Dying to be Fathers – Cookie’s Problem

An extract from Dying to be Fathers by E.M. Swift-Hook and Jane Jago The sixth Dai and Julia Mystery, set in a Britain where the Roman Empire never left...

“So what do we do now?” Edbert asked. “We’ve summed it all up pretty neatly between us, but so far I don’t see where it gets us.”
Gallus opened his mouth to speak, but was forestalled by Bryn.
“It’s very much a case of waiting it out at the moment. I have people with ears to the ground and leaning on anyone they think might have any ideas. We are doing all we can do. When the reports come in, then we can act.”
Julia could feel for Edbert and in many ways shared his sense of frustration. She wished her heavy body away for just one day so she could be the one out there asking the questions, demanding the answers. But she knew Bryn was right and that he would be doing everything that could humanly be done.
“Then you had better get back to Viriconium,” she said, “in case those reports come in. I think we’re done here for now.”
Gallus gave a salute as if dismissed from parade, but Bryn stood solidly.
“Do you have a moment, Domina?” he asked. “Your cook is just outside the door looking very unhappy. She was wanting to knock when I came back in, but I said I’d let you know as soon as we were done.”
The one thing Cookie never did was interrupt Julia when she was working. If something had driven her to do so today it had to be very pressing and urgent, above the ordinary run of domestic crises.
“Of course, show her in please.”
Bryn opened the door and stood aside.
“Thank you so much Domina Julia.” Cookie’s normally placid face was creased with worry, and she never normally called Julia anything but dearie, Julia set her own worries aside and beckoned her forward. Cookie twisted her apron in her big red hands.
“I’m sorry to bother you but there is something odd going on. It’s my nephew, Ban and the boy Dewi who helps Edbert with the dogs, and the youngest garden lad, Cerdic. They are getting hold of porn somehow. And they have started trying to spy on the younger girls in the household. Luned caught them. She boxed all their ears and thought no more of it, except to come and tell me, but almost all the rest…” She took a deep breath before ploughing on. “I decided to see if I could find out what they are up to. I tracked them to the bothy, where they are now – swigging cider they have pinched from the store and watching stuff I don’t want to describe. And the youngest of them no more than fourteen. They’re not bad lads, but this..this… Well, I dunno what to do.”
Julia held out her hands to the distressed woman and nodded to Edbert who produced a massive handkerchief in one of his pockets.
“Chin up, fach,” he said. “They are all three under age, so a quick visit from the local law should frighten them into good behaviour.”
“It should indeed,” Bryn had managed to dredge up a grin. “We can go by that way as we leave. Bothy you said?”
Cookie nodded and Bryn cocked his head at Gallus. They left shoulder-to-shoulder, walking as easily together as if they were friends. Cookie blew her nose lustily and offered Edbert his handkerchief back. He looked at it in some distaste.
“Tell you what, Cookie, you can keep it.”
She smiled her appreciation, pocketed the hanky and ambled off back towards the kitchen.

Dying to be Fathers is released on 9 November but is available for pre-order now.

Jane Jago’s Daily Drabble – Sixty-Seven

Bridges need trolls. They keep the sightseers coming. 

So we build a troll house, and advertise in Boulder Weekly and on the troll community Facebook page. 

What do we get? 

Bugger all.

Trolls these days are so busy with moving pictures and bodyguard duties that bridges are far beneath their notice

And that’s why the house under our bridge is occupied by a fat, alcoholic, gnome called Ethelred, who waves his willy at passing virgins.

Disaster?

Far from it. 

It’s the busiest bridge anywhere.

Young women come from far and wide to prove their virtue whist keeping their panties on…

©️jj 2018

Coffee Break Read – Walking Shadows

From A Walking Shadow, the final book in Haruspex Trilogy of Fortune's Fools by E.M. Swift-Hook.

“How long you friend to Avilon?” In the flickering light from the fire, it was hard to see the other man’s face clearly, but there was genuine curiosity in his tone. It was odd, though, how he pronounced the name with the emphasis on the wrong syllable.
Jaz gave a slight shrug. “If you add it all up – including our time in the Specials I’d say around fourteen, fifteen years.”
The other man seemed thoughtful.
“Avilon have many?”
Friends, presumably. That was easy.
“No. I think I was about the only one for most of that time. Now – he has more. And a woman too.”
“He is – change? Not the same?”
There was clear concern in the question. Concern Jaz couldn’t lay to rest. He nodded briefly and felt his breath escape in a slight sigh.
“Yeah. Much changed. Not the same at all.”
“But – he is Avilon?”
Jaz had no idea how to answer that. It was something he struggled with himself over the past few years. There had to be something or he wouldn’t have kept with the grindingly thankless task of nurturing the empty shell he found in the Specials. But sometimes – and more often now than before – he was left wondering how much of that had been wishful thinking and how much had been real. How much he needed it to be Avilon as opposed to how much it actually was.
“Sometimes it’s like you can see a ghost of who he was,” he said, at last.
“Ghost?”
“Uh – yeah – like a shadow of who he was.” Jaz moved his arm so the firelight sent his own shadow reaching away and gestured to that with his other hand. “He’s like a walking shadow of the man he used to be.”
“Shadow – yes.” The Overlord nodded, moving his hand to match the shadow. Jaz noticed the triple line of scarring on the back of the hand, identical to the scarring Avilon had brought back from Temsevar. He put a finger towards it, running his hand through the air as if drawing three fast lines.
“What is that about? Avilon has it also.”
The Overlord looked at him as if he wasn’t sure that the question could be a serious one, but he must have seen from Jaz’s expression that it was. Then he nodded slowly and shrugged off his coat, pulling at the sleeve of his shirt so his shoulder was exposed. Jaz saw a crude raised mark that he took a moment to realise was caused by some kind of strike branding process. He knew Avilon was similarly scarred but not with the same design. The other man covered his shoulder again and pulled his coat back on. “Slave mark,” he said. Then closed his fist so the three scars on his hand stood out. “Fighting slave mark.”
Jaz had no idea what he could say to that, but the other man went on, hunting for words. Clearly struggling, but wanting Jaz to understand. His gaze intense with it.
“Avilon make him – made him -” The Overlord broke off and started again. “He made his choice. To be fighting slave – to find me. To free me.”
Something shifted in Jaz and he suddenly understood what this man must have meant to Avilon and had no doubt at all what Avilon was to him. He held the intense gaze and gave a slight nod, then reached out his hand. The other man took it, his grip strong.
“You’re my brother’s friend,” Jaz said, making each word clear so he could be sure he was understood. “That makes you my friend.”
The other man nodded.
“My friend.”

E.M. Swift-Hook

Jane Jago’s Daily Drabble – Sixty-Six

We didn’t want a sister. We wanted a puppy. But we got sent to Auntie Enid’s anyway. And when we come home Alice was there. Red-faced and wrinkled, and in the crib beside Ma’s big old chair.

Tell the truth we wasn’t too much impressed, but she improved a bit, and by the time she was three we almost forgave her for not having a tail.

She started school today. Tagging along behind us kinda quiet and shy.

When one of the big girls pulled her braids, we stepped in. Hard.

Alice may not be much, but she’s ours…

©️jj 2018

Author feature: ‘i know you like a murder’ by Amy L Sauder

i know you like a murder by Amy L Sauder is now available.

Chapter 1 – The 5 Ws of Murder

A narrator always gets to know the reader before spilling their deepest secret.
I am a murderer.
She was just a silly nothing of a girl until I made her rise to fame. A pennything.
I imagine a dreary donut-glaze day at the station before I dropped murder in their laps. I’d like to say the coppers pounded down my door in their cliché little way, but really it was a nice rap-tap-tap. Like the children’s ditty: Skunk in the barnyard, pee-yew. Murder in the theater…for you…
Clueless buffoons, more accustomed to traffic control rather than detective work. I wasn’t considered suspect; for all intents and purposes, I was victim.
“Tell us what happened.” “Did you notice anything out of the ordinary?” “Any odd or unusual behavior?” and the kicker: “Is there anyone who would have motive?”
“Don’t we all,” I said. “Don’t we all hold a reason to kill.”
I wasn’t much help. Why would I be? I divulged a dozen motives, to bait their sniffers a million directions, all but mine.
I don’t think they liked me all that much. Whatever. I wasn’t looking to impress. I was looking to distract. Once their curiosities turned elsewhere, I could move on to tell you, my now-avid readers, the story.
My story.
Our story.
If a tree falls in the forest and no one hears, does it make a sound? If a person is murdered and the tale is not told, did it happen?
And so, I have found my audience. Yes, you. Won’t you read my story, sleuth it out? I take the role of murderer, now you fancy yourself a detective.
Sit down, cozy up. I’d offer you a cup of tea, but you may worry it’s been poisoned, and you may be correct. But hold it, dear reader, don’t twist your shirt in a bundle before I give you all the pieces.
What: death, cold and sudden
Where: the most dramatic place for murder, the theater
When: the top of Act III, naturally
Who: Too many names, there are too many names in the world. I only remember the one girl. Don’t be indignant when you struggle to recall names, too.
No matter. I will choose some form of name to distinguish the lot. Let’s call them:
Madame Director,
Homeless Hag,
Facilities Hawk,
Villains 1 & 2,
Shy Boy,
Makeup Artist,
and Cami’s BFF.
But the one you’re waiting for: Camille. Or Cami now, to be more relatable, more likeable. Hear the sounds roll off your tongue: the name Cami skips playfully from your mouth, while the nasal sound of Camille bodes aloof, unapproachable. The name change is product branding or whatever.
She’s a washed up writer. Now scriptwriter and also, get this, leading lady. She scooped that right up, and Madame Director allowed it even though Cami has never performed on stage.
Why: Cami got one of the useless English degrees and expected it was worth something. Interned at a publishing company, but they wouldn’t look at her manuscript without an agent; and she couldn’t interest an agent though she had an in with a publisher.
She’d tell that sob story, then with a twinkle in her eye promise that this theatrical production would put us all on the map.
Hopeful.
Deluded.
But I would make her keep that promise.
Alibis are useless in this investigation, because all of us, of course, were at the theater when it happened. As for motive, don’t we all have something worth killing for?
If you were a Criminal Psychologist maybe you’d have this case wrapped up by now. Tell me, which of the listed characters am I, the murderer?
But statistically speaking, you likely aren’t a Criminal Psychologist, so here you are. Still reading. So many questions.
You know, you could hand this over to a Criminal Psychologist to solve. But I don’t think you will. Not now.
It’s not real, you say. It’s a book. And you’ll pore through this story looking for answers, intrigued by the tale, fascinated by death.
Okay, detectivize. Draw up a grid, write up characters and clues, cross off cleared suspects. Or whatever you crime buffs do. Maybe you have the cliché marker board to track your clues, or maybe you have the string linking ideas throughout a crime-solving room. You sure get off on this stuff, don’t you?
So let’s get to it. What I haven’t told you yet is How. But I can’t just tell you how she died. That’s too easy. Too quick. Buckle up: you’re in for a villainous monologue.

A Bite of... Amy L Sauder
Q1:How much of you is in your hero/villain?

Considering my main character is a psychopathic murderer, it’s probably in my best interest to say I’m not completely like my characters but I can relate. I can definitely relate. Now hold on a minute while I answer the door; it’s probably the police here to arrest me…

Q2:Would you rather live in this world or the one you create in your books?

I love adventure as long as it stays within the confines of the page. I’m a wimp when it comes to pain, and I freak without my routine. Fictional worlds are much too chaotic for my tastes. I’ll put characters through the wringer plenty, but I’d like to stay holed up in the comfort of my home with a chai latte by my side, thank you very much.

Q3:Have you ever invented a language?

Doog ckul ngirugif newh ot pasw rsettel nda ton; em nda ym restis detabe tath trap. Lareneg elur si rdsawckab ptecxe sphargid ro srettel tath ntod tif rethegot enco deppilf. E.I. Newh em nda ym restis erew ngouy, ew etowr ekil sith rof a tecres edoc. Soed tath tnouc?

I guess that’s a yes then…

Amy L Sauder in her own words:

Amy L. Sauder is a writer, educator, and creative. She has been called quirky meta mystery and walking fairytale.  In her not-so-spare time, Amy coaches other writers and sells artistic fashion finds. While she has a degree in English, that has yet to land her amidst a murderous plot. Hopefully that doesn’t change.

You can find Amy L Sauder on Facebook, Twitter and her own website.

 

 

Jane Jago’s Daily Drabble – Sixty-Five

The door crashed open, and she could smell the booze. Her heart sank and she looked at last Saturday’s bruises which were only just fading from her arms.

He grabbed her by the hair and slammed her against the wall, backhanding her viciously as he did so. She made no sound, and he laughed harshly.

“Silence won’t save you this time.” He raised his booted foot.

The vegetable knife was only four inches long, but it was viciously sharp. 

She stabbed him again and again and again…

When she was sure he was dead she got back in her coffin.

©️jj 2018

Sunday Serial LVI

Once everyone was supplied with a glass, Sam raised a toast.
“Let’s drink to love and friendship.”
“I’ll drink to that,” Danny agreed.
“Mind you I’d drink to misery and dislike if somebody would only feed me…’
Amid roars of laughter, Anna fetched a tray of tiny biscuits spread with pate, stuffed cherry tomatoes, and cubes of salty feta cheese.
“Just to stop my big brother fading away while I make the gravy.”
She went to the range, with Sam at her heels.
“What can I do?”
“Nothing. Or do you fancy carving?”
“Can do. What is it today?”
“Sirloin.’
“Easy-peasy.”
Sam put his glass down and picked up the carving knife and fork. Anna watched respectfully, as slice after slice of perfectly carved meat landed on the serving platter.
“Well bugger me,” she said almost reverently as she stirred the gravy.
He grinned.
“You want both joints carved?”
“Please.”
With the meat carved and the gravy in two jugs, Anna and Sam got the food on the table, and everyone dug in.
“Can you pass the water jug?”Jim asked, “I’m driving, so no more booze.”
“Me too,” Rod concurred. “If I was to touch a drop before driving her boy, Pats would have my nuts for a necktie.”
“I’ve got non-alcohol lager if either of you would prefer,” Sam offered.
“If it ain’t too much trouble that’d be great.”
Sam went to the booze fridge and got two bottles, while Anna fetched beer glasses.
“Thanks both,” Jim said somewhat thickly around a mouthful of succulent roast lamb.
“Manners Jim,” Patsy giggled.
He finished his mouthful and looked hurt.
“It’s a worry,” he said, “it’s rude to talk with your mouth full, and it’s rude not to say thank you. So which rude do you go for?”
There was a shout of laughter, and Patsy rapped his knuckles with a serving spoon.
“Can you imagine Sunday lunch at ours?” she said despairingly. “It’s a fucking bear garden.”
Charlie lifted his face from his dinner.
“T’isn’t, it’s worse than that. Last week the twins went to fight over the last roast potato…”
He subsided and Patsy took up the tale.
“Jim was no help. Could do nothing for laughing. I had to prize them apart with a serving spoon. Which broke…”
The laughter rose in waves again.
Danny patted her hand.
“Never mind, Pats. You wouldn’t be without them, would you?”
“God no. I love every smelly, sullen argumentative inch of all of them. And if they grow up to be like their dad there will be five lucky women out there one day.”
Jim put a beefy arm around her and dragged her over for a kiss.
“Love you too, you silly old bat.”
She grinned.
“You see how it is.”
Jim grinned at the assembled.
“This parenthood thing is a minefield. I dunno how most people navigate it. Me? I just follow Pats.”
“Yeah. And I go by my gut and the seat of my pants. And by dog training principles…”
This had the rest of the table in stitches.
“It’s true,” Jim mopped his streaming eyes. “I come in from work one night. Late. The twins were about two. She had them on the kitchen floor chewing bones.”
“They were teething. Doing my head in. Bones helped.” Patsy said irately, then she laid her head on the table and laughed until she almost cried.
“Sorry everyone,” she said between guffaws.
“But you should have seen Jim’s face that night. He didn’t know whether to laugh, cry or call a social worker. In the end he phoned his mum, who told him not to be a worry-arse. Apparently, he cut his teeth on his old man’s riding crop. At least there’s a bit of goodness in a beef bone.”
It was Bill’s turn to look up from his plate of roast beef and grin engagingly.
“I remember you putting me and Charlie in the puppy pen one day when we were whiny. Grandpa Cracksman took us out and fed us potato chips and Coca-Cola.”
Patsy laid her head on the table and laughed till she cried.

All in all it was a very happy Sunday, and when Patsy, Jim, Rod and the boys drove away Sam put his arm around Anna and pulled her close.
“I really like all of them. They’re real. In an increasingly plastic world they are as refreshing as a swim in a cold Scottish loch. However, we now have packing to do. We are catching a plane at eleven tomorrow morning. Pack for warm weather. Nothing formal.”
“For how long will we be away?”
“Sadly, I could only book a week. Even then I had to call in some favours.”
“And where are we going?”
He tapped her nose with one long finger.
“You’ll find out when we get there. Paul is driving us to the airport. So no need to leave the car in one of the overpriced car parks.”
“Good. Talking of cars. It having been ages now, I’m guessing the garage can’t fix the Audi?”
“Oh yeah. I forgot that. It’s fucked. When we get home I’ll have to get me a new car. I can’t keep using yours.”
“You could. In fact, maybe you should. I only need a small runabout. Perhaps it would be best to replace the Audi with something a bit less ostentatious than the Range Rover.”
“Anna. It’s your Range Rover.”
“Ours numbskull. If it’s our house it’s our Range Rover. And I’m sure it’s just the kind of car a consultant should be driving.”
He laughed.
“It certainly looks more at home in my parking space at work than the Audi did. It sits between a Jag and a four-wheel drive Merc, and seems to sneer at both. But what will we buy you to replace it?”
“Oh. I dunno. A Golf maybe?’
“Nope. Not a VeeDub. I think you should have an Evoque.’
“Okay. If that’s what you think. We’ll have a look when we get home. Now I’m off to pack my bikini.”
“Good. Is it itsy bitsy teeny weeny?”
“You’ll find out when we get there?”
She ran upstairs, leaving Sam to go and hunt up Danny for a bit of a chat, about cars among other things.

Jane Jago

 

Jane Jago’s Daily Drabble – Sixty-Four

Siowanna spoke the ritual words and laid her forehead on the Sacred Stones. As the sun’s first rays touched the eastern sky, she raised her voice in praise before bowing thirteen times.

The girl stood back and waited with her head bowed. It seemed like a very long time before there was a rustling in the woods.

The bear was as black as night and she knew fear for an instant. Then he made the change.

Standing naked before her he shaped his mouth to the unfamiliar way of words.

“Wife,” he said and she put her hand in his.

©️jj 2018

It Can’t Be Done

It can’t be done, they said. You can’t graft dragon wings onto a human.

Fools! They know nothing.

See? Here I stand in the sun, wings flexing with my own muscle power. Those ants below just gawp.

One leap and I fly.

Admit it, you thought I’d fall didn’t you?

Fool!

E.M. Swift-Hook

Weekend Wind Down – Sabre

The tattooed face broke into an ugly snarl, as the spearhead nearly grazed one shoulder of its owner’s powerful frame. He lunged forward, the double-headed axe swinging and the crowd yelled as he claimed his kill, severing the arm of the spear-wielding warrior at the shoulder in a fountain of scarlet and removing his head with a backswing, as effortlessly as a chef might slice through a soft cheese.

It was a very popular kill. This animal, who had the fighting-name ‘Therloon’, had been the new darling of the Alfor crowds since he had arrived in the arena a couple of moons after the Fair. He was of the nomadic folk from the Eastern Continent and had their renowned tenacity and powerful build combined with a flair for the theatrical and a spectacular viciousness that was all his own. Playing to the crowd like the professional he was, Therloon swung his axe around his head and roared, his face contoured into a hideous grin which must have been visible even to those who stood furthest from the edge of the arena. The crowd responded to his signature salute and roared his name.

The powerful Easterner turned to where one opponent remained facing him. The smaller man held his sturdy frame prepared, the curving sword he gripped in one hand looked as frail as a blade of grass against the life-harvesting scythe of Therloon’s whirling axe. But the crowd expected good sport before they had their final glut of blood. For this was no ordinary combat unfolding before them and the money that rode on the outcome of this single bout would have paid the wages of half the troops Qabal Vyazin had been mustering on the outskirts of Tabruth. This was the kind of match that men waited years to see and could only be provided by this, the most prestigious Arena in Temsevar – that of the city of Alfor.

It occurred to Torwyn, watching this display as he ran a hand through his short terracotta-coloured hair, that there were many places better to be than standing less than ten paces away from the axe-wielding maniac and on the wrong side of the high barricades which protected the crowd from the fighting-slaves within.

Facing Therloon, now alone, stood the one they called the Sabre, whom the crowd had just seen defeat his own previous opponent with a classic display of athletic grace and skill. Now, invisible to all except those in the audience closest to where he stood, he shifted his weight very slightly, as if knowing what to expect. The charge, when it came, made him move quickly aside and turn to duck under the axe whilst bringing his own, lighter, blade across to cut at the bigger man’s back. It was not sufficient to do any real damage to his opponent, but enough to gain an appreciative call or two from the crowd and Torwyn could tell it had angered the Easterner.

“Sabre! Sabre!” He evidently had supporters out in strength, probably as many as were there to cheer for Therloon, but then few fighting-slaves were as well-known as the Sabre because few survived six years in the Arena as he had. Few overcame for that long the ever more creative and dangerous demands made on a crowd-pleasing favourite which turned life and death combat into gore-fest theatre or blood-drenched farce.

If it had not been for the coming war this fight would never have been allowed so soon. To end deliberately, the career and crowd-pulling earning power of a top fighting-slave was not a decision made lightly by the lanista of an Arena. More especially when the lanista was well renowned for being a tight-fisted miser, who kept his fighting-slaves in the minimum conditions and invested all his money in crowd-pleasing exhibitions and expensive exotics.

The dance of death continued on the blood-stained sand of the stadium between the unwieldy axe, made agile and serpentine in the hands of the powerful Easterner, and the insubstantial blade of the sword weaving the will of the man who held it. From the first, it had been apparent that the sword was no real match for the heavier weapon with its much longer reach. It was only because the man who held it seemed to possess almost precognitive reactions and a creatively robust athleticism, that the inevitable end was being delayed so long. The tension became palpable and the focus of the two men was absolute. For them, the world had shrunk to the circle of sand and the sweep of feet, hands and weapons.

Normally, the element of drama would have featured far more in any performance by either man. The Easterner was famed for his love of blood and to watch him fight was to watch a butcher at work in a slaughterhouse – but a butcher with a malicious streak of sadism – and the crowd, never sated, loved that. By comparison, the Sabre was known for the humour and finesse he brought to his savagery, playing with his opponents in burlesque ways which would have the crowd fired up with laughter and then stunning them into silence by the breath-taking skill of his acrobatic agility.

Even now, apparently pressed to his limits, Sabre found time to dance a brief step or two with a flower in his teeth, thrown by one of the crowd. It proved to be an expensive crowd-pleaser as the Easterner seized the moment to strike and Sabre, ducking under the blow, raised his own weapon ineffectively to deflect the lethal weight of the axe. It barely turned the heavy slicing blade but at the price of being smashed away from its owner’s grip.

Disarmed, the Sabre dived into a desperate, ground-covering roll that brought him distance from the certain death of Therloon’s backswing, and a few more precious moments of life. But his move was accompanied by the groans and boos of the watching throng. Those who had placed their money on the Sabre were most vocal in their disappointment. The fight was lost and many who had bet on the old favourite knew they would go home the poorer. But the let-down was soon overlaid by a fresh building of anticipation. There remained the catharsis of the kill itself, and Therloon was a master of spectacular, messy killing. That was something to look forward to. The Sabre’s last show would be an essay in violent, agonising death and those he had just robbed of their winnings would enjoy that revenge.

Torwyn watched the Easterner as he advanced across the floor of the arena. Therloon was fully aware that this was his moment and the exaggerated grin that split the tattooed face was as much leer of derision as smile of victory. Only those nearest the edge of the arena heard the tattooed man’s words as he approached his unarmed foe.

“You want to take back what you said before?”

The Sabre backed off step by step as the other man advanced, his arms spread wide in a gesture of pacification or surrender and the roar of contempt from the crowd at this sign of cowardice swelled close to riot.

“Take it back? Why should I?” he said as if puzzled by the question.

“Because on that depends how fast you die.”

“I don’t see why.” The Sabre’s tone was soft. “No matter how quickly or slowly you kill me it is all still true, Gant. You are an imbecile, a laughably dumb brute. You have less intelligence than the beast they named you for.”

An animal growl in his throat, the Easterner shot forward, the long axe held lightly in his hands. Sabre stepped back in a nervous retreat and in doing so missed his footing and tripped, sprawling backwards over the body of Therloon’s previous victim. He fell on his back, arms wide, body spread open and helpless.

The Easterner charged the last few paces, his face congested by anger and hate and Torwyn knew he was going to make this kill one his audience would long remember. Then the fallen man moved. His body rolled suddenly backwards, looking for all the world like a street tumbler, legs disappearing over his head and he finished the movement smoothly on one knee, the spear he had rescued in the process of completing the roll, held in his hands and braced solidly against his foot.

Therloon could no more have shifted his course at that point than taken flight and his eyes barely had time to widen in horrified comprehension, before his stomach was impaled upon the spear.

Sabre was on his feet as the impact was carried through, driving the point home deeply, twisting it to bite into the spine as the Easterner went down. Standing above his fallen foe, the sturdy fighting-slave looked down, without compassion at the tattooed face which was broken now by a rictus of agony.

“How fast do you die?” he asked savagely, for once allowing the fury and disgust to boil up through his veins. But the Easterner was beyond words, lungs pierced by the ripping barbs on the side of the spear’s head and breathing only in wheezing grunts.

The adoring ululation of the crowd ran like a hurricane around the arena and a monsoon of flowers and ribbons rained down onto the blood-drenched sand.

“Sabre! Sabre! Sabre!”

Torwyn straightened up and looked around as if seeing the scene for the first time. Then, strangely impatient and with no more than the most perfunctory of gestures to acknowledge the adulation, he ran his hand through his short rust-coloured hair and strode back through the now open gates, into the dark tunnel beyond.

From Transgressor: Dues of Blood by E.M. Swift-Hook

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