This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The author makes no claims to, but instead acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of the word marks mentioned in this work of fiction.
Copyright 2020 by Samantha Vitale
THE LADY ALCHEMIST by Samantha Vitale
All rights reserved. Published in the United States of America by Month9Books, LLC.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Trade Paperback ISBN: 978-1-951710-17-0
ePub ISBN: 978-1-951710-18-7
Mobipocket ISBN: 978-1-951710-19-4
Published by Month9Books, Raleigh, NC 27609
Cover design: Maria Spada
For my husband
Table of Contents
Sephas boots pounded on the worn forest path. It was somewhere between cruel winter and frenzied spring, in that wet time just after snowfall and just before the great explosion of green. Soon, everything would be covered in a thick, sticky layer of yellow-green pollen, and the ground would be flooded from melted snow and perpetual rain. The River Guterahl would be swollen and roaring mad, and no one in the mountain town of Three Mills would have dry feet for weeks.
Sepha skidded on a patch of rot-slicked leaves, barely recovered her balance, and ran even faster. Her fathers glare flashed behind her eyes, but she shook her head, ridding herself of the image. She would not be late. She would not! Be late!
She had spent months studying blueprints, practicing alchemical exchanges, and rehearsing the speech her father Ludov had prepared for her. Now, the day had finally come.
The Magistrate, the ruler of all Tirenia, was visiting town for the express purpose of touring Fathers mill. The mill turned raw steel into parts for rifles, cannons, and armored tanks on crawler-tracked wheels. It wouldve closed years ago if not for Sephas hard work and unexpected knack for alchemy.
If Sephas demonstration didnt go as planned, it may as well close today.
The Magistrates tour would culminate in Sephas alchemical demonstration, after which the Magistrate would have no choice but to grant them a new contract with Tirenias army. Or so Father had insisted. The contract would move the mill from just making parts, a pre-assembly factory, to a one-stop manufacturer of army supplies. It would halt Three Mills rapid decline and transform the town into a real, thriving community. And it all hinged on Sephas demonstration.
Shed stayed up late last night preparing for the demonstration, making sure everything was just so. This morning, exhausted from the previous night, shed walked to the River Guterahl to clear her head.
And had fallen asleep.
Like an absolute idiot.
And now she had to runand runand run, if she was to get to the mill on time.
Stupid! she muttered angrily.
Stu-pid, stu-pid, her boots seemed to agree, slamming the word against the ground.
The common path unwound ahead of her, skirting the edge of the forest until it reached the ramshackle housing near Three Mills industrial district. Past the housing were the defunct flour and saw mills, and past those, at the farthest end of the mill-yard, was the steel mill. She was too far off. She wouldnt make it.
Unless.
There was a second, much-frowned-upon path through the heart of the forest that would save her nearly a mile. Magicians used to lurk in the woods, but it had been quiet for years. Not a single attack. Anyway, she was more afraid of Father than anything that might be on that path. And fear had always spun her reckless.
When she came to the fork, she hesitated for a fraction of a second before taking the overgrown path to the right. She was so focused on the tasks ahead that she didnt notice the heaviness of the air, the strange smell, or the unnatural hush that hung like a mist over the forest.
Get to the mill. Do the demonstration. Impress the Magistrate. Save the town.
And, added a small and hopeful voice inside, maybe, if youre lucky, the Magistrate will make you a Court Alchemist.
Sepha swallowed and shook her head. That was nonsense. Unlike Sepha and every other alchemist shed ever met, Court Alchemists were official. Theyd gotten into the elite Institute of Alchemical Disciplinewhich Sepha had spectacularly failed to doand had come out full, guilded alchemists. Which Sepha could never be, not with hernot with the way things were.
She focused instead on something useful, something real: the speech Father had written for her.
Today, she muttered in time with the beat of her boots on the ground, I will show you how our mill takes common steel and transmutes it into tirenium. The rectangular ingot in her pocket pressed against her leg as she dashed around a bend in the narrow path. The strongest alloy in
A fallen tree lay across the path, and Sepha climbed over it. When her boots landed on the other side, she looked up.
And stopped dead.
Her mind went blank, her body went numb, and her heart beat hard against her chest.
Too late, the silence of the forest impressed itself upon her: a heavy blanket of nothing instead of the usual racket of birdsong and small rustlings and the wind scrubbing the leaves. And she could see why it was so.
Sepha stood on the edge of a wide ring of devastation: perfectly round, perfectly silent. Fallen trees, hundreds of them, lay on the ground in a riot of lines that pointed in every direction but up. There was a sacred horror about the place, like a battlefield after the fighting is done. Sepha was afraid to breathe, afraid that the slightest sound might disturb whatever had done this.
Flinching at a loud crack behind her, Sepha turned and saw that the ring was still expanding. With a sound like a sigh, a pine tree shivered and shed all of its needles. A prolonged groan, and the tree crashed to the ground.
Sepha turned on her heel, slow and disbelieving, and stared at the fallen trees. This couldnt be natural. Things like this didnt just happen. There was no man or beast who couldwho would
Oh.
It wasnt natural.
This, whatever it was, was magic. Now that it occurred to her, she could see magic in the too-perfect symmetry of the ring, in the speed with which it expanded, in the hush and the horror.
Magic.
Thunder rolled long and low across the sky in emphatic agreement.
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