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Lawless
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Lawless
By Janeen Ippolito
© 2017 Janeen Ippolito
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, subject line “Attention: Permissions Coordinator,” at [email protected].
Uncommon Universes Press LLC
621 N. Mulberry St.
Berwick, PA 18603
www.uncommonuniverses.com
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Copyediting by Sarah McConahy
Proofreading by Sarah Delena White
Cover Design by Julia Busko – www.juliabusko.com
Dedication
To Kathy Anischenko.
Love ya, Gram!
Table of Contents
Map
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
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Map
Chapter 1
One benefit of illegal missions: there were no high and mighty leaders questioning everything you did.
But beware fleetwings who tried to fill the gap.
Kesia huffed a stream of smoke at her tactical partner and thought back.
His Talent was the only reason she was alive. An ordinary soldier caught on an illegal mission would face severe punishment. A criminal like her would face immediate execution. Unless she brought home reconnaissance, something to earn her enough respect for her past to be erased.
Something like spying on the Congruency’s newest airship and prized captain.
A thread of panic stirred her. No more thinking, or else she would never do it. She flapped her wings, coming close enough to Zephryn to flick her long tail across his back.
She glided in slow circles beneath the ship, smelling the acrid scents of oil-fuel and smoke. Airships had once been vessels of beauty and artistry, used for pleasure excursions and merchant expeditions. After the war began, the Scepter of Industry had made new advancements, ones that stung the eyes of dragons and corrupted the air.
Kesia brought her attention back to the mission.
What should she be? Stifling a bubble of laughter, she closed her eyes.
Raven.
She shifted. Her dragon form shrank and was consumed by paper-thin skin and feathers. Kesia fought dizziness at the sudden loss of mass and angled her body to adjust for the night winds that buffeted her far more than before. Zephryn’s Talent could get them perilously close to the airship, but hers would allow her to hop aboard.
Kesia shook off the thoughts and flapped her wings harder. She enjoyed this form. It was fast and fleet.
She croaked irritably.
Kesia could picture Zephryn’s peevish look, one with a faint undertone of playfulness that made her enjoy teasing him more.
She closed her eyes and shifted again, this time to another, smaller bird. By the time she reached the top-most mast of the ship, she had gained control of her new sun-dove form. Kesia landed gracefully on a crosspiece and settled her wings about herself, fanning the brilliant yellow plumage underlaid with pale blue feathers. Zephryn couldn’t possibly object to this choice. Sun-doves were migratory birds that followed winter across the land of Sekastra. All human travelers saw them as good omens.
Dragons like her saw them as snacks.
Kesia chirped again, this time in a fluting tone.
It was one of the few joys she had as a Pinnacle prisoner, and she was loath to lose it.
She released her grip on the crosspiece and flitted lower, veering around the smaller sails and taking in each aspect of the ship. It was an archaic one, made entirely of wood. Most modern airships were made using some kind of alloy. Using masts and sails was a vanity custom, as useless as jewels on a dragon’s wings. All the real power came from the masked but foul-smelling engine.
“Oye! There’s a sun-dove. Good fortune on us all!” An answering chorus arose from the deck, and out of the corner of her eye, she spied numerous hands pointing her out or raising mugs in her direction. She spied a few tables laden with food and beverages, and most of the crew seemed relaxed. A few of the humans had even loosened the collars of their tunics.
Zephryn said.
Kesia felt a pang of jealousy for her fleetwing’s knowledge. Criminals were highly limited in their education. Why waste time on a dragon who could be executed at any moment? She studied the ship further. Wings spread out on either side of the silver-toned masthead, which was crowned with—
Kesia made an annoyed squawk. Zephryn had a point. They had sneaked far away from the Cloudpeaks on this excursion. This airship was within the territory of the Scepter of Commerce. All the more reason for Zephryn’s worry; they were on enemy turf.
Yet, he had allowed her to coax him into the mission, sneaking her out of her cell after the tactical lockdown. Zephryn didn’t have to abide by the lockdown; it was one of the few benefits allotted to the only remaining member of the old royal family. But freeing her was still a risk. He could be sentenced to days of discipline in the flay-room. Her fleetwing managed to avoid punishment with astonishing ease, but direct disobedience of the law on behalf of a convict?
Not even a prince could dodge that.
She had better make this worth his trouble. Kesia flitted closer, chancing a perch on the railing of the ship. It was finely polished, making her grip difficult until she dug her nails in.
Another cheer rang up from the crew. Her feathers fluffed in pity. If only they knew who she was. This war made dragon and human friendship impossible. But right now, she was a sun-dove. She would enjoy people desiring her company, for once.
“Ack, be gone with you!”
Or not.
Kesia fluttered her wings in protest, skittering away from the gray-haired woman who swatted at her.
“None of that, Virna.” Another voice spoke up, this one with a light, pleasant cadence that was far more cultured. “A sun-dove is always a gift. The railing is all the better blessed for her claw marks.”
“Begging your pardon, Cap’n, but the shipbuilders spent days shining up that piece.” Virna gestured around vaguely. “All these here pieces! And you’ll let some common pigeon muck that up, will you? Spit on the Congruency’s generosity like that, will you?”
The other speaker walked into her field of vision, a tall man with blond hair and a finely-trimmed beard. “I appreciate all the efforts the Congruency has made on behalf of this vessel and all of their favor on me. And that is why I will not curse The Silver Streak by showing unkindness to a simple bird.”
Kesia gave the captain a second look. Fitted tan pants, tall brown boots, and a plain black waistcoat over a dark blue long-sleeved shirt. The standard attire for an airship captain. It was the silver insignia fastened over his right shoulder that drew her attention. Not simply a captain, but an elite squadron leader. It explained the extravagance of the ship.
“A’right then, Cap’n Windkeeper. It’s as you say.” The gray-haired woman brushed off the sleeves beneath her black waistcoat and gave Kesia a last glare.
A Windkeeper? Their entire line featured humans Talented with manipulating the winds. She had happened upon one of the most powerful individuals in the enemy camp. Never mind that Windkeeper was a dragon surname. Whatever ties he and his forebears had had with dragons had been lost long ago to gunfire and bloodshed.
The captain nodded to her sharply, then turned back to Kesia with a wry look, the authority dropping from his gaze like an unwanted mask. “Sometimes I think you have it a lot easier, my feathered friend.”
She gave a trill. Hopefully that would win his affections even more and allow her free range of the ship.
He laughed. “Perhaps not. After all, dragons go after you, don’t they? I remember reading that in my studies. It seems like we’re on the same side.”
Kesia resisted the urge to bristle. Sun-doves made a good treat; every dragon knew that. It wasn’t like the humans cared for sun-doves any more than dragons did, except as meaningless symbols. Though Captain Windkeeper seemed more sentimental than most.
She could use that. With another trill, she hazarded a quick flight to his shoulder. In turn, he cautiously stroked her head.
A shrill chirp escaped Kesia.
She surveyed the ship. Three levels: a central bridge, the poop on one side, and cabins on the aft. More like a pleasure ship than a warship, but appearances were deceiving. She spied the gleaming bronze multi-fire guns on either side of the railing, sixteen total. In the masts, more pipework coiled around the beams. Some new kind of weapon?
Kesia tweaked at the captain’s hair around his ear, earning a gentle look of reproval and another head rub, this one angled around her neck. Giving her delicate skin a scratch in just the right place. A coo escaped her. He was certainly an animal lover.
Unless those animals were dragons.
Her enjoyment cooled. This man had killed her people. Not her father, though; Kesia had taken care of that herself.
She fidgeted, hoping Captain Windkeeper would move. Something was coming out of the pipes, and it smelled even more foul than the oil fuel. At least the fuel was a known factor, one that she had almost become used to, but this was sickening. Just a few breaths made her lightheaded.
Time to fly.
Then the pipes exploded in a fury of flames and bilious green stench.
Chapter 2
He had to save the sun-dove.
Shance shoved away the absurd thought. The bird had flown away the moment the blast broke through the ship. His next thoughts involved more important matters: keeping The Silver Streak from ripping in half and making sure his crew didn’t die.
He took a deep breath and mentally reached out for the winds that always came at his command. Only faint breezes drifted around him. He frowned and extended his hand, calling with his Talent to every part of the fetid air.
A whisper of pressure on his palm was the only response.
“Oh, Fiarston,” he cursed. Not that he believed in the sky god or any of the others whose temples peopled the four Scepters. No one could count on gods to come through.
Right now, Shance had to save his crew. And he couldn’t.
What devilry was this smoke? Dragon made? But there was no evidence of dragons using weapons. They preferred flames and complicated sky maneuvers. Could a Talented dragon make nauseating green smoke bombs?
He forced down the panic knotting his chest.
Time for option two.
“Get to the parachute boats!” He coughed on the noxious green smoke, gripping the side of the plummeting airship. “All hands to the parachutes! I want you whole for our next mission!”
A pause.
Shance could sense the unspoken question; why wasn’t he saving their asses?
There was no time to explain what he himself didn’t understand.
“That’s an order! Now!”
“Aye!”
Crewmen and officers ran across the deck, stumbling toward the craft at the bottom of the vessel. Soon the small tan blimps of the parachute boats floated into view.
Relief flooded him. At least they would be safe. The ship was close to the Scepter of Commerce. If his crew used their parachute boat propellers well, they might land in one of the Trebbian Seas that surrounded the city.
Virna’s gray eyes crinkled, and her mouth was a sharp line. “Sir! R’spectfully, yer needed in those boats just as much as the rest, if not more!”
Explosions seared his ears into senseless ringing, and wood bits splintered his fingers as he grasped the tilted railing. So much for Virna’s concern over the polish.
“There are other captains—”
“Yer a Windkeeper!”
“There are other Windkeepers!” The planking split and cracked beneath their feet, and the ship careened
in a haphazard, dizzying spiral. Virna’s solid figure skidded along the deck. “They’re not you! The captain—”
“The captain is ordering you to the parachute boats! Question me, and I’ll have your hide for insubordination!”
Virna clenched her hands into fists, then nodded and gave a quick salute, the bent finger joints of her right fist touching her lips. “Aye, sir!”
She ran toward the parachute boats. More of the small vessels floated toward the Trebbian Seas, where they would alight gently in the water.
“Ships in the water,” Shance grunted. “What a novel thought.”
The deck below him sagged. He braced his feet into a corner, trying to leverage his weight. One false step and the planks would slant vertical.
The pride of the Scepter’s air fleet might be on fire, broken in half, and wreathed in green smoke that smelled like rotten eggs, but still, Shance had made a vow to bring it safely back to port every time.
Windkeeper honor.
“Come on! Work, you stupid ancestral wind tunnel!”
Shance flung out his hand once more, his heart beating like the parachute boat propellers. There was another sickening blast and puff of bilgey smoke from his ship, but no wind. Only the slow sinking of the deck beneath him as it finally gave way. Pieces of wood dug deeper into his palms as he desperately reached for any part of The Silver Streak to stop his fall. The grooved wood panels offered no purchase.
His hands were on fire, swelling with blisters. That would put a damper on his love life. Shance fell through the cool, empty air. A hoarse cry mixed with a panicked laugh escaped his throat, and he leaned forward. He may as well know where he would meet his death.
The blankness of dark earth greeted him. Even if it had been water, he would still have met his end; at this height, the waves would have offered no cushion.
Adrenaline surged through him, bringing new vigor to his mind. Shance stripped off his waistcoat, shirt, and undertunic, discarding all but the shirt. If he could collect even a small gust or two of wind, maybe he could slow his descent enough to avert death. He gripped the shirt cuffs tightly, ignoring the pain from his blood-smeared hands, and extended his arms behind him, calling any wind he could to his aid.