A Royal Rebellion (12 page)

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Authors: Revella Hawthorne

Tags: #mpreg fantasy

BOOK: A Royal Rebellion
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***

Edward

 

Edward breathed in deep, remembering who he was, and who he didn’t want to be. Reason, calm, control. He was all of these things. He wasn’t the entitled crown prince, who sulked when he didn’t get the choicest meat, nor was he the brash and rude middle son, who made it a point to need no one and make sure they knew it. He saw the flaws others hated most in his brothers and made it a point to be more, and yet less.

Who was Edward, third son of the king? Farmer, tax law expert, master, lover? Father? He looked at Percy, his lovely mate held securely in Reynard’s arms, the captain ready and willing to give his life to protect Percy’s. His mate, whose ice-blue eyes were fraught with worry and tension, all but begged him to find peace.

The control he’d been struggling with the last weeks was all but gone. So used to having his life be the way he wanted it, undisturbed by politics and family backstabbing, Edward realized with a harsh awakening that he was spoiled. He was a prince, cast adrift in world he couldn’t control and he certainly could not protect his mate and unborn child. He relied on Reynard to protect them from harm, and even Mason, the seemingly crass and degenerate rake, had more value and skill than he’d given him credit for, and was immensely more suited to the life they were living than Edward was.

In that epiphany he realized he was no one. Yet he could be someone, and he wanted to be more than what the world saw, and what he had been before. Every moment set before a man he had the chance to be better than he was before, and that thought sent the tension from his body.

Edward relaxed, and sat. He would listen, and learn, and then figure out what kind of prince he really was. What kind of man. Percy made a small movement from Reynard’s arms, but Edward glanced up at the captain who nodded and sat back down, holding securely onto Percy. His mate gave him a small moue of his lips, and Edward sent him an apologetic smile before returning his attention to their host.

“Apologies for the outburst, Lord Lucius. I have no excuse for my behavior.” Edward had plenty of reasons, but he refused to act the child. That was Mason’s job. Lord Lucius gave him a gracious nod, and Edward glared at Mason. “Speak up, brother.”

“Oh, is it my turn?” Mason asked, leaning back in his seat, legs crossed, looking so alike Reynard that Edward wondered just how far back their liaison went.

“Mace,” Reynard warned in a soft tone, and surprisingly enough his brother sat up in his chair and lost the insouciant attitude.

“First begin with why Father is listening to the Minister of DNA Engineering and Cloning,” Edward said. That was the most pressing matter—the why would explain how the king could be bent to follow the wishes of a single minister, a minister who was appointed by the king, and not the people. All their father had to do was dismiss the minister and appoint someone knew. For the king to let a mere minister, no matter how influential, to meddle in the affairs of the royal family was almost unthinkable. “Tell me why he endorsed this manhunt and is coming after Percy. Malcolm said it was money, that the slave trade in Cassia is losing too much money for a breeder like Percy to be bound to one man.”

“Well, cut to the heart of the whole fucking mess, why don’t you,” Mason muttered, incredulous. “You always were so smart, Eddie.”

“Mason!”

“Fine. The illustrious King Henry the Third is being blackmailed, and bribed, by the Minister of DNA Engineering and Cloning.”

“What?”

“Before he was the minister, he was a lowly geneticist and manipulation expert at a semi-well known breeding house. Goes by the name of Heritage Breeders, I’m sure you’ve heard of it. His name is unimportant, but he worked alongside a Master DNA Architect named Cartwright. That’s not really important either, I’m afraid, just shows what a small world this is.”

“Mason!”

“Ok, okay. This all boils down to our dear mother, Eddie.”

“What does Mother have to do with anything? She’s been dead for twenty years!” She died when Edward was ten, after complications from the birth of his youngest sister. That was what his father told him and the rest of the world, at least.

“Mother was ill, Eddie. She born sick, and she didn’t tell Father until after she had you. It’s that disease that eventually took her from us, and drove Father mad.”

Mason’s face was set in stone, dark eyes a bottomless pit of pain. Edward stared at his brother until it felt like no one else was in the room, everything narrowed down Mason. Air seized in his lungs, his hands gripped the arms of the chair, and his legs tensed. He locked eyes with Mason, and said, “Keep going.”

“A congenital disease that remains dormant until triggered by a childhood illness, so only about half of the people who have it develop symptoms. It has a long and boring scientific name, but it’s responsible for the winnowing of several noble houses around the world. It affects the reproductive organs and cells, more seriously in women. In men, it makes us sterile. Mother died because Father found out, and in an attempt to hide the illness from his country and ministers, he made Mother continue to bear his children through IVF and assisted birth. The line of Airric can have no weakness, and he believed more children would guarantee the continuation of our line, and hide the truth from any curious observers.”

“I don’t….” Edward was falling apart. He understood the words, the meanings, but in the context Mason was supplying he was lost.

Mason must have seen it in his eyes, as he got up and walked to him. Edward sat back and turned to his brother as he crouched beside his chair.

“Eddie, just listen. Mother was sick, before she married Father, she knew, but the King of Elysian wanted a marriage covenant with Cassia, so she married him anyway. She had Malcolm, then me, and then you, all of us naturally conceived and born. But she got very sick after you were born.”

“I remember the servants talking about it. They said it was pneumonia.”

“No, it was her disease. She got so sick Father called in specialists, and they found the disease. Father went to the best geneticists in the country, one of whom is now the current Minister of DNA Engineering. They all told him the same thing—that the disease was incurable, but it could be managed properly with the right treatment. Father lost it, to put things mildly. He married a woman who polluted the Cassian Dynasty with a fatal weakness, and that was something he could not tolerate. As a result, he had the three of us tested.”

That made sense. If it was congenital, then they could have it. But what did that have to do with what was happening now?

“Malcolm and I have it, Eddie. You don’t. It skipped you completely. You don’t even have the recessive for it, so you can’t give it to your child.”

“Thank the Saint’s,” Eddie breathed out, his relief at that assurance enough to snap him out of his state of disbelief. Their baby wouldn’t have it. “But Mace—you and Mal?”

“It affects men differently, little brother. In men, all it does is eventually render us sterile by destroying our ability to produce viable semen. Malcolm and I were both sterile by the time we were fifteen.”

“You both have children,” Edward stated, confusion returning.

“I’ll explain that part of this whole mess in few minutes. Back to what happened after Father found out, okay?”

“Fine, keep going!”

“Father lost it, like I said. As punishment for not telling him before the marriage, he forced Mother to continue to have children, even though she got weaker and weaker after each pregnancy and birth. She was unable to conceive naturally, so Father made the geneticist from Heritage Breeders impregnate her through IVF. She then delivered via C-section, because she wasn’t able to deliver them naturally after you were born.”

“This is insane.”

“Yes, it is, because Father is insane. No normal, sane human being would do anything like this,” Mason said, putting his hand on Edward’s arm. “I’m almost to the good part, so hold it together.”

Edward breathed in deep, and nodded, letting the air out slowly.

“Father got rid of everyone who knew. About the disease and Mother’s forced pregnancies and the IVF and about Mal and I having it. He pretended there was nothing wrong, and he let Mother die from her disease. Everything was kept a secret. He let the geneticist live, and eventually made him a minister, just in case the disease worsened in any of us. And not because he loves us, Eddie, not really. Because he didn’t want to risk the truth getting out. The line of Airric is supposed to be all but infallible, and the woman he marries almost destroys his house. It was never her fault, but he’s insane.”

Mason gripped his wrist, squeezing hard.

“Years go by, and the world knows no different. Mal knows because of the testing. I know because Mother told me the day she died, and I read all the journals she kept. Things were held in a horrible pattern of deceit and threats and betrayal, right up until the random day you decided you wanted to be a daddy.”

Edward’s eyes went to Percy. Thick, long reddish brown hair and ice-blue eyes, set in a face both handsome and pretty, part of a body that was graceful and strong. Perseus was the epitome of perfection, and yet it was the mind and heart under the physical perfection that enticed Edward and beguiled him. It was the human man under the designer body that Edward fell in love with, and it was with a horrible pang that Edward realized that he was not a decent person.

If he had chosen a different breeder that day, if there hadn’t been an error on Heritage’s part that day and Percy never made it into the show room, then Edward would have bought a different breeder, fucked it until it bore him a child, and he would have retired it to his estate like an old pet until he wanted another child. Edward would have gone on with his life, and never once given a thought to just how wrong it was that people were made for the selfish use of others, stunted in growth and mental acuity, and forced to breed. Even the pleasure slaves were designed to have no free will and be driven by sexual needs, and any thought to the potential of the human being under the sex was never once considered.

He never thought about it. He was never cruel to the few slaves he’d met, and while he was curious, he never bothered to understand. It didn’t affect him or his life, so it didn’t matter. None of it mattered until Percy.

“I see you’re about to fall apart, but I need you to listen to me, Edward. You can fall apart in your misplaced grief and guilt in a few minutes, but I need you to listen to me now.”

“I’m listening,” Edward whispered, eyes on Mason because if he looked back at his lovely mate he would indeed fall apart.

“When you took Percy home, when you fell in love with him and then collared him, you forced Father’s hand. He would have let you have any breeder but Percy. The proprietor of Heritage went to his old buddy, the Minister, and then the Minister approached Father. He told Father that if Percy wasn’t returned, then he would leak to the press the whole sordid ordeal with Mother, Mal’s and I’s sterility, our sisters’ birth. All of it. He promised Father that he would replace Percy to appease you, give Father a part of the profits from cloning and breeding Percy to produce more like him, and in return nothing would be revealed about the disease that leaves Mal and me out of the line of succession.”

“Mason, dear God….”

“So that is what brought us to this current situation. You failed to turn over Percy and got him pregnant. I failed to keep my mouth shut and toe the line like I had the last twenty years, so I was beaten and tortured. The people I loved were finally out of harm’s way, so I was getting my punishment instead of them. Percy needs to go back to Heritage, but not until he births his baby. Father needs your child. Because he failed to return Percy to Heritage, the truth can be revealed at any time, and everyone will know. Father can’t have that. He needs your child as a back-up plan to the truth getting out. He would take you, but he knows now that controlling you is as pointless as controlling me.”

“Mason, are you saying…”

“Mal is sterile. He cannot sire heirs. So am I. Our children are not ours, but our father’s bastards. Neither of us can continue the line of Airric. Our sisters cannot inherit because of the laws put in place almost a century ago, prohibiting artificial conception to protect Airric’s line from foreign DNA in a coup attempt. Only a Cassian conceived naturally can inherit, and that royal must be able to continue the line. The only Cassian Royal in the direct line of succession who meets all the criteria is you, and through you, your unborn child.”

Edward’s mind was spinning. He could hear Percy demanding that Reynard let him go, that he wanted to go to him. He could see Lord Lucius laughing into his wine out of the corner of his eye. But all Edward could do was cling to his big brother’s hand, and let everything he knew about his family fall apart in his mind and heart.

Chapter Eight

Percy

 

 

Edward’s expression was horrible. Percy struggled, but Reynard held him fast, keeping him on the captain’s lap. He wanted to go to Edward, to comfort him, anything. His lover was breaking apart, and he couldn’t just watch.

“How…” Edward audibly swallowed, and Percy went still, listening. “Percy is a breeder, he was designed and created. Wouldn’t that disqualify our child? Keep him or her safe from this?”

“The law was made before breeders became viable for sale. Though we could argue that Percy was born as he is, which is technically true, so he is naturally the way he should be. Regardless, there is a loophole in the royal inheritance laws for them, further assisted in this case because from what Lord Lucius has shared about Percy’s history. That he can only conceive naturally, through sexual intercourse, and not artificial insemination. That means the babe he carries meets the criteria to inherit through you.”

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