Oaths of legacy

Emily Skrutskie, 1993-

Book - 2021

Now a political hostage in a newly-reignited war, Gal must sabotage a rebellion from within, concoct an escape plan, and return to the empire he is destined to lead, even if it means he must also sacrifice his loyalty to Ettian.

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SCIENCE FICTION/Skrutski Emily
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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Published
New York : Del Rey [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Emily Skrutskie, 1993- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
290 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593128923
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Skrutskie's follow-up to Bonds of Brass (2020) continues the story of two young men whose developing romance is complicated by vast galactic conflict. Gal, the heir presumptive to the ruthless Umber Empire, is now in a gilded cage maintained by his former classmate and crush Ettian, the restored leader of a resurgent Archon Empire. This volume in the trilogy follows Gal as his lingering affection for Ettian and their mutual friend Wen wrestles with his years of Umber upbringing demanding he resist and sabotage their nascent resistance movement at every turn. Skrutskie sets her characters' competing political and personal motivations against stellar battle scenes featuring mammoth Umber dreadnoughts and the distinctly Gundam-esque powersuited and "vibrosword"-wielding Knights of Archon. While new readers will want to start with the first volume in the trilogy, Skrutskie ably avoids common middle-volume pitfalls and creates an engaging narrative that should satisfy existing fans and new readers alike. Recommended for fans of anime-inspired space opera and readers looking for queer relationships in their sf sagas.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Skrutskie's sweeping second Bloodright Trilogy space opera (following Bonds of Brass) blows away the expectations set in the first act and promises an epic finale to the trilogy to come. Almost-18-year-old Gal emp-Umber has been groomed to rule the brutal Umber empire his entire life. Now Umber has all but defeated the hated Archon empire, leaving only small pockets of rebellion. That is, until Ettian--Gal's classmate, friend, and love--reveals himself as the long-lost Archon heir, uniting the cause behind himself as emperor. As Ettian's prisoner, Gal's kept in a gilded cage, surrounded by people who want him dead by virtue of his name--and others who want him alive for the same reason. Fueled by anger over Ettian's betrayal, he's desperately scheming to bring down the Archon rebellion and return to his rightful place, but the question becomes whether he's ruthless enough to ruin the man he still loves--and their fierce friend Wen--to do so. The easy-flowing narrative expertly immerses readers in Gal's inner conflict as he strategizes his way out of one precarious situation after another. Along the way, Skrutskie's breathless, brilliantly written action sequences and tear-jerking quieter moments will keep readers enthralled. This is a knockout. Agent: Thao Le, Sandra Dijkstra Literary. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In this sequel to Bonds of Brass (2020), Gal wrestles with his love for Ettian, the boy who took on an empire to save him, and his new role as Ettian's prisoner. Narrated by Gal from his gilded cage on Archon's capital planet, and then from inside Archon's dreadnought flagship in the middle of a war with his mother's empire, the Umber bloodright heir has no idea how to feel about anything. He blames his former roommate and lover for his imprisonment. Then again, Ettian saved his life by taking his throne. But Ettian lied! But so did Gal….All Gal really knows is he's currently Ettian's human shield and the best hope the young emperor has of staying alive once Gal's mother brings the full fury of the Umber fleet down on Ettian's newly crowned head. Meanwhile, Gal's schemes to regain freedom and his own crown dig him deeper into danger when Ettian takes his advice and goes to the front, dragging Gal and their friend Wen--who is known as Archon's new Flame Knight--with him. Gal soon realizes that if he wants to keep his and Wen's heads away from Archon general Iral's ax, Ettian needs to remain in power. And Gal, with all his training and knowledge of true empire, is Ettian's best chance. With so many outcomes leading to death for one or all of them, Gal walks a fine line threaded with panic, post-traumatic stress, and lessons in controlling what you can instead of obsessing over what you can't. Skrutskie strives for a fresh look at the lover-to-hater-and-back-again trope, taking quite a few unexpected detours among her diverse and sprawling worlds. This installment maintains quite a slow burn between all the recaps of the first volume and the necessarily slow machinations of a war in space fought with mileslong ships, but the last third of the book does return to the fast-paced, intimate action many readers came to love in Bonds of Brass. Above all, it's a character study of Gal, whose struggle with panic attacks and PTSD are very real and well done, though he's often hard to like when he's being a selfish, obtuse know-it-all. Readers of the Bloodright Trilogy will enjoy this second installment, despite its leisurely pace, and they'll be left eager for Book 3. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 There's a quiet to captivity. Its monotony steals time. I can feel myself getting slower and duller to match it. It's the exact opposite of what I should be doing. If all had gone according to plan, I'd be at the Umber Imperial Seat right now, preparing to take my crown. I'd be caught in a tumult of meetings designed to bring me up to speed on the seven-­year handover process that would begin the day I turned eighteen. I'd be proving to my mother, Iva emp-­Umber, that I deserve wholeheartedly to take up her mantle--­that I am the perfect heir she raised. That's all gone to hell now. All of this is to say that my guard is solidly down when the man comes crashing through the grate on the ceiling. I'm lounging on an ostentatious couch that used to belong to Berr sys-­Tosa, legs kicked up on a pillow, and for a moment I find myself locked in my messy repose as my body scrambles to inject the necessary adrenaline into my bloodstream. Two horrible, still seconds pass as the intruder locks his sights onto me. Then he lunges. I grab the pillow from behind my head and fling it at him, but it glances harmlessly off stealth-­black tac armor. I barely manage to snag the pillow at my feet and jam it up between us before he's on me, his right hand swinging up with an obvious glint in it. The blade sinks into the pillow, the tip of it tearing free mere inches from my throat. The sight of it sparks something deep in my gut, a survival instinct so strong that for a moment my brain takes the copilot's chair. I twist my arms, yanking the knife away from my jugular as I brace one foot on the sofa beneath me and lunge upward. The assassin staggers back a step, giving me the space I need to snatch his wrist and lever his arm up over his head. The whites of his eyes flare in surprise, and I jam the heel of my hand up against the hilt of his blade, popping it out of his grasp before he can counter. The clatter of metal against the stone floor sends a pulse of relief coursing down my spine. Then the man's free hand latches around my throat. He throws me down hard, nearly cracking my head open on the tiles. I've got one breath left in my lungs, and before he can tighten his grip, I holler, " Help! " My brain slides back into the pilot's chair just in time to realize what a waste that is. There are guards stationed outside my room, but their only order is to prevent me from getting out. They don't care about anybody getting in--­ in fact, they'd probably welcome the death of the Umber heir with open arms. Most people in this palace are solidly on the side of cutting off the Umber line of succession. I'm one of the few holding out on the other side. I squirm as my throat collapses under the assassin's weight, trying to wrench a knee up somewhere soft. All I find is more tactical weave, bruising me wherever I try to strike it. My hands scrabble fruitlessly at his wrists, a plea caught in my spasming windpipe. All my life, I've been surrounded by people who leap into action whenever someone tries to kill me. Bodyguards when I was a kid, growing up in the shadows of the Imperial Seat. Sleepers once I left its safety to study on Naberrie and train on Rana, in the heart of the former Archon Empire. And when that life and the secrets that propped it up shattered on a clear winter's day in the skies above the academy--­ When a Corinthian mobster on a wiretram raised his gun with my heart in its sights--­ When the great Archon general Maxo Iral, risen from the dead, victorious in his bid to reclaim the old empire's capital and have his vengeance on my parents for their conquest, held my fate in his hands--­ Fury strikes like flint, and my blood ignites. My gaze flicks sideways and catches the end table perched next to the couch. Within reach? It had better be. I lash out with one hand, knocking over the glass of sweetwine I've been nursing. It shatters with a sharp, clear noise that doesn't break the assassin's laserlike focus on watching the life drain from my face. Pity. If he'd looked, he would have caught the moment my fingers closed around the stone coaster. A thrill washes over me the moment I slam it into his temple. I feel myself come back to life in the crunch --­all the way back, back from the languor that's lasted so long that I've nearly lost track of the time I've spent here. His hands spring free as he instinctively reaches up to guard his head against another blow, and I choke down the breath I sorely need. But the air has its price; the assassin is already lunging for the knife he dropped. I surge to my feet and hurl the coaster at him, striking him hard on the back of his skull. He falters enough that I have the opening I need to leap on top of him. No one is rushing in to save my life now. For the first time in nearly eighteen years, I have to do the damn thing myself. My fists rain down on the man's head furiously, my stomach convulsing as I try to keep down the urge to gag long enough to stop him from killing me. I lose my rationality to the steady rhythm of beating him senseless, and for a moment I think I understand why Archon people like their drums so much. It isn't until a second set of arms wraps around me from behind that I come back to my senses. I buck and thrash against the grip, but they pin me tightly, yanking me off my knees, up and away from the twitching, groaning man I've left lying on the floor. The first clear thought lodges in my head when I spot the coaster next to him--­ Should have used that to finish the job, would have done more damage. The next: What the ever-­loving rut is wrong with you, Gal emp-­Umber? I'm half a second from throwing my head back into the nose of whoever's grappling me when I note the emerald-­green stitching on their sleeves. Imperial-­guard uniforms, which means this is one of the two useless louts who were posted outside my door. Confirming that suspicion, the second surges past me, tucking a blaster back in her belt as she drops on top of my would-­be assassin and wrestles his arms behind his back. "Oh good, you got him," I say flatly, and she fixes me with a thin-­lipped look over her shoulder. I don't dare articulate the concern that gripped me earlier. If they were hoping the assassin would finish the job, I'm sorry to disappoint. My guard pulls the poor man to his feet, giving me a good look at my handiwork. His nose is crooked, one eye swollen shut, the lower half of his face painted in blood from a split lip. The slickness on my hands apparently isn't just sweat. I reach back and wipe them on the uniform of the guard holding me. A resigned sigh wheezes in my ear. "Traitors," the assassin chokes, spattering blood in the face of his captor. "That Umber whelp should be beheaded at the seat for the galaxy to see. Not kept in this ruttin' jewelry box." He rolls his eyes at the lavish appointments around us. "He has a point," I mutter, and the hands restraining me tighten painfully. My guards are well aware of the public opinion. The Archon people want to give the Umber imperials a taste of their own medicine. Justice for my mother's execution of Marc and Henrietta emp-­Archon. They've been calling for my blood for weeks, but this is the first time anyone has had the gumption to take the matter into their own hands. I'm almost impressed, although that sentiment is dampened by the fact that he very nearly succeeded. Probably on account of being kept in a ruttin' jewelry box. If I were in a normal cell with normal round-­the-­clock surveillance, there'd be no chance someone could get within striking distance. But instead I'm kept in comfort and nearly got my throat cut if not for a fancy embroidered pillow. "I'll get this asshole to a cell and call in a perimeter check," the female guard says. "You take the prisoner to the emperor and report the incident." I resist the urge to squirm out of the guard's grip, even though he releases me a second later. My blood heats back up to a simmer in a flash. Cool it, hot shot, I tell myself, rolling my head from side to side as I wring my hands, trying my best to wipe some of the slickness off my skin. Absentmindedly, I muss my hair, as if that's going to do anything to smooth it back from its unruly state. Probably shouldn't have done that. Getting the blood and spit out later is going to be hell. Excerpted from Oaths of Legacy: Book Two of the Bloodright Trilogy by Emily Skrutskie All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.