Hi! I’m Kim Fielding. That’s not my real name. My real name is long and German—and nobody (except people who speak German) ever spells or pronounces it correctly. I publish textbooks under my real name, but I thought about a pen name for fiction for a long time. In fact, I give a lot of thought to names in general.
Rumors say the prisoner, Gray Leynham, is a witch and a traitor. What is certain is that he has spent years in misery: blind, chained, and rendered nearly mute by an extreme stutter. And he dreams of people’s deaths—dreams that come true.
As Brute becomes accustomed to palace life and gets to know Gray, he discovers his own worth, first as a friend and a man and then as a lover. But Brute also learns heroes sometimes face difficult choices and that doing what is right can bring danger of its own.
Buy links at Dreamspinner Press:
And at
Amazon
As
part of the Brute Blog Tour, Kim Fielding is running a contest. All you have to
do to enter is leave a comment on this entry, stating one of your favorite—or
least favorite—names. Please leave your email address in your comment. You can
comment at multiple blog tour entries for multiple chances to win! Click
here for the full list of tour stops. Winners will be chosen on December 25. One person
will receive a paperback copy of Brute
and another person will receive an e-book copy of Brute.
Excerpt from Brute:
Time
passed achingly slowly. Sometimes someone would pop out from one of the little
doors and take one or more of the waiting people back in with them, but nobody
ever came for Brute. New people came through the large entry doors, did a
double take when they saw him, and sat far away. They were eventually escorted
through doorways too. His ass grew sore from sitting on the hard bench, his
stomach gurgled and growled, and worst of all, his bladder began to complain
quite insistently. He knew it was impossible for the giant with the ugly face
to have been forgotten, and yet none of the people who worked there even
glanced his way. Maybe they thought he was a new and especially unbecoming
statue.
Just
as he was about to give in to desperation and ask where he might find a place
to relieve himself, a round woman with a feathered hat and the widest skirts
he’d ever seen appeared from the far left door and sailed in his direction.
“This way,” she commanded.
His
hips and legs had cramped a little as he sat, and he limped very badly as he
followed her.
The
far left door led to an office smelling of tea and crammed with books and
papers. The woman went away and shut the door behind her, leaving Brute alone
with a man who was a few years older than him. The man was dressed in rather
plain clothes and was tiny—barely five feet tall and probably one-third Brute’s
weight—but he managed to project an aura of such powerful authority that he was
almost terrifying. He stood several feet away and looked Brute up and down
slowly. “You have a letter?” he finally said.
“Um,
yes sir.” Brute produced the paper from the folds of his cloak and held it out,
but the man didn’t take it.
“You
will address me as Lord Maudit. You may call me milord or Your Excellency as
well, for variety’s sake.”
“Yes,
Lord Maudit.”
Lord
Maudit rolled his eyes and snatched the paper out of Brute’s hand. He tore open
the seal without ceremony and scanned the contents. When he was finished, he
considered Brute again, this time appraisingly. It reminded Brute of the way
Darius would look over a mule he was considering buying. “So you’re a hero?” he
said at last.
“I—no.
I mean, the prince, he—”
“Needed
to be rescued from his own foolishness. Again. And rather dramatically, I
understand.”
Brute
didn’t know how to answer that. He licked his lips nervously and fought the
urge to shift his feet. His bladder was full to bursting, and the glimpses of
the sea he could catch through Lord Maudit’s window weren’t helping.
“Not
very chatty, are you?” the lord said. “Good.” He folded the paper and slapped
it against his thigh before tossing it onto his desk. “Wait here.”
“Please!”
Lord
Maudit was nearly to the door when Brute blurted out his plea. The little man
turned, eyebrow raised. “Yes?”
“I
need to—is there an outhouse? Milord,” Brute added hastily.
“Garderobe’s
through there,” the lord said, waving at a narrow door in the corner. Brute
made what he hoped was a dignified dash for it while the other man left through
the main door.
To
reach the garderobe he had to climb a set of very narrow, winding stairs. The
stairs dead-ended in a rounded little chamber with tiny slits for windows. The
room contained a wooden seat with a hole in it and a small table bearing an
earthen pitcher of water. Fumbling his laces open one-handed seemed to take
forever, but eventually he managed to get his trousers undone. He emptied
himself with a long groan of relief. At least he hadn’t lost his good hand, he
reminded himself for the thousandth time. The gods only knew how he would have
managed to get himself undressed then.
Lacing
back up again was even more troublesome, but at least his need was no longer
quite so urgent. He just wished he could have managed to find a way to pour the
water in the pitcher over his hand to cleanse it.
Lord
Maudit’s office was empty when Brute descended the stairs. Brute resisted the
temptation to poke around—he had an eerie feeling that the man would somehow know—and instead admired the view from
the windows and then a large painting of a hunting party chasing a stag.
“Hideous
painting, isn’t it?”
Brute
jumped at the voice and whirled around. Lord Maudit had returned, but it was
his companion who had spoken: Prince Aldfrid, attired in riding clothes and
smiling broadly. The prince showed no sign of limping as he crossed the room.
“I’m glad you’ve recovered enough to make the journey,” he said to Brute. “How
are you managing?” He seemed genuinely concerned.
Brute
pulled his stump out of his cloak pocket, which made Lord Maudit’s eyes widen.
Apparently the prince’s letter hadn’t mentioned that Brute was maimed. “Your
Highness, are you certain—” the lord began.
“Yes,”
the prince interrupted sharply. “Completely. He’s the man for the job.”
“The
job, Your Highness?” Brute asked.
“That’s
why you’re here, isn’t it? I could just give you a sack of gold and send you on
your way—you’ve earned it—but I’m guessing you’re not that kind of man. You
want to be… useful.” His laugh sounded a little sad. “More useful than a king’s
fourth son.”
Brute
took a moment to consider the prince’s words. A sack of gold. He’d never have
to worry about his livelihood again. He could buy a little cottage somewhere,
have some clothing made that actually fit. He could eat decent food every day.
And then… what? Sit by himself and wait to grow old and die? “I would like to
be useful,” he confirmed. “But I don’t know what I can do for you, sir, not
like this. I’m sorry.”
“Have
you any skills at all?” Lord Maudit asked. “I suppose it’s too much to ask that
you know how to write.”
Brute
hung his head, ashamed. “I wanted to. Had no money to pay the schoolmaster.”
After his parents were dead, when his great-uncle would send him scurrying
around the village to fetch this and carry that, Brute used to pass the little
schoolhouse now and then, and he’d pause long enough to gaze at it enviously.
Once he’d even dared to ask his great-uncle to send him—Brute had promised to
work twice as much to pay for it—but his great-uncle had cuffed him hard enough
to send him sprawling, then growled that Brute was too stupid to learn.
“Doesn’t
matter,” said Prince Aldfrid, pulling Brute out of the bad memory. “I have
something perfect for you.”
“Aldfrid,
you’re taking an enormous risk.” Lord Maudit sounded irritated with the prince,
but in a resigned sort of way, as if he were used to conversations like this.
“He’s
the one, Maud.”
“But
the king—”
“My
father, if he notices at all, will see that a very large and not especially
bright man—sorry, Brute; I know you’re no idiot—has been put in place. That’s
all.”
Brute
stood there mutely, slightly surprised at the obvious familiarity between the
men and not having the vaguest clue what they were talking about. But then the
prince clapped him on the arm and grinned. “It’ll all work out. You won’t be
seeing much of me, Brute, but if you need anything, just get word to Maud here
and he’ll take care of it.” He smirked at Lord Maudit and sped out of the room.
Maudit
briefly closed his eyes, as if he were in pain. “Scrambled your brains a bit
more on those rocks, didn’t you, Friddy?” he muttered. Then he glared at Brute.
“Follow me.”
It
seemed that everyone was saying that to him today. But Brute shrugged and did
as he was told.
He
was led through another dizzying arrangement of corridors and stairways. Once
he caught a glimpse of an enormous room—by far the largest he had ever
seen—with a polished marble floor, gilded pillars, and a ceiling fresco
considerably more elaborate than the one he’d been admiring while he waited.
But he didn’t get a chance to enjoy it, because Maudit dragged him along at a
pace surprising for a man with such short legs. Guards saluted when Lord Maudit
passed, and various well-dressed functionaries and servants all tried to look
more industrious. Maudit ignored them.
They
eventually left the building—through a different door than the one by which
Brute and the guard had entered—crossed an oblong grassy area where several
women in colorful gowns sat and embroidered, and entered a narrow passageway
between two buildings. The passageway dead-ended at a grim little building of
dirty stone. The windows in the building were simply narrow vertical slits, and
even those were covered by iron bars. The door was iron as well—arched and
sporting a heavy bolt—with a bored-looking guard stationed outside. The guard
snapped to attention when he saw them coming.
“Has
everything been readied?” Lord Maudit snapped.
The
guard nodded sharply. “Yes, milord. The maids just left.”
“Good.
This is… well, Brute. Obviously. You’ve been told of his duties?”
“Yes,
milord.”
“If
he needs anything, make sure he gets it. I’ll be checking on him.”
The
guard looked slightly horrified at the prospect but nodded again. Then he
unlocked the door and waited for Maudit and Brute to enter.
This
time, Brute found himself in a small hallway with a ceiling so low he almost
had to stoop his head. The walls were rough plaster, dirty and cracked, interrupted
now and then by doors made of thick dark timbers. The building smelled of damp
and age, with a faint sickly sweet undertone, as if something had rotted long
ago.
“What—”
Brute began.
“In
here.” Lord Maudit pressed the latch on one of the doors; the hinges squealed
in protest. Brute stepped inside and saw, to his astonishment, a somewhat dim
but comfortable-looking apartment. The ceiling was higher than that of the
hallway, although he could still have brushed it with his fingertips. The room
contained an oversized bed piled with quilts, a chest of drawers with an actual
mirror on top, a solid table with two equally solid chairs, and a matching
wardrobe and bookshelf. The window was tiny, of course, but the walls were hung
with colorful tapestries that depicted scenes of beasts in the forest and
creatures under the sea. A small stove with dark green tiles was tucked in one
corner, but not lit today because the weather was far too warm.
And
in one wall, over near another corner, was a door constructed of heavy iron
bars, with only darkness visible behind it.
“Welcome
to your new home,” said Lord Maudit from the doorway.
“But…
what?”
“His
Highness has decided that you will be a very specialized sort of guard, with
only a single prisoner to watch over.”
“Prisoner?”
Brute’s eyes strayed back to the barred door.
Maudit
twitched one shoulder. “See for yourself.”
With
some degree of trepidation, Brute crossed the room.
The
bars separated the apartment from a small cell. He had to squint to see
inside—there was no window slit in the prisoner’s space—but there wasn’t much
to see. Bare walls, bare floor, and in the corner, a dirty pile of rags. But as
Brute stared, the rags shifted slightly and chains clanked, and a matted mass
of hair appeared from under the edge of the fabric. A man, Brute realized. He
was looking at a man huddled under a blanket. Chains sounded again, and Brute
noted the metal collar around the man’s neck, manacles on his wrists, and
shackled ankles fastened by chains to bolts in the floor. It was impossible to
make out any details of the man past his rat’s nest of hair and tangled beard
until the prisoner lifted his head slightly. Brute gasped at the man’s obvious
blindness: eyelids closed over sunken, empty sockets.
Lord
Maudit sighed. He still hadn’t actually entered the room. “Brute, meet Gray
Leynham.”
I read Brute yesterday and fell in love with all the characters. Warin is my fav of course. I wish I could travel with Aric and Gray. Thank you for writing an awesome book.
ReplyDeleteAnd thank you for such kind words! I'm so happy that you enjoyed! Warin was great fun to write.
DeleteThank you, JR, for letting me visit today!
ReplyDeleteTaking a short break from being with the family yesterday and today. I went home (it's no distance to get something) and saw your entry. I like all the names you gave your characters and *grin* I like your name too. Gaah, I've to go back to my Grandma's place. See you!
ReplyDelete:-) Thank you!
DeleteI do find names have such an influence how we view ourselves or others.
ReplyDeleteI once knew a Mildred who was very nice, but I would hate to have her name as my own.
strive4bst(At) yahoo(Dot) com
Maybe Mildred was once a hip name!
ReplyDelete