I looked at him in alarm, but I could not ask the questions of him that I wanted to; he would not tolerate the informality. “As you wish, my King,” I bowed my head, and stood instead, fidgeting through their conversation, effectively forbidden from pursuing Akyran and ensuring his welfare.
They exchanged gossip about the courtiers and nobles in attendance, and the dances progressed into estampies and other couple dances.
Eltarin joined us. “Your majesties,” he bowed to the King and Queen. “May I steal my sister for this dance?”
I looked to King Treyvin, and he inclined his head. I accepted Eltarin’s hand and stepped onto the polished dancefloor with him.
“Thank you,” I said fervently to my brother.
He laughed. “You looked like a griffin in a cage.”
“Akyran had an argument with King Treyvin and stormed off, and I was not permitted to pursue,” I said under my breath. “I thought I was destined to spend the rest of the evening listening to courtly chatter whilst Akyran’s off at the tavern.”
“Ah,” Eltarin said wisely. “That explains it. I doubt Akyran’s gone to the tavern.”
“Hmph, this is Akyran we’re talking about,” I reminded him. “We’ll finish this dance, and then hopefully I can slip out and go after him.”
“I can save you the bother,” Eltarin replied, his eyes behind me. “He’s just come back into the room.”
Throughout the remainder of the dance, I watched Akyran drink his way through three glasses of wine whilst glowering at his father from across the room. When the dance ended, and before I could escape, my father halted my progress wanting to draw me into a dance.
“I am sorry,” I said to him, looking over my shoulder at Akyran. “I need to see to Akyran. If he does not leave the wine alone, in this mood, there will be a scene.”
“The King asked me to take you for a dance,” my father replied firmly. “You cannot refuse, Ecaeris.”
I sighed out a breath. “He is determined tonight,” I observed, letting my father lead me into the circles of dancers. “What are they arguing about?”
“Treyvin is justified,” my father replied grimly. “And does not want the reasons circulated, so we should speak of it no further, Ecaeris.”
Daryith hovered waiting for the next dance.
“Let me guess,” I said to him. “The King ordered you to dance with me. Does he intend to keep me dancing all night?”
“I do not know,” Daryith admitted. “But the king asks, we do.”
“Hmmm.” We danced in silence for a little while, and I watched Akyran finally incline his head at his father. “There we go,” I sighed in relief. “Hopefully, this will be the last enforced dance.” I turned my attention to Daryith remembering his comment from the game. “What did you mean, by the way, about Akyran’s mistress?”
“Ah,” Daryith flushed. “What do you mean, what did I mean?”
“Exactly what I said. What mistress?”
“I do not know, truly,” Daryith shrugged awkwardly. “There’s a rumour, that is all.”
“Alright,” I prompted. “What does the rumour say?”
“Just that there was a mistress, and King Treyith had Leamoira send the girl away to serve the dragon’s princess.”
“Mmm,” I digested this, feeling a tightness in my chest.
If Leamoira had sent a girl away because of Akyran’s attentions, then the girl had been important to him. He had not told me of her, however, and he was not normally discrete about such things. Perhaps there was no girl, therefore.
But Treyvin’s and Akyran’s argument indicated there was a disagreement between them. If Treyvin had sent Akyran’s mistress away, it would certainly explain Akyran’s anger. But why would the King do so? They had never intervened with Akyran’s bedfellows before unless…
If Akyran was attached to a woman who was partially mankind, that would certainly cause the king to intervene. Even a dalliance for the future King of the Dark Court with a woman of mankind or halfling would be discouraged, and Akyran knew that, so he would not dally, unless there was a genuine attachment…
Was Akyran in love? Why had he not told me? Because she was of mankind?
“I need a drink,” I told Daryith as the song came to an end. “I have been dancing quite long enough.”
I collected a glass of wine from a servant’s platter as I made my way to a seating area and drank it quickly before claiming a second. My dress felt too tight, too heavy on my skin, and the ballroom too hot. I made my way to one of the doors onto the terrace, and stepped out for air, leaning against the balustrade.
My parents and brother had been brought here as Treyvin had intentions to use me somehow to control Akyran. It was why I had not been permitted to follow him. Surely Treyvin would not force me to betray my friend somehow?
I claimed another glass of wine as I entered. King Treyvin met my eyes and indicated I was to join them. I sighed and took the wine over to the table set at the head of the room, behind which the king and queen now sat, my parents to one side.
“Sit beside me,” Treyvin instructed me. I met Akyran’s eyes across the room as I did so and widened my eyes at him. He finished his drink and set it to the side, excusing himself from his conversation with a group which included at least two of his past lovers. Lady Beria looked hopefully of a repeat of her stallion evening in Akyran’s bed. I sighed and wondered if I would have to spend another night with a pillow over my head.
Akyran came around the table, to my chair. “Dance with me, Ecaeris,” he said, taking the wine glass from my hand and placing it on the tabletop.
“As you will. I like this song,” I let him draw me out onto the dance floor and spin me so that the layered skirts of my dress swirled with the movement and caught the light. He was tense, the set of his shoulders and his arms hard against me. “So, why has King Treyvin been keeping me within eyesight all evening?”
“No reason,” he tightened his grip, drawing me closer against him than was strictly within the boundaries of etiquette. If it had been anyone other than Akyran to hold me that tightly during a dance, I would have broken his thumbs. I could smell the spirits on him - he was half-way drunk, I thought.
“Surely you do not expect me to believe that?” I commented. “You’ve been glaring daggers at your father across the room ever since your argument.” I saw Leamoira and my mother, their heads inclined towards each other, murmuring behind their hands, their eyes on us. Eltarin had moved to stand behind their chairs. I raised my eyebrows at him, and he returned the look.
“I am not allowed to discuss it,” Akyran cleared his throat. He slowed the steps of the dance, positioning us in the centre of the room, out of the circle of the other dancers. “You have the right to refuse, Ecaeris.”
“The right to...” I started and leaned back to look up at him. He watched my face, a muscle working in the corner of his jaw as he clenched his back teeth, a habit I had grown to know well. He was angry. “Akyran… What is going on?” I was baffled. “Are you invoking the law of three?” The law of three was used in many ways, but most often, between Fae, to invoke the rite of marriage.
“You have to answer, Ecaeris,” he replied. We had given up any pretence of dancing, but he continued to grip me tightly to him, his grip too tight, as if he feared I would seek to flee him.
I swallowed, hard. My heart pounded against my sternum. I knew I was missing a piece of the puzzle, between this rumour of a mistress, Akyran’s disagreement with his father, King Treyvin using me to control Akyran… I wanted, oh so much, for this offer to be genuine, but there was a bad taste in my mouth.
“I know I have the right to refuse,” I said carefully. “Do you want me to?”
He looked taken aback and then bewildered. “I would not be invoking the law of three if I wanted a negative response.” He frowned.
“Akyran,” I said softly. “We can just keep dancing and pretend we did not start this conversation. I do not know what is going on between your father and yourself, but I…”
“You have to answer,” his grip tightened. “By the new moon, Ecaeris, you are making this difficult.”
“I do not mean to be difficult.” I was aware that we were the centre of attention, the dancers and audience alike focused on our murmured conversation, watching our body language and our faces, trying to determine the content of our discussion. “This is a very, ah, public venue for this, Akyran.”
“I am sorry about that,” he replied softly. “I have my reasons. Ecaeris...”
I would have to just trust him, I decided. “I’m not refusing.”
He sighed out a breath, and I felt him relax. “You had me worried for a moment there,” he said, colour heightening on his cheeks. “You can refuse, Ecaeris.”
“Akyran,” I saw his father and mine move to stand near our mothers. My father met my eyes and nodded encouragingly. I forged on with the question, regardless. “Are you sure you want to do this?”
He laughed, wryly. “I’d hardly be doing it otherwise, would I?”
I met his eyes and held them, frowning. “You’ve never...”
“We are,” he interrupted firmly. “In the middle of a conversation, Ecaeris.”
I had not answered, I realised. I searched his face with my eyes, trying to see some hint of what I wanted to see… All I saw was annoyance.
“Ecaeris,” he prompted.
I looked over his shoulder at the king. Treyvin met my eyes and inclined his chin. I looked back at Akyran. He was frowning. I sighed. “I’m not refusing.”
“You have the right to refuse.”
“I’m not refusing.” This was not how this was supposed to be done, I thought bitterly. It was not romantic, tender, passionate, and private – it was the opposite of all those things.
“Will you be mine?” The frown had eased from his face now that I was following the required script.
“Yes,” I mumbled, dropping my eyes to the buttons at his collar, and knew my cheeks had flushed.
“You’re blushing,” he said, amused. “I think the only other time I’ve seen you blush was that time - ”
“Akyran,” I cut him off, jerking my eyes back to his. “Don’t make me stamp on your instep.”
“That would make a story for our children,” he replied. “In the middle of the dancefloor, whilst I was asking your mother to marry me, she stamped on my instep… Will you be mine, Ecaeris?”
Three opportunities to refuse, three acceptances, and three consummations. I could not lift my eyes to see those that watched us. There was a reason that marriages were normally made privately, as they were intensely personal and physical affairs. I could not fathom why he had chosen to do it here, except...
“Your father made you do this.”
“Ah,” he dropped his face, so his lips were near my ear. “Yes and no. It is my father’s way of keeping me inline, yes. But I had planned to do it anyway. Answer the question, Ecaeris.”
I could hardly refuse. Even had I wanted to, every person in the ballroom by this time knew the content of the discussion that held us frozen in the centre of the dancefloor, and I would humiliate him if I did. I did not want to humiliate Akyran. And I wanted him, had wanted him since childhood. But did he want me?
“Are you sure?” I asked him.
“Answer the question, Ecaeris,” he said, tension building in him again as I delayed.
“Yes.”
“Will you be mine?” he murmured into my ear. We must look romantic, I thought, grimly, to those who watched, with my face against his neck and his cheek against mine, but there was no romance in his grip. It was more, I thought, as if he sought to tame a wild horse, holding tightly to it, and whispering into its ear.
“You are my best friend,” I whispered. “I cannot imagine my life without you.”
“And you are mine,” he replied, his grip gentling, his thumb stroking as if to sooth away the red marks he had left behind. “There is no one I would marry, if not you, Ecaeris.” It was not, I thought, a declaration of passionate, romantic love, but it was something. “Answer the question, please. I don’t think any other Fae-man in history has had to work this hard to get the rule of three from his wife’s lips.”
“Akyran...” I leaned back against his grasp and he rested his forehead against mine, holding my eyes with his. I examined the depths of those blue eyes, searching for a reason behind that nagging doubt that had me hesitating. There was no passion, no heat, no desire in his body for all that he held me tightly against him.
“Ecaeris,” he brushed his lips over mine. “All you have to do is say yes one more time, please.”
But that was not all, I knew.
“Say it,” there was a sharpness to his voice, and shadows in the dark blue of his eyes. “Yes, Akyran.”
“Yes, Akyran.”
“Good girl,” he smiled, triumphantly, his face relaxing and he pressed his mouth against mine.
The courtiers cheered, and suddenly we were surrounded by silks and perfumed hair, as everyone moved in to congratulate us both.
And Akyran released me, letting us be drawn apart by the crowds.
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
“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 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