Page 21 of Young Jaguar, The


  “I’ll call the maid to bring us hot chocolate. And some octli.”

  “Tell them to bring the chocolate. But no octli. I’ll never touch that drink again.”

  Later on, as they drifted between sleep and reality, touching and loving and going to sleep again, the maid peeked in. “Master, the messenger from the Palace is on his way.”

  “Make the bath ready,” he ordered.

  Sakuna cursed softly. “One day, one single day!” she muttered into the blankets.

  He gathered her into his arms. “I’ll be back before darkness,” he promised, whispering into her hair.

  He sprang onto the warm tiles of the floor, and she watched him, so nicely built – wide-shouldered and muscular, with not even a little fat burdening his flat stomach, his calves those of a man used to walk great distances. A few more days in bed and it might have changed, she thought, chuckling.

  “Make sure you let them know that I am allowed to go wherever I please. They all, including your children, take what you say way too seriously.”

  He winked. “I’ll think about it.” His eyes twinkled. “You can use some time at home, resting and all.”

  She straightened up. “I’m serious, Tecpatl. Tell them!”

  His smile widened. “Calm down. I already have.”

  “What about Atolli?” she asked before he was gone. “I trust his troubles are over?”

  “For now they are.” He grinned crookedly. “But he’ll get himself into another bunch of trouble soon enough. He is an interesting boy, you know? I never knew him well, and I’m sorry about that.”

  “Will he serve under you?”

  “No. I want him to find his own way. He is not a man to thrive under the shadow of his father.”

  How perceptive he was, she thought, laying back and closing her eyes. His Uncle and the Emperor’s dead brother had been correct. Tecpatl was deeper than he cared to display, much deeper.

  He would have made a great emperor, she thought amusedly, drifting off to sleep.

  Afterword

  But Tecpatl’s Uncle was correct in more than his judgment of his Nephew’s character.

  While, through the late 14th century the Tepanec Empire was expanding, gaining control over almost all of the Mexican Valley, the Aztecs, tucked into their swampy unimportant island, did not remain idle. They dried and expanded their piece of unwanted land, enlarging it as the city of Tenochtitlan grew, developing advanced agricultural systems to feed the growing population.

  A causeway was built to connect the city to the mainland, and the ten-mile-long embankment, to keep off the brackish waters of the Great Texcoco Lake, was planned, along with two large aqueducts to provide the city with a constant supply of fresh water. They acted humbly, just another tributary of the mighty Azcapotzalco, but were they content with their position?

  We know the answer to that. The Spanish conquistadors, arriving about a century and a half later, did not meet the mighty Tepanecs. The lands they had found were ruled by the Aztec’s empire and the Aztec’s Empire alone. So what had happened?

  More answers are in the second book of the Pre-Aztec Trilogy, “The Jaguar Warrior”.

  ###

  “The Young Jaguar” is the first book in the Pre-Aztec Trilogy:

  At Road’s End (prequel)

  The Young Jaguar

  The Jaguar Warrior

  The Warrior’s Way

  More on the later history of the region, and on certain characters appearing in these books, can be read in “The Rise of the Aztecs” Series:

  The Highlander

  Crossing Worlds

  The Emperor’s Second Wife

  Currents of War

  The Fall of the Empire

  The Sword

  The Triple Alliance

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Table of contents:

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Epilogue

  Afterword

  Other Books

 


 

  Zoe Saadia, Young Jaguar, The

 


 

 
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