Read The Kraken King, Part 7 Online

Authors: Meljean Brook

The Kraken King, Part 7

Titles by Meljean Brook

The Guardian Series

DEMON
ANGEL

DEMON
MOON

DEMON
NI
GHT

DEMON
BOUND

DEMO
N
FORGED

DEMON
BLOOD

DEMON
MARKED

GUARDI
AN
DEMON

Novels of the Iron Seas

THE
IRON
D
UKE

HEART
OF
STEEL

R
IVETED

MINA
WENTWORT
H
AND
THE
INVISIBLE
CITY

(A Berkley Sensation Special Novella)

TETHERED

(A Berkley Sensation Special Novella)

HERE
THERE
BE
MONSTERS

(A Berkley Sensation Special Novella)

THE
KRAKEN
KING

Part I: The Kraken King and the Scribbling Spinster

Part II: The Kraken King and the Abominable Worm

Part III: The Kraken King and the Fox's Den

Part IV: The Kraken King and the Inevitable Abduction

Part V: The Kraken King and the Iron Heart

Part VI: The Kraken King and the Crumbling Walls

Part VII: The Kraken King and the Empress's Eyes

Anthologies

HOT
SPELL

(with Emma Holly, Lora Leigh, and Shiloh Walker)

WILD
THING

(with Maggie Shayne, Marjorie M. Liu, and Alyssa Day)

FIRST
BLOOD

(with Susan Sizemore, Erin McCarthy, and Chris Marie Green)

MUST
LOVE
H
ELLHOUNDS

(with Charlaine Harris, Nalini Singh, and Ilona Andrews)

BURNING
U
P

(with Angela Knight, Nalini Singh, and Virginia Kantra)

ANGELS
OF
DARKNES
S

(with Nalini Singh, Ilona Andrews, and Sharon Shinn)

ENTHRALLED

(with Lora Leigh, Alyssa Day, and Lucy Monroe)

The Kraken King

Part VII

The Kraken King and the Empress's Eyes

Meljean Brook

InterMix Books, New York

INTERMIX BOOKS

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (USA) LLC

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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

THE KRAKEN KING AND THE EMPRESS'S EYES

An InterMix Book / published by arrangement with the author

PUBLISHING
HISTORY

InterMix eBook edition / May 2014

Copyright © 2014 by Meljean Brook.

Excerpt from
Here There Be Monsters
copyright © 2012 by Meljean Brook.

Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

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No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author's rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

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eBook ISBN: 978-1-101-63926-9

INTERMIX

InterMix Books are published by The Berkley Publishing Group

and New American Library, divisions of Penguin Group (USA) LLC,

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®
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Version_1

Contents

Titles by Meljean Brook

Title Page

Copyright

Letter

Chapter Twenty-five

Chapter Twenty-six

Chapter Twenty-seven

Chapter Twenty-eight

Special Excerpt from
Here There Be Monsters

About the Author

The Imperial City, Nippon

June 6

My dear fearless brother,

I've finally done something that you haven't, despite all of your travels: Today I crossed a coral bridge in the Living City. You should applaud me. It was a terrifying endeavor. The bridge traversed the river between two of the city's tallest towers, and was high enough that an airship flew beneath our feet as we walked its length.

So please applaud me. Because I am wretched and cannot congratulate myself.

Oh, Archimedes. There have been times when I unexpectedly received from you long letters that were more revealing than any of your other messages. I came to recognize that those letters were written while you faced some mortal danger—such as when your spark lighter died in the mountains and an ice storm closed in, when you were trapped while zombies battered a crumbling door in Venice, and when you were courting Captain Corsair. So many letters. And each time, I believed that you wrote them as a farewell, so that there would be nothing left unsaid if you weren't lucky enough to escape the danger. But I was utterly wrong, wasn't I? I didn't realize it until now, when it is my turn to write a longer letter.

If you could see the bridges, you would be all amazement. From the moment I spotted similar walkways in the Fox Den, I wanted to run across them, yet they are nothing compared to those in the imperial city. Were a sunset to be poured into the shape of a building, it would resemble the towers, and the bridges are filaments stretching between them—appearing so thin and unsubstantial from a distance, but upon drawing nearer, the strength of the structure reveals itself. Sunlight glitters over the coral as if it had been fashioned of crushed crystal. The flowering vines winding through the balustrade create a parade of blossoms in the loveliest pinks and red. The roadway is rough-textured, so there is no danger of slipping, and wide; a steamcart rolled past us with room to spare for a buggy on its other side.

Yet from the moment I stepped onto the bridge, the urge to flee back to the tower flattened my courage. I could barely force myself to cross it, even though our destination was the most splendid temple I've ever seen. If Mara and Helene weren't with me, and the thought of revealing my distress hadn't been so unendurable, I don't know that I would have ventured more than a few paces.

I felt certain, utterly
certain
, that as soon as I began to cross it, the bridge would fall out from under me.

And I can't account for the fear. There are so many things I'm afraid of, yet great heights has never been one. It was nothing to look over the side, even as I walked. But not a second passed that I didn't feel the terror of the bridge dropping from beneath my feet. It makes so little sense. How many balloons have we jumped from together with gliders strapped to our backs? I didn't feel the same fear then.

I don't know when I became this woman. My distrust of
people
is a sensible one. How many have given me reason to be cautious? Yet now I'm distrusting even solid structures. What will be next? Will I stop eating, fearing that I'll choke because I won't trust my teeth to properly chew my dinner?

No doubt you are laughing at me as you read this. You are pointing at what I've written and shaking your head because the true source of my fears is all so obvious. Laugh all you like, my brother. I've written far too many stories to be incognizant of how one fear represents another . . . and I have just been married.

I love him. More than ever I believed possible. Never did there exist a man more suited to both my heart and my mind. And despite the turmoil surrounding us, these past few days have been the happiest I've ever known.

So I'm terrified that it will drop out from under me. I'm utterly certain that it will—and my heart has no glider to break my fall.

But I
did
cross the bridge. And I understand these longer letters now. They are not farewells, are they? Because what use would it be to write a good-bye that would be lost in the ice or a zombie's teeth? None at all. No, those letters were to remind you of every reason you had to escape the danger you were in, to fight past any hopelessness or despair. Because what good are the words you've written if they are never delivered? They would be naught but ink staining a paper clutched in a dead hand. They only mean something when the letter is read, and if you didn't fight, those words would never be said.

So I will battle my fears. And when you arrive, I hope to meet you on the other side, smiling.

Always,

Zenobia

Chapter Twenty-five

When Zenobia had begun sketching out her new story in the jellyfish balloon, the outline of a plot had almost written itself: a tinker would topple a tyrant.

So simple. And no wonder. She'd written it so many times before.

Sometimes the antagonist had been less of a tyrant and more of a villain, yet still Archimedes Fox had been there, fearless and charming, defeating the oppressor with his charm and his sword. He'd been followed by Lady Lynx, with her fearless swagger and perfect aim. Now Zenobia was writing about a tinker girl who would build a machine that could toss a despot from his throne. It was the same. Exactly the same. The girl was smaller and weaker than Archimedes Fox and Lady Lynx, but she was just as fearless, with a sharp tongue and brilliant mind—and with no real doubts about whether she would win.

Zenobia had gotten it all wrong. Every step her tinker took needed to be an act of courage—not just the final step, surrounded and protected by a mechanical suit. Her tinker needed to fear defeat. If she didn't, the victory would be too easy. Perhaps even meaningless.

Blast it all to hell. Every word she'd written, pure rubbish. Nothing to do but start over.

“Did you still intend to join us— Oh.” At the chamber door, Mara took a step back and spread her hands, as if in surrender. A bathing basket hung from her elbow. “I'll come back when you aren't as murderous.”

Murderous? Probably. But Zenobia had reason.

Pure rubbish.

She ripped the paper from beneath the typesetter and slapped the machine closed. “I'll come.” A bath had to be better than soaking in the foul dregs steaming from the pages in front of her. “Let me gather my things.”

As she stalked toward the screen shielding her dressing area, Mara came into the room and reached for the shredded page that had fluttered to the floor. “The work isn't going well?”

“I ought to burn it all.”

Like Ghazan Bator had burned Zenobia's last manuscript. Oh, he'd done her a favor. He'd done the
world
a favor, sparing them the offal dripping from her pen.

“I'm glad that you've been giving Helene duplicates to take with her, then.”

“I learned my lesson.” Zenobia belted the long, wide-sleeved robe that she'd purchased the previous day specifically for this purpose. There wasn't a single tub on their tier of the tower, and a bowl of warm water simply wouldn't do any longer, so she would traipse two levels down and frolic in a public bath. “There's always some rebel general waiting to throw my work on a fire.”

Though maybe it hadn't been such a favor.

“You didn't have Helene post this?” Mara asked, and Zenobia peeked around the screen. The mercenary had found Zenobia's letter to her brother, sealed and still sitting beside her typesetter.

“I wrote it after we returned from the temple walk this morning.” Though if Zenobia had written the letter earlier, she still wouldn't have given it to Helene to send. “And I didn't know where to have it posted. Archimedes must be on his way, don't you think?”

“Probably.”

“Then I'll wait to give it in person. Or have you do it. That would be best.”

“Why best?”

Because although Zenobia had the courage to give it to her brother now, she wasn't certain if she would when he arrived. Exposing so much of her heart—even to Archimedes—was difficult. Terrifying.

One step at a time.

She emerged from behind the screen. “It's best because I would probably burn it first.”

“Why would you— Oh. No. Don't tie that sash in the front. You might as well hike the hem up around your waist and hang a vendor's sign around your neck.”

Blast it all. Zenobia tugged the wide belt free. On their walks and in the Fox Den, she'd noted that most women wore it with the knot at the back, but there had been some who didn't. “I assumed it was just to make their stomachs look flat. And that those who tied it the other way were pregnant.”

Mara's brows shot up. “Are you?”

A prospect both wonderful and terrifying—but unlikely. The timing wasn't right. It had been almost a month since her menses and they were due again soon.

But it was possible. “If I am, I suppose I will know it before long. But I only knotted the sash in front because I couldn't figure out how to tie it behind my back.”

“You could have tied it in front and twisted it around to the back.”

And of course she told Zenobia that
after
she'd untied her knot. Snarling a little, she started over. “Why are these so impossibly wide? It is like tying a ship's sail around my waist.”

Grinning, Mara watched her struggle with the sash for another minute. “You're making a mess of that. Let me help.”

With a sigh, Zenobia let the mercenary do what she could. Her gaze landed on her typesetter, but she couldn't dredge up any irritation again. Instead her chest tightened with the same heavy and breathless anxiety that had filled her as she'd written Archimedes' letter.

These past few days had been so wonderful. Every moment with Ariq. These explorations through the city with her friends. Even the rubbish she'd written seemed better than anything she'd created before.

Dare she hope that it might endure?

Behind her, Mara said softly, “Helene didn't look very well when she left.”

“No.” Pale and ill, her friend had returned across the Red Wall shortly after they'd completed their trip to the temple. “I don't think the mask agrees with her.”

Or rather, the fear of what would happen if they were outside the quarantine and she was forced to choose between removing it or being sick in it.

Zenobia didn't know if Mara had guessed the truth of Helene's condition. Most likely, the mercenary had. But Zenobia wouldn't mention her friend's pregnancy; better to blame it wholly on the masks.

“I don't think they agree with anyone,” Mara said.

No. Not the people who wore them or the unmasked people who tried not to stare. “Perhaps we will stay in this tower on her next visit. As we can tolerate the masks better, you and I can go out alone.”

“You never ventured out so often in Fladstrand.”

“No.” Zenobia had liked that town well enough. There hadn't been as much to see, that was true. Yet that wasn't why she went out so often now. “I didn't care to go out. But even if we were back home, I couldn't be content staying in my parlor now.”

Even though she had just as much to write. Because the world had always been so small, and that had been her escape. But now . . . she wouldn't be content until the world around her felt as big as the one in her head.

“Well, I won't argue,” Mara said. The sash pulled tighter before loosening again. The mercenary huffed out a little breath and started over. “I can never tie the complicated ones. I'll have to use the same knot the men do. You're a foreigner, so no one will care.”

Zenobia didn't either. She would be untying it as soon as they reached the baths. “Why won't you argue? Did you and Cooper suffer such severe boredom in Fladstrand?”

“No. At first, perhaps, we wondered if we'd made a mistake. It was a drastic change for us. So quiet. We wondered if we should take on smaller jobs in addition to yours. Then the kidnapping attempts started. So it got better.”

“How fortunate for you, then, that so many blaggards were trying to abduct me.”

Mara laughed. “It was. It still is.”

“But . . . you wanted a quiet situation. To start a family.”

“Yes. But we don't want to sit and rust, either.”

And Zenobia had been worried they wouldn't renew their contract because of the danger she'd put them in? No wonder she liked writing stories so well. She would
never
understand real people. “Do you prefer being here? Aside from the masks—and the Empress's Eyes.”

Which were unavoidable. The clockwork devices watched them on every street, on every level of every tower. Only their personal chambers boasted any real privacy.

“Those are impossible to put aside,” Mara said before sighing. “I don't know whether I enjoy being here, or if I just enjoy the things that remind me of when I was a girl. Such as hearing the clack of the women's sandals. I'd forgotten that. But I used to hear it whenever my mother and I would walk through the Nipponese enclave in the Ivory Market. I don't have many memories of her. Mostly just of how she would lift the lid from a cooking pot and waft the steam to her face, and how beautiful her smile was when it smelled as she hoped it would. So it's . . . pleasant to be reminded of more.”

By the thickness in Mara's voice, Zenobia thought that
pleasant
couldn't convey the emotions the memories truly evoked. “It's good that you're here, then.”

“Yes.”

“Would you enjoy living in Krakentown?”

Oh, Zenobia hadn't meant to blurt out the question like that. Anxiety bound her chest again, pulling tighter and tighter when a brief silence fell, as if she'd surprised the other woman.

Finally Mara said, “Cooper and I would like it very much,” but the mercenary's response didn't make it easier for Zenobia to breathe.

“I love him,” she whispered, and now she'd exposed her heart to two people—her brother and her guard.

This time there was no hesitation before Mara replied, “I know.” She finished with the sash, and concern creased her brow when she came around to study Zenobia's face. “Are you well?”

Not trusting her voice, Zenobia nodded. She was perfectly well. She just had lungs that wouldn't breathe. A heart that wouldn't stop racing. And feet that didn't trust the ground beneath them.

But perhaps she should have expected this uncertainty. Her world had turned completely upside down in the past two months—quite literally. She stood in a different hemisphere on the opposite side of the earth from where she'd been. And she'd changed, too. When she'd left home, Zenobia hadn't been in love; now she was in so deep with Ariq that she could drown in it. She'd been a virgin; now she was so thoroughly ravished and eager to ravish him that every night had become an unending pleasure. She'd been a woman who hid and waited for ransom; now she would make a bludgeon and fashion her own escape.

In many ways, she was the same woman who'd boarded an airship in Fladstrand. But there had been shifts within her, some like shivers and some like earthquakes, and so it was no surprise that she wasn't yet steady.

And she'd worried that Ariq had fallen in love with the spy rather than the woman she was? It wouldn't have mattered if he'd known the truth. She would still be a different person now than the one he'd first met. She just had to trust that he would move with her when she shifted and quaked.

Not so easy, trust. Not so easy, hope. But the realization helped her settle a little.

Mara must have thought so, too. The concern smoothed away from her expression and she retrieved her bathing basket. “Are you worried because you haven't yet received news from Krakentown?”

Not a word from Ariq's brother or from Lieutenant Blanchett, though he'd expected to hear from them the previous day. Ariq had been quiet that morning while readying to leave, his tension bordering on that terrifying calm. “Some. I'm trying not to think the worst. Ariq might have received a message today.”

“And if he hasn't?”

“Then we will do what we must.”

Though Zenobia had no idea what that might be—only that whatever Ariq decided, she would stand with him.

Mara nodded. “And you know Cooper's and my services are at your . . .”

Tilting her head, she trailed off before setting her basket down. Zenobia stilled, listening.

Only the ocean, the birds, and the expected noises of airship traffic and life in the tower.

“Wait here.” Mara left the chamber.

Zenobia rushed to the door. She'd wait as told. But she'd look.

An airship hovered off the western terrace. Painted a bright red and with white sails like fins, the sleek cruiser resembled a flying fish—though she had not seen many fish with gilded fins and ornate gold scrollwork decorating their snouts. Too opulent for a hired ship, it could only be a private vessel. Someone who hoped to speak with Ariq?

Though the engines hummed quietly as it rose on level with the docking platform, the low rumble echoed and amplified through the long coral courtyard that ran through the heart of their residence like a tunnel. She wasn't surprised to see Cooper already waiting at the edge of the terrace, with the sides of his jacket tucked behind his holsters. They hadn't expected visitors. But when Mara joined Cooper, whatever she said had him covering up his weapons.

Did she know whose airship it was?

Zenobia glanced at the vessel again. Narrow flags fluttered on long posts near the bow, but the writing on them meant nothing to her. An emblem of leaves and a blossom marked both the flags and the balloon.

Across the courtyard, one of the new attendants they'd hired in the Red City emerged from a chamber carrying a basket. She looked toward the western terrace. Her eyes widened and her entire body seemed to stutter to a stop before she dropped into a crouch, her head bowed.

Oh, dear Lord. Zenobia didn't need Helene's book to tell her what the attendant's reaction meant. Perhaps it was best not to wait, after all, but to go out and meet this person.

A woman. She appeared at the rail as a gangway extended from the side of the red airship to the terrace. Zenobia abruptly halted.

This was someone important. It was also someone dangerous.

Her midnight blue robes possessed more layers and were more complicated than Zenobia's simple dress, but didn't conceal the sword hanging at her side. The pale flowers printed on the heavy silk echoed her snowy sash and the white plague mask that covered her mouth and nose, leaving her eyes exposed. An ivory headdress shaped like a fan secured her smooth halo of black hair. She strode boldly down the gangway, her razor-edged gaze touching Mara and Cooper before finding Zenobia.

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