Daughter of the Flames

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Authors: Zoe Marriott

BOOK: Daughter of the Flames
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Daughter of the Flames
Daughter of the Flames [1]
Zoe Marriott
Walker Books Ltd. (2011)

A sweeping fantasy chronicling a courageous girl's fight for freedom in a world ravaged by war and religious fanaticism.

Zahira is a young woman of the conquered Rua people, their country occupied by another, very different culture – the Sedorne. Zahira is an orphan and has been raised to despise and distrust the occupying population, as well as to be a devout follower of the native religion. But everything changes for Zahira when her home and foster family are destroyed and she finds out some shocking truths about her heritage and real family. Realizing that it is up to her to do something about the violence and upheaval that are tearing her country apart, she must learn to accept her Sedorne origins and try to bridge the gap between the warring cultures. But when her own people suspect her of treachery for her ideas – especially after she saves the life of a Sedorne nobleman and begins to fall in love – the epic task ahead of her seems insurmountable...

This book is dedicated to my
editor, Emil Fortune,
and my agent, Yasmin Standen,
with the deepest gratitude

PROLOGUE

The screaming woke Surya. Her eyes flicked open and she was out of bed, flinging back the furs and reaching for her robes, before her mind had even registered the noise. She had become used to the sound of screaming that winter, and her body knew what it had to do.

It would be the Sedorne again. Whoever they had caught would need her help.

Ignoring creaking joints that had aged forty winters in the chill of the mountains, she wrapped herself in a practical, dun-coloured habit, with only the golden band at the waist to show her rank, and shoved her feet into fur-lined boots. Before she could catch up her long braid of crinkly, greying hair and hide it under the noirin’s gold headdress, there was an urgent clapping outside the curtain of her room.

“Come,” she called, already stepping forward to pull back the heavy fabric.

“Noirin Surya.” The young woman outside was a novice namoa, barely sixteen, the dark skin of her face greyed with fear. She sketched a hasty bow. “They’re attacking Aroha.”

Surya felt a cold trickle of fear that lifted the small hairs all over her body. Aroha was the seat of Ruan’s government. “Then – they’ve invaded?”

“Yes! There are survivors coming up through the hills. They say … they say the palace is burning.”

Surya swallowed. “The rei? His family?”

“I don’t know.” The young holy woman wrung her hands. “There’s a woman from their household and she’s demanding to see you. She’s badly burned, but she won’t let anyone near her – she just keeps saying we have to fetch you.”

“I’ll come at once.” Surya stepped over the threshold, paused, then turned back and quickly caught up the short, curved sword hanging from the wall. Her fingers closed into their familiar places on the hilt and she found herself relaxing, her breaths slowing as battle-ready calmness settled over her. The worn leather grip was cool against her calloused palm, and she realized she was sweating.

She turned back to the novice namoa, and they ran together along the corridor and down the steep, slanting steps into the octagon room. The sound of panicked shouting, hoarse voices lifted in pain and children crying made Surya wince as she entered.

Dozens of smoke-stained, bleeding people sat in forlorn clusters on the floor. The doors were flung open on to the courtyard and the room was flooded with the tarnished, flickering light of the great tapers burning outside. The inner gates beyond were open and a steady trickle of survivors filtered in, guided – in some cases almost carried – by some of the red-robed namoa from the outer walls.

Surya shook her head. “So many…”

The novice heard her. “This is only the beginning, Noirin. The hills are swarming with people.”

More namoa weaved efficiently through the refugees, bringing food and water, blankets, and treatment for their injuries. The everyday odours of herbal remedies and spiced chickpeas wafted through the air, mixing oddly with the smells of burning and blood and fear. Rubbing the chill from the back of her neck with her free hand, Surya ran a practised eye over the arrangements, returned the hasty greetings of the supervising namoa, and then nodded, satisfied.

“Where is the woman?”

“In the courtyard, Noirin. She wouldn’t come in.”

They picked their way swiftly along the outer edges of the room to the inner courtyard of the temple complex. The air was sharp. Surya’s breath turned to frost in her mouth as they crossed the flagstones, their shadows warping and jumping strangely under the capricious candlelight. Never in her life had she seen so many tapers lit in one night. She glanced up and saw the great arc of the sky turned dusty grey against the flames.

In the darkest corner of the courtyard a woman huddled, a swathe of cloth wrapped around her body, covering her head and trailing on the floor. She looked up at their approach and Surya sucked in a sharp breath as she saw the blistering burns covering the left side of the woman’s face. The undamaged side of her face was the pale toasted almond brown of a lowlander, her smooth skin marking her as a young woman, perhaps not yet into her thirties.

“Let me see,” Surya said briskly, stepping forward. The woman cringed back and Surya stopped in bewilderment. “What’s wrong with you?” she demanded, pity making her voice rough. “Why come to the House of God if you want no healing?”

“I didn’t come for me.” The woman’s voice crackled like dry leaves. “Are you the head of the Order? The noirin?” Her eyes dropped to the gold belt at Surya’s waist and returned to her face in sudden hope.

“I’m Noirin Surya, yes. Why did you ask for me, then, if not for yourself?”

“Send her away.” The woman looked at the novice namoa, and Surya, with a sigh, gestured at the girl to leave them. The novice shook her head and walked reluctantly away.

The woman shuffled further into the shadows. Frowning, Surya moved closer until her body shielded the woman from the view of the rest of the courtyard. The woman reached up with one blistered hand and pulled back the bulky fabric from her chest.

“I came for her.”

The cloth fell away to reveal an unconscious child draped limply over the woman’s shoulder, dressed in the charred remains of a nightgown. The small, delicately featured face was obviously female and might once have been beautiful. It would never be beautiful again. A horrific burn ruined the left side of the girl’s face, turning the skin of her eyelid into a twisted, purpling mess.

“She’s the last one,” the woman was muttering frantically. “The others were dead, all dead. There was nothing I could do. I could only get her out – only get her here.”

“In God’s name, woman! You should have brought the child to our attention the moment you arrived.”

Surya began to turn away, her hand lifting to signal to the others; but before she could finish the gesture, the woman’s hand had clamped over her wrist, the shaking, blistered fingers exerting amazing strength as she pulled Surya’s arm down.

“No!” she whispered. “No one else must know! They’re hunting for her – if they find her she’ll be dead too.”

“Hunting for…” Surya stiffened. “The Sedorne are hunting her?”

“She’s the last one. The only one. Little Zahira. I saved her.”

Surya looked at the woman’s desperate face, and then again at the child.

Zahira
.

At that moment, the girl’s good eyelid flickered, revealing a cornflower-blue eye, vivid against the honey gold of her skin. Surya took a sharp breath. The rei’s wife was a golden-haired Sedorne, married in happier times, when the two nations were friends. It was said her eyes were blue as cornflowers – and that her children had inherited them.

“You’re telling me this is the rei’s youngest daughter?”

“The others are all dead. And the rei. In their beds, in the night.” The words tumbled over one another in their eagerness to be heard. “Little Zahira had a nightmare so she slept with me, in my room. I woke when the fire started. I tried to get out, but the soldiers were there so I had to go the other way. Through the fire. A beam fell on us; it hit her head. Please help her. She’s the last one. She’s the reia now.”

Surya nodded, dazed. The child must be taken somewhere safe, quiet, hidden… She looked around, saw that no other survivors or namoa were near. “Come – now, while no one’s looking. Follow me.”

Still clutching the sword, she picked up her heavy robes and ran, the woman a shadow in her wake as they raced out of the courtyard, past the octagon room, along the inner wall of the temple.

“Where … where…?” the woman panted.

“Somewhere no one will look.”

Surya led the woman round the curve of the wall to an alcove, and pressed an almost invisible indentation in the stone. There was a hollow click, and a panel, made of wood but cunningly faced with stone that acted both as camouflage and armour, slid back with a faint grating noise from the runners. They moved through the opening, out of the orange light and the noise into the darkness and quiet of a hidden passageway.

“What happened? What happened at the palace?” Surya demanded as she led the woman along the narrow corridor, her feet finding the faint depressions in the stone that told her which direction to take. “Treachery?”

“Yes.” The woman’s voice was almost noiseless as she struggled for breath. “The Sedorne … their rei. He came to talk – to negotiate, he said. Claimed that the raiders attacked us … without his knowledge. Wanted to … stop … the fighting. Wanted to make a treaty. Stayed in the palace – as a guest. Then … in the night … the fire.” The woman made a small sound, half sob, half gasp. “No warning.”

Surya swallowed and shook her head. “Say no more now. Come this way.”

They pattered quickly up a narrow flight of stairs, took another turn, and then climbed another, narrower run of stairs. Surya was horribly aware of the laboured, rasping breaths behind her. The woman needed medical help, probably just as much as the child she carried. The child … dear God.

They reached the top of the stairway, and Surya pulled back a thick brocade curtain. A gust of cool air blew into her face. She breathed it in gratefully.

“What is this?”The woman inched forward.

“It’s the shrine. The shrine of the Holy Mother of Flames.”

“Am I … am I allowed?”

“I would not have brought you, else. There’s nothing to fear from God, child – She is your mother, just as She is mine. Come on.”

The woman following hesitantly behind her, Surya ducked under the heavy wooden lintel of the entrance. The moss underfoot was springy and thick, crushing with a faint astringent odour. There was no trace of snow anywhere. Snow did not fall in the shrine.

Light shone here day and night, a warm glow that glinted, starlike, through the boughs of the ancient lir trees. The circle of trees was over four hundred years old, their roots trained up into giant curlicues that snaked and twisted around the papery silver trunks and almost blocked the centre of the shrine from view. Surya led the woman forward through the gap between two of the curved trunks.

This was the heart of the House of God. It lay at the very core of the complex, hidden and protected by the lives of every namoa, Surya most of all.

Cut deeply into the smooth, round belly of earth at the centre of the tree circle was a stone-lined pit. It was the source of the light. Flames the colour of a peacock’s feathers pulsed lazily in the pit. The air above the fire rippled gently, like a heat haze, and yet the fire shed no heat. Surya heard a soft exhalation from the woman – a sigh not of awe but of contentment.

“Give her to me,” Surya said, dropping the sword and reaching for the girl. The woman did as instructed without question, her eyes filled with the light of the flames. “There now. Rest. Lean against the tree.”

As Surya took the warm weight of the child into her arms, the woman sank down and settled against one of the lirs. Her burned face was peaceful as she watched the fire. Surya spared a moment to look at her, and what she saw was worrying. But the reia must be her first concern now.

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