Author
-Milo Swanton
Release
Date-8th September,2014
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goodreads-https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/23172063-fealty-to-the-king?ac=1
Synopsis
As
the fourth son of the former clanlord of the Herkt, Brutez wasn't
meant to rule. But finding himself in conflict with the violent
current leader over a captured enemy warrior, he challenges the
clanlord for leadership, and changes his destiny.
Brutez
is soon drawn into the wars among the neighboring clans and tribes.
He has a vision for a unity they've never known, but peace comes at
great price. Warfare is dangerous, and politics are even deadlier.
Fealty
to the King is a sweeping, epic tale of warrior clans and tribes. Of
discovery, knowledge, and faith. Of the founding of a nation. Of
greatness.
Excerpts
Except
1
“We
have a hundred warriors,” said Vinlon. “We’re going to Ranjin.”
“Tribemaster,
we shouldn’t.”
Vinlon
was angry. “Why not, Jaspich? Look what they did to your family’s
house. They killed your father.”
“Nobody
will stop the Herkt from reaching Fenzdiwerp if we go to Ranjin.”
“You’re
like your father, not wanting to counterattack.”
Angered,
Jaspich no longer withheld words. “If you had listened to my
father, Habergenefinanch wouldn’t be this incinerated ruin.”
Vinlon
thrust forth his chest in a challenge. “You speak bold words to
your tribemaster.”
The
menace in his voice chilled Jaspich, but he refused to relent.
“You’re tribemaster, but you told me I’m the next one. I know
you intend to treat me as a son. If you want to be my new father, you
must listen to me.”
Vinlon
said nothing, staring Jaspich in the eye. He looked down Jaspich’s
tensed body to the young man’s feet and back to his face. “I
chose well.” He allowed a smile. “You’re not intimidated
against speaking your thoughts, even after I threaten you. You’re
worthy to advise me, so speak, and I’ll consider.”
“I share your desire for revenge,
Tribemaster. How can’t I? He was my father!” Jaspich considered
that Lady Gernthol burned Habergenefinanch merely to avenge her
father. How would the cycle of revenge end? “This was my town as
much as for any Warnek, but we should do what’s best for the tribe.
Let’s send a force back to the Pultanik River to defend Fenzdiwerp.
Let’s take as many of these good people we can to Pultanik. We’re
going to need the fortress we’re building there.”
“I
know we should do as you say, but I want vengeance.”
Jaspich
knew Vinlon needed an argument to convince his heart as well as his
mind and was glad he had one. “You heard the carpenter back there,
saying your lady wife wants to kill you. If we go to Ranjin, you’ll
have to kill her. Do you want that?”
Vinlon
didn’t need to speak his answer. It was written on his face for
Jaspich to read. He still loved the woman.
Excerpt
2
Warlord
Druogoin lingered before Vinlon, blocking the way to the
tribemaster’s warriors. He asked, “When did you start paying
ransoms, Warnek?”
Vinlon
had no answer.
“A
travesty you didn’t start years ago,” said Druogoin.
Not
my fault, Vinlon thought, but nothing he said would convince Druogoin
to relinquish his hatred, and he passed this contempt to Gernthol,
his daughter who was Vinlon’s wife, and she passed it to her
children.
Vinlon’s
silence agitated Druogoin. “You have nothing to say, Warnek? If Hoj
wasn’t my grandson, I would kill him to take away your son from
you, but I’ve taken him already, haven’t I? I have your daughter
and wife, too.”
Vinlon’s
arms shook, ruffling his black ribbons. The man better shut up.
Druogoin
didn’t. “Do you know why Gernthol allowed Thigrel to be a woman
with Pokyer?”
Vinlon
didn’t know, and he didn’t care. He only wanted Druogoin to shut
up. He walked around him to leave. The warlord dressed in garish
orange stepped sideway, and they bumped shoulders.
Druogoin
sneered into Vinlon’s face. The warlord’s breath smelled like
onions as he kept speaking. “She tried him first, and when he
performed well, she couldn’t deny Thigrel the experience.”
Shut
up!
“Don’t
be shocked, Warnek. Did you expect your wife to give up pleasures
when she gave up you?”
Vinlon
couldn’t get away from Druogoin fast enough, and then a revelation
struck him. They were alone. Their nearest warriors were no less than
one hundred cubits away. This was an opportunity he might never get
again.
He
tossed his pennants at his antagonist. While Druogoin batted away the
poles, Vinlon unsheathed his sword, the prodigy of Banshim’s anvil:
sharper, lighter, and balanced—lethal. The multitudinal-honed blade
shimmered glaucous blue in the sunlight. It was virgin steel, never
before used against flesh because Vinlon didn’t engage in any
swordplay against the Jatneryimt. His sword would know pleasure,
consummated with his wedlock father’s blood.
He
swung up one-handed, intending to slash off an arm, but one pole
still was falling to the ground. The sword sliced through the loose
wood stake as though it was a marsh reed, but the blow deflected into
Druogoin’s side, and the warlord’s orange-padded gambeson
absorbed most of the impact. Druogoin drew a longsword while
stumbling backward.
This
first parry turned them around, so Vinlon saw the Druogoinyim
warriors collecting their new armaments. They noticed the combat and
ran closer. The time of opportunity was getting short. He swung low.
The blade was so light, sailing through the air like a bird’s wing.
Druogoin met the blow with his thick heavy blade before Vinlon would
have severed him at the knees. Vinlon whirled up and around.
Druogoin’s sword was too sluggish to follow. Vinlon came across
with a backhanded slash, and his blade gashed through Druogoin’s
neck as easy as through a melon. The head lolled into the air,
squirting blood from the sneering lips, and dropped to a cushioned
landing on the meadow grass. It was a sight Vinlon would replay in
his mind countless times with satisfaction.
The
Druogoinyim warriors were almost upon him, but his warriors were
closing, too. He regretted not having time to claim Druogoin’s
sword or head as prizes before he ran to join his ranks, holding his
bloodied bluish blade before him. Reaching his men, he turned to face
the enemy. Some Druogoint stopped at the head and body of their slain
warlord. The rest trailed, hauling their booty.
Radzig
came to Vinlon’s side, wielding his hatchet. “I don’t think
they’ll fight.”
Vinlon
agreed and ordered his warriors to halt. Sure enough, Nelber
retreated eastward with an armload of bows, beckoning the other
Druogoint to go with him to the hill marking the border of their
territory. A brawny warrior hoisted the warlord’s headless corpse
over his shoulder. Blood drained from the severed neck. Another
Druogoin took the warlord’s sword, impaled the head on it, and went
with the others following Nelber.
Vinlon
planned to lead his warriors in the opposite direction to Fenzdiwerp,
but first he needed to clean his weapon, kneeling to wipe the blade
on the meadow grass. He had a name for the consummated sword, a
worthy name—Shut Up.
Excerpt
3
The
clanlord led a mounted column of twenty warriors. They followed a
hard-packed path along the northern bank, the same side as the
upcoming town, never needing to cross the river since leaving
Taubueth two days ago. Brutez often rode with his friends, Jonerch
and Gordib, but invariably he found Larboelm nearest him, holding the
staff with the iron blooddrop. He ventured to learn more about the
bodyguard he inherited from Vulrath and Klinteg.
“This
is the town where you were a boy?” Brutez knew the answer, but the
question opened a conversation.
“Yes,
Clanlord.” Larboelm spoke those words more than any others to
Brutez.
“What’s
its name?”
Larboelm
paused before answering, “I don’t remember it having one.”
Brutez
considered a nameless town and a lake referenced by a description
rather than a name, yet the Taubueth River had a name, the same as
his stronghold. His father once told him Taubueth was a Chizdekyim
name, but didn’t know what it meant. “Do you have family there,
Larboelm?”
“No,
Clanlord.”
A
variation of his most common words, Brutez thought.
“I
have no brothers or sisters. If I had other family, I never was told
about them. I left for the Blue River with my mother when she went
there for a new husband.”
“What
happened to your father?”
“He
stuck a sword down his throat, a bloody mess.”
Brutez
remembered how his mother begged for death. “Was he sick?”
“Sick
of life.”
“Does
your mother still live at the Blue River?”
Larboelm
shook his head. “Her husband beat her to death. I killed him for
that.”
Brutez
couldn’t decide which disturbed him more, Larboelm’s story or how
he told it without emotion.
Larboelm
tapped his macabre spiked mace by his leg on the side of his mount.
“I mashed his head to pulp. Clanlord Vulrath saw me.”
Brutez
understood how Larboelm became Vulrath’s bodyguard, and also why he
became his. I’m the man’s family, he realized. The man should
have more. “Do you have a woman?”
“I
never thought about having one,” said Larboelm.
“You
never took chances?”
“My
own, yes.”
Brutez
had resorted to that for many years, but he knew the ancient words.
It is not good for a man to be alone. He had a worthy question for
his man. “If I find you a wife, will you take her?”
“Clanlord,
I’ll do whatever you command.”
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Author
Bio
Milo
Swanton started writing stories as soon as he could write (second
grade). His first big purchase from his paper route money was an
electric typewriter.
Milo
enjoys epic stories with intricate plots and lots of characters. He
wrote his first novel during college after watching the epic movie El
Cid and wanting to write something like it. A rewrite of this novel,
The Imperial Swords, is a possible sequel to Fealty to the King.
Milo
grew up in Wisconsin and earned a bachelor's degree in computer
science and mathematics. His software engineering career included
work on military, medical device, and air traffic control
applications. He lives with his wife and three teenage daughters in
Minnesota.
Contact-
Goodreads-https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8532116.Milo_Swanton
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