Sea of Death: Blade of the Flame - Book 3

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Book: Sea of Death: Blade of the Flame - Book 3 by Tim Waggoner Read Free Book Online
Authors: Tim Waggoner
self-important—to serve themselves. The diners themselves came from all strata of society. Some were clad in expensive finery and adorned with jewelry of rare craftsmanship and incalculable value, while others were barefoot and wore torn, dirty rags that could only charitably be referred to as clothing at all. But despite the variance in dress, the rich and poor—or at least, those who appeared to be so—often sat at the same tables, talking, laughing, and behaving as equals.
    Yvka stood in the great hall’s entrance for a moment as she scanned the tables searching for the man she had come here to see. It didn’t take her long to spot him sitting at a table alone, almost as if he had been expecting her. He probably was, Yvka thought.
    Zivon was a handsome man who appeared to be in his mid-forties, though Yvka knew he was older, perhaps quite a bit so. Half-elves weren’t as long-lived as full elves, but their lifespans were significantly longer than those of their human cousins. His brown hair was pulled back and bound with a leather thong, and he sported a neatly trimmed goatee with more than a bit of gray mixed in withthe brown. Full elves didn’t grow facial hair, but half-elves could, thanks to the human side of their ancestry. Zivon wore a fine silken robe of aquamarine with white trimming the color of sea foam, in keeping with the Culinarian’s underwater theme.
    Zivon smiled with what appeared to be genuine delight when he spotted Yvka and waved her over to his table. Yvka returned the smile, acknowledged the invitation with a nod, and began making her way across the room toward Zivon. As she drew near, she saw that the capillaries in the half-elf’s eyes were tinted purple, and she knew that he’d been indulging in urchin-sting, a common narcotic enjoyed in the Principalities. She also knew that he was far from the only one in the great hall who had done so this day. Sitting on the table before him was a plate piled high with seafood delicacies, and before Yvka could sit across from him, a server brought her a plate similarly loaded. As soon as that servant departed, another appeared carrying a wine jug. She refilled Zivon’s mug, then moved to fill the mug already sitting at Yvka’s place, but the elf-woman waved the servant away and the woman moved off to tend to other diners.
    As Yvka took her seat, Zivon said, “I’m surprised you declined the wine. You know I select only the finest vintages for my cellar.” The half-elf’s voice was steady, though his words were slightly slurred.
    “I also know you lace your wine with urchin-sting to blunt the effects of the Fury,” Yvka said. “I’d rather my perceptions remain undulled. Besides, if all goes well, soon no one in Kolbyr will need to worry about resisting the Fury any longer.”
    Zivon took a long sip of wine, and when he put his mug back down, the veins in his eyes looked thicker and more purple than they had a moment ago. “You speak of course of your friend the priest.”
    There was something in the way Zivon said
your friend
that made Yvka uncomfortable. Half-elves were known for their silver tongues, and Zivon was no exception. He used words with rapier-like precision. He was undoubtedly making a comment about Yvka getting too close to her companions.
    Zivon lifted an oyster to his mouth and swallowed it in a single deft motion. He set the empty shell aside and took another sip of wine. Half-elves tended to be thin, though not as ethereally slenderas full-blooded elves. With his hybrid metabolism Zivon could regularly eat twice as much as a human without putting on excess weight, which made the Culinarian a perfect place for a devotee of fine dining like him to serve the Shadow Network.
    “We were aware of the priest’s vow to lift the curse on the House of Kolbyr moments after he made it,” Zivon said.
    The half-elf was exaggerating, Yvka thought, though probably not by much. The Shadow Network knew virtually everything that happened

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