Scribes by James Wolanyk - Book Tour + Giveaway
SCRIBES
The Scribe Cycle #1
by James Wolanyk
Pawns in an endless war, scribes are feared and worshipped, valued and exploited, prized
and hunted. But there is only one whose powers can determine the fate of the world . . .
and hunted. But there is only one whose powers can determine the fate of the world . . .
Born into the ruins of Rzolka’s brutal civil unrest, Anna has never known peace.
Here, in her remote village—a wasteland smoldering in the shadows of outlying foreign
armies—being imbued with the magic of the scribes has made her future all the more uncertain.
Here, in her remote village—a wasteland smoldering in the shadows of outlying foreign
armies—being imbued with the magic of the scribes has made her future all the more uncertain.
Through intricate carvings of the flesh, scribes can grant temporary invulnerability against enemies
to those seeking protection. In an embattled world where child scribes
are sold and traded to corrupt leaders, Anna is invaluable. Her scars
never fade. The immunity she grants lasts forever.
to those seeking protection. In an embattled world where child scribes
are sold and traded to corrupt leaders, Anna is invaluable. Her scars
never fade. The immunity she grants lasts forever.
Taken to a desert metropolis, Anna is promised a life of reverence, wealth, and fame—
in exchange for her gifts. She believes she is helping to restore her homeland,
creating gods and kings for an immortal army—until she witnesses the hordes
slaughtering without reproach, sacking cities, and threatening
everything she holds dear. Now, with the help of an enigmatic
assassin, Anna must reclaim the power of her scars—before she
becomes the unwitting architect of an apocalyptic war.
in exchange for her gifts. She believes she is helping to restore her homeland,
creating gods and kings for an immortal army—until she witnesses the hordes
slaughtering without reproach, sacking cities, and threatening
everything she holds dear. Now, with the help of an enigmatic
assassin, Anna must reclaim the power of her scars—before she
becomes the unwitting architect of an apocalyptic war.
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Their baying rose from the southern
bogs, low and tortured, warning fieldmen to gather roaming sows and bleary eyed
mothers to bolt their shutters. Then came the screeching that told caravan
drivers to seek refuge behind earthworks and palisades.
But the targets of their hunt had no
time to think of shelter. Anna, First of Tomas, was too busy thinking of death.
She wondered if it would be sudden and painless, numbing her exhaustion like
bathing in winter streams. Perhaps death was agonizing, which explained the
sobs of feverish men who—
Just two leagues, she reminded herself,
even as her steps faltered among the oaks and saplings and lichen-choked stone,
all looming monstrously in the fog. Even as her pulse drummed in her temples. The
lake is two leagues away. But the air was humid and foul, too thick to breathe.
Everything smelled of carcasses reclaimed by the mud.
Her predictions had placed the trackers
at five leagues by dawn, yet beyond the latticework of branches, the skies were
still a murky wash. Darkness hadn’t yet been flushed from the horizon. No, it
was impossible
for them to make up this much ground
before sunrise. They’d come earlier every year, ever since the village started
to learn their tactics, but this was calculated.
Somebody told.
“What is it?” Julek winced. “You’re
hurting me.”
Anna glanced down. She’d absently
clamped onto her brother’s wrist, turning his fingers a pallid blue. Her grip
eased as she focused on the predawn stillness. Mother often told her that she
had their kin’s sharpest ears, but now she hated the honor. She heard the
rustling of shrubs, the startled flight of a thousand birds, the slap of paws
on damp reeds as
huntsmen cut across the floodplains.
“Nothing,” she said, hoping the boy was
too young to understand. She was hardly an elder, but old enough to tell
convincing lies. Old enough to make an eight-year-old feel that he wasn’t being
hunted, and that they’d spend their morning with toes dipped in crisp water,
staring out at the dark pines across the lake. Weaving her fingers into the
links of her silver necklace, Anna pulled Julek toward the ferns. “If we don’t
hurry, we’ll spend all day out here.”
“It isn’t even sunup yet,” Julek said.
He frowned at the beasts’ cries.
“Anna, what’s that?”
“Elk,” she whispered.
Ahead lay the gloom of deeper woods,
and behind them, a sprawl of waterlogged fields. She’d been forced to carry
Julek through the bogs, and all the while she’d made him laugh by pretending she
was his warhorse. Her new boots were ruined, and her linen leggings were soaked
to the knee, but it hardly mattered. She wouldn’t be returning.
“Come on, little bear,” she said,
waving a gnat away from her face.
“Here, come on. I’ve got you.”
He scrunched his brow, clenched his
tongue between crooked teeth, and swung his right boot out. Pitching forward,
he caught Anna’s arm for balance. His left leg was more deformed, but the
momentum pulled him into an awkward gait. “Anna, it isn’t making me fast. Whatever
you rubbed on my arm.”
Anna stole a sniff of her free wrist,
breathing deep for the twistroot’s sap-like odor. In its place, she smelled
only sweat and ancient wool, and realized the beasts hadn’t latched onto a
false scent. She’d mixed the salves incorrectly, perhaps forgetting the tallow
to waterproof it on their skin. It was too late now, of course. They were
closing in.
“Anna, please,” Julek whined. “I need
to sit down. That’s all.”
“When we reach the lake, we can sit
down. Is that fair?”
“No,” Julek said. “The lake is an hour
away.”
“Less than that, if we hurry. Isn’t
that right?”
“I can’t hurry.”
There was pain in his voice, and worse
yet, sincerity. Back home, he could barely pace around the field or crawl onto
his cot by himself, and he’d been excited by the idea of a secret trip to the
lake without his riding pony. For once, he’d been trusted to keep pace on his
own two feet. Now it was an exercise in cruelty.
“Anna!”
“I know,” she said softly. She blinked
away prickling tears, wondering if they came from desperation or pity. When she
saw another cluster of crows scatter from the treetops, she realized it was
both. “Julek, we can’t disturb these men. I need you to be quiet.”
“Why?” he whimpered. “You’re hurting
me.”
Anna bit into her lower lip, threatening
to draw blood. She tried to soften her grip on him, but couldn’t. Letting go
meant death.
The boy jerked his arm back, twisting
free of Anna’s hold.
She rounded on him with clenched fists.
“Julek!”
But he was already crumpled among ferns
and overhanging thistle, his breathing hard and broken between whimpers. Thorns
fixed his tunic in place, leaving his legs sprawled limply behind him.
“Julek, please,” Anna whispered. She
knelt beside him and reached out, but he recoiled, pinning his arm to his chest.
His tunic sleeve ended above the elbow, exposing the lashes from the briar
patches. Beneath the blood, mirrored across his face and neck and fragile
ankles, his rounded sigil shifted in luminous white. The symbol was cryptic yet
familiar in Anna’s mind: the boy’s essence, unique to him alone. To glimpse
such a thing was a gift and burden known only to scribes. “I’m sorry.”
Julek glanced away, wiping his nose
with the back of his hand. “Just take me home, Anna. I don’t like this. I want
to go back.”
“Fine,” she said. Again she heard the
trackers crashing through the underbrush. Panic put a burning flush in her
cheeks. “Come on, Julek, we can go.”
The boy looked up at her, tears
streaking his freckles and trailing down his dusty cheeks. “You’re lying to
me.”
Branches snapped, perhaps in the grove
a pence-league away.
“Never,” Anna said. She offered a hand
to coax her brother’s arm out of hiding.
He shook his head. “Something’s wrong.”
“No,” she said in a broken whisper.
“You’re crying,” he said. “Anna, who
are they? What’s wrong?”
Out of sight, the beasts growled.
Anna snapped her focus to the expanse
of dead brush behind them, scanning for any sign of disturbance among the
thorns. But the morning was still a filthy gray, staining the forest in monochrome,
and she couldn’t discern anything beyond the dark slashes of trees and creeping
fog. The scene only grew blurrier as her eyes watered.
She glanced back at Julek. “We’re fine.
I just cut myself.” Anna held up her right hand and fought to ease the shaking.
There was a smear of blood beneath her ring finger. “See? Just a small cut.
I’ll bandage it at home.”
“You never cry.” His next teardrop
rolled until Anna wicked it away with a trembling thumb. “Are you scared?”
No, little bear, she wanted to say,
even as the teardrop stung her skin, everything is all right. She opened her mouth,
but the words vanished.
Cracking twigs burned away her breaths.
It all seemed so foolish now. Even if
she reached the raft, she didn’t know where to go. The tanner’s son never
specified which direction she had to travel to reach Lojka, nor how far. And
what good were her salt clusters if she conflated pinches and grabs, and had
never asked how much to pay for anything? Some of the local boys even said that
the northern cities didn’t take salt as payment. Was she even going north? How
far could they go without food?
The longer she stared into Julek’s
eyes, the less such things mattered.
“Give me your arm,” she commanded.
Julek obeyed with hesitation, and Anna took hold of his wrist with one hand and
seized a wad of his tunic with the other, dragging the thin boy to his feet and
bracing his body against hers. “Just like the fields, okay?” She dropped into a
narrow squat and allowed him to lean forward, bearing his full weight across
her back and meshing his hands beneath her chin. “I’ll keep you safe, little
bear.”
On any other day, Julek would’ve been
considered light. Most of his muscles were atrophied from years of housework
and bed rest, and unlike the other boys—indeed, unlike Anna—his daily meal was
a mug of boiled kasha. Their father could still lift him with a single arm. But
today it was all wrong.
Anna had been too nervous to eat for
days. She’d traveled a league in total darkness, and another two in marshlands.
Her feet were waterlogged and bleeding, her legs threatening to buckle with
every step.
Lukewarm sweat beaded along her brow
and stung her eyes. When she stopped listening to the wet pulse of her own
heartbeats, she heard boots stomping through the brush behind her, quickening
as they drew closer. With every exhale, her ribcage constricted. Stagnant air
burned in her lungs as she emerged from withered grass and into the mire,
hemmed in by drowning trees.
Her boots sank into the muck,
squelching as she fought to move on. Flickers of memory, rusted trapper’s teeth
and bloody bear flesh and desperate animal thoughts, exploded into her
awareness. Escape.
But
every step pulled her deeper, swallowed her boots to the ankle. Julek’s weight
damned them. Anna worked to free her boot, her legs cramping with the effort,
but it remained trapped. “Julek,” she said, still pulling, “if I let you down
now, could you walk?”
He made no response.
She repeated the question, tugging at
the boy’s trouser leg. “It’s very important.” The calm of her voice died with
the crunching of nearby branches. She knew they were within sight, but she
couldn’t afford to look, especially with Julek clutching her. The boy’s muffled
prayers fed the dread in her gut. “Julek,” she whispered to the shuffle of unbearably
close steps. “I want you to stay beside
me, no matter what. I know you can do that.” Anna bent at the left knee,
struggling to remain upright as Julek swung himself around and dangled freely.
She reached down to pull his limp legs from the water, but the boy clutched her
tighter. “Don’t worry. Just hold onto me.”
Her knees gave way, and she toppled to
the left. But before she could feel the lukewarm water she collided with moss
and termite-ravaged wood. Her pale arm slid into the notch between branches and
exposed her own cuts, much deeper and brighter, running down leaf-littered skin
from elbow to palm. But her flesh was bare, devoid of the sigils she saw
on everybody else. A scribe carried no
essence, they said. No protection against the bloodshed from which they spared
others.
“It’s okay,” Anna whispered. Boots
thumped nearby.
Julek stared up at her with wide,
swollen eyes, his grip tightening around her neck. He was trying not to cry,
trying to be like her. “Home, Anna. We need to go home.”
Behind her the screeching that once
seemed so distant was now deafening. It was a guttural moaning, no doubt
muffled in some way, communicating starvation that only trackers could put into
their beasts.
Flesh wasn’t enough to satisfy it now.
It needed violence.
In spite of the blood, Anna’s mouth
went dry. She stared at Julek as her vision blurred, and the tips of her ears
turned cold. Before long the crackle of leaves overtook her ragged breaths.
“You’re quick,” said a passionless
voice, no more than ten paces away.
“You must be exhausted. Set him down,
rest against the tree. There’s no need to hurry.”
In Anna’s mind it was a simple thing to
retrieve the hunting blade tucked into her belt. But it seemed impossible to
move her hands. When the beast growled behind her, close enough to rustle her
trouser leggings with its hot breath,
she lost her nerve.
James Wolanyk is the author of the Scribe Cycle and a teacher from Boston.
He holds a B.A. in Creative Writing from the University of Massachusetts, where his
writing has appeared in its quarterly publication and The Electric
Pulp. After studying fiction, he pursued educational work in the
Czech Republic, Taiwan, and Latvia. Outside of writing, he enjoys
history, philosophy, and boxing. His post-apocalyptic novel, Grid,
was released in 2015. He currently resides in Riga, Latvia as an
English teacher.
He holds a B.A. in Creative Writing from the University of Massachusetts, where his
writing has appeared in its quarterly publication and The Electric
Pulp. After studying fiction, he pursued educational work in the
Czech Republic, Taiwan, and Latvia. Outside of writing, he enjoys
history, philosophy, and boxing. His post-apocalyptic novel, Grid,
was released in 2015. He currently resides in Riga, Latvia as an
English teacher.
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1 Comments
I enjoyed getting to know your book; congrats on the tour and I hope it is a fun one for you :)
ReplyDeletePlease try not to spam posts with the same comments over and over again. Authors like seeing thoughtful comments about their books, not the same old, "I like the cover" or "sounds good" comments. While that is nice, putting some real thought and effort in is appreciated. Thank you.