AUTHOR'S NOTE: This is the first part of an adult fantasy story set in an alternate history universe where Magick is on the decline and technology on the rise. Follow the turmoils of this New Age, beginning with this tale of a revolutionary leader in a land modelled on the Ottoman Empire who obtains his revenge on his former teacher and tormentor. The first few chapters are mostly scene-setting and background. Bear with me as I develop the story. Features graphic sex and violence, bondage, submission and non-consent. Read at your own discretion.
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The khamsin blows through the open doors, setting the silk curtains aflutter. I blink at the sudden grittiness in my eyes and step back off the balcony.
Sand. It gets everywhere.
Though the sun has set and the sky is now almost black, here, high up where the wind still rules, the heat of the dying day carries. It is, now, a gentle thing, stripped of its noontime fury. I rub my eyes and breathe it in.
In the city below, the cooking fires are lit. The wind carries its tinge to me. Smoke. Wood. Charring flesh. I hear the sounds of life, the clank of pots, the lowing of oxen, the calls of the water-bearers as they do their dusk round.
Below, beyond the walls and the gates of the citadel, the night market is beginning. Fires flare in great cauldrons. Merchants shout out, peddling their wares. There are dancers in the square, their silhouettes arching and bending against the firelight. The music is reedy and thin. The chatter is loud and boisterous, indistinct against the rat-tat-tat of the darbuka.
The city comes to life again as the day dies. It has always been thus.
And this should be a night just like any other. Except that tonight is the night I gain my revenge.
My gaze flicks back to the port. I am anxious, I realise. Afraid. Though I have risen so far and my dearest goal within reach, still the fear haunts me. Fear, that nameless, shapeless spirit that swells out of my chest without reason or warning.
The ship is still there, its single mast unremarkable amongst a hundred others bobbing gently in the water. Unremarkable except for the single pennant that flutters in the wind and catches the burnished light from the braziers on the docks.
I raise the spyglass to my one good eye. The flag quivers in my view. My hands are trembling. A rampant lion still ripples in the wind, its jaws agape, the sword upright in one raised claw, all rendered in shimmering silver. The Sabred Lion, symbol of the Thawrat Al Shaab, the People's Revolution. It is the ship I had been waiting for all these days, ever since I received that first message.
My hands had quivered then, too, as I took the scroll. The Guard Captain's face had been expressionless though I could read surprise in his eyes.
"Is all well, effendi?" he had asked, one hand on the hilt of his scimitar. "A goatherd gave it to the gate guard. The guard would have given him a cuffing except the guard took care to examine the seal first." He paused, uncertain. "The goatherd is held, effendi. Should he be beaten?"
I shook my head. I did not dare trust my voice to speak. I turned away from him to the lamplight and examined the seal again.
Ψ£ΩΩΩΩ*ΩΩΨ§Ψ‘
Alif and Ya. The First and the Last. The symbol of our Order, signifying our hunt for our enemies from the First to the Last of all places.
"No," I said, over my shoulder. My voice did not betray me. "Release him. And reward him. Fifty dirhams. And three flagons of wine."