Devourer: A Minister Knight Novel (The Minister Knights Series Book 2) Read online




  Devourer

  A Minister Knight Novel

  Nicole Givens Kurtz

  Contents

  Devourer

  Reviews

  1. A Mother’s Suspicions

  2. Akub the Devourer

  3. Trust Swallowed Whole

  4. Betrayal Redux

  5. Sudden Snow

  6. Awakenings

  7. Facing the Queen

  8. Arrival

  9. A Sprout in the Snow

  10. Manola Returns

  11. Old Wounds Still Bleed

  12. Internal Fire

  13. A New Day

  14. Spoken Truth Comes to Pass

  15. Empty-Handed

  16. A Cold Wind Blows

  17. Secrets

  18. A Vanishing

  19. A Mother’s Confession

  20. The Cold Creeps In

  21. Secreted in the Night

  22. The Best Laid Plans

  23. The Land of Lundlei

  24. The Aftermath

  25. Epilogue

  About the Author

  Devourer

  A Minister Knight Novel

  Nicole Givens Kurtz

  Mocha Memoirs Press, LLC

  Winston-Salem, NC

  Copyright Notice

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the authors’ imaginations or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Devourer: A Minister Knight Novel

  Copyright © 2017 Nicole Givens Kurtz

  Edited by Melissa Gilbert at ClickingKeys.com

  Cover design by Laura Givens

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced electronically or in print without permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in reviews.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  Published by

  Mocha Memoirs Press

  931 S. Main Street

  Ste. B-143

  Kernersville, NC 27284

  Mochamemoirspress.com

  Providing New Flavors in Fiction!

  Reviews

  Praise for The Soul Cages:

  A Minister Knight Novel

  “Crossing and Double Crossing--Soul Cages is Deep, Dark, and Fun!”

  --Reviewer, Julie Dismukes, 5 Stars

  “…In this dark fantasy world that is filled with twists and turns the reader is in for a wild ride of suspense, love, betrayal, and ultimately the power of one woman that can change 3 different worlds.”

  --Katara’s Café, 5 Stars

  “Nicole Givens Kurtz has written an awesome tale of valor, love, greed and sibling rivalry around a brilliant story about good versus evil. She does a good job with a host of characters and lots of suspense and drama. She made each character in this saga seem very human although you are aware that they have some superhuman tendencies. Each page seems to be the start of a new adventure that surprisingly doesn't get lost in all the subplots as they come to a very exciting climax that left me flipping the pages looking for more.”

  --The RawSistaz Review, 4.5 Stars

  “Experiencing Sarah’s journey is much like being a foreigner enjoying a beautiful, exotic, and dangerous land from the comfort of your favorite chair. The Soul Cages will keep you spell bound and turning pages all the way to the final haunting and bone-chilling sentence.”

  --A Kindle Reader, 5 Stars

  1

  A Mother’s Suspicions

  At the Minister Knights of Souls’ castle, Queen Zoë quieted the crowded Great Hall with the mere act of standing. The pain rippling through her stomach threatened to silence her, but the eyes of every servant, child, and knight were trained on her. As she took in the people before her, seated at tables throughout the hall, she recalled how many had grown up with her and the Veloris royal family. She had been a friend to them as a little girl, and they had born witness to her wedding, and later, celebrated the births of her two sons. Now, they’d watch her reign through the much-needed time of peace. With the threat of Valek vanquished, they had returned to the formality of day-to-day life and on to more mundane things.

  The Veloris people’s relationship with her bordered on intimate. Her every command, they obeyed. They trusted her with an absolute devotion unparalleled in other kingdoms. This she knew with certainty. Zoë understood her duty as queen—to be both strong and well for her people, to be fair and just.

  Yet, as the day of celebration, the Festival of Warming, arrived, she found herself growing more ill. Her stomach throbbed with each inhaled breath. Eating had become next to impossible. Confined to her chambers for days before, Zoë knew the sickness had spread throughout her body, but this morn, she’d crawled out of bed. She’d forced herself to dress and come down for the festivities. She’d sent her chambermaid away. Her people expected her; she wouldn’t disappoint them.

  "On this day, the Minister Knights of Souls saved the Pixlis Galaxy and restored peace. As I said then, I say again…we are forever in your debt, Minister Knights!" She smiled through the sharp pangs and raised her goblet to toast those seated at the table closest to her throne.

  She sipped, signaling the beginning of the celebration. The hall erupted with cheers and quick, thirsty gulps of ale, and for the children, warm milk. History dictated that throughout the night, the kitchen servants would struggle to keep up with the demand. The people situated at the table closest to the queen's throne cheered the loudest and celebrated the hardest. There, Marion and Kalah, and their wives, Lady Sarah and Lady Amana, feasted with full gusto. Zykeiah, the knights’ sole female member, whistled with joy.

  Queen Zoë watched the celebration. The servants were bees buzzing around the festive and colorfully dressed crowds. Tonight, she had dressed for the occasion, as most of the women present. After all, this was a feast! She wore a ruby-red gown made of a heavy woolen fabric. The silver surcoat had been embroidered with thick thread of unknown origin that twinkled in the candlelight. Even the Warming Season couldn’t stay Veloris’s icy temperatures. A crown made of refined silver rested atop her head. The puff of her silver tight-curled hair flowed outward around it.

  Elaborate decorations adorned the hall. Herbs and flower petals from the Northern Forest had been strewn about on the floor providing color, a showing of the Awakening Time’s blossoms. On the walls, ornate tapestries in vibrant burgundy and silver depicted Veloris’s ivory landscapes. Dining tables set on trestles were covered with lilac-colored linen cloths. In the middle of each table sat burned-down lavender scented candles and wax statues carved by the village candle makers.

  They’d had celebrations and feasts before, but this night, the festival reached an all-time high that would become legendary. Queen Zoë divided her attention between the children’s game of marbles and the dancing, and sometimes, drunken adults. Despite the pain in her stomach, she participated as much as she could, walking around the hall, talking to people—servants and villagers alike. When she passed her sons’ table, her youngest, Kalah, grabbed Marion’s sleeve, his thick fingers crumpling the fabric.

  "How does it feel this many years later? To be surrounded by this?" He spread his arms wide as if to embrace the entire Great Hall a
nd those therein.

  Marion, her eldest son, grinned, his gray eyes bright with excitement, his dark skin illuminated from the candles’ soft light, and laughed. "Good! It feels good."

  As if to pass on his joy, he leaned over and kissed his wife, Lady Sarah. She squeezed his hand in return, her gaze full of love. “Marion!”

  “Then why do I not feel it? Inside?” Kalah asked as he slipped back over to his seat. His brow furrowed, and he looked away, out over the hall. With a huff, he crossed his arms and glared at the crowd.

  Ah, her sulky youngest son had not been himself as of late.

  “Kalah…” Zoë patted his shoulder. “Try to have a good time. Each time you have too much drink, your spirit falters.”

  Turning from her sulking son, Queen Zoë marveled at how much in love Marion and Sarah were; it seemed they were two halves of the same person. They moved in concert and harmony that many couples never achieved in entire lifetimes, let alone in only a few years. It reminded Zoë of her husband, Marshall, now dead. She and the reverend had been one. They had been in concert, in harmony, two souls bound by love and fate as well.

  Unlike many of the women present tonight, Sarah wore a scarlet kowletta-fur sweater and jet-black, kowletta-leather pants. The queen smiled as she took in her outfit. No dresses for the future queen of Veloris.

  “If you could just get her to wear a gown, she’d be more beautiful than the chester flowers that bloom in the Warming Season.” Zoë gestured to Sarah’s outfit.

  Marion’s chest swelled with pride as he gazed upon his wife. “It matters not what is on her outward person. It is inside that matters. Besides, she’s still beautiful.”

  “Of course. Of course. Grant an old woman her small torments, Marion.” Queen Zoë laughed and turned her attention to Sarah’s sister, Amana. Her smile faded.

  Given the title of lady, for they were not princesses prior to their marriages to her two sons, Queen Zoë thought Amana an unsmiling and cold woman. Emotions never rose to her face’s plain surface. Where Sarah produced light, Amana held only darkness. She carried a cloud about her person. Some of the servants had said the woman simply froze them with her gaze until they did her bidding. It could all be superstition and conjecture, but one thing held certainty: Amana troubled her.

  The grim-faced sister’s place and status came solely from her blood relation to Veloris’s future queen, Sarah, and her strategic marriage to Kalah. Queen Zoë knew this with a worldly knowledge of a queen who listened to her servants’ gossip when they thought her asleep and mined out the kernels of truth.

  Upon her arrival to Veloris, Amana had been given food, wine, clothes, and a prince for a husband. Yet, the girl remained standoffish and secretive. Sarah had been Amana’s only saving grace, for the queen had wanted her death after her act of treachery—stealing Marion’s soul.

  But that had been three years ago.

  "It is good!" Zykeiah said from her seat at the end of the table. "You were almost lost to us, Marion!"

  “Yes.” Queen Zoë drew her attention back to the celebration and away from her suspicions. It’s customary to greet the queen, but Amana wouldn’t even acknowledge Zoë’s presence. She avoided the queen’s gaze.

  "Indeed," Marion said. “To you, Kalah, and Sarah! Hear, hear!”

  "To Valek's death!" Kalah roared above the crowd, and in return, several neighboring tables burst into another drunken and deafening song of victory and cheers of celebration.

  The night stretched on, people danced, jesters joked, and children played. Several times, the dancing resulted in outbursts of laughter and drinks spilled as people fell in merriment. In all, feelings of contentment blanketed the hall.

  Zoë watched it from her seat on the throne.

  Sarah and Marion got up to dance after much cheering and encouragement. They danced to the slow ballad, “The Song of Alilah and Roan,” a heart-breaking tale of Marion’s forebears who died during a violent snow storm only to be reunited in Stocklah as trees forever intertwined.

  As she rested, Zoë pushed back the soft rumblings in her mind. This illness held something dark in its mixture, and she could feel it seep through her. With a grunt, she shoved the thoughts away. This was her time, a moment of celebration in a life that had seen far too many deaths and destruction. She didn’t want anything to disturb her or her people’s joy. Her sons, her ministers, had vanquished Valek.

  All was well.

  Despite feeling safe, a metallic trace of fear coated her tongue.

  Zoë saw the strangers to Veloris among the crowd. After the knights’ previous visits to other planets to save Marion, the world of Veloris had begun to accept visitors from those kingdoms. Tonight, merchants from Saturn Four had come to trade and mingled with the villagers. Joy laced the air, but Zoë knew, too, that many of her people held dissatisfaction over how the monarchy governed them. A foreign feeling flickered through the hall. She’d heard the whispers of rumor and rebellion.

  Veloris was changing.

  With this knowing, Zoë tightened her hold on the throne as a shiver raced down her spine.

  “Are you well?” Zykeiah’s glowing gaze rested on her.

  Damn the woman’s ability to see through almost anything.

  “Yes, I am well.” Zoë raised her hands and clapped in time to the song, despite her agonizing pain. She would not show weakness. Not now. Let joy and peace reign in celebration. Suppressing her grief, she swallowed her suffering and forced a grin at Zykeiah.

  The knight would not be that persuaded. Zykeiah came up to the throne and stood close to her. She watched Sarah and Marion dance, her hand on her throwing daggers strapped into a thigh-holster tapping in time to the music. She had worn them regardless of the celebration’s call for more formal dress.

  “I’m glad to be able to let my guard down for once,” Zykeiah said, but kept her gaze on the crowd.

  On the surface, it sounded casual, but Zoë knew the perceptive knight wouldn’t make a personal statement such as this, unless it had a deeper purpose.

  “That means you haven’t let your guard down at all.” Zoë shot her a knowing glance.

  “When she doesn’t think anyone is looking, hatred stains her face,” Zykeiah said, her gaze still focused outward to the crowded hall.

  Zoë didn’t need to know of whom she spoke. “Many fear the merchants from Saturn Four.”

  “They can’t be trusted.”

  “No?” Zoë quirked an eyebrow. The revelation didn’t surprise her as Zykeiah distrusted most people, but it did take her aback a little, for the dark-skinned warrior hailed from that planet.

  “I know this for fact.”

  Zoë nodded. She followed Zykeiah’s gaze to Amana.

  The danger may not lie in the salesmen but right in the royal ring. Zoë resumed clapping and forced a big smile. She would not show weakness.

  Not now.

  For tonight, let joy and peace reign in celebration.

  2

  Akub the Devourer

  Something was amiss.

  Akub stood in the open mouth of the Great Hall, her cloak’s hood tossed back and the cold glass sphere in her palm. It pulsated heady green rays of illumination, highlighting her fingers and making them appear dark with decay. The tattoos along her hands and palms spread up to her elbows and burned. Hot whispers whirled around her as the people backed up, and back in, to the crowd flowing into and out of the hall.

  The orb always conjured fear.

  It sucked out souls.

  It brought death.

  Death was a permanent thing, not to be taken lightly.

  With her hand starting to sweat, she swallowed the tight knot of worry in her throat. She’d come to Veloris as fast as she could, but something—no, not something, someone—inside her warned she had arrived too late. Before anyone alerted a guard, she shoved the pulsating sphere back into her pocket, quieting its hunger.

  Thank the goddess for drink and merriment. Most probably wouldn’t remem
ber they’d seen anything strange at all. She’d been foolish to pull it out of her cloak in the first place, but the damn thing acted as if it had a mind of its own.

  A scream pierced the stuffy castle air, sailing high above the minstrel’s song and the murmur of conversations. The music halted. In its wake, silence grew thick as one of the minister knights stepped away from a woman and unsheathed his sword. Akub spied the female knight, Zykeiah, who jumped to her feet. Her hands rested on her daggers, ready for an attack. She searched the group, scanning the people. Others looked around for the origin of the scream. Many were now backpedaling from the throne. Panic skated along the tight edge of tension.

  It has begun, and I am too late!

  Mystic energy throbbed in Akub’s hands, and her ears tingled with anticipation. As a weaver, her magick derived from inside her. She could harness it and use it to bend the wills of others. So talented she’d become that she could sweeten the magick to the point the individual devoured it, and their will became hers.

  The oracle’s foretold events had commenced. No one noticed Akub. She blended in with the other Saturn Four strangers. The allowance of foreign tradesmen to move about the castle gave her entry. She should travel with the crowd, retreat, hide among the hordes, but the flood of emotions rooted her to the spot at the front of the entrance.