The Devil Eats Here (Multi-Author Short Story Collection) (13 page)

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Authors: Alice Gaines,Rayne Hall,Jonathan Broughton,Siewleng Torossian,John Hoddy,Tara Maya,John Blackport,Douglas Kolacki,April Grey

BOOK: The Devil Eats Here (Multi-Author Short Story Collection)
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JOHN HODDY
is a retired nuclear engineer and former submariner, living in Southern California where he shares quarters with a wife and four cats. A member of his college magazine features staff, he published three short speculative fiction stories before setting creative writing aside until recently returning to the craft with a young adult fantasy novel.
Rejection Letter
represents his first short fiction in over 30 years. A subsequently written piece,
Decision of the Council,
earned runner-up honors in an international writing contest sponsored by
AlienSkin
magazine and was later published in
AlienSkin.

 

DOUGLAS KOLACKI
began writing while stationed with the Navy in Naples, Italy, published numerous stories in San Diego, and recently completed a cross-country trek to his new home in Providence, Rhode Island. His short story credits include
Weird Tales, Dragons Knights & Angels,Haunted: Ten Tales of Ghosts, Bites: Ten Tales of Vampires, Cutlass: Ten Tales of Pirates
and
Big Pulp.
His published novels are
Elijah's Chariot
and
On the Eighth Day, God Created Trilby Richardson.
You can find his ebooks on Amazon at
http://www.amazon.com/Douglas-Kolacki/e/B0072BVUCC

 

TARA MAYA
loves rampaging robots, undersea unicorns, magic gone amuck, science turned apocalyptic, pirates dueling gladiators, kittens, cannibals and all things weird and wonderful. She has lived in Africa, Europe and Asia, pounded sorghum with mortar and pestle in a little clay village where the jungle meets the desert, meditated in a Buddhist monastery in the Himalayas and sailed the Volga river to a secret city that was once the heart of the Soviet space program. This first-hand experience, as well as research into the strange and piquant histories of lost civilizations, inspires her writing. Her terrible housekeeping, however, is entirely the fault of pixies.

She has studied ancient and modern history, sometimes even in school. She is the author of
The Unfinished Song,
an epic fantasy series in which two lovers are caught between the schemes of the Fae and the Deathsworn and
Conmergence,
a collection of speculative fiction short stories. She blogs at Tara Maya’s Tales:
http://taramayastales.blogspot.com/

 

SIEWLENG TOROSSIAN
grew up in Singapore and lives in the USA. She devotes her time to family and her passion for books and writing. She writes science fiction and fantasy and is currently working on two novellas of speculative fiction.

 

 

DEAR READER,

 

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To find out about more fiction by some of these writers, read the excerpts on the following pages.

Rayne Hall

 

 

 

From the epic fantasy series
The Unfinished Song
by Tara Maya:

 

At the High Table, the chief stood up. “I accept the Staff of Peace. To treat for peace, I will send as my envoys seven honored ones, with another seven to serve them, and Kavio the Exile to lead them all.”

Dindi felt her heart squeeze. Kavio would be leaving… without her. There was no way he could keep his pledge to teach her dancing.

While the crowd buzzed, and Jensi and Yodigo eagerly debated the trustworthiness of the Blue Waters tribe, Dindi pushed her food around on the eating mat. She knew some women somewhere had toiled over the delicacies, and it seemed a pity to waste the food, but she had lost her appetite.

“Dindi.”

She jumped. She would recognize the disapproval in that voice anywhere.

Brena loomed over her. Dindi scrambled to her feet, trying to guess what she had done wrong this time, to make Brena hunt her down and glower at her like that.

“Dindi, you have been chosen to be a serving maiden for the peace party,” said Brena. “Come with me now, please. I’ll tell you what to pack. We leave at once.”

He did it,
thought Dindi.
He found a way for us to be together.

Brena strode away without looking back, forcing Dindi to run to catch up.

“We?” she asked belatedly.

“Gwenika and I will be going as well,” said Brena. She stopped so abruptly that Dindi bumped into her back. Brena glared at her.

“Sorry,” said Dindi.

“Please understand,” said Brena. “My daughter will be going because Zavaedi Danumoro thinks highly of her healing skills, and Gwenika needs a handmaiden to help her carry her things. But you are there to serve her, not get her into mischief. Do you understand?”

“Yes,” said Dindi.

“I will be watching you as keenly as a hunting owl watches a mouse on the rooftop,” added Brena. “If I catch you in any kind of misbehavior, lies, tomfoolery,
anything askew at all,
I will find out. It will not be pleasant for you. Do you understand?”

“Owl. Mouse. Got it,” said Dindi. She tried to smile ingratiatingly, but Brena just snorted in disgust and began to walk away again, as if what she really wanted to do was leave Dindi behind. Dindi didn’t care. Inside, she wanted to sing. She skipped after Brena. Kavio had found a way. Nothing could go wrong now. She wouldn’t let it.

 

 

From the dark epic fantasy novel
Storm Dancer
by Rayne Hall:

 

Even in the shade of the graffiti-carved olive tree, the air sang with heat. Dahoud listened to the hum of voices in the tavern garden, the murmured gossip about royals and rebels. If patrons noticed him, they would only see a young clerk sitting among the lord-satrap's followers, a harmless bureaucrat. Dahoud planned to stay harmless.

The tavern bustled with women - whiteseers hanging about in the hope of earning a copper, traders celebrating deals, bellydancers clinking finger cymbals - women who neither backed away from him nor screamed. The youngest of the entertainers wound her way between the benches towards their table, the tassels on her slender hips bouncing, the rows of copper rings on her sash tinkling with every snaky twist. Since she seemed nervous, as if it was her first show, he sent her an encouraging smile. Ignoring him, she shimmied to Lord Govan.

The djinn slithered inside Dahoud, stirring a stream of fury, whipping his blood into a hot storm.
Would she dare to disregard the Black Besieger? What lesson would the Besieger teach to punish her insolence?

Dahoud stared past her sweat-glistening torso, the urge to subdue her washing over him in a boiling wave. For three years, he had battled against the djinn's temptations. To indulge in fantasies would batter his defences and breach his resistance. He focused on the flavours on his tongue, the tart citron juice and the sage-spiced mutton, on the tender texture of the meat.

Govan clasped the dancer's wrist and drew her close. “Come, honey-flower, let's see your blossoms.”

She tried to pull herself from his grip. Panic painted her face. Against a lesser man's groping, she might defend herself with slaps and screams, but this was the lord-satrap. She was too young to know how to slip out of such a situation, and none of her older colleagues on the far side of the garden noticed her plight. The other clerks at the table laughed.

“My Lord,” Dahoud said. “She doesn't want your attentions.”

“She’s only a bellydancer.” Contempt oiled Govan's voice. Still, he released the girl’s hand, slapped her on the rump, and watched her scurry towards the safety of the musicians. “These performers are advertised as genuine Darrians. I have a mind to have them arrested for fraud. I suspect ...” He ran the tip of his finger along his eating bowl. “They're mere Samilis.”

Dahoud, himself a Samili, refused to react to the jab. Govan was not only satrap of the province, but Dahoud's employer, as well as the father of the lovely Esha.

“Samilis are everywhere these days.” Peering down his nose, Govan swirled the wine in his beaker. “Not that I have anything against Samilis. Given the right kind of education, their race can develop remarkable intelligence, practically equal to that of Quislakis. They can make valuable contributions to society.” He stroked the purple fringe of his armband, insignia of his rank. “Provided they respect their betters.”

The other clerks at the table bobbed their chins in eager agreement.

Dahoud the Besieger would not have tolerated taunts from this pompous peacock, but Dahoud the clerk had to bow. Submission was the price for guarding his secret.

At the entry arch, a short man in the yellow tunic and turban of a royal rider was consulting with the tavern keeper.

“Is that messenger looking for you, my Lord?” Dahoud asked.

Govan shifted into his official pose and summoned the man with a flick of his sandalwood fan. The courier walked on bowed legs as if he still had a mount between his thighs. Conversations halted, glances followed him, and whiteseers peered, anticipating business.

Lord Govan put on his official smile to receive the leather-wrapped parcel.

“Forgive me, my Lord,” the herald said. “The message I carry is for Dahoud, the clerk.”

Govan’s hand pulled back and his smile vanished.

Dahoud's stomach went cold: The Queen or her Consort would not write to an ordinary clerk. After three years of respite, his anonymity was breached. He stripped off the camel-skin wrap and broke the scroll's seal. The ends of the purple ribbon dropped into the mutton sauce.

“The High Lord Kirral, Consort to the Great Luminous Queen, greets Dahoud, council clerk in the satrapy of Idjlara: Present yourself at the palace without delay. The Queendom needs the Black Besieger. K.”

The expansive curves of the signature “K” claimed more space on the parchment than the message.

In his bowl, the uneaten mutton was going cold, whitish grease separating from the sauce. A large fly drifted belly-up in the liquid, its legs clawing for a hold in the air. The memories of siege warfare wrapped around Dahoud, those sour-sweet odours of fear and faeces, of disease and burning flesh.

At twenty-five, he had a conscience heavier than a brick-carrier’s tray and more curses on his head than a mangy dog had fleas. He had left the legion to cut himself off temptation, to deprive the djinn of fodder. After a siege, rape was legal, a soldier's right, practically expected of him, part of the job. By returning to war, he would forfeit his victories over his craving. The djinn would again be his master.

Yet he ached to wear the general's cloak again, to silence sneering bureaucrats, to make women take notice. He lusted for that power the way a heavy drinker, deprived of his solace, ached for a sip of wine. The yearning to wield a sword ached in his arms, his chest throbbed with the urge to command, and his loins flamed with the dark desire. He felt the panting breaths of women and their hot resisting bodies, smelled the scent of female fright and sweating fury.

“Why is the Consort writing to you?” Govan leant forward to grab the document. “You’re out of your depth with royal matters. I'll read and explain.”

“Why should I want your counsel?” Dahoud tucked the rolled parchment into his belt.

“Don’t get pert, Samili!” Govan barked. “Give me that letter.”

“The Consort summons.” Dahoud rose. “Good afternoon, my Lord. Don't expect me back soon.”

He strode to the exit, his mind reeling like a spindle. Could he deny that he was the Besieger? Refuse a royal order? Lead an army without stimulating the djinn?

On a low stone wall near the entrance gate, a row of whiteseers perched like hungry birds. Whiteseers had glimpses of futures others could not even imagine. One of them slid off the wall and sauntered in his direction. A coating of pale clay covered her sharp-boned triangular face and her long hair, and painted black and blue rings adorned her clay-whitened arms.

“Your hands,” she demanded.

“I need to know what will happen if -”

“Give your copper to a soothsayer,” she snapped. “We white ones only give advice. We can see the future; we can see several futures for everyone, but we won’t tell you all we see.”

“Advice is all I want.”

“That’s what they all say. Yet everyone asks for more. I give one piece of advice, the best I can give to help a client. They always demand that I tell them what I see. Well, I won’t.” Nevertheless, she grabbed the copper ring from Dahoud’s fingers and threaded it on her neck-thong. Her tunic smelled of old sweat and mouldy wool.

She grasped his hands to pinch their flesh, her long nails tickling. Her white paint contrasted with Dahoud’s bronze tan. When she felt the pulse and lifted his hand to her face to listen and sniff, he could have sworn he saw her blanch under the white clay as her closed eyes stared into his past. She sagged forward and stayed in a silent slouch.

At last she straightened, her eyes wide, her mouth open, but no words burst forth. So she had seen what he had done, and worse, what he might do once more.

“I assure you, I'll never again...”

“I can’t read if you chatter.” She frowned at his hands. “My advice: Get stronger arms.”

He flexed his biceps, startled. “My arms
are
strong! I do trickriding, I wrestle, I lift weights.” Every night, Dahoud exercised until his muscles screamed, to block out his cravings and punish his body for its desires.

The seer’s mouth curled with contempt, making more clay crumble. “You’re not listening. I didn't say
strong.
I said
stronger.”
She pinched his biceps. “Much stronger.”

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