The Liar of Partinel
The Liar of Partinel
Chapter One
of fighting, the old man was finally losing his battle with
the poison.
trying to make him lay back in bed. The old jesk, however,
hut was lit only by a single lamp, running low on oil. Even
foolish?”
Hoid sat up a little bit more. Midius knew from
Yet, it was all they had. Midius’ own sleeping spot was a
are precious to us. Tell them of beauty when all they see
“You are not like any apprentice I’ve ever had,” Hoid
Midius took the coat off its hook, then carried it back
reasons.”
whispered.
dead.”
frustrated.
“I should have--” Midius began.
Hoid squeezed his arm. “This was not your fault, lad.”
“Be sure to bury the bodies before you go,” Hoid said.
breathing.
his master. His master, and another. The assassin who had
more like a robe than a true coat, but it was lighter than
That had always been so odd. Only warriors kept their faces
A man who did not plan for the future told very poor
lies.
of human life, had lost a great asset this day. And many
would never know. Midius bowed his head, closing his eyes
for a moment.
Then went back into the hut and prepared a small pack
Midius for years. Being the old man’s apprentice had been a
forcefully.
off the table and slid it into his pack along with the
Despite the fact that they had assassinated the greatest man
Chapter Two
man should be able to see the sun when he dies, feel the
left, guards behind him. The men of his personal guard wore
grow food.
Theus finally emerged from the fields, walking out
onto a road that circled the city, its earth packed flat by
man, his wife, and two children kneeling in the dirt, their
dust anyway.
belong here. They work these crops, hauling water from the
defend that wall. They were born here. They will die
here.”
wait upon drawn lots for the right to work what land we have
room for you. You know this. This land isn’t yours.”
cropper.”
clearings open up, they are gone before the next season
begins.”
This was the Bear of Partinel? A man giving away free grain
him firmly as Jend pulled the sword free, then he cut at the
woman’s neck. The weapon got lodged in the vertebrae, and
it took him three hacks to get the head free. Even so, it
Jend cleaning his gladius and sheathing it. Over the tops
people did.
what is necessary.”
beside Theus. “That man hates you. Have you not just
realize that, and go. Others he meets will hear his story
looking back at the sobbing man, who was now holding his
in skullmoss.
smooth gait, hair stark red, skin slightly darker than that
to work.”
clue to his motives for being in the city, nor hint toward
Partinel?”
glistening.
“Where?”
“Show me.”
horse, and the chariot began to roll down the muddy street.
“About?”
“The family.”
Theus, Jend was thinner of both face and frame. His answers
Jend made good points, and Theus knew the guard captain
for his people. Even if that meant doing things that were
citizenship.
buildings meant more roof space. And more roof space meant
with many of the men out working the fields. Theus would
heads when they saw his chariot. There were just so many of
was too slow moving his flock across the street from one pen
to the other.
first place.
slaves were his people too--men who were working off debts,
where a few more pockets of trune life had sprung up, but
be autonomous.
The east court looked much like the rest of Partinel, and
nearby.
his soldier.
fed by the cooper. The men he would rent out to work the
fields, the women would care for his garden. He got to keep
Theus. After all, Theus was the one who provided the dirt
down when one tapped the plant. This was no common mold.
Corrupted, too?”
with fear, and could only watch as the Corrupted fled with
the child. The cooper’s description of the thing matches
“Is he lying?”
clothing. Then, take the cooper, his family, and his slaves
you is true.”
down.
“Perhaps.”
Theus snorted.
emotion from it, and it had trouble putting out even a small
eyes.
Chapter Three
through fainlands.
would see a bird or small fox among the white. The trune
Someone had passed this way during the previous year, laying
down dead fain plants, then burning them away to leave the
Why did you deny the king’s will by not answering the
to?
knew of King Theusin, the man would not look favorably upon
legs were too long, and there were six of them. A head set
Fain.
from the edges of trune lands. Even living with Hoid, deep
for a short time, but the creature was far faster than he.
quite right, and not just because of the colors. The trees
nearer the road had looked like trees should, despite the
and the places where branch met trunk were too fluid, too
the foliage.
and hateful. Why were the trees near the road more normal,
away predators.
dirt, crops, and the brown, mud-dobbed city wall. And the
your goods?”
three days. . . ?”
ground.
respective influences.
Midius knew this. He knew many things, not just what
he’d learned during his time with Master Hoid. He knew that
Partinel worked.
As the soldiers led him into the city, Midius saw other
sheer sides led straight down, like an enormous god had cut
Maybe, before they died, one of the gods had cut the
Lies and hopes. So often, they were the same thing. It was
of his spear for Midius’s head. Midius snapped his hand up,
himself.
No, he thought.
out.
up, holding his head. He felt sick to his stomach from the
His jesk’s coat had been taken from him, leaving him in his
Hoid sat down. The old jesk wore his brown, many-
summons. You know it was only sent to bring you into the
earthen floor.
there?”
are.”
day it is?”
Silence.
response.
“Delides?”
Again, no response.
What does it matter to me? Midius thought, thumping his
And yet. . . .
No response.
fool, he decided one day that he would not flee when the
resist, and to prove that not all of his kind would scurry
more clever. But, the story says, because the wolf was so
too much for the wolf’s mind, and he sat there, staring,
this?”
“Not all rabbits will die without a fight,” Midius
said, staring up though the wooden bars. “And not all men
biases.”
“But Corrupted--”
it in my own garden. And, I’d like to know why the king was
have brought the moss in, and that I must have made up the
couldn’t have known of it. He’d been gone from Partinel for
And yet. . .he said that the city needed me. That it
was urgent.
Bear of Partinel had sent for, then killed, Hoid the jesk.
Why?
Chapter Four
Theus.
stopped their own matches when the king chose to spar. That
your side and where you killed in formation. No, with the
sword, you got in close. Theus could smell his opponent’s
arm back. But, it was good enough. The sliced arm spit
blood, and Theus backed away to let the man bleed out.
stuck the man through the stomach. Theus pulled his sword
and a fresh, clean sword from his armoring boy. Theus drank
the mead, then slammed the new sword into his sheath.
Jend was waiting at the back of the courtyard. He
had missed out on a lot by taking over the city as they had.
from his back. His name had been Xeol. He had once been a
death.
It was terribly unfair. Theus wore a bronze
an opportunity.
even from those who would oust him. Plus, it not only gave
a kingdom that covered more than one city? Theus had enough
trouble controlling, feeding, and ruling one. How would any
Theus turned away from the dead corpse, and sat down on
it. The piece of armor was almost too heavy for him. Jend
Jend turned away from the boy. “I am.” That was all
the affection he ever showed the boy, and Theus hoped the
“Don’t let the men hear you say things like that. The
feel it, if he couldn’t taste it, touch it, or kill it, then
not? He couldn’t keep every man who saw such things locked
in dungeons.
Theus left the arming room, walking out through the gate.
it was finished.
it began to move.
“I don’t see why you sent for that jesk,” Jend said.
that a person who knew those legends and stories might know
how to combat the creatures. And so, he had sent for old
even the Eddau and their religion, calling for aid from a
want to rely on the jesk any more than he did Naysho and his
Rens Aetherlin?
them?
satisfied.
“Assuming I am allowed.”
Theus waved indifferently, stomping into the prison
his twenties. Dark hair, with a lean face that might have
face. . . .
Theus’s son.
Lightweaver.”
“He poisoned my master,” the apprentice said, hidden
a word.”
pulled out his gladius to kill the jesk. Theus turned back,
lest our lord, the king of Rens, feel that his willingness
still has the twisted idea that all of the cities of the
ask.”
Or have you been the problem all along? Have you been
Theus’s son was more than skilled enough to deal with an old
assassin, boy?”
proclaimed liar.”
resources.
Not if there were a way to save it. Not if there were a way
asked.
“My friend from Rens claims that you know things of fain
Again, no reply.
for a few days in here, then we’ll see how silent he is.
Theus knelt down. “You stop them, and I will give you
deal.”
“You run,” Theus said, “and I will find you. And I
word.”
“I pick him.”
one thing that had seemed true of Hoid, no matter what. He’d
Partinel.
his exile.
arrangement, jesk.”
doing?”
Chapter Five
hours he’d spent in the prison pit, and the king gave no
story about the rabbit and the wolf? Just because it hadn’t
apprentice?
the king said from his chariot. “This is the second one
Midius asked.
and legends.”
thing I will admit about the Jesks. They know things. Half
Thousands will die, and you will lose your throne. You
you.
jesk?”
soldier I wanted.”
rope cages hanging from the top of the city wall. “Him,” he
said.
“We had a deal. You let me live, assuming I can find out
“Trust me. I’m well aware of how careless you are with
human life.”
“That man isn’t what you think,” the king said. “You
fool Hoid teach you to act like this? Meet the eyes of men
do? Men like Theus did not respond well to being bullied.
before Midius and their king. The man slumped down, his
the man’s muscles. He knelt, but he did not fall over. His
me, kill him. Stay with him, no matter where he goes, and
slightly.
“Even the walls were too good for me,” Kail whispered.
supposed to go.
for picking the soldier off the wall--he’d assumed that any
beginning to pound.
of people.
as a jesk.
That’s what Hoid said. No man is more loved than the goodly
liar.
history as long.”
it gets too close. When men first discovered the trune ring
slightly.
first men who lived here were among the very first
Aetherlins upon the land. Back then, just after the Gods
died and nearly took the world with them, these men had very
little to rely upon. They were cast out from other men
because of their Aether, which was called dark and evil.
“All know that Duskr Aethers are among the most clever
and the most intelligent. They helped their men found this
place.”
from behind.
disappear. Yet, now you claim that the Duskr Aethers led
man here, and presumably told them that there was a stable
can’t get them out without tripping over his own tongue.
crops.”
the lake.
the land, men stumbled, they die, they starve. But here,
the gods watched over men, humans could live anywhere they
wished, like the Chan people still do. Life was not hard,
but peaceful. There was no war, for if men offended others,
west. All was despair, for they knew fain would soon claim
city.”
He opened his eyes. Some few had stopped to watch,
mostly children.
It meant hope. They could not fight fainlife, and could not
live amongst it, for its plants were poisonous to man. But
the children away. They shot him scowling looks, and soon
said.
wasn’t the one who had spoken. Watching from behind was a
small figure.
Perhaps three feet tall, the figure was stooped,
walking on four. Like all other Eddau Midius had met, this
Midius said.
actually.”
“My kind?”
Chapter Six
stood atop the brick tower just inside his city walls,
Duskr sliver from the wrist of the dying king before him.
cross. They could twist the truth out of those they met,
and knew the secrets within the hearts of all men. Their
a breeze play with his cloak. The wind carried the scent of
Jend reported. “He used his powers, but the people rejected
to a local tavern.”
“Which tavern?”
“Flaxen’s place.”
his head. “We have men watching the tavern to see what the
Theus nodded.
Corrupted.”
prison.”
him in one of the wall cages for five days as punishment for
disappearance.
was a murderer.
always the way it had been. Jend and Theus had overthrown
the city together, but the younger cousin had never wanted
this unacceptable.”
your intentions.”
“One can never have too much in the way of help,” Theus
and your man will keep them both focused. The jesk works
asked.
Theus turned away. “I’ll probably still give him to
approaching!”
and out of the fields--the real city border was the edge of
from the forest and road down the road through the fields.
chariots bore four people each, the one in the middle had
about the face to protect from the dust and wind of riding.
kill our pests, but not grow hungry for our own flesh.
cloud around them. The horses were larger than any Theus
before, with dark black coats and wide hooves. The rider in
black leaped from his chariot, then pulled free the head
Theus nodded.
as she was.
“I’ve wanted to come visit here for ages,” the woman
beat!”
lady Aetherlin.”
problem?”
here?”
does.”
Naysho flushed.
light and airy, like a voice carried on the breeze, and felt
lethargic. . . .king. . .
Yunmi glanced down at the rose-colored crystal embedded
into her forearm just above her wrist. King Theus? She
thought.
conversation, Naysho.”
He flushed again.
. . .why. . .taunt him. . . ? Glimmer said from her
Ah. . .
Naysho followed.
eyebrow.
a speech.
.human humor.
in Tshor.”
streets.”
thinks.
Partinel.