The Grimjinx Rebellion Read online




  Dedication

  To Jim, Mark, and Pam,

  who’ve always known the truth about the Vanguard

  Contents

  Dedication

  Part One: The Creche

  Chapter 1: Portents

  Chapter 2: Jaxter’s New Shadow

  Chapter 3: The Sentinels

  Chapter 4: An Ancient Decree

  Chapter 5: Dark Times

  Chapter 6: The Rescue Mission

  Chapter 7: Gobek and Mavra

  Chapter 8: A Baking Accident

  Chapter 9: The Purple Prophecy

  Chapter 10: Into the Athenaeum

  Chapter 11: The Great Uprisings

  Chapter 12: Beyond the Black Door

  Chapter 13: The Greater Gain

  Chapter 14: Escape from the Creche

  Chapter 15: Jubilee

  Chapter 16: The Fall of the House of Soranna

  Part Two: The Rebels

  Chapter 17: Oberax

  Chapter 18: The Truth About Slagbog

  Chapter 19: The Braxilar

  Chapter 20: Ghostfire

  Chapter 21: The Seeds of Rebellion

  Chapter 22: Betrayed

  Chapter 23: Danger in the Swamp

  Chapter 24: Blackvesper Abbey

  Chapter 25: The Abbot and the Answer

  Chapter 26: The Rebel Mage

  Chapter 27: The Dowager’s Dilemma

  Chapter 28: Kolo’s Last Secret

  Chapter 29: A Patchwork Army

  Chapter 30: The Greater Loss

  Chapter 31: Battle Plans

  Chapter 32: Betrayed Again

  Part Three: The Scourge

  Chapter 33: A Plague of Monsters

  Chapter 34: Is Death

  Chapter 35: Callie’s Hope

  Chapter 36: Message Received

  Chapter 37: The Abbot’s Story

  Chapter 38: War from Within

  Chapter 39: The Prisoner

  Chapter 40: The Key and the Keep

  Chapter 41: Attack of the Scourge

  Chapter 42: The Death of Jaxter Grimjinx

  Chapter 43: Birth of the Procoran

  Chapter 44: Everything Changes

  Back Ad

  About the Author

  Copyright

  Credits

  About the Publisher

  PART ONE

  THE CRECHE

  1

  Portents

  “Portents bleed the foolish and feed the wily.”

  —Mendar Grimjinx, sole survivor of the Rexian Ziggurat plunder

  Of all the wisdom passed down through the generations of the Grimjinx clan, the bit I think about most came from Jerrina Grimjinx, wife of Corenus, our clan father. She said, “Tomorrow’s eyes penetrate yesterday’s haze.”

  It means that when things get hectic—like when you’re fighting off balanx skeletons or stopping a madman from blowing up every mage in the Five Provinces—it’s hard to get perspective. It’s only with time that you can reflect and see clearly what would have been obvious.

  If, you know, you hadn’t been distracted by all the running and screaming.

  Looking back, it’s all very clear to me now. The Creche, the war, the Scourge . . . each one shines brightly in my past, like a beacon leading me to my fate. At the time, you could have told me what was coming but I wouldn’t have believed it. Yet the signs were all there.

  I was going to die.

  No expense had been spared for the Dowager’s party.

  The Banquet Room in Vengekeep’s town-state hall was the largest, most lavish room in the whole city. Silky red draperies hung from the ceiling, framing walls that had been decorated with woodcuts depicting key moments in Vengekeep’s history. Long tables buckled under the weight of roast hemmon, freshly steamed vegetables, and a collection of the best vintages of ashwine ever assembled. It would have been a party worthy of the High Laird himself.

  It was a shame no one showed up.

  I stood in a small antechamber tucked into the Banquet Room’s north wall, hidden behind a golden curtain. I peeked out and did a quick head count.

  “Twelve people,” I announced in a whisper. “But they look happy to be here. You’ll have a captive audience.”

  Dowager Annestra Soranna sat on a stool. Her hands picked at the formal gown that clung tightly to her frail frame. She hated dressing up. “Sallah kesh,” she said, only loud enough for me to hear.

  The Dowager, in her never-ending quest for knowledge, had asked me to teach her ancient par-Goblin, the language of thieves. She didn’t quite have the hang of it yet. She thought sallah kesh was a form of swearing. Actually, it meant “prudent soup.” I figured I’d get around to correcting her. Someday.

  To the Dowager’s right stood Neron, her most trusted guard. On the other side, decked out in his official uniform as Protectorate of Vengekeep, stood Da. He gritted his teeth at the news.

  “Twelve!” Da said. “Well . . . that’s a good sign. Twelve’s a lucky number for thieves. There are twelve clans in the kleptocracy, twelve charters in the Lymmaris Creed. . . .” His voice trailed off as he failed to identify other ways to make twelve people sound promising.

  The Dowager’s nose wrinkled as Ma brushed powder onto her crooked cheekbones. “I heard Ullin Lek, the butcher, is here,” Ma said cheerily. “He’s the wealthiest man in Vengekeep.”

  Ma, Da, and I were taking turns trying to keep the Dowager from worrying that a banquet thrown in her honor had attracted so few people. Earlier, Da, who was in charge of security, had told Ma and me that over three hundred invitations had been sent to dignitaries and the nobility throughout Korrin Province. Nearly all had been returned with polite regrets. A few, Da had added, were less than polite.

  “I appreciate your optimism,” the Dowager said, a gentle lilt to her voice, “but we all know very well why there are so few people here.”

  Ma looked surprised. It was easy to mistake the Dowager as being doddering and unaware. In truth, a razor-sharp mind lurked beneath that befuddled exterior, ready to cut anyone who believed the facade for a second.

  It was hardly a secret that her brother, the High Laird, was facing . . . popularity problems these days. His erratic behavior had been raising questions for a year now. But in the two months since the exile of the Sarosan pacifists, he’d gone positively naff-nut. Unjust taxes. Centuries-old freedoms revoked. Even his most loyal subjects were unhappy.

  I had hoped to see my friend Callie Strom here tonight. But both she and her cousin, Talian, Vengekeep’s mage, were absent. This suggested truth behind another whispered rumor that had slinked its way across the Provinces: the Palatinate, the mages who governed magical law for the High Laird, was also trying to distance itself from the government.

  I was worried about Callie. From the letters I’d received while studying with the Dowager in Redvalor Castle, it sounded like she had come a long way in her magical training. Talian said she had a real talent. What worried me was how close she was getting to the Palatinate. If the recent past had taught me anything, it was that the mages couldn’t be trusted.

  I turned to Aubrin, my eleven-year-old sister, who sat in the corner, scribbling in her journal as usual. To break the tension, I tried snatching the book. But she saw me coming and did a tuck and roll to get away.

  “Come on, Jinxface,” I said. “When are you going to let me see what you’re always writing?”

  She raised an eyebrow. “It’s not time,” she said. It was what she always said when I wanted to read her journal.

  The gold curtains parted and in came Castellan Jorn, chief magistrate of Vengekeep. His thick fist clutched an oversize key made of brass and encrusted with fake jewels: the symbolic key to the gates of Ve
ngekeep. Jorn presented it to anyone of importance who visited the town-state.

  He bowed low before the Dowager. “My lady,” he said, “I believe we are ready to begin.”

  “You look marvelous, Annestra,” Ma told the Dowager.

  The Dowager kissed Ma, then Ma and Aubrin slipped through the gold curtain to join the others in the Banquet Room. Jorn straightened his robes and followed Ma and Aubrin.

  “May I have your attention!” we heard Jorn call out, his bass voice thundering off the room’s walls. “As you know, every one hundred years, the reigning High Laird throws a Jubilee to commemorate another century of benevolent rule under the Soranna family. In one month, we will mark five hundred years of unification for the Five Provinces!”

  The Dowager cringed on hearing the smattering of polite applause. Given the mood throughout the Provinces, many people doubted the Jubilee would happen at all.

  “This Jubilee,” Jorn went on, “is especially exciting for Vengekeep. As per custom, members of the royal family offer their patronage to a town-state they feel most exemplifies patriotism for the Five Provinces. Tonight, we gather to celebrate that the Dowager Soranna has graciously chosen Vengekeep!”

  Jorn paused, expecting applause. Silence.

  “As such,” he continued quickly, “the Dowager will oversee Vengekeep’s celebration, offering her insight until the Jubilee begins in one month. It is now my extreme pleasure . . .”

  I took the Dowager’s hand as she nervously licked her lips.

  “. . . to introduce Her Majesty, the Dowager Annestra Soranna!”

  Neron pulled back the curtain. A smile lit the Dowager’s face. We walked into the Banquet Room to meek applause from the stateguard and Jorn’s overzealous cheers. But most of the guests stood immobile and frowning. The Dowager waved as she took her place at the head table next to the Castellan.

  “Good people,” the Dowager said, “it is I who feel honored to be among you tonight. For centuries, the High Laird’s Jubilee has served as a symbol of your sovereign’s devotion to these lands we all forge day to day. . . .”

  As the Dowager continued, I spotted Aubrin trying to get my attention. She wiggled her eyebrows and jerked her head. I looked where she was motioning. All I saw were the people of Vengekeep. Ullin Lek, the widow Bellatin, Abrinar Benrick, the cobbler. Nothing out of the ordinary.

  Then, just as the Dowager started describing her plans for Vengekeep’s Jubilee celebration, the widow Bellatin—a frail old woman who’d devoted her life to teaching girls to be proper ladies—stepped forward and flung her arm toward the Dowager.

  Splat! A large, juicy blackdrupe struck the Dowager’s chest, exploding in a mess that left the front of the Dowager’s gown stained purple. The Dowager’s jaw dropped.

  Immediately, a retinue of Provincial Guards—the Dowager’s protectors—was upon the widow, holding her stick-thin arms at her sides. But the widow strained against them, her face flushed with rage.

  “The High Laird is bleeding the Provinces dry!” Bellatin said with a roar. “The money I inherited from my husband should have kept me for life. Now I am nearly destitute, thanks to the High Laird’s new taxes.”

  I swallowed hard. The widow had been one of the wealthiest women in town. The idea that she was poor seemed inconceivable.

  Da, two stateguards at his side, approached the widow. “Arrest her,” he said with a sigh.

  “No.”

  The Dowager raised her hand as she spoke. The Provincial Guards released the widow. The Dowager smiled at Bellatin, even as the widow stared back defiantly.

  “Tomorrow,” the Dowager said, “you will come to the Grimjinx house and we will discuss your grievances. I have the High Laird’s confidence. Perhaps I can—”

  But the widow would hear no more. She gathered her skirt and stormed from the Banquet Room. Everyone fell silent.

  Mortified, Jorn jumped to his feet. He fumbled to hand the Dowager his napkin, which she used to mop up the mess down her front.

  “So,” Jorn squeaked, “you were saying about the Jubilee?”

  2

  Jaxter’s New Shadow

  “Plan twice, steal once.”

  —Yevill Grimjinx, creator of the Grimjinx family code

  The rest of the banquet was a quiet, miserable affair. Not exactly the celebration Jorn had intended, I’m sure. He’d hoped to show the Dowager off like a prize. Instead, when we finished eating, the Dowager excused herself and we all walked back to my parents’ house in silence.

  The second we were home, she snapped her fingers at her soldiers. A tall, broad-shouldered Satyran woman with a neatly trimmed brown beard stepped forward.

  “Luda,” the Dowager said, “from here on, you are Jaxter’s bodyguard. Your duty is to protect him at all times.”

  A bodyguard? I knew Luda by reputation. She could be . . . intense. The horns that stuck up out of her helmet looked sharp enough to gore an entire herd of cargabeasts with a single swipe.

  “Your Majesty,” Luda said in a deep and determined voice, “the boy will always be safe while I am around. This I pledge!”

  I looked up at her in mock skepticism. “I’m not sure she’s qualified.”

  If I hadn’t just been placed in her care, I suspect Luda would have ended me right then. The Satyrans of Rexin were proud warriors. She stomped her cloven hooves and thumped her breastplate with her armored fist.

  “I have defended the Tor of Belos against the marauding hordes from the Rexian bileswamps!” she bellowed. “I have slain a herd of rampaging sanguibeasts on a stampede through the farmlands of my home! I have—”

  “It was a joke!” I threw up my hands. “You have jokes on Rexin, right?”

  From her stony look, I guessed they didn’t.

  “Dowager, this isn’t necessary—” I started.

  But the Dowager’s face was very serious. “I’m sorry, Jaxter, but if I’m in danger, you’re in danger. I should have assigned you a permanent guard months ago, following the affair with the Sarosans. After tonight, it’s clear I can wait no longer.”

  “But—”

  “Jaxter!” An edge in the Dowager’s voice sliced the air. She looked exhausted, angry, and defeated. She closed her eyes and her face relaxed. “There is no discussion. Good night.”

  Luda snapped to attention, her armor clanging, and she bowed to her sovereign. The Dowager nodded in return, then made for the stairs. Aubrin fell in next to the royal, taking her arm.

  As the other Provincial Guards took their posts, Ma eyed Luda with curiosity. The Satyran had already attached herself to me like a second shadow.

  “If you ever give up your job as a guard,” Ma said, looking Luda up and down, “you should consider a life of thievery. You’d be very good at stealing objects on the top shelf.” She paused, hoping Luda would crack a smile.

  She didn’t.

  Da said, “And where will you be sleeping tonight, Luda?”

  Luda folded her hefty arms. “I do not require sleep. I will hold vigil outside the young master’s bedroom and protect him, as is my charge.”

  “Yes, well, nothing like a good vigil,” Ma said. “Get some rest, everyone. Big day tomorrow.”

  “Indeed,” Da said, grinning at me. “Someone’s got a birthday.”

  With all the attention being paid to the upcoming Jubilee, I was worried people had forgotten my birthday. Of course, if they had forgotten, I had a plan. I was glad I didn’t have to use it. After such a tense evening, waking everyone up at dawn with noisemakers would have been frowned upon most likely.

  Hand in hand, Ma and Da went upstairs. I followed, with Luda at my heels. Walking past Aubrin’s room, I found my sister sitting on the windowsill next to her bed. She leaned her head on the glass, gazing up at the two moons passing side by side against the night sky.

  “Not tired, Jinxface?” I asked, standing in her doorway.

  It was several moments before she looked at me. Her eyes, normally bright and mischievous, seem
ed sad. Even her smile lacked its usual energy.

  “I’ll be in bed soon,” she said quietly.

  “You were trying to warn me,” I said, “about the widow. How did you know she was going to throw fruit at the Dowager?”

  Aubrin shrugged. She slid from the sill and crawled under the covers of her bed. As she blew out the candle on her nightstand, she whispered, “It’s good to have you home, Jaxter. Get some sleep. Don’t forget what Kolo said: Volo ser voli.”

  My chest tightened. Those words—a par-Goblin proverb meaning “Yesterday is today”—had been haunting me for months. It was the last thing Kolo, the former Sarosan leader, had said to me.

  Just before he was imprisoned in a shimmerhex, Kolo had tried to warn me about . . . I still didn’t know quite what. It had something to do with the Palatinate and the Great Uprisings. But all information about the Uprisings had been outlawed hundreds of years ago by Mannis Soranna, the first High Laird. How could Kolo know anything about the Uprisings? And how was I supposed to learn?

  For the last two months, I’d used my position as the Dowager’s apprentice to gain access to the biggest libraries in all the Five Provinces. If any record of the Uprisings existed, it would surely be available to royal eyes only. But not even the darkest, most unused shelves with the oldest, dustiest books held any answers.

  My obsession worried the Dowager. I’d never told her exactly what I was looking for. I had only the words of a possible madman to go on, after all. But she could tell something was upsetting me. This trip to Vengekeep was supposed to be relaxing. Now, between my frustration with Kolo’s warning and the disastrous banquet, relaxing was proving harder than I imagined.

  I kissed Aubrin on the forehead and went to my room. There, I found Maloch Oxter, stripped down to his breeches and sitting cross-legged in the hammock Da had slung above my old bed. Like Kolo, Maloch’s da had been trapped in a shimmerhex for the role the Shadowhands had played in stealing from the High Laird’s vaults. Maloch, who worked for the Vengekeep stateguard to hide the fact that he was a thief, had moved into my room so Ma and Da could continue to teach him thievery.

  As a result, my room now had a distinctly . . . sweaty smell.