Captive Scorpio: Dray Prescot #17
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Overview
Dray Prescot, Earthman of Kregen, that wonderful world circling the twin suns of Antares, had risen high in the empire of Vallia, but luck could not always sustain him. When, at last, all the forces opposed to his lands, his princess, his emperor, and to him personally, converged, it was to produce the darkest hour of his long career. For treason struck at the court, while rebel armies marched from the backlands, the war fleets of enemy nations were aloft, and the uncanny wizardry of a master scientist launched a spell of doom for all Prescot held dear. With his back to the wall, Dray Prescot faced that time of peril with unflinching will... until the cruelest blow of all was struck: his warrior daughter Dayra rode in the vanguard of his foes!
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Author Information
Bio of Alan Burt Akers
Alan Burt Akers is the pen name of the prolific British author, Kenneth Bulmer. Bulmer wrote over 160 novels and many short stories, primarily science fiction.
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Additional Info
Imprint
Mushroom eBooks
Filesize
1.89 MB
Number of Pages
N/A
eBook ISBN
9781843195740
Excerpt from: Captive Scorpio by Alan Burt Akers
One
Before the Dawn
"Oh, yes, it is common knowledge," said Travok Ott expansively, leaning back, sipping his light white wine with a most delicate air. "Delia, the Princess Majestrix, is continually indulging in affairs. Why, her latest inamorato is this muscular wrestler, Turko. Oh, yes, a lovely man. Who can blame her?"
The perfumed currents of warmed air moved caressingly about the group of men sitting in the ord chamber of the Baths of the Nine. The chamber presented a comfortable, modish, relaxing atmosphere. Young girl slaves carried wine and parclear in glazed ceramic flagons, and bronze trays of sweetmeats and tempting cakes. No lady bathers were allowed here, their establishment was separated off by a stout masonry wall. The scented air cloyed.
"Surely, this is just rumor, Travok?" said Urban the Gloves, popping a paline into his mouth.
"Hardly." Travok Ott, a slender man with the brown hair of Vallia cut into a curled bang, sipped his wine with a knowing smile. He, like them all, was naked, covered only by a small yellow towel. "Have you seen this Turko? A Khamorro, so I am told, from somewhere outlandish deep in southwestern Havilfar. But a lovely man. Oh, yes, beautiful--"
"I hold no brief for the emperor," cut in the overfed man with the three chins and swag belly, all quivering as he shook his head warningly. "But he'd have your head if--"
"Of a certainty, Ortyg--perhaps!" Travok cast a sliding glance at the shadowed alcove where a yellow towel draped down from the arm of a bronze faun, prancing, abandoned, garlanded with loomins. "But I mean him no disrespect. He understands business, and that is good enough for me."
They were all businessmen here, traders, merchants, shopkeepers to whom war and country-wide distress could bring profit, for they were shrewd in the mysteries of bargaining and gaining a corner and of stocks and the human frailties of supply and demand. This particular establishment of the Baths of the Nine stood at a crossroads in the southern part of the great city of Vondium, the capital of the Empire of Vallia. It was not one of the enormously luxurious first-rank establishments; but its entrance fees were high and it catered to a certain clientele of the middle rank, merchants and traders who could afford to pay for a night's comfort.
These men were habitu�s of the place, they knew one another, had been coming here for years to relax and gossip. The fellow who sat somewhat removed from them along a marble bench on pink and yellow towels smiled and nodded and joined in the conversation and listened with due respect; but he was a stranger. So the talk was more circumspect than normally the case in these secluded, sybaritic and seductive surroundings.
A beautifully formed Fristle fifi glided forward to refill Travok Ott's glass, for he found the flagons tiresomely too heavy. The Fristle's fur was of that deep plum color that limned her lissom form, made of her a sprite of beauty in that place. Travok grunted as the wine reached a whisker below the rim, and trembled, and stilled. Had the Fristle spilled any it would have gone hard for her.
"I've always stood by the emperor," Travok went on. "Did I not give thanks to Opaz when he recovered from his illness? Did I not put up the shutters on my shops when those Opaz-forsaken Chyyanists went on the rampage with their Black Feathers? Have I not a son at sea?" The wine gleamed on his lips. "Vallia is built of men like me."
"You say this Turko is the princess's inamorato," said Ortyg. "But is she his inamorata? That is a conundrum."
A low, fruity chuckle ran around the circle of men lounging in their chairs or on the benches, warmed and caressed by the scented air.
"The princess owns men's hearts--but I wager Turko has his own little inamorata tucked away somewhere safe in Valka."
Ortyg leaned a little forward, his belly bulging. "The princess does not own my heart."
The shrimp of a fellow in the corner where the warmest breezes blew puckered up his lips, his little tuft of goat's beard blowing. His brown Vallian eyes were deeply sunken under sandpapery brows.













