Domna the complete serie.., p.1
Domna: The Complete Series, page 1





CONTENTS
Title Page
Teaser
Book One - The Sun God's Daughter
Chapter One - The Prophecy
Chapter Two - The Grove
Chapter Three - The Figurine
Chapter Four - The Betrothal
Chapter Five - The Lure
Chapter Six - The Dinner
Chapter Seven - The Departure
Chapter Eight - The Waiting
Chapter Nine - The News
Chapter Ten - Quintus's Prophecy
Chapter Eleven - To Dallos
Chapter Twelve - The Ally
Chapter Thirteen - The Letter
Chapter Fourteen - Slow Burn
Chapter Fifteen - Journey's End
Book Two - The Solon's Son
Chapter One - The Arrival
Chapter Two - The Reunion
Chapter Three - The Preparations
Chapter Four - Wedding Night
Chapter Five - Winter Lessons
Chapter Six - Unwelcome News
Chapter Seven - The Midwife
Chapter Eight - Another Pregnancy
Chapter Nine - The Father
Chapter Ten - New Child
Chapter Eleven - Saying Goodbye
Chapter Twelve - Going Nowhere
Chapter Thirteen - Dangerous Words
Book Three - The Centaur's Gamble
Chapter One - The Farmer
Chapter Two - The Centaur
Chapter Three - Old Friends
Chapter Four - New Posting
Chapter Five - The Palace
Chapter Six - The Death
Chapter Seven - The Heir
Chapter Eight - Fallen Messenger
Chapter Nine - The Guards
Chapter Ten - Bidding War
Chapter Eleven - Final Call
Chapter Twelve - The Solon
Book Four - The Regent's Edict
Chapter One - The Cowbird
Chapter Two - The Heir
Chapter Three - Old Rival
Chapter Four - Marching Orders
Chapter Five - Heading East
Chapter Six - The Challenge
Chapter Seven - Loyalty Questioned
Chapter Eight - The Show
Chapter Nine - Begging Mercy
Chapter Ten - The Homecoming
Chapter Eleven - Cold Departure
Chapter Twelve - The Spy
Chapter Thirteen - The Edict
Chapter Fourteen - The Reunion
Chapter Fifteen - The Newcomer
Chapter Sixteen - Sibling Love
Chapter Seventeen - The Betrothal
Chapter Eighteen - Filial Duty
Chapter Nineteen - The Wedding
Chapter Twenty - The Bedding
Chapter Twenty-One - The Helians
Chapter Twenty-Two - Traitor's Way
Book Five - The Forgotten Heir
Chapter One - Bitter Draught
Chapter Two - The Cloak
Chapter Three - Hard Truths
Chapter Four - The Return
Chapter Five - The Arch
Chapter Six - The Heirs
Chapter Seven - The Traitor
Chapter Eight - Fear's Grip
Chapter Nine - Final Words
Chapter Ten - Mourning Colors
Chapter Eleven - Past Mistakes
Chapter Twelve - Striking Out
Chapter Thirteen - The Departure
Chapter Fourteen - Turning Wheels
Chapter Fifteen - Sudden Storm
Chapter Sixteen - Forest Attack
Chapter Seventeen - Seeing Truth
Chapter Eighteen - The Treaty
Chapter Nineteen - The Rebellion
Chapter Twenty - Enemy Territory
Chapter Twenty-One - The Saliche
Chapter Twenty-Two - The Fissure
Chapter Twenty-Three - The Collapse
Book Six - The Solon's Wife
Chapter One - A Solon's Strength
Chapter Two - A Promise Fulfilled
Chapter Three - The Medic
Chapter Four - Saying Goodbye
Chapter Five - The Split
Chapter Six - The Demand
Chapter Seven - The Mercenaries
Chapter Eight - The Damnation
Chapter Nine - The Troublemaker
Chapter Ten - Clever Gods
Chapter Eleven - Traditional Mourning
Chapter Twelve - Full Force
Chapter Thirteen - Departure Question
Chapter Fourteen - The Return
Chapter Fifteen - Protector of Demos
Chapter Sixteen - Solonian Wisdom
Chapter Seventeen - Eugenian Welcome
Chapter Eighteen - Hidden Solon
Chapter Nineteen - The Tunnels
Chapter Twenty - Bendrian News
Chapter Twenty-One - New Worship
Chapter Twenty-Two - The Betrayal
Chapter Twenty-Three - Adelina's Worship
Chapter Twenty-Four - The Race
Chapter Twenty-Five - Temple of Terros
Chapter Twenty-Six - Temple Cries
Chapter Twenty-Seven - The Solonship
Chapter Twenty-Eight - Epilogue
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Back Copyright
DOMNA
THE COMPLETE SERIES
A NOVEL OF OSTERIA
BY
TAMMIE PAINTER
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BOOK ONE
THE SUN GOD'S DAUGHTER
CHAPTER ONE
The Prophecy
I STEPPED INTO the darkened room. After the bright afternoon sun of a Bendrian summer day, I could see nothing, but the pungent scent of spruce incense bit at my nostrils. Today, like every Bendrian youth on the eve of his or her sixteenth birthday, I would have my fate told by the oracle. From the seer’s predictions I would be given my path into adulthood. My future would be decided by an old man who served as the voice of the gods. Having my own mind and strong ambitions, I knew what I wanted. But would the gods let me have it?
"Enter," rasped the voice of the oracle.
A chair scraped against the stone floor. I still couldn’t see properly, but I knew this room well enough to head toward the sound without faltering. Slipping my hands along the smooth, curved edge of a table, I took cautious steps until my toe brushed the leg of a chair. The wooden seat creaked as I slipped into it. My legs started trembling the moment I was settled. I told myself I was being ridiculous. My destiny was already written by my birth and by my training.
Still, the oppressive silence of the oracle’s room and its bitter chill despite the heat of the bustling afternoon outside had put me on edge. A cool, papery hand clasped mine. I jumped in my seat and cursed my childish nerves. The dry hand gave a squeeze.
"I had doubts you would come."
"Shouldn’t you have seen I would?" I teased and laid my free hand over his. My vision finally adjusted to the dim room and I smiled at the warm, crinkled face of my grandfather. Like all Osterian seers, he had been born with red hair. The strands had gone completely silver years ago, but the tufts of his unruly eyebrows retained their fiery tint.
"Such a cynical girl," he said with a sigh and released my hand.
I leaned forward and gave him a peck on the cheek. "You should know I’m not the type who would break with tradition."
As a priestess my career would be centered on maintaining tradition. Growth was changing Osteria, with several of the poli demanding independence and the Solon of Osteria doing his best to keep the realm united under his rule. But, as long as the people had their rituals and festival days to keep them grounded, the troubles of politics were easier to withstand. In my future role as priestess, I would be the focus of that tradition in the polis of Bendria, so I needed to adhere to it.
My grandfather, usually so still and calming, shifted in his seat and picked at his fingernails.
"And if you don’t like what I have to say? Will you still want to uphold the tradition?"
My stomach lurched.
My father, Bassio, served as High Priest of Apollo here in Dekos, capital of Bendria, and I had followed his every movement since I could walk. I trained alongside the acolytes, I memorized the incantations, I never flinched at the sacrifices, and I understood how bedsport honored the gods. Unlike most people in Bendria, I could speak, read, and write in all the dialects of Osteria, the ever-growing realm Bendria had recently joined. I was even fluent in the language of the Califf Lands, a separate realm far to the south.
I may have not yet reached sixteen, but I had my future planned. I knew what I wanted and I’d always believed it would be mine. I wanted the honor and status of being High Priestess of Apollo, and I wanted the love of Papinias, my childhood friend who I’d sworn myself to.
I had a course mapped out for my life. Shouldn’t the gods appreciate and honor that as I had always honored them? Shouldn’t I of all people get what I want? Still, how bad could my Seeing be?
"Go on, give me my Seeing. I’m not destined to work in the sewers, am I?"
The old man paused, sucked a deep inhale through his nostrils as if for courage, then declared, "You will marry a king."
I stared at him wondering if he'd been too long in the sun. This prediction was about as meaningful as the ones I cast with my sister, Jalaia, when we were children playing at being oracles. Having inherited our mother’s dark hair without a hint of red, we would never be true seers, but a few years ago I had been lucky enough to befriend a sorceress who taught me some of her spells and trained me in the use of star charts that might glimpse the future. True seers scoffed at these "tricks" saying the only way to know the future is to hear it from the gods’ lips, not from the movements of objects in the sky or the casting of rune sticks.
"Of course I’ll marry well. I’m the daughter of the high priest and a member of the patrine class," I said, hoping to goad the seer into telling me something more, something I could twist to suit my plans.
Besides, he might not be wrong. Secretly, Papinias and I had betrothed ourselves to one another on my birthday last year and hadn’t I at times called Papi the king of my heart? Still, I wanted to hear my grandfather’s and the gods’ blessing of my future with Papinias who, with his education and training in the medic’s arts nearly complete, would have more power than any Bendrian king these days.
Unless I was passed off to a land not ruled by Portaceae – Osteria’s center of power – such as the foothills of the Great Mountains where the Middish lived in their uncivilized tribes (which, even in his worst mood, my father would never do to me), a "king" in Osteria was nothing but a man with a pointless title.
This had been a sore point as Osteria spread its rule across the land and absorbed one region after another. There was no war to bring this unity about, just treaties signed between district governors and the Solon, the overall leader of the realm of Osteria who resided in Portaceae City. With poli now overseen by governors who reported to the Solon, sat as judges in local matters, and collected taxes, kings suddenly found themselves as little better than figureheads under the new agreements.
"Your sister didn’t marry well," the oracle reminded me. "She's the eldest. She should have married far better than you could ever hope to, yet she was given to a nobody. A clerk for the undersecretary of the Solon is all she got."
"But I'm prettier," I said, taunting the old man with the vanity he always chastised me for.
"You are a most impertinent young woman. Zeus give strength to the man you wed."
"You’re too easy to tease. Now, I think you owe me the Seeing my father didn’t pay for."
On my way to my grandfather’s I had indeed seen my father walking in his long, purposeful strides away from here. Until the past year, he had taken enormous pride in my intelligence and dedication, and had given every indication that I should join him as priestess at Apollo’s temple. I never confronted him about this change in attitude and he had never said anything outright. I assumed his frigid distance toward me must be due to the strain of his new duties under Osterian rule or that it might be his way of forcing me to prove myself without his guiding hand. What else could it be?
I’d only been joking about the bribery, but as my grandfather averted his gaze and fidgeted with his sleeves, my smile dropped. As if on cue, a silver drachar with the image of Apollo stamped on it fell from a fold in his tunic. I wouldn't have thought anything of it. People always gave a donation of some sort when they visited an oracle, so Grandfather always had coins and trinkets clinking about in his pockets. But the speed with which his hunched frame bent down to snatch it up, and the scarlet flare of embarrassment in his cheeks told me my comment had hit the mark. I eyed him and arched one of my finely tweezed eyebrows.
"He’s very forceful in his demands," my grandfather said apologetically. I’d never truly thought of him as old before, but the feeble comment and cowed look on his face aged him two decades in the space of two heartbeats. I reached out for his hand and patted it to show I wasn’t angry. As head of my household, my father could dictate who I married. Father didn’t exactly prefer Papi, but he must know Papinias made me happy. So why would he want a false prophecy regarding who I would marry?
"I know my father isn’t fond of Papinias, but he has to like the idea of having a daughter who wants to follow in his steps. There’s no way he would pawn me off on some distant king with no power just to spite Papi. You see, I’ve already decided my fate, Grandfather. You just need to read the stars and confirm it for me. Tell me Papi and I have the gods' blessing." I tried to sound confident, but the final words came out in a pleading tone.
"Alright girl, you want the real Seeing? It's yours. But you may not like it any better." He scattered a bundle of thin wooden tokens across the table. A square one had carved into it the date and time of my birth; twelve rectangular ones were filled with colorful images each depicting a strange morphing of the gods and the animals in the night sky; and several round ones of varying sizes represented the planets, sun, and moon.
"I thought you said star charts were for charlatans."
"In unskilled hands they are," he said, not looking up from the tokens on the table. "In the right hands with the right talent, they can be a useful tool, but no replacement for a true oracle, mind you. I’ve already done your Seeing. I’m only doing this for verification. Although I wonder if you wouldn't be better off accepting the false one. Marrying a king wouldn't be so bad, would it?"
"I may crave power, but I also want the truth." I looked into his dark eyes that were set deep in the wrinkles of his brown face. "Is the Seeing that bad?"
He shrugged noncommittally.
"It is mixed. You are destined for power and status. No, don't smirk just yet," he said, scolding me with a waggle of his finger then pointing to one of the wooden pieces. "Your power will only be achieved and maintained through struggle. Sometimes the struggle will seem to never fade and may even threaten your life. It will also take sacrifice, choosing one dream or one desire over another when both are what you want. You must always trust your heart, Sofia, and never back down."
"And?" I wanted more details. This Seeing was so vague it could apply to anyone. Everyone had struggles, everyone had to make choices, everyone faced threats at some point in their lives. My grandfather rolled his eyes and sighed.
"I can’t see everything, so don’t expect it. But there is one point that is very clear." He took my hands. His cool and coarse fingers reminded me of being a little girl and walking hand-in-hand with him through Dekos’s agora. Engulfed by his comforting grasp, I felt like a child again. A shiver ran over me at the gravity in his voice. "Do not raise your husband's child."
"Why wouldn't I raise my own child?" I blurted. Flashes of the beautiful babies Papi and I would make danced like a festival day procession through my head.
"Stupid girl," he said, dropping my hand. "Your husband's child doesn’t necessarily have to be your own. I know you are kind and wouldn’t turn any child out, but you’re also ambitious. This child could put everything you strive toward at risk. It could put your very life at risk."
My ears had adjusted to the stillness of my grandfather’s home, just as my eyes had adapted to the dimness. Even with the room set far back in the house, the din of the street had been seeping in: people shouting across lanes, the metal of vigiles' protective aprons jangling, and various animal noises from goats bleating to peacocks calling.
Now, with my head full of my grandfather’s words, the exterior sounds faded to nothing. The deafness to the outer world drove his words in and flooded my mind with questions. Suddenly, a crash of something shattering and men's cursing shook me out of my reflection.
"Papinias is too devoted to me to stray like some common satyr," I said too brightly for the somber mood that, like the heady scent of spruce, lingered in the small room. "Speaking of, when should I ask Father about Papinias?" In truth, I’d already done my own reading which showed the best day for making requests would be in two days’ time, but I desperately wanted to hear my grandfather say all would be well for us, that Father would give us his blessing, that our marriage would be a happy one, and that I wouldn’t have to make any effort to keep Papi faithful to me. Sure, we’d have troubles like any couple, but overall we would be an enviable pair.