Someone put a crystal glass of wine into my hand, and I threw it back, wishing it were spirits. I saw Akyran surrounded by menfolk, lifting a gilded flask to his lips, and replying to something someone said with a laugh. His eyes met mine and he smiled, but it did not have the brilliance behind it that his smiles normally held.
Leamoira caught my face between her hands and kissed both my cheeks enthusiastically. “A long time coming,” she declared. “We have been expecting an announcement now for... oh, at least fifty years.”
“Was he coerced into this?” I asked her under my breath.
She hesitated for just a moment. “Not into asking you to marry him,” she replied carefully. Fae do not lie. We omit, avoid, and mislead. Leamoira was omitting something, but the relief was overwhelming. Not into asking me to marry him.
There is no one I would marry, if not you, he had said. It was not a lie. But there was a lot unsaid within that statement.
I did not have the chance to ask her more, for King Treyvin embraced me, a rare physical expression from the stern king. “Well done, Ecaeris,” he said with approval. “I am very pleased to finally greet you as my daughter-in-law. Your father and I have long aspired to unite our families. We are very happy to see it to its fruition.”
I opened my mouth to ask him and closed it again. One did not ask questions of the King. “Thank you, my King.”
He nodded and his eyes were amused. He knew I had bit back my questions.
My father embraced me. “Congratulations,” he said, his voice thickened by emotion. He was on the verge of tears. “Your mother and I are very happy that you have made this connection for our family.”
“Thank you,” I replied stiffly. How much had Akyran’s actions been influenced by our parent’s wishes, and how much had been motivated by a genuine attraction? Had I lost my best friend in becoming his bride?
As the congratulations continued, I was plied with glasses of wine, half of which were removed from my hands without being touched. Over the heads of those around me, I saw that Akyran was somewhat more successful in drinking the alcohol brought to him.
When the excitement died down sufficiently, I escaped the ballroom, and made my way back to my chambers as if I were being pursued. Fiena and Tillie were awake and excited, the news having spread through the castle. They gushed over the announcement as they undressed and bathed me.
“So romantic,” Tillie told me. “To ask you so publicly.”
I met Fiena’s eyes, and she sighed. Tillie was very young and innocent and did not understand that marriages were meant to be private affairs.
I lay into my bed unsure about the etiquette. Should I lie down in his room? It would feel odd to do so with Ithyles waiting for him to return. I lay awake and fretful as Fiena and Tillie withdrew into the dressing room, closing the door behind them. Would he come here? I wondered. I tossed restlessly upon the bed. What would happen if he did?
Unlike Akyran, I had not taken many lovers. It was not something as indulgently looked upon for Fae noble women as it was for noble men. Those I had taken, I had done so very discretely, very carefully, and only where there was a genuine attachment. I did not know if Akyran even knew that I had done so.
What if we went to bed now, and he thought I was a virgin?
What if he thought I had more experience than I did?
What would sex actually be like with Akyran? Would we even have sex? The marriage rites needed three consummations… but there was some game afoot that I was not privy to. What if this marriage was a sham? Did he expect me to realise it was?
Everything was out of order, I thought. I was not sure how it had come to be so, how our relationship had become so public before it had become private, but surely now... surely, now it would even out. If the marriage was genuine… If…
I heard the door open, and my breath caught.
I heard him curse as he collided with a chair, crossing the room.
“Are you alright Akyran?” I smothered my laughter.
He had sat into the offending chair in order to remove his boots and looked up at me with a quick grin. “Didn’t see the chair. You moved it since the last time I was here.”
“Last time you were sitting on it,” I reminded him.
In the moonlight I could see him pull off his top and trousers, and the silhouette of his body, the slide of moonlight across muscle and skin as he approached the bed, the inky darkness of his hair echoed lower... He was so beautiful he made my heart ache with longing.
He would not come naked to the bed unless he intended to consummate our marriage. One knot within me released with the assurance that Akyran did not intend for the marriage to be a sham, at least, and intended to follow the rite to its completion.
He slid into the covers and lay for a moment on his back before drawing in a deep breath and turning and reaching for me. I could smell the spirits on his breath as he pulled me towards him. He pressed his face into the curve of my neck and shoulder, pressing his lips against my skin, but did not try to kiss me as he arranged me beneath him, making room between my legs.
His hand tilted my hips to him, but he pushed against me in vain, before cursing, reaching between us to grasp himself, and I felt the movement of his hands as he stroked himself to hardness, before trying again. I winced, tense and... unwilling. Unseduced.
In all my nights of dreaming of his body against mine, it had not been like this.
“Gentle,” I protested, and reached between us. I felt his breath indrawn sharply as I closed my hand around him, stroking him. If he had doubts of my experience, my touch would have dispelled that, I told myself.
His forehead dropped to mine, his eyes closing, and he groaned. “- Ecaeris,” he swore, his tone appreciative, desirous. I released him and adjusted under him, so that when he tried again, we both sighed out in relief as he joined us. His lips grazed against my jaw and cheek as he began to move against me, his eyes still tightly shut.
It was... perfunctory. It was not a seduction, not a joyous merging of people, it was... meeting obligations. Oddly uncomfortable and intensely polite, and utterly bereft of passion. He did not kiss me, did not look at me, his face contracting in a scowl as he increased the speed and vigour of his thrusts. I felt the heat of his seed, and he gasped, before pulling from me and falling onto his back.
I could see his chest rising and falling as he recovered himself. “Alright, Ecaeris?” he whispered.
“Yes,” shame burnt in my throat, stung tears to my eyes. I was bitterly disappointed. I might not have had much experience, and those times I had might have been clumsy and rushed, but they had been more than this.
Three times we had to consummate the marriage and after this first, I wanted nothing more than for it to stop. It was just so… awful, that this was all that there was between us. After so many years fantasizing… The courtiers he had taken to bed had seemed well pleased, why was I not? Because I told myself, he was not… he was just not… wanting to have sex with me. It was a soul crushing embarrassment.
This was a mistake. We should have just stayed friends... If I stopped it now, perhaps I would save us a long lifetime of regret. But I would also be answerable to the whole court after our declarations being made so publicly. What had we done? I wanted to weep, but I was a war mage, and we did not do such things as weep over broken hearts.
He sighed. The moonlight picked out his profile. “There’s word of a bunch of ogres in the outer edges of the forest. We should go roust them in the morning, make sure they’re behaving themselves,” he said, moving onto his side. “Maybe hunt some deer whilst we’re out.” Suddenly we were back, camping around the fire after having a few too many drinks, friends sharing a bedroll and company. Though normally we did not do it without a stitch of clothing between us, admittedly.
“That should be fun,” I agreed, trying to let go of the resentment and settle back into the comfort of our friendship. “You could use the practise.”
“Hey,” his teeth flashed in the darkness. “My spear hit the chest plate. Yours was just a lucky shot.”
“Why is it that everyone else has luck, whereas you have skill, Akyran?”
“I still think you have cast a spell to help your aim,” he retorted with a laugh. He reached out and stroked a lock of my hair back from my face and then leaned forward, brushing his lips over mine gently.
I threaded my fingers into his hair and stroked down to his shoulder feeling the shift of his muscles beneath his smooth skin, the rise and fall over his arm as he drew me under him, joining us as he opened my mouth with his.
His eyes were closed, the lashes heavy on his cheek, and although the kiss heated and I could feel the response of his body, although his heartbeat increased and his breath grew unsteady, there was a formality to his touch, that edge of politeness.
Enough was enough, I decided. I gripped his hips, and held him closer, changing the pace and lifting to meet him. He drew in a sharp breath and let it out on a moan, lowering his torso closer to mine, relaxing at last, his hand pulling me closer to him, changing the angle. I felt my body respond and worked hard to bring it to pleasure against him, and he cried out with me, pressing his hips against mine as he spilled his seed.
“That was better,” he said, sounding surprised and pleased. He did not roll from me as he had the first time but stayed above me and in me. He brushed his lips against mine, trailed them along my cheek, lover-like. “I wasn’t sure if being friends would be... uncomfortable in bed.”
“Well, the first time was pretty awful,” I told him, reaching up to stroke his hair from his face.
He grimaced. “Sorry. Too much to drink and a case of nerves.”
“You, nervous?” I scoffed.
“Very,” he grazed his lips over mine and then lifted from me onto his side, and I did the same so that we were eye to eye on the cushion. “You are my friend, Ecaeris,” he stroked his hand down my arm, taking my hand and threading his fingers in mine so that our joined hands rested between us. “I’ve known for centuries that we would marry, it just... made sense. But crossing into being physical without damaging the friendship... Yes, I was nervous.”
I sighed out a breath. “So was I,” I admitted and was rewarded with another quick flash of a grin. Another knot of tension within me released. Nerves, I told myself. Just nerves.
“I’m sorry,” he released my hand and drew me closer to him. His skin against mine was divine, the texture of him, the skin that was crisp with hair, his chest, his legs… and the silk of him that was not, along the curve of rib, the point of hip... My hands drifted over him, and he did not stop me, in fact seemed to welcome the touch, his eyes hooded, and his body relaxed. “About the first time. I thought it would be easier to just get the first time done... The drink did not help. It was awful.”
“It would have been better if everything hadn’t all been so... tense,” I reached up to touch his cheek, feeling the rasp of stubble under my fingertips. “It was just so awkward, with everyone knowing what was to come... I was nervous, too.”
“We should have just gone camping, drunk too much, and done it in the heat of the moment,” he agreed. “I had rather had that in mind… Next time we get married, we’ll do it that way,” he joked.
“What was going on tonight?” I asked him. “Ah,” he blew out a breath and rolled onto his back again. “Rivyn’s been in my father’s ear, and my father is on the verge of sending an army to aid Aurien’s princess. I’ve been trying to get him to see sense.” I grimaced. He was avoiding answering by offering partial truths. He knew I meant about the manner of him invoking the rule of three, but he did not want to answer. “He knew I was planning on invoking the rule of three,” he said suddenly, rolling onto his side to face me and taking a lock of my hair between his fingers, letting it run free and fall. “Because we argued, he demanded I do it in a way that was unfair to you, and I am sorry for that, Ecaeris.” Then he laughed. “- I’m probably lucky that I did do it that way, or you might have made it impossible to get through the rites. That had to be one of the hardest proposals in Fae history.” I lifted my mouth to his and tasted his laughter as I slid my
I rolled my eyes. “I am the War Mage, Ecaeris,” I told her. “Queen Diandeliera.”“You’re Fae,” she considered me, undaunted by my old war titles. An unusual woman, I thought. She had the delicate prettiness one thought of when one thought of mankind princesses at all, the fair skin that spoke of being sheltered from the sunlight, but there was a determination in her eyes that defied her birth and species. This was a princess who would lead her army from the front. I decided that I liked her.“Yes.”“Bane of Nerith,” she repeated what Daerton had said. “You fought with Aurien in the war against Phimion.”“Yes.”Her eyes went to Aurien who, dragon-like, had lost interest in the conversation, and stood caught in his own thoughts, his gaze fixed distantly. He would remember every word said in his presence, for all his appearance of inattention. She looked back at
We moved to the section of the camp where the camp followers were situated. Women held babes on their hips whilst they stirred pots over the fire, and small, grubby children wove in between the basic A frame tents. Prostitutes and wives of the poorer soldiers intermingled with servants and the various trades that supported all armies. A blacksmith worked a sword over an anvil, his sweat running black down his face and his muscles standing out impressively against skin scarred with the burn marks of his trade. “Let me guess,” Daerton said. “Mummy and daddy found out about the half-Fae bit on the side, and demanded the little princeling marry the pure-blood as per plan, but no one thought to let you know in advance of the invocation. So now the War Mage is mad and gone stomping off to the camp where the half-Fae bit is to have her revenge, but Aurien put a stop to it?” “Mostly,” I gathered some ash from a fire into a pouch. “I mean Ashara no harm. Akyran has always bee
I wiped my sword clean on the cloak of the corpse of an enemy soldier and reviewed the skeleton army I had amassed. I checked my pouch. I had enough components for another casting. “Inmithus mancitem!” I saw the soldiers that picked through the dead for armour and weaponry dance back as the corpses of their enemies expelled their flesh and rose as skeletons. “Tell Ruelke she can add two hundred odd skeletons to her tally,” I said to Leongrad. “She’ll be happy about that,” he agreed. “They probably don’t eat much.” I laughed - my laughter sharp edged. I saw Aurien land, and the soldiers called Diandreliera’s name in triumph, as she again raised Intuin Desparen in salute of the victory. We left the strongholds sieging, not interested in taking them, and instead occupied the next large town along the road. The residents welcomed us, greeting Diandreliera as the True Queen. Narayan managed to arrange a bath for me in one of the private hou
I sent the skeletons onto patrol between us and the river that framed the city and castle as the camp set up. “The bridges are set to collapse,” Daerton told me. We both looked to the sky as the golden dragon winged down to land. Aurien shifted into man-form as soon as Diandreliera had dismounted. He walked alongside her to the tent that had been set up for them as if his golden hair were not the only thing he was wearing. “Take a good look, Ecaeris,” Daerton muttered to me. I grinned at him. “As if you wouldn’t look if it were a female dragon walking naked through the camp. I’ve never met a dragon that’s hard on the eyes.” “The same could be said for the Fae,” he replied. “Which is why I am so pretty, it’s the Fae blood in me. Back to the bridges, however.” “It’s not unexpected,” I pointed out. “No. There are any number of solutions. The question is which one?” “Hmmm,” my hand closed around the locket. “I think it depends on w
“Looks like you’ve already done the fun part,” Akyran sat next to me. I tossed the first rock back into the river before taking up the second rock. “Cloth soaked in children’s tears,” Daerton watched with interest. “That’s some serious spell casting.” I threw the next rock into the river. “It needs to be.” “So, we’re creating a dam,” Daerton observed. “The bank is going to be slippery.” “I will dry it.” “You will need… ah,” he glanced at Akyran under his eyelashes. “I guess you have that in ready supply.” “Yes,” I murmured. “What?” Akyran looked between us. “I need some of your blood,” I held out my hand. “My blood?” he repeated but placed his hand in mine. I stabbed his finger with my dagger point, and he exclaimed. “- Ecaeris,” he protested. I squeezed his finger, to get the blood to bead, and then let it fall onto a cloth I held ready. When I released his hand, he put his finger in his mouth and sucked it. “T
“Shit, Ecaeris,” Leongrad defended my injured side. “Fall back and seek a healer.” “I can still fight with one arm, and spell cast,” I dismissed the suggestion. “I am fine.” “You have a -ing arrow through your shoulder!” he replied. I saw the flash of dragon scale overhead as Aurien cut through the night sky, and the screams of the enemy soldiers beneath his fire. We were at the castle walls, the chemin de ronde thick with soldiers, arrows falling swift and fast. I threw up a ward, and the arrows suspended just above Leongrad’s head. He looked at me, wide eyed. I heard my name yelled behind me and recognised the voice as Akyran’s - he was fighting his way through to me. I turned, instinctually, centuries of training responding, and plunged back through our soldiers, to come to his side. He caught me and hunched over me as a volley of arrows struck into the shields of the soldiers that guarded his person. “Ecaeris,” his face was shadowed by his
The water was bluer thank Akyran’s eyes and sparkled like it was scattered with diamonds. I watched another ship move into the bay. The port and city were busy with traders moving in and out. A strange place, this, I thought, watching the movement from my perch in the open tower window. Isolated and surrounded by a deadly desert, the people who had colonized this spot had been foolhardy and determined. They had come from further inland, following the fertile land off the riverbanks until it disappeared into the ocean. The people were brilliant and deadly, like the environment. Their clothing was brightly coloured, finely woven, and designed for the heat of this land. They wore their wealth in gold heavily around wrist and throat, and their weapons in plain sight to deter thieves. Life came and went quickly. The Fae Courts intrigues did not hold the brutality of these beautiful and charming people, who would take a hand for a theft, and an eye for a trespass.
The wind blew a ball of spindle weed across the baked-dry land before us, and the heat of the sun caused sweat to prick between my shoulder blades and gather between my breasts, sticking the cloth of my tunic to my skin. I blew a stubborn fly from my face and slid a look at Akyran. The sun had reddened his cheeks and the tip of his nose where his helmet exposed them, and a drop of sweat tracked its way through the stubble-roughened surface of his neck to be absorbed into the collar of his tunic top.A stillness settled over the land as if every creature waited with us for the moment of battle. We stood back from the well opening weapons in hand, each man and woman intently listening, anticipating attack.There was a dull “whomp” that seemed to shudder the ground, and for a moment, the air seemed to draw into the well like a breath as the fire cast by Daerton and Rivyn into their well location several miles away consumed the oxyge
In the morning bright light, in between stolen mouthfuls of fruit-ladened bread and herbal tea, we prepared for the day our own way, by preparing our armour and weapons. My armour had not seen active use for over a decade and I tsked over the stiffness of the leather.“I need new armour,” I complained. “And new weapons.”“That can be arranged, but not on short notice,” he replied as he helped me with the buckles of my armour.“I also need to take on some new pages and squires,” I sighed. “Not that you aren’t doing a great job…” I sent him a grin and he chuckled.“I’ve had some practise with armour. I think you will have your pick of Aurien’s dragonets if you are looking for pages,” he pointed out and dropped a kiss onto my forehead. “Done.”“I can hardly make princes
Between the craftsmen manufacturing new nets and Akyran’s people searching the city for every net that they could find; they were prepared for our return. Akyran rolled out the map whilst we ate around the great table with the leaders of his army, and he divided them into teams. As we finished the meal, the terrible call of the creatures echoed overhead and we all looked up instinctually, although all that we could see was the arch of slate overhead.“We must endure another night of this,” Akyran said. “As the plan relies on them being in the underground caverns. In the morning, we will begin netting, and by afternoon, between Rivyn, Daerton and Ecaeris, we will burn the monsters to ash.”“I’ll be back in the morning then,” Rivyn declared and cast a portal, the wind whipping the edges of the map so that Akyran had to use his hands to pin it to the tabletop until the portal closed again behind h
“Our daughters are children,” Aurien turning to address Leamoira. “Dragons mature at the same rate as humans. I find it difficult to believe that the prophecy intends for our children to fight monsters before they are fully grown.” “It would be difficult for a child to wield a sword,” Leamoira agreed. “There is no measure of time to the prophesy, but I think it’s safe to assume that it will be a number of years until the heroine is ready to fulfil her future. Which leaves us with what to do in the interim?” “It seems to me,” King Sterin looked at me. “That we have someone experienced in hunting these monsters already in our midst.” The murmuring amongst the assembly rose, courtiers and royalty alike whispering behind raised fans and the palms of their hands. “You’ll recall that the last one I fought, almost killed me,” I reminded him. “A team is needed,” Sterin replied. “Obviously, to support
As the day aged into afternoon, we gathered on the terraces overlooking the town below as the arrival of the dignitaries from all over our world formed a parade winding its way up into the castle, serenaded by bards and showered with the petals of flowers. “I see Aurien,” I spotted him by his golden hair which had been left free like a magnificent coat. “As if he is hard to spot,” Akyran replied with a hint of jealousy. “He stands a head over most others.” “He’s just jealous,” Rivyn grinned enjoying his twin’s reaction. “Ecaeris hasn’t exactly been secretive over her admiration for our golden friend.” “I just whole-heartedly believe it is unnatural for dragons to wear clothing,” I replied innocently. “It must be so inconvenient for him.” “I’m just glad he’s married, and being dragon, entirely faithful,” Akyran spoke over my head to Rivyn. “Or I’d be chaining her to the bed.” “You could do that anyway,” I suggested, and Akyran’s eyes lit fiercely. “I could,” he agreed putting his
It was odd being back at the Court of the Light without Fiena, Tillie, or Ithyles to serve us. We had been assigned new servants, and they did not know our ways or habits, something which irritated Akyran, causing him to be short and curt with them.“We should have stopped by Nerith and brought your servants with us,” I commented to him as we settled into the bath and the servants retreated to lick their wounds. “You are too harsh. It is not their fault that we have been absent from court for a decade.”“Over a decade,” he reminded me passing me a wine goblet.“My point precisely.”“I am in a foul mood,” he admitted leaning his head back against the lip of the bath, his dark hair spreading out in the water around him like ink.“Your mother?” I guessed.“A bit, but the realisation is
Due to the nature of magic around the Court of Light, the portal opened at the gates into the town. We both looked up automatically, the winding stone roads guiding the eye to the gleaming white walls of the castle in the center of the township, the terraces spilling greenery over the edges, and the open windows billowing the sheer curtains out.We could see the brightly colour courtiers strolling the walkways. From the gathering of minstrels, and the number of courtiers on the terrace from the main hall, Queen Leamoira was entertaining outside.We approached the gates, and the guards saluted us. “Prince Akyran, Princess Ecaeris!”I grumbled under my breath as we began the slow climb through the tidy houses with their white-washed walls and dark wood.“Oh, shush,” Akyran smirked. “When you marry a prince, it makes you a princess.”“Siorin
“To end the slaughter,Not dragon son, but daughter,In the right hand,Rivyn’s sword will save the land,If the lamb chosen is wrong,Love’s sacrifice will not be strong.”The Seer’s words echoed hollowly around the room, and the vines behind her seemed to shake and tremble. There was a heaviness to the sound of them, a weightiness that implied meaning, and a ring to the tone so that it seemed she spoke from a great distance, and the sound carried to us from where-ever she was.The delivery seemed to exhaust her, her chin dropping to her chest, the points of her headdress stringing out vine behind her like spiderweb. She became so still that I found myself studying her chest for the rise and fall of breath. If she breathed, it was so lightly it did not disturb the cloth she wore.“Hmm,” Akyran hummed his sigh out through his nose, trying to sup
Armoured and armed, we returned to the courtyard and I cast a portal. “Aperianu.”The Temples of Seigradh were buried deep within the forest on the border of Nerith and Uyan Taesil. Even the irreverence of mankind had not dared to touch this forest. It was one of the oldest in the world, the trunks of its trees wide and its branches and roots tangled. It was said that its roots systems had become so enmeshed that it no longer existed as a forest of many trees, but all were part of one.There had once been a path to the temples, but the root system had long tossed the stones aside, or curled over them, so that the way was often lost beneath greenery. Pilgrims determined the way, instead, by the stone monoliths that marked the path, though even these were often swallowed by the forest.Water gathered in puddles on the ground, though the greenery was so thick, if there was mud from a recent rainfall, we were kept from it. Fairies with eyes like black be