The Final Strife Read online




  The Final Strife is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2022 by Saara Eldin

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States by Del Rey, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

  Del Rey and the Circle colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: El-Arifi, Saara, author.

  Title: The final strife / Saara El-Arifi.

  Description: New York: Del Rey, [2022] | Series: The final strife; book 1

  Identifiers: LCCN 2021055840 (print) | LCCN 2021055841 (ebook) | ISBN 9780593356944 (hardcover; acid-free paper) | ISBN 9780593356951 (ebook) | ISBN 9780593501009 (international edition)

  Subjects: LCGFT: Fantasy fiction. | Novels.

  Classification: LCC PR6105.L429 F56 2022 (print) | LCC PR6105.L429 (ebook) | DDC 823/.92—dc23/eng/20220128

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/​2021055840

  LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/​2021055841

  Ebook ISBN 9780593356951

  Map illustrations: © Kingsley Nebechi

  randomhousebooks.com

  Book design by Alexis Capitini, adapted for ebook

  Cover design: Ella Laytham

  Cover illustration: © Adekunle Adeleke

  ep_prh_6.0_140193380_c0_r0

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Epigraph

  Maps

  Prologue

  Part One: Trade

  Chapter One: The Day of Descent

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Part Two: Invade

  The Story of the Origins of the Aktibar as Spoken by Griot Sheth

  Chapter Twelve: Twenty-four Days Until the Trial of Aerofield

  Chapter Thirteen: Twenty-three Days Until the Trial of Aerofield

  Chapter Fourteen: Twenty-three Days Until the Trial of Aerofield

  Chapter Fifteen: Twenty-two Days Until the Trial of Aerofield

  Chapter Sixteen: The Trial of Aerofield

  Chapter Seventeen: Twenty-eight Days Until the Trial of Tactics

  Part Three: Pillage

  The Story of the Siege of the Silent as Spoken by Griot Zibenwe

  Chapter Eighteen: Twenty-seven Days Until the Trial of Tactics

  Chapter Nineteen: Twenty-six Days Until the Trial of Tactics

  Chapter Twenty: Sixteen Days Until the Trial of Tactics

  Chapter Twenty-one: Two Days Until the Trial of Tactics

  Chapter Twenty-two: The Trial of Tactics

  Chapter Twenty-three: Twenty-eight Days Until the Trial of Mind

  Chapter Twenty-four: Twenty-seven Days Until the Trial of Mind

  Chapter Twenty-five: Twenty-six Days Until the Trial of Mind

  Chapter Twenty-six: Twenty-six Days Until the Trial of Mind

  Chapter Twenty-seven: Twenty-five Days Until the Trial of Mind

  Chapter Twenty-eight: Fourteen Days Until the Trial of Mind

  Chapter Twenty-nine: Thirteen Days Until the Trial of Mind

  Chapter Thirty: Ten Days Until the Trial of Mind

  Part Four: Assimilation

  The Story of Anyme and the Spider as Spoken by Griot Sheth

  Chapter Thirty-one: Four Days Until the Trial of Mind

  Chapter Thirty-two: Four Days Until the Trial of Mind

  Chapter Thirty-three: One Day Until the Trial of Mind

  Chapter Thirty-four: The Trial of Mind

  Chapter Thirty-five: Twelve Days Until the Trial of Bloodwerk

  Chapter Thirty-six: Eight Days Until the Trial of Bloodwerk

  Part Five: Rule

  The Story of the Tannin as Spoken by Griot Sheth

  Chapter Thirty-seven: One Day Until the Trial of Bloodwerk

  Chapter Thirty-eight: Seven Days Until the Trial of Combat

  Chapter Thirty-nine: One Day Until the Trial of Combat

  Chapter Forty: Twelve Strikes Until the Trial of Combat

  Chapter Forty-one: Eight Strikes Until the Trial of Combat

  Chapter Forty-two: Six Strikes Until the Trial of Combat

  Chapter Forty-three: The Trial of Combat

  Chapter Forty-four: The Day of Ascent

  Chapter Forty-five

  Epilogue

  Short Story: One Poison, Two Sugars

  Glossary

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  A Duster is built for labor. Their submissive nature, which I believe to be an element of their blue blood, means they are best suited for the plantation fields. Ghostings, stripped as they are of communication, make the best servants, their translucent blood a clear indicator of adaptability, although a Duster may be substituted if needs must, given the rarity of Ghostings. Embers continue to be the superior race, proving without a doubt that those with red blood are born to lead.

  —Extract from On Race and Color by Hamad Al-Olar, Warden of Knowledge, year 378 of the Wardens’ Empire

  Stolen, sharpened, the hidden key,

  We’ll destroy the empire and set you free,

  Churned up from the shadows to tear it apart,

  A dancer’s grace, a killer’s instinct, an Ember’s blood, a Duster’s heart.

  —The plantation chant of the Stolen

  The tidewind came every night.

  It billowed in from the Marion Sea between the clock strikes of twelve and two, moving from one wave to another, from the sea to the sand dunes of the Farsai Desert. Salt air and blue sand collided within its swirling midst, weaponizing each grain into something deadly.

  It blew through the Wardens’ Empire and the thirteen cities within, destroying everything in its path not strong enough to withstand it.

  To the south, it swirled through the capital city, Nar-Ruta, running along the invisible seams that separated the citadel into four quarters. It weaved up toward the Keep, the smallest and most affluent quarter, where the four wardens, the leaders of the empire, slept soundly behind the iron walls of their fortress. Nothing entered the Keep without the wardens’ knowledge.

  In the Ember Quarter wreckage rolled through the cobbled streets, soiling the pristine courtyards of the nobility. The tidewind pounded on their lavish doors, but the metal shutters were steadfast.

  The tidewind moved on to more fruitful ground, across the Ruta River, which separated rich from poor, red blood from blue and clear. It battered the wooden doors of the Duster Quarter and thrust its tendrils through poorly repaired windows. Brooms stood ready for the morning’s cleaning. The residents, worn down from the
plantation fields, were used to backbreaking work.

  The wind moved east toward the final district of Nar-Ruta, the Dredge: the impoverished ruins and rubble home to Ghostings and Dusters. It moved toward the maiden houses where the fake cries of the nightworkers’ pleasure drowned out the tidewind’s wails. It swept through the shadows of the joba seed drug dens where the small red seed was consumed under the cover of the Dredge’s crumbling structures. There it lingered, ready to shred the skin of any who had the misfortune of finding themselves outside as the tidewind blew. Then gone would be their dark skin and blood. The tidewind took it all, leaving nothing but bones and the tattered remains of who they once were.

  And the wind had been getting stronger in recent weeks. Hungrier.

  The residents of the Dredge not to be found in the maiden houses or joba seed dens could be found in the Maroon, the largest tavern north of the Ember Quarter. Set into the tunnels beneath the city, the tavern was protected from the tidewind’s havoc.

  Inside the Maroon, a drumbeat shook the blue particles of sand that had slipped through cracks and under shutters, until the sand danced like the plantation workers within.

  They were all Dusters. The workers swayed, their brown faces smoothed by the fleeting freedom of the dance. Heels pounded the floor, turning outward left and right with a flick of their wrists. Backs arched, not in pain now but in defiance, their faces snapping to the rafters of the tavern. They stamped their scythes on the ground, adding to the cacophony of the drums. The blades were sharp enough to cut bark but blunt enough to make their Ember overseers feel safe. And if their limbs were covered with welts from the whip and their backs stooped from carrying heavy loads, the Maroon’s shadows hid all that.

  And if it didn’t, the firerum would.

  Griot Zibenwe took to the small wooden stage and signaled for the band to stop. He held a small djambe drum and wore a shawl patterned in bright reds and greens, well made if a little threadbare. His graying locs, which fell down to his waist, shimmied back and forth as he beat a new rhythm on his drum.

  Griots were storytellers, Dusters who had taken it upon themselves to preserve their heritage in poetry, prose, and rhythm. Many of them worked in the plantations during the day, but at night they came alive with their stories.

  There was a collective inhale as the energy from the dance shifted into anticipation of a new tale.

  The drumbeat reached a crescendo and then abruptly stopped.

  The audience stood on their heels, waiting with readiness for the griot’s words. The silence pulled taut, the tension building, and just when the crowd thought they couldn’t take it anymore the griot pounded the djambe three times.

  Thump. Thump. Thump.

  Then he spoke:

  “Listen well. Sit close. This story will be told once, and only once. So listen well. Sit close.”

  Thump.

  “Too close!”

  Those sitting closest flinched, then laughed as a wicked grin spread across the griot’s face.

  He continued, “Let me take you to a time not too long ago, but not yesterday. A moment when the space between the peoples of the empire fractured a little more. Eighteen years ago. Not long ago at all.”

  Thump-ba-da-thump.

  “There is one thing in life that weaves us all together. No matter your blood color, no matter your quarter—we are all birthed into this world as babes, naked under Anyme’s sky.”

  “Absolve me of my sins, Anyme.” The prayer was an instinctual reflex from the crowd.

  “But when the babe cries the weave holding us together unravels. The colored threads of the empire pull apart, pull away. But there are those who resist the patterns laid down for them. And so, to the story I promised you today.”

  Thump-ba-da-thump.

  “You may have heard of the Night of the Stolen, though the wardens tried to strangle the whispers on the wind. But for one night I will pry the wardens’ grip from our necks and let the story free. It is a story about thieves in the night; about a rebellion brewing; about our wardens’ home breached.”

  Thump.

  “Duty.”

  The audience grumbled.

  Thump.

  “Truth.”

  The audience booed.

  Thump.

  “Strength.”

  Fists were raised in the air.

  Thump.

  “Knowledge.”

  The audience screamed their dissent to the beat of the drum.

  Thump-ba-da-thump.

  The griot stopped and leveled his gaze at a newcomer. “My stories may fill your mind, but they don’t fill my coffer. Latecomers, pay up, stories aren’t free. One slab apiece.”

  The griot paused until he heard the sound of a coin hitting his trinket box.

  “Now, back we go. To the Wardens’ Keep, where the court resides and the patrons sleep. Here we find three unwelcome shadows: a mother with her child, and the leader of their crimes, sneaking through the gates.”

  The griot’s voice dropped to a whisper. “Do you know who they were? The couple who crept in? Fleet of foot and quieter than a breath?”

  “The Sandstorm!” a young Duster cried. Instead of a toy, she clutched her scythe.

  “Eyoh! You have it right. Indeed, you have it right. The Sandstorm,” Griot Zibenwe whispered the word and winked. “Just in case the officers hear your cheers.

  “The Sandstorm had a plan that night. They crept into Ember houses and the Keep and cut down anyone in their path. And so, the three shadows moved through the Keep, death in their wake. Blue was their blood, but that night the Keep ran red.”

  Thump-ba-da-thump.

  “Up and up the stairs they went. Toward the chambers where the nobility slept. Toward the chambers, where the babies were kept.”

  The griot lifted his hands from the drum and sliced them through the air. “The leader slashed his scythe through the nursemaid’s neck. Blue blood stained the wall.”

  “He killed a Duster?” the young girl in the front cried.

  The griot nodded sadly. “Yes, my friends, he killed one of his own. But I tell you this: love may give you strength, but retribution gives you purpose.”

  Thump.

  “There in the center of the bedchamber, another baby lay. A babe whose blood ran red, unlike the blue-blooded child the mother held. Two years the Sandstorm had planned for this moment. The mother placed her Duster babe next to the other. Red and blue threads in the Sandstorm’s plan. The Duster a decoy for the other, a life sacrificed to allow them to escape.

  “The leader lifted the other baby. The child whose blood ran red. This new child, swapped, was the key to bringing down the empire. Neither looked back at the Duster child they left behind as they ran from the warden’s home.”

  Thump.

  “If you looked outside that night you might have seen other couples in flight. For the Sandstorm knew their craft. The craft of people wronged. Twelve children they stole and disappeared into the beyond.”

  The griot’s voice softened, grew weaker, like he spoke his musings to himself.

  “And that is where their story is silenced. A tale with no ending. What happened to the children they stole? Their doom impending.”

  He raised his head, his eyes shimmering.

  “Dead is what the wardens say, destroyed like every rebellion. But sometimes I wonder, what was the Sandstorm’s plan? And that of the stolen?”

  The griot stood, the moroseness that had burdened him vanquished with a mischievous grin. “Remember, my friends: love gives you strength, but retribution gives you purpose.”

  Thump-ba-da-thump.

  The audience cheered and stamped their scythes as the tale came to an end. The griot stood and reached for his trinket box, now brimming with slabs. He looped the strap of the djambe over his other hand and m
ade his way through the crowd who congratulated him on his tale.

  As he ascended the steps to the street above he listened for two things. First, to check whether the tidewind’s wrath had quietened for the night, and secondly to hear the distinctive thud of an officer’s boots. It was easy to know if an officer was nearby, as few people in the Dredge owned shoes.

  When he heard neither, the griot pushed open the door to the Maroon and slipped out into the blackness of the night.

  Each of the thirteen cities of the Wardens’ Empire specializes in different exports, creating a sustainable cycle of resources within a single market. Every city must meet its trade quota each mooncycle, often resulting in a higher death toll among those who labor in the fields. Sacrifices must be made in order to ensure economic stability within the empire; blood will always flow when an empire thrives.

  —Extract from Economic Independence by Sibul Abundo

  I have been searching for any trace of the Sandstorm to complete my tale. Though the wardens claim to have killed them some years ago, I have no confirmation of where or when. It may be my aging eyesight, but I can’t see the end of the story. The rumors are thin, wisps of smoke that I can’t grasp. I will continue to search. I will continue to hope.

  —Note found in Griot Zibenwe’s villa

  Bang-dera-bang-dera-bang.

  The drumbeat still thrummed through Sylah’s veins as she weaved her way back home.