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The Freelance Hunters, Season One: The Unknown Package, Part One of Five

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A freezing wind beat against the walls of the city of Carabos. It hurled gusts and flurries of hard-packed snow at the gray blocks of stone, plastering them with white patches. It howled like a frantic toddler, searching for the smallest crack in the city’s defenses.
Finding none, the weather settled on bringing misery to the travelers huddled below, tearing away unguarded hats and ripping at thick woolen cloaks. They had come from every corner of the great island of Elanterra, and lines of carts clogged the bare patch of ground in front of the gates. Some were piled high with fruits and vegetables raised out of season by the skilled Hillfolk farmers of the Tungal Hills. Others were loaded with coal mined by the stout Mountainfolk from Pherros. There were human-driven carts holding a grand assortment of goods, and there were others filled with travelers that wore so many cloaks and coats and scarves that nothing could be seen of them. And also in that crowd waited the Freelance Hunters, returned from their latest adventure, neither as rich or crowned in honor as they had hoped, but not without success, either.
They chattered their way through the checkpoint and finally entered the city gates, where the air warmed, and a gentle autumn breeze blew through streets as crowded as the gates.
The trio removed their thick traveling cloaks and carried them over their arms as they pushed their way into the crowd.
The city was a hive of activity. Hawkers shouted over each other, competing to sell their good from the backs of their wagons. Everything from soap to shoes was on offer. The good weather wouldn’t last, and the citizens of Carabos rushed to prepare for the coming blizzards and the party that came before them.
Outside the walls, ice and snow already clogged the roads, but in the Water City, the weather behaved as the Riverfolk Mage Lords wished. Due to their amphibious nature, Riverfolk weren’t a people made for the cold weather. The magicians in the city used their magic to keep winter at bay as long as possible, as every Riverfolk on Elanterra gathered in their ancestral city. From sundown to midnight on the solstice, every Riverfolk in the city, and nearly the whole population in all of Elanterra would parade from the city gates down to the shore of Crystal Lake, and disappear beneath the water for their winter sequestration. Once the last of their population was safely under the surface, the weather mages would end their spell, sealing the lake behind them with ice.
The rest of the city, the Humans, Half-Elves, Hillfolk and Mountainfolk of the city, along with the few others that defied common classification, would gather to see their supposed masters off, and what was once a solemn and holy ritual had slipped over the years into a raucous and well-loved festival.
As they made their way down the hill towards their rooms, the Freelance Hunters watched the city prepare for the celebration. In one alley, a group of Riverfolk youths were preparing the finishing touches on a float covered in flowers. In front of one tavern, a pair of laborers made a pyramid of barrels in preparation for lively outdoor business. Streamers hung from every street lamp, and the air was thick with baking pies and roasting meat. A few spectators were already camped out in the best spots, even though the parade was still several days away.
“Ugh, Parade Night,” Bingo Proudfoot complained, plunging his hands deep into the pockets of his long coat, which is still wore despite the more temperate climate inside the walls. Glory Bywater the group’s mage, stopped short and stared at him with her piercing blue eyes. Joachim Verne, the team’s resident warrior, who was tall even for Humans, nearly trampled them. The two Hillfolk were half his size, and while he was graceful in combat, he often found himself out of sorts with the pair.
“Bingo, how can you distain the New Year?” Glory demanded. “When I was a student at the Academy, we all lived for it! The bonfires, and the food, and the presents, and the floats, and the mulled cider. It is hands down the best night of the year!” The mage’s nostalgic smile seemed decidedly out of place.
“I’m sure you had a real benjo as a student. Your work was done for the year. The rest of us still had to make a living,” he grumbled. Her smile dimmed. There was an unspoken rule that the three of them didn’t talk about their pasts. They each had done things they regretted, or would sooner have others forget. The Proudfoots were a rough and poor clan, mostly made up of outcasts and orphans. She knew Bingo’s upbringing had been rougher than most as a foundling whose small size and quick hands had been put to nefarious use.
“But surely,” she ventured against better sense. “You must have some fondness for the holidays?”
“I’m just not ‘jolly,’ okay?” Bingo doubled his pace, attempting to force his way through the thick crowd, most of whom were at least twice his height.
“Joachim, surely you celebrated Solstice back home?” Glory asked. He frowned and stroked his bushy red beard.
“The snow had already packed us in by this time of year, but the whole village gathered for a feast on First Snowfall, if that’s what you mean.”
“You see? Everybody celebrates. Civilized folk need something to brighten the dark this time of year.”
Bingo sighed. “The dark was where I was raised. You know I was an urchin, yes?” His two companions nodded. “The orphanage wasn’t my salvation. That was where I learned my particular trade. And the headmistress made us work doubly hard on Parade Night. While you were toasting marshmallows and trading presents, I was cutting purses and fawning rigs. And the worst part was, we were always back and in bed before the snow fell. She was always one for curfew, the Headmistress.”
“Well, at least you had solstice dinner, right?”
“An extra portion of gruel, to keep our strength up.”
“A log fire? A wreath?”
“She kept the coal scuttle tightly locked, and never had an extra copper for anything so frivolous as decorations.”
“Presents?”
Bingo turned around and gave her a meaningful look. “I never celebrated Solstice in my whole miserable childhood, and I don’t intend to start now.”
The crowd carried them to their building, a three-story brick structure just off of Dock Street in a ward that insisted it was still respectable. The Freelance Hunters’ combination headquarters and apartment occupied half of the tenement’s top floor. They slipped into the dim foyer and were nearly to the stairs when their landlord, Mr. Gannet, burst from his office with a brown-paper package under his arm.
The Riverfolk man had silver-gray scales, a perpetually sour expression, and a penchant for tall hats that made him look like a dropped ice cream cone.
“Hello, Mr. Gannet,” Bingo said, and doffed his own cap.
“So the heroes have returned. Plundered any good tombs lately?”
“Well, we have to make our bones somehow,” Bingo quipped. Gannet pressed his thin lips together in what was definitely not a smile.
“This arrived for you today,” he said, holding out the box. “By Maile Man.”
“I simply cannot understand why people are so terrified of them. They deliver letters,” Glory said.
“They’re ten foot tall, hook-barbed, monstrosities created by the Mage Lords to protect their secrets,” replied Joachim.
“Well, certainly, but it isn’t as though they’re dangerous, as long as you’re polite and follow instructions.” Glory reached out to take the package, and Gannet lifted it out of her grasp.
“I was instructed quite explicitly to deliver this to Mr. Proudfoot.” Bingo took the package, profoundly surprised. “Eldritch delivery golems aside, Your rent is due,” Mr. Gannet said, recovering his composure. “I expected a deposit before you went on your latest, ahem, excursion.” His large, luminous eyes narrowed behind three sets of eyelids.
“We have it, Mr. Gannet,” Bingo started, then stared at his proffered hand. “But I just need to, er, convert it into more fungible coin for you. You’ll have it tomorrow?”
“I had better. I have much to do before Parading but don’t think I won’t toss you out before the freeze.” With that he retreated back into his office, leaving them in the hallway. They climbed the stairs to the third-floor landing and Joachim unlocked and opened the door. Bingo trailed behind, carrying the package as though it were cursed.
The apartment/headquarters wasn’t opulent, but it was big enough for the three of them. The main room was large and open. A hearth along the east wall provided heat. There was a pair of couches around it that served as both a living room and a space to entertain clients. It was separated from the kitchen and pantry by a low table. Glory’s laboratory took up the next corner, with strange, humming machines and gleaming glass beakers. Next to that was Joachim’s training area, and a round dining table next to the door. A dark hallway lead to the bedrooms and water closet. Riverfolk innovation meant that they had running water, even three stories up.
Bingo set the package carefully on the table. “Home sweet home,” He said. “Let’s hope it’s still standing in five minutes.”
Glory peeked around him to examine the package. “No return address. How mysterious. Who do you suppose sent it?”
Bingo made an odd little noise in his throat as he stared down at the package. “I recognize the handwriting,” he said.
Reaching a hand into the a hidden pocket of his greatcoat, he pulled out a black cloth bundle and unrolled it with a practiced flick of his wrist. The burglar’s tools didn’t make a sound as they landed on the table’s surface. Slowly, thoughtfully he picked through them, removing one tool and examining it before discarding it for another.
Finally, Glory reached the end of her patience. “For Barley’s sake, Bingo, who’s it from? And what are you picking through your gear for?”
Bingo straightened and looked her in the eye. “It took a lot of sweat, luck, and skill to get out from under the Proudfoot clan’s thumb. Most orphans don’t. They run up debts, get apprenticed, and before they can blink they’re in the life up to their eyeballs. I almost got tangled up, but I got myself free. And after five years of silence, Rosemary Proudfoot, my own dear orphan-master sends me a present. Do you want to bet it ain’t a trap?”

Tales of the Freelance Hunters, Season One: A Splash on the Big Bridge

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The Freelance Hunters stood on a hill overlooking the castle’s outer wall. The night was cloudy and chill. Mist rose from the lake beyond, and the air held the promise of the coming autumn. The gate stood against the water like a dark bulkhead.
“So this is Isleheart Castle,” Bingo said, his slim, four-foot tall Hillfolk frame was shaking with excitement. “I can’t believe we’re actually going to crack it!” He was manic, practically giggling at the thought.
“The keep’s a long way to go, Master Proudfoot. This is just the outer gate.” Their patron, a finely dressed Hillfolk man of about middle age said. “And there isn’t much time left before sunrise.”
“We’ll get you to your meeting on time, Ambassador Peacebridge. But I must admit, I hadn’t expected the need to assault the defenses. Isn’t the gate supposed to be open when the Council of the Five People is gathered?” Glory the magician asked. She fixed him with a shrewd gaze.
“Normally, yes. Which is why I have hired you to escort me back inside. I couldn’t raise a guard, and I feared for the safety of my fellow ambassadors. I fear something is terribly wrong.”
Joachim, the warrior of the group, looked down at the three of them and frowned. “How is it that you happened to be out at this time of night, Ambassador?” Peacebridge had the decency to look embarrassed.
“Well, I received a letter…” He trailed off sheepishly.
“And when you returned from this promised rendezvous, the gate was shut and locked?” Glory surmised.
“Exactly, Magus.”
“I see. But why don’t you just wait until they open the gates at dawn?” Joachim asked.
The Ambassador gasped at the suggestion. “Young man, the Renewal Ceremony begins promptly at first light! The Human kingdoms might not take the alliance seriously anymore, but for the rest of us, this is a sacred tradition! If even one of the councilors is not present for the ceremony tomorrow morning, it will be considered a grievous insult. Twelve-hundred years of cooperation dashed, and before long, all of Elanterra could be at war!”
Joachim looked out over the still, black water. “Can we boat across?”
“They didn’t put a castle here for the view. The waters are cold as a hag’s knickers, and the currents are deceiving. It’s a quarter mile deep, and loaded with feral krakens. No one who’s put a boat out has gone more than twenty feet in before being tipped in and shredded.”
“Alright then, the boat’s out. But I don’t see anyone guarding that gate. Could we just climb over it?” Glory asked.
“There aren’t any fires, but someone is surely in that gatehouse. I can feel it,” Joachim said.
“It wouldn’t work, anyway. The surface of the wall makes climbing impossible, and whoever’s in there’d be on us in an instant!”
“Bingo, what is it with you. You’ve been practically bouncing up and down since we took this job.”
“Joachim, this is Isleheart Castle. Out beyond that gatehouse is the Big Bridge, the most famous mile in all of defensive lore!”
“And?”
“And in the twelve-hundred years this castle has stood, it has never, ever fallen. During the war against The Enemy, it supposedly held off a siege that lasted for a decade! This is the tightest drum on the island! Nobody’s been mad enough try it since, but it still holds an ubeaten record as having never been infiltrated, ever. It’s an unpopped cherry, mate! We’ll be famous for this one.”
“So how do you suggest we get inside?”
Bingo paused, stood perfectly still for a moment, and finally shrugged. “We could Knock?”
“Fine. Glory, cover me.” Joachim marched up the winding path to the bridge gate. He met no resistance along the way, and out in the night, there was no sign of anything amiss. There was a bell, presumably for service, set in the wall next to the iron-banded oak. Joachim rang it in a long and loud peal. Soon, a shadow poked its head from between the crenellations.
“The gate is closed,” a high raspy voice said. Joachim couldn’t see the speaker, but he could guess who it belonged to. This might be interesting after all.
“Closed by goblins?” He called up. “They don’t have a seat on the Council. By what right?”
“By right of conquest. We claim this castle for our lost god. You will not enter, dale man. We are the Wolf People, and our pack is strong. You dare call me ‘Goblin?’” The figure was barely a silhouette in the night, but Joachim heard the sneer in its voice. “We remember the god that yours bound, because they feared his power. We keep the laws that you forget, because you are weak. You cower in stone houses and claim land you cannot see. We take nothing we cannot lift, or carry on a wolf’s back. Our ways are the pack’s ways, and they make us stronger than you. Begone.”
There was a ragged cheer. The leader had his pack behind him. That was to the good. If Joachim could insult the alpha badly enough, he’d have to come down and fight, or else get ripped apart by challenges from his own ranks. He cleared his throat.
“You are far from home, and I see no wolves here. You squat in a stone house made by the hands that bound your fallen god. Why are you here?”
“Vengeance. Justice. We have forsaken our wolf pack and come to the soft lands to break them.”
“You’re a fool if you think the Council will do anything but kill you when they find you playing on their doorstep.” A pebble flew over Joachim’s head. He pretended not to notice.
“Maybe, but your alliance is a fragile thing, made of promises and paper. If those pretty words failed, who would they kill first, us, or each other?
“So your plan is just to hold the gate and hope you aren’t discovered by morning? Too bad you’ll be dead long before then.” A few more rocks, and some sticks came down. They all missed him, but the pack’s aim was improving.
“You can’t reach us, unless you grow wings, human.”
“Maybe not from up there, but I can make a lot of noise if I want to. A shout can carry, across a lake like that. Unless, of course, you agree to a formal challenge.” A single rock whizzed past his ear, and then the barrage paused. The buzzing crowd on the gate was silent.
“A human has no right to challenge. Besides, your master would never allow himself to be discovered in this way.”
“I’m not his vassal. I’m just a hired spear.” Joachim reached behind his back, to where his spear was wrapped and tied. Incisor came free instantly, and Joachim could feel the unearthly pressure of the magical weapon in his hand. The runes on the fang-like head glowed icy blue in the darkness. There was a sharp intake of breath as the goblins recognized it.
“You are Joachim Verne, the Dale Knight, Wolf-killer and pack breaker.”
“You’ve heard of me? Open the gate and fight me.”
The figure climbed to the very top of the gate, and Joachim could see him for the first time. He wasn’t tall, even for a goblin. He didn’t stand more than three and a half feet high. His skin was a pallid gray-green, and his long hair was tied back and woven with small bones and charms.
“Foolish, Dale Man. I am Kor-fu son of Ak-ron, and I am the chosen of my dark lord’s people! I do not need to open the gates to fight you!” A ball of red fire appeared in the goblin’s hand, lighting up the battlements. With a grunt, he threw the fireball down on Joachim.
“Glory, shield! Shield!” The magical fire reached a point a few feet above the warrior’s head and stopped. It seemed to bounce like a child’s colorful toy before breaking against the barrier spell and flowing out in all directions in jets of scarlet flame before it disbursed. Kor-Fu cursed and withdrew from the wall. The gates opened a moment later.
The rest of the crew drew up as the gate reached the ground. They braced for a rush of goblin fighters, but nothing but darkness lay beyond. Bingo clapped him on the back, as high as he could reach. “Nicely done, Joachim. Now all we have to do is get past whatever traps they have waiting for us.”
“I don’t know. He claimed to have godly powers.” Glory glared at him like he were a slow student.
“Joachim, the Enemy is sealed away. That was just magic.”
“I’ve never seen a goblin use magic before. They consider it civilized.”
“Me neither. He certainly wasn’t Academy trained. He must be a hedge wizard.”
“It ain’t a bad con,” Bingo said. “Go off and learn a few flash spells, then come back and play prophet to your tribe of rubes.”
“Could take him, if it came down to it?” Joachim asked Glory.
“Did some other wizardry doyen save your life when I wasn’t looking?”
“Good. You should protect the client, then. Bingo, you know this place better than either of us do. You sweep for traps, I’ll sweep for goblins. Right?”
“Just don’t spook, Dale Knight.”
Joachim led the way inside. They were only a few feet into the castle before they hit the first ambush.
“We dedicate these deaths to the God of the Pack!” A pair of high voices shouted from above them. There was a great commotion as something tipped, and a steaming oil came streaming down from hidden holes in the stonework. Glory raised another shield, and the hot oil began to pool in the air above their heads.
“Move, I can’t hold it up for long!” the magician shouted. Joachim burst through the doors at the end of the hall.
“Don’t step on the white stones!” Bingo called as they moved forward. Bingo pulled the ambassador through with him, and Glory followed. The shield buckled just as she did, and hot oil splashed onto her boots, making her wince. By then, Joachim was already cleaning off his spear. The hidden crawlspace was now marked in blood.
“A strong defense from the front, but not from the other side,” he said. “Are you alright, Glory?”
“I’m fine.”
“They’ll be hidden all over the bridge, anywhere they can get a shot at us.”
“Is that your warrior’s intuition?” She asked. Joachim seemed to have a sixth sense for enemy strategy. He glowered.
“Just good tactics. Bingo?”
“This room’s clear.”
Joachim opened the gate at the far side of the room, careful to only step on the square black stones of the checkerboard floor. They got their first good look at Isleheart Castle’s famous bridge. It was mostly made of wood, rather than the stone Joachim had expected. The path snaked between a line of gatehouses which jutted from the water like stones in a stream. The castle keep stood on an island not more than a few hundred feet away, but the twisting bridge was at least a mile long.
“No wonder they call it the big bridge,” Joachim said. He took his first step, but bingo put out a hand. He paused. The cracksman tossed a rock out instead. Where it struck, a section of planks tilted, rose, and flipped over, tipping the stone into the water with a plop.
“The lake’s full of wild kraken, eh?”
“So they say.”
“Never seen one of them.”
“Stop by the Caribos docks some time. A few of the madder Riverfolk use ’em as draft horses. Bingo wedged a stick underneath the bridge, jamming the mechanism. “This one should be safe now.”
Joachim and Bingo forged ahead, treading cautiously in the darkness. A pair of goblins attempted to hold the second gate with javelins. Joachim kept them busy at the front while Bingo climbed around the side of the tower. A few busy minutes later, Bingo opened the second gate for him. This one was a little smaller than the first.
“Well done, Bingo.”
“Thanks. The bridge is designed to hold off a superior force, but the goblins don’t seem to have even the numbers for that. What were they thinking?”
“This is a suicide mission. Maybe Kor-Fu didn’t get all the recruits he was hoping for.”
Glory and the ambassador moved into the second gatehouse while Joachim and Bingo cleared the rest of the bridge. They quickly fell into their established rhythm. Bingo would back up Joachim as he fought the goblins from the front, and Joachim would watch Bingo’s back while he disarmed the multitude of hidden blades, tripwires, and counterweighted floorboards built into the bridge. Once a gatehouse was clear, Glory and the ambassador moved in and the mage protected their rear. The system worked, but the sky was getting lighter all the time. Dawn would come soon, and they were running out of time.
Joachim was astonished by all the different ways the builders had thought up to flip, twist, swing, and tilt sections of the planking. Bingo didn’t miss a single one. When Joachim mentioned this, he modestly admitted that most of the defenses were famous in burglary circles. Since the Alliance was established, no one had ever actually tried to assault Isleheart Castle up until now. It was used by cracksmen as a sort of primer on how to spot and get around traps.
The path narrowed as they went along, from the width of a horse cart at the first gate, down to where they had to march single-file on the last leg. That’s where they found Kor-Fu waiting for them. He’d changed into an ornamented suit of armor, cobbled together from a half-dozen sets and brightly painted to look like one piece. Joachim surmised that the original owners had been humans or dwarves ambushed by Kor-Fu’s tribe, as the gaudy iron breastplate was a bit too large for him.
“I’m impressed that you made it this far, but you’ll never get past me in time. I didn’t need to take the castle, just the unprotected bridge. In a few minutes, your treaty will be dead, and the alliance with it!” The goblin sneered at them from under a lopsided visor. Pointed teeth stuck up from his lower jaw. Joachim thought he might be right. It was nearly dawn. It would be a bright, clear morning, and the Council’s ceremony would begin when the first rays peaked over the horizon.
Joachim dispensed with banter and thrust Incisor in a precise jab, aiming for a gap in the armor plates. He felt a curious sensation of weight, and the head of the spear stopped, just a fraction of an inch from the metal. Bingo fired a bolt behind him, and it actually hung in the air for a second before dropping to the planks, robbed of all momentum. Joachim pulled back, but it took nearly all his strength, as though the spear were stuck in glue. Kor-Fu laughed.
“You didn’t expect me to just rely on armor, did you? This suit is well enchanted.” He pulled a thick, black sword from behind his back. “Your spear will make a fine trophy.”
“Bingo, go get Glory. I’ll hold him here.”
“Right.” The Goblin lunged, and Joachim stepped back, parrying the attack and fighting to keep the distance between them. He had to buy some time for Glory to get there and undo whatever spell he was using. Time they did not have. The goblin wizard was not a skilled fighter, but he didn’t have to be. The magic armor ensured that if Joachim made so much as a thrust against him, his weapon would be trapped. Joachim was far less well protected. He pushed at Joachim with a set of wild slashes, and Joachim parried and stepped back, looking for a way to disarm him.
“Your witch won’t be able to undo this spell. Any force fed into it just makes it stronger. I am as living iron.”
“It must be heavy,” Joachim noted, turning aside another clumsy strike. Kor-Fu found this comment particularly amusing.
“Fool, I don’t have to outrun you, just outlast you. In minutes, the Sun will rise, the Ambassador will be missed, and a thousand years of oppression will be undone!”
“You can’t honestly think that one treaty will change anything,” Joachim said.
“Twelve centuries breeds contempt, and hatred. Even with the alliance, small border wars and disputes rage. The River Men will take revenge on the Hillfolk who dump their waste upstream. The Humans will again war with the dwarves for gold and iron. And what will the Elves do, from their remote and hidden forests?”
As mad as he was, Joachim knew the warlock was right. He’d fought in a few of those border wars, and they were ugly things. The only thing that prevented outright war was the tradition of the Alliance. If it broke down, Elanterra would bleed out in the wars that followed.
Korfu pressed Joachim back further along the bridge until Joachim’s retreating step brushed against something, nearly tripping him.
There was no time to think about it, as Kor-Fu brought down is blade in triumph. Joachim dodged it by a hair’s breadth, and sunk into a crouch. He saw Bingo had placed to keep this bridge section in place.
“I hope that suit doesn’t rust, Kor-Fu,” Joachim said, and kicked the makeshift support away. The Goblin leader had only a moment of confusion before the great weight of his magic armor shifted the section of planks, and the bridge unceremoniously dumped him into the water below. The splash echoed across the water, and was so loud that it soon sent staff from the castle running, just about the same time Glory, Bingo, and Peacebridge opened the gate from the other side.
“Sorry,” Bingo said. “The gate came down after me and it took me a minute to get it open again. What happened to Kor-Fu?”
“He went for a swim,” Joachim said.
The Freelance Hunters rushed the ambassador to the ceremony, whose celebrants were none the wiser about the attempted invasion the night before. They made it with moments to spare. Bingo and Joachim opted for a hearty breakfast and a nap instead. Although the servants of the castle plied them with questions, they kept stoically silent. They had yet to collect their fee, after all.
That evening, the corpse of a freshwater kraken washed up agains the shore of the lake. A cursory examination showed that it had choked on a large metallic object. about three feet in diameter.
The Freelance Hunters were not on hand to provide an explanation. Peacebridge had already paid them and sent them on their way.

Hugh Likes Fiction: Even Though I Knew the End

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Even Through I Knew The End
Written by C. L. Polk
Audiobook Read by January LaVoy

The Skinny: A quick mix of Fantasy and Noir that hits hard and fast.

Helen Brandt is a Private Investigator living in 1940’s Chicago. She’s also a lesbian, and a warlock. She takes on magical work for her mysterious clients, gets paid well for her work, and doesn’t ask questions. But when she’s recruited to investigate a notorious serial killer whose murder scenes have a magical connection, she turns the job down. There’s too much risk involved, and people she cares about could get hurt, including her estranged brother and her girlfriend. But she changes her mind when her client offers her something she can’t refuse: Her soul.Even Though I Knew The End is a delightful little jewel of a fantasy noir novella. Polk’s recreation of 1941 Chicago, layered with a tantalizing hint of a rich magical world, is stunning and vibrant. The city breathes, and you can practically smell the stale cigarette smoke and stale coffee on the narrator’s breath. The combination of enticing fantasy world and impending doom with palpable and exciting. Polk’s well-researched noir prose is spot on, giving just enough to bring the story to life without turning purple.The audiobook, read by January LaVoy, is outstanding. Her narration brings the characters to life, and her performance of Brandt brings out the perfect amount of hard-luck noir sympathy for a protagonist who has undoubtedly done awful things for awful people (Marlowe in particular) but we want to root for her anyway, even though, well, we know how things are fated to turn out. Her performance of the rest of the cast is also excellent, giving otherworldly touches to the characters where appropriate and garnering sympathy when necessary.Even Though I Knew the End is a brilliant Fantasy Noir novella. You can find it in Print and eBook from the usual marketplaces, and as an audiobook from Audible.

Hugh Likes Fiction: Fireheart Tiger

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Fireheart Tiger
Written by Aliette de Bodard
Published by Tor.com
Read on Kindle

The Skinny: A tightly plotted fantastic historical romance about power and politics

Thanh is a princess bereft of options. Sent as a hostage to the distant and powerful nation of Ephteria, she returned home after the royal palace burned down with her inside. She still has nightmares of the fire. Lately, these have been getting worse, and she’s been smelling smoke and seeing flames in impossible places.

 Worse still, her cold and uncaring mother the Empress has put her in charge of the latest negotiations with Ephteria led by her former lover the princess Eldris. Caught between impossible duties, irresponsible desires, and the terrifying prospect that she is either a witch or madwoman, Thanh fights to make a future for herself where she remains free.

 The author of novellas such as The Teamaster and the Detective and The Citadel of Weeping Pearls, I have been a fan of Aliette de Bodard’s writing for years. She has a signature grasp of political melodrama, with characters caught between the things they want and the duties and destinies of empires. She is a master of using that drama to humanize her characters, even when they’re sentient spaceships. And while I won’t spoil the twist in this novella, she uses that skill no less effectively in this secondary world echoing historical Vietnam and France in the colonial period. Thanh is an intriguing protagonist, limited in her options and constrained by her position. But she is always moving, always fighting, even while she bemoans her lack of power. This novella burns through fantasy and romance tropes like well, again, no spoilers but it is a delightful trick to see her use those tropes and the echoes of Vietnamese history to such excellent effect here. In another kind of story, Eldris would have been the protagonist with all her poise and strength, swaggering into a political negotiation with her sword bouncing on her hip.

 The major complaint I have for this story is that I would’ve liked to have seen more of it. de Bodard confines the action to the Imperial Palace, with lots of discussion concerning Thanh’s sisters and the Empire’s neighbors. While I understand the reason this story is so intimate, I would’ve also liked to have seen a longer novel, or perhaps a sequel that incorporates more of those elements.

 Fireheart Tiger is an enchanting queer fantasy romance that burns away the illusions and deconstructs some of the tropes of the subgenre. You can find it in print from your local indie bookstore, or digitally from the usual storefronts.

Everyday Drabbles #689: Crisis of Faith

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The Paladin sat in contemplation. She was caught between her duty and the voice of her heart. Was she any better than the supposedly evil people she killed?
She rose and passed through corridors lined with holy relics. They were crafted from gold donated from pious kings or reconsecrated from heathen temples. But where had that gold come from originally? Was it faith or merely a display?
She decided to lay down her sword and walk until she could say for sure.
In the end, she never stopped walking but left a trail of mercy and hope in her wake.

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Everyday Drabbles #686: Overgrown Station

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She climbed through the abandoned train station, the cat always just a few steps ahead. The platform had a tree growing out of it, and the tracks were obscured by underbrush.
She heard the whistle and watched the train pull in, unhindered by the plant life covering the tracks. The train was an antique, painted white and green. She couldn’t make out the destination.
The doors opened and the cat sauntered onboard. She followed and took a seat with a threadbare cushion. She looked out the window and saw the ghosts of the station’s past waving as they steamed away.

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Everyday Drabbles #685: The Key to the Kingdom

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She received the ornate silver key with her other regalia on the day she became queen and asked her seneschal what it unlocked.
“Why, nothing, Your Majesty. It is symbolic.”
“The key to the kingdom, as it were?”
He chuckled. “Quite right, ma’am.”
As her reign progressed, she couldn’t get the old key out of her mind. She took to wearing it looped on a chain and wandered the corridors at night, looking for a keyhole.
It was three months before she found the door in the lowest depths of the palace basements and discovered how deep her kingdom went.

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Everyday Drabbles #684: Fire Cat

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The wizard’s cat was on fire.
It didn’t seem distressed. It just sat placidly and groomed itself. But the guest watched as pale flames and smoke rose from its back.
The wizard returned to the sitting room, the tea tray following behind with military precision.
“Do you know that your familiar is on fire?”
The mage smiled indulgently. “That’s just an experiment. Elemental pets are going to be the next big thing.”
“Elemental pets?”
“Oh, yes. I have an outstanding grass dog growing out back as well.”
The cat rubbed up against the back of a chair, setting it alight.

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Everyday Drabbles #681: Through the Forest

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“I’m telling you, it’s a monster,” the fighter said, raising his axe toward a shape in the gloom. The ranger sighed. They’d never get through the forest at this rate.
“That’s a mushroom growing on a dead tree. Don’t they have fungi under that mountain of yours?”
“Not ones that are six feet tall with claws!”
“Those are branches. It’s not going to attack you. This forest is perfectly safe. Ah!” The snare trap circled the elf’s foot and sent him hurtling skyward.
“Safe, you say?”
“I got distracted. Now cut me down before whoever set this thing shows up!”

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Everyday Drabbles #680: Getting the Band Together

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The witch began the summoning. She swung her ritual stone, with its glimmering silver chain, in all directions. The room filled with miasmic haze.
Her grandmother said all a real witch needed was two sticks and a bad attitude. But she wasn’t just a witch. She was a performer.
Three figures emerged, lanky and wolf-like with skulls for faces. They bowed to her and went to their instruments.
“Let’s all try and stay on key today,” she said as she picked up her guitar.
They weren’t the best musicians in Faerie, but they made one hell of an album cover.

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