onlineShadow of the Lion hoa-1To Light A Candle ou(tom-2 Read onlineTo Light A Candle ou(tom-2Arrow's Fall Read onlineArrow's FallBastion Read onlineBastionSnow Queen fhk-4 Read onlineSnow Queen fhk-4A Tail of Two SKittys s-2 Read onlineA Tail of Two SKittys s-2The Gates of Sleep Read onlineThe Gates of SleepThis Scepter'd Isle Read onlineThis Scepter'd IsleTwo-Edged Blade v(bts-2 Read onlineTwo-Edged Blade v(bts-2A Host of Furious Fancies Read onlineA Host of Furious FanciesElite: A Hunter novel Read onlineElite: A Hunter novelCrown of Vengeance dpt-1 Read onlineCrown of Vengeance dpt-1The White Gryphon v(mw-2 Read onlineThe White Gryphon v(mw-2Owlsight v(dt-2 Read onlineOwlsight v(dt-2Silence - eARC Read onlineSilence - eARCThe Robin And The Kestrel bv-2 Read onlineThe Robin And The Kestrel bv-2Fairy Godmother fhk-1 Read onlineFairy Godmother fhk-1Burdens of the Dead Read onlineBurdens of the DeadWintermoon Read onlineWintermoonValdemar 09 - [Mage Winds 01] - Winds of Fate Read onlineValdemar 09 - [Mage Winds 01] - Winds of FateCollision: Book Four in the Secret World Chronicle - eARC Read onlineCollision: Book Four in the Secret World Chronicle - eARCThe River's Gift Read onlineThe River's GiftThe Eagle & the Nightingales: Bardic Voices, Book III Read onlineThe Eagle & the Nightingales: Bardic Voices, Book IIIPathways Read onlinePathwaysThis Rough Magic Read onlineThis Rough MagicTake a Thief Read onlineTake a ThiefMuch Fall of Blood-ARC Read onlineMuch Fall of Blood-ARCSacred Ground Read onlineSacred GroundOathblood Read onlineOathbloodChanging the World Read onlineChanging the WorldSun in Glory and Other Tales of Valdemar v(-100 Read onlineSun in Glory and Other Tales of Valdemar v(-100[500 Kingdoms 04] - The Snow Queen Read online[500 Kingdoms 04] - The Snow QueenLark and Wren Read onlineLark and WrenA Scandal in Battersea Read onlineA Scandal in BatterseaBeauty and the Werewolf fhk-6 Read onlineBeauty and the Werewolf fhk-6Moontide (five hundred kingdoms) Read onlineMoontide (five hundred kingdoms)The Black Swan Read onlineThe Black SwanFour and Twenty Blackbirds bv-4 Read onlineFour and Twenty Blackbirds bv-4Stolen Silver (valdemar (05)) Read onlineStolen Silver (valdemar (05))No True Way Read onlineNo True WayOne Good Knight Read onlineOne Good KnightThe Chrome Borne Read onlineThe Chrome BorneWhen Darkness Falls Read onlineWhen Darkness FallsThe Fairy Godmother Read onlineThe Fairy GodmotherFoundation Read onlineFoundationFinding the Way and Other Tales of Valdemar Read onlineFinding the Way and Other Tales of ValdemarHome From the Sea: An Elemental Masters Novel Read onlineHome From the Sea: An Elemental Masters NovelDragon's Teeth Read onlineDragon's TeethBrightly Burning Read onlineBrightly BurningRevolution: Book Three of the Secret World Chronicle - eARC Read onlineRevolution: Book Three of the Secret World Chronicle - eARCThe Outstretched Shadow Read onlineThe Outstretched ShadowVictories Read onlineVictoriesGwenhwyfar Read onlineGwenhwyfarFour and Twenty Blackbirds Read onlineFour and Twenty BlackbirdsMagic's Promise v(lhm-2 Read onlineMagic's Promise v(lhm-2The Last Herald-Mage Trilogy Read onlineThe Last Herald-Mage TrilogyChanging the World: All-New Tales of Valdemar v(-103 Read onlineChanging the World: All-New Tales of Valdemar v(-103Elementary Read onlineElementaryCastle of Deception bt-1 Read onlineCastle of Deception bt-1Storm Breaking v(ms-3 Read onlineStorm Breaking v(ms-3The white gryphon Read onlineThe white gryphonCloser to the Heart Read onlineCloser to the HeartMad Maudlin Read onlineMad MaudlinReserved for the Cat em-6 Read onlineReserved for the Cat em-6Sanctuary dj-3 Read onlineSanctuary dj-3The Wizard of London em-5 Read onlineThe Wizard of London em-5Kerowyn's Ride v(bts-1 Read onlineKerowyn's Ride v(bts-1Owlknight v(dt-3 Read onlineOwlknight v(dt-3Dragon's Teeth [Martis series 2] Read onlineDragon's Teeth [Martis series 2]The Otherworld Read onlineThe OtherworldInvasion: Book One of the Secret World Chronicle-ARC Read onlineInvasion: Book One of the Secret World Chronicle-ARCIll Met by Moonlight Read onlineIll Met by MoonlightChanges Read onlineChangesNo True Way: All-New Tales of Valdemar (Tales of Valdemar Series Book 8) Read onlineNo True Way: All-New Tales of Valdemar (Tales of Valdemar Series Book 8)Redoubt Read onlineRedoubtValdemar Anthology - [Tales of Valdemar 02] - Sun in Glory and Other Tales of Valdemar Read onlineValdemar Anthology - [Tales of Valdemar 02] - Sun in Glory and Other Tales of ValdemarMagic's Pawn v(lhm-1 Read onlineMagic's Pawn v(lhm-1Sanctuary Read onlineSanctuaryThe Oathbound Read onlineThe OathboundExile's Honor v(-1 Read onlineExile's Honor v(-1Nightside [Diana Tregarde series] Read onlineNightside [Diana Tregarde series]The black gryphon Read onlineThe black gryphonBy Tooth and Claw - eARC Read onlineBy Tooth and Claw - eARCThe Fire Rose em-1 Read onlineThe Fire Rose em-1Arrow's Flight Read onlineArrow's FlightSpirits White as Lightning Read onlineSpirits White as LightningShip Who Searched Read onlineShip Who SearchedThe Silver Gryphon v(mw-3 Read onlineThe Silver Gryphon v(mw-3Phoenix and Ashes em-4 Read onlinePhoenix and Ashes em-4Sleeping Beauty fhk-5 Read onlineSleeping Beauty fhk-5Crossroads and Other Tales of Valdemar Read onlineCrossroads and Other Tales of ValdemarTake A Thief v(-3 Read onlineTake A Thief v(-3The Sleeping Beauty Read onlineThe Sleeping BeautyWinds Of Fury v(mw-3 Read onlineWinds Of Fury v(mw-3Valdemar 11 - [Owl Mage 03] - Owlknight Read onlineValdemar 11 - [Owl Mage 03] - OwlknightWing Commander: Freedom Flight Read onlineWing Commander: Freedom FlightAerie Read onlineAerieThe Eagle And The Nightingales bv-3 Read onlineThe Eagle And The Nightingales bv-3Beauty and the Werewolf Read onlineBeauty and the WerewolfAlta dj-2 Read onlineAlta dj-2Unnatural Issue Read onlineUnnatural IssueA Study in Sable Read onlineA Study in SableThe Black Gryphon v(mw-1 Read onlineThe Black Gryphon v(mw-1Alta Read onlineAltaBlue Heart v(-2 Read onlineBlue Heart v(-2Exile's Valor v(-2 Read onlineExile's Valor v(-2Hunter Read onlineHunterWinds Of Fate v(mw-1 Read onlineWinds Of Fate v(mw-1Owlflight Read onlineOwlflightMagic's Promise Read onlineMagic's PromiseOathbound v(vah-1 Read onlineOathbound v(vah-1A Better Mousetrap s-4 Read onlineA Better Mousetrap s-4Joust dj-1 Read onlineJoust dj-1Born to Run Read onlineBorn to RunIntrigues v(cc-2 Read onlineIntrigues v(cc-2SCat s-3 Read onlineSCat s-3Home From The Sea: The Elemental Masters, Book Seven Read onlineHome From The Sea: The Elemental Masters, Book SevenSacrifices Read onlineSacrificesThe Bartered Brides (Elemental Masters) Read onlineThe Bartered Brides (Elemental Masters)Magic's Price v(lhm-3 Read onlineMagic's Price v(lhm-3Fortune s Fool Read onlineFortune s FoolMagic's Pawn Read onlineMagic's PawnOathblood v(vah-3 Read onlineOathblood v(vah-3The Robin and the Kestrel Read onlineThe Robin and the KestrelThe Price Of Command v(bts-3 Read onlineThe Price Of Command v(bts-3Valdemar 07 - Take a Thief Read onlineValdemar 07 - Take a ThiefThe Serpent's Shadow em-2 Read onlineThe Serpent's Shadow em-2The Wizard of Karres wok-2 Read onlineThe Wizard of Karres wok-2Storm Warning v(ms-1 Read onlineStorm Warning v(ms-1Charmed Destinies Read onlineCharmed DestiniesMagic 101 (A Diana Tregarde Investigation) Read onlineMagic 101 (A Diana Tregarde Investigation)Steadfast Read onlineSteadfastCloser to the Chest Read onlineCloser to the ChestSKitty s-1 Read onlineSKitty s-1Nebula Awards Showcase 2016 Read onlineNebula Awards Showcase 2016Storm rising Read onlineStorm risingFortune's Fool Read onlineFortune's FoolMagic's price Read onlineMagic's priceValdemar 11 - [Owl Mage 02] - Owlsight Read onlineValdemar 11 - [Owl Mage 02] - OwlsightStorm Rising v(ms-2 Read onlineStorm Rising v(ms-2Lark and Wren bv-1 Read onlineLark and Wren bv-1Under the Vale and Other Tales of Valdemar Read onlineUnder the Vale and Other Tales of ValdemarStorm Warning Read onlineStorm WarningThe Wizard of London Read onlineThe Wizard of LondonOwlknight Read onlineOwlknightRevolution: Book Three of the Secret World Chronicle Read onlineRevolution: Book Three of the Secret World ChronicleFIERCE: Sixteen Authors of Fantasy Read onlineFIERCE: Sixteen Authors of FantasyThe Shadow of the Lion Read onlineThe Shadow of the LionValdemar 05 - [Vows & Honor 02] - Oathbreakers Read onlineValdemar 05 - [Vows & Honor 02] - OathbreakersAnd Less Than Kind Read onlineAnd Less Than KindThe Obsidian Mountain Trilogy Read onlineThe Obsidian Mountain TrilogyApex Read onlineApexWerehunter (anthology) Read onlineWerehunter (anthology)Winds of Change Read onlineWinds of ChangeSatanic, Versus [Diana Tregarde series] Read onlineSatanic, Versus [Diana Tregarde series]Elemental Magic: All-New Tales of the Elemental Masters Read onlineElemental Magic: All-New Tales of the Elemental MastersJoust Read onlineJoustIntrigues: Book Two of the Collegium Chronicles (a Valdemar Novel) Read onlineIntrigues: Book Two of the Collegium Chronicles (a Valdemar Novel)A Ghost of a Chance bv-1 Read onlineA Ghost of a Chance bv-1The Demon's Den v(-12 Read onlineThe Demon's Den v(-12Moving Targets and Other Tales of Valdemar Read onlineMoving Targets and Other Tales of ValdemarOwlflight v(dt-1 Read onlineOwlflight v(dt-1Brightly Burning v(-10 Read onlineBrightly Burning v(-10Winds Of Change v(mw-2 Read onlineWinds Of Change v(mw-2Winds of Fury Read onlineWinds of FurySword of Ice and Other Tales of Valdemar v(-100 Read onlineSword of Ice and Other Tales of Valdemar v(-100Changes v(cc-3 Read onlineChanges v(cc-3Aerie dj-4 Read onlineAerie dj-4The Wizard of Karres Read onlineThe Wizard of KarresSword Sworn [Vows EBOOK_TITLE Honor series] Read onlineSword Sworn [Vows EBOOK_TITLE Honor series]Storm breaking Read onlineStorm breakingValdemar 03 - [Collegium 01] - Foundation Read onlineValdemar 03 - [Collegium 01] - FoundationRedoubt: Book Four of the Collegium Chronicles (A Valdemar Novel) Read onlineRedoubt: Book Four of the Collegium Chronicles (A Valdemar Novel)Novel - Dead Reckoning (with Rosemary Edghill) Read onlineNovel - Dead Reckoning (with Rosemary Edghill)Reserved for the Cat Read onlineReserved for the Cat