The Crimson Claymore

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Authors: Craig A. Price Jr.

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy

BOOK: The Crimson Claymore
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Contents

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Map

Prologue

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 45

Chapter 46

Chapter 47

Epilogue

Back Matter

Acknowledgments

Characters

Races

Land & Cities

Glossary

About the Author

The Crimson Claymore

 

Claymore of Calthoria

Book 1

 

 

By Craig A. Price Jr.

 

 

Copyright
©
2015 by Craig A. Price Jr.

First edition
All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the copyright owner, except for “fair use” as attributed quotations in reviews of the book.

All characters in this work are fictional. Any likenesses to persons or situations are entirely coincidental.

Cover design by
Treasure Scarbrough

Map inspired by Craig A. Price Jr. & Designed by Treasure Scarbrough

 

 

Dedicated to Mary Quimbey,

Thank you, Mom, for always believing in me.

 

Prologue

 

S
earon ambled through the alleyways of crowded Augealia, completely ignoring the merchants who hounded him with their entreaties. He knew that they had seen him giving a small bag of coins to a poor beggar woman and her children and no doubt figured he had plenty to spare. He dared not meet their gaze, but kept his steady pace as he walked past them. Suddenly, something walloped into him from behind that made him stagger and nearly tumble to the ground.

It was a young girl, grown barely higher than his waist, with a loaf of fresh bread in her arms. The smell taunted his stomach as she looked up at him with her watery blue eyes. He understood her fear—he was probably the most intimidating man in the crowd in his plate mail and scabbard, except, of course, for the two guards with short scimitars in pursuit of the girl. He glanced back down at her. She cowered in fear. He reached down to grab her arm, but she was too quick, and she dashed away through the crowd, stopping only long enough to stick her tongue out at him.

Searon gaped at the girl as she receded into the distance. She had some nerve, although it was hard for him to judge: Was she was merely a thief, or a true survivor? She didn’t look as if she had any money, with her torn cotton and leather dress, and her dirt-stained hair, about which he could only wonder—had it once been blonde? Her smudged face looked as if it hadn’t been washed in months. He tried to catch up to her, sprinting now, but she was far too quick for him.

The guards had reached him and bumped into him, but ignored him and sprinted on, intent only on catching the girl. In their loose chain mail, they made entirely too much racket and seemed mere footmen compared to Searon, with his finely honed tracking skills, and it was amusing to watch them fall behind the clever girl. Searon knew by the way they chased the girl from behind, with little regard for tranquility, that their intellect wasn’t very high; he knew well that was never the best way to catch someone.

Searon cut through a few shops and into an alley. He figured if the young girl had been stealing food to feed herself, she’d have made a roundabout back through the shops to lose the guards. Instead of foolishly joining the chase, he decided to intercept her when she headed back.

Every stone wall in the nearly deserted alleys was spiderwebbed with cracks. The village did not appear to have spent money to fix them for a long time. It had just stopped raining, and water draining down was even now eroding the cracks ever deeper. A few crows looked down at him from the rooftops. Searon followed a small gravelly path through the still puddles. When ripples began to form on the surface of the puddles, Searon looked up to see what could be making them. Fast footsteps echoed in the water in a chill whisper.

The young girl splashed into plain sight from a side alley. Searon swiftly turned and dashed into the next alley. His ears were keen, and he was able to discern her position with more certainty than most other humans. He rushed out from his hiding spot and grabbed her. She kicked and bit but did not scream. Her mouth was glued shut so she would not divulge her location to the guards, who were most likely lost in another alley. But Searon couldn’t hold her for long. Her tiny foot connected with his groin, hard, and she wriggled away.

The excruciating pain sent shivers down his spine, and he dropped to his knees, his vision blurring. This tiny girl had grounded him worse than anyone ever had. The games were over, and he unsheathed his claymore. The silver blade glowed crimson in the shadows. Tears like sparkling sapphires welled up in the girl’s soft blue eyes.

“What is your name?” Searon said in a tone as gentle as he could muster, hoping to not startle her.

She stared up at him, quivering, holding herself in a firm hug.

“Charlotte.”

Searon sighed and sheathed his claymore. He wished no harm to come to the little girl, but she seemed too frightened to give him any helpful information, especially with the guards still on her trail.

“Where are your mother and father?” His voice was soft as a warm autumn rain. But somehow he knew that no parents in their right minds would be letting their daughter run aimlessly through the markets to steal food.

“They are no more,” she whispered. There was no sorrow in her voice, only irritation—a true sign of her having been on her own for far too long.

Searon nodded. He knew if they were still alive they’d be risking their own lives for food rather than their daughter’s. At least that was how it would have been if he were her father. He felt sorry for the little girl. She didn’t need to be living like that from day to day, each day draining a little more of the innocence from her youth.

“Come, you must pay for this food. It is not right to steal,” he declared, holding out his hand to her. She dared not budge. He didn’t really expect her to; he only wanted to guide her along her way.

“But I have no money,” she spat out, almost crying. He looked at her rags. If she’d even had a pocket to keep money, once upon a time, anything that might have resembled one had been torn away.

“Do you know where the captain of this village’s army is?” Searon asked politely. He held his chest high, as if to impress her.

“Yes,” she muttered, and backed up a few steps. She appeared confused. She was frowning, and he could tell that she wanted to show him that she wasn’t afraid, no matter what he did or said.

“I must meet with him. If you lead me to him, I will pay you,” Searon said. He lay down his claymore to show her he meant no harm.

“Why?”

“There are some very bad creatures out there. The captain may know where I can find them. Can you take me to him?”

He unclipped a bag from his sash and handed it to her. Heavier than the one he had just given away, it was all gold coins, his emergency fund. It should be plenty for her to buy food for some while. Besides, he didn’t need it half as badly as she.

He observed her closely. The bag was so heavy that she staggered and had to grasp it with both hands. She gazed up at him in blissful wonder, her eyes still full of tears, but also gratitude. Her face glowed. She had the biggest, brightest smile now, and her teeth were perfectly white. Despite everything else she had been through, she knew how to take care of her teeth.

“Follow me,” she said with a giggle. She dashed away through the alleyways as gleefully as though she were skipping through a meadow of beautiful flowers. Searon followed her only a few paces behind. Even though he was clad in silver and crimson plate armor, he barely made a sound. Finally, Charlotte turned from the dirt pathways into a main road, completely empty of traffic. Searon stopped and stared. Ravens glared down from the rooftops at a pearly, octagonal building at the road’s end. Charlotte nodded at the building and made a tiny gesture with her hand.

A few men talked among themselves. They barely paid heed to either Charlotte or Searon standing there. Blacksmiths’ hammers pounding steel echoed up and down the road, which was made of colorful stone rather than dirt, in tans, blacks, grays, and reds, all laid out in a very precise pattern.

She stood behind him. Her voice shivered. “Sir Knight…please do not make me go any farther.”

Searon turned around and smiled at the young child kneeling in front of him. “Thank you for your help, child. You may go now, but promise me you will get yourself a fine meal and a good night’s sleep.”

“I promise!” The little girl beamed up at him.

“May the stars shine over you and light up your path for the future,” he whispered.

“Thank you, sir!” She bowed, dashed back into the alleys, and disappeared.

 

Chapter 1

 

S
earon’s claymore was in his hands, glowing red, sparkling as he twirled it about to deflect blows from axes all around him. And yet, even as he defended himself against the black-scaled reptilian draeyks, the blazing orange eyes he saw in his dreams the night before were still the only thing on his mind. He felt as if those eyes were watching him still, and he could almost swear to have seen them through the thick forest enveloping him. Three draeyks lay dead on the ground. The stench of distilled vinegar and rotten eggs brought an awful taste in his mouth, taking away the scent of pine that he treasured so much.

Only two of the creatures remained, both cunning warriors but frightened at his skill with a blade. He didn’t understand why he was having such a hard time killing the savage creatures. For the past three years, Searon had been slaughtering a few each and every day, yet it never seemed like it would be enough. There was only one of him, and there seemed to be thousands of the wretched creatures. Sometimes, it felt as if they would never be destroyed but would keep coming back to haunt him in his nightmares.

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