e smell of burning fire and new blood. Just yesterday, it had the sweet scent of wild thyme and the sound of Kael
underfoot, and how to connect with the huge, living land without saying a word. His life had been a patchwork of hot, sunny days, predic
m that made it sound like everything was going to end. It was nicknamed the Iron Harvest, and it c
eir crude hide shields, their polished obsidian blades they were twigs against a surging river, the courageous screams of his people muffled by th
ces. He saw Kael, frozen in the doorway of their cabin, a hunting knife gripped in h
the inevitable. Three fell, then four, their cold, lifeless eyes looking up at the cruel sun, the
e, and the world shattered into a dark hole ta
ible punctuation to his new existence. The sun, a malicious, molten eye in the heavens, seared his bare fleandmarks, flanked by silent, armored specters whose faces were entirely devoid of humanity, hidden beneath visored helmets. Thee across the shuffling ranks. His mother's distant cousin, her once vibrant eyes now vacant, hollow pools reflecting only
hering darkness Kael. His brother, pallid and shaking, his small hands chafed
ruel bindings, a low, guttural moan rumbling deep in
d raging flames that created dancing, hideous shadows against the gathering dusk. The air here
iately identified by the scarred, savage terrain of his face and
lculated indifference of a butcher inspecting sheep. He went amid the ranks, pr
his body shouting a silent plea. He felt Kael shrink behind him, a small, del
arcus's chest like a branding iron, a nonchalant sign of own
d before dismissing him with a nonchalant, almost bored flick o
ream of defiance against the inevitable. He surged, chains shoutingMy brother! You w
his knees on the hard ground. He slumped, wheezing, spitting gravel and b
Kael's small body resisting futilely, a desperate, wordless battle. Kael's eyes, wide wit
weak and reedy, was a
e part of his soul, but the distance expanded, the whirling dust gene
a mild throb compared to the excruc
ized within him, burning away all fear, all sorrow. He would locate
brick, for what it had stolen. He swore it, softl
one ignored. As the soldiers yanked him back, roughly, into the shuffli
? Like a rabid dog, s
truck directly in Marcus's gut,
g. From this day, yo
him, spreadeagled on the ground, his arms and legs pulle
g flesh, hot and metallic, overwhelmed his senses, bitter and nauseating, and a primal scream tore from his
t devoured him, but it was the humiliation that fes
nimal, a piece of property, marked and owned. But even as the iron bit deep, leaving an
mmitment to his brother, to his dead people, to the untamed warrior spirit within hi
towards the unknown coast, a coastline that felt as
wanted to engulf them all. Marcus marched, one torturous step at a time, his branded shoulder hurting, his e
his family, his freedom, his very name but
ast. This dog, he knew with sickening certainty, would one day dig
d and sorrow, guiding him toward an unknown