A Soul for Vengeance (22 page)

Read A Soul for Vengeance Online

Authors: Crista McHugh

Tags: #Fantasy

BOOK: A Soul for Vengeance
13.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

A crease appeared above Kell’s nose which accented the confusion in his eyes. He let his arms fall to the side, leaving a chill along her skin in their absence. “Very well, if that is what you want.”

There was so much more she wanted to say, so much she wanted him to know, but guilt and shame kept her silent. Instead, she whispered, “I promise to come tonight, though, if you still want me to.”

The hurt still lingered in his expression, but he nodded. “Please.”

“Then I will be there shortly after you blow out your candle.” She nodded toward her window, where she had a clear view of his hut. “But for now, I need to get cleaned up and changed for dinner, and you should probably greet Ortono.”

“He’s here?” Surprise of a different kind animated his features.

“He joined me on this last raid and is here now to offer his insights.” She shooed him off. “Go before Fermo tries to bully him.”

Kell grinned. “Not very likely. Ortono can hold his own.” He paused before the door closed behind him to add, “We’ll talk more about our
activities
later tonight.”

Once she was alone, she finally released the tempest of emotions she’d reined in while he was with her and sank onto her bed. What kind of mess had she gotten herself into? When she’d crawled into Kell’s bed, she never expected their liaisons to last this long. Usually, Kell lost interest in a woman once he’d lured her to his bed. She’d expected it to be the same with her. After all, she wasn’t anything special. She certainly wasn’t some yellow-haired witch who’d captured the prince’s heart. And perhaps once she explained the cold, hard truth, he’d lose interest in her.

But every time she had the chance to say it, she lost her nerve. Even just now.

She sat there on her bed trying to find the best solution to her problem and finding none by the time Bianca returned. “Was that Prince Kell I saw dropping by earlier?”

Zara nodded.

“So I take it you’ll be sneaking off to his bed later tonight, as usual?”

Her heart skipped a beat. Despite all her efforts to be discreet, Bianca knew. “Please don’t tell anyone.”

Bianca giggled. “Don’t look so terrified. You’re not the only person sneaking into someone else’s bed once the candles are blown out.” She fluffed her curls. “I was merely asking because I have someone who visits me when you’re gone, and I wanted to make arrangements for myself if you’re not going to be here.”

Zara’s jaw dropped. All this time, she’d dismissed Bianca as a pitiful mouse of a girl. “You have a lover?”

“Oh, don’t be so surprised. I’ve told you before that men don’t care what we look like once our clothes are off. Besides, Garroux is just a little fun for me until I’m forced to marry some stuffy old lord that’s befitting to my station.” She rolled her eyes and fell back on her bed. “In truth, I sometimes wish I wasn’t born a noblewoman so I could marry whomever I wanted. But for now, I’m content to lie with a man who knows how to make my toes curl every night.”

She’d always thought that she and Bianca were complete opposites, that they had nothing in common. But in one simple sentence, her roommate had summed up her entire complex relationship with Kell. Zara knew that their affair would eventually end. For now, though, she was content to indulge in the pleasure it had to offer.

Fermo’s gruff voice carried across the tress, another cruel reminder of what her future held. She hugged her arms around her knees. She’d have a lifetime of listening to that voice if Bynn had his way. Right now, she wished she could be spared another dreadful night in his company. “I don’t want to get dressed for dinner. I’d much rather take a nap.”

“And rest up for tonight, eh?” Bianca lifted her head from the bed with a smirk. “Don’t worry. I won’t mention anything about you and the prince.”

As Bianca left to deliver a message to her lover, Zara laid back and stared at the ceiling, wondering when her life got so complicated.

 

****

 

Kell walked back to Bynn’s hut, his mind still jumbled from his meeting with Zara. How could she be so warm, so inviting, so responsive in his arms and then push him away like that? A thread of doubt pierced his heart. Arden had been the same way. What if Zara’s heart belonged to someone else, too?

“Good evening, Your Highness.”

Ortono’s warm voice jerked him from his thoughts and brought a smile to his face. He shook the soldier’s hand. “So good to see you again, Ortono.”

He gathered around the table with Bynn and Fermo to listen to Ortono’s report from the north. Zara slipped into the room as he was describing the increased number of troops daring to cross through the snowy mountain passes, even though spring was still a good month away. A frown marred her pretty face as she sank into the chair between her brother and Fermo. “This doesn’t bode well for our plans.”

“Where are the troops headed?” If he knew where their destination was, he might be able to discern their enemy’s plans.

“Some are going south along the road to Trivinus. The others appear to be headed east toward Boznac.”

He pressed his lips together. A glance across the table showed Zara making the exact same expression, her eyes fixed on the table.

“Why are they dividing their forces, especially after risking travel through the mountains at this time of the year?” Bynn asked. “It doesn’t make sense.”

“Unless they’re not finished with their conquest.” Zara lifted her steely gaze and looked to each man at the table as she spoke. “Think about it—the shortest path to Gravaria for them is crossing the sea from Boznac.”

Fermo chugged the contents of his glass and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, barely hiding his disdain for her. “Maybe, but that doesn’t explain why any of them would be foolish enough to try crossing the sea in storm season, nor why they are sending troops toward Trivinius.”

“Storm season will be over in a matter of weeks, which may explain why they’d risk going through the mountains now. They’d be ready to launch an attack as soon as the weather improves.” Kell raked his finger through his hair, his stomach forming a row of knots. His plans were growing bleaker with each tidbit of news. “And if that’s the case, we can’t depend on help from Marist.”

“As if we could’ve counted on it to begin with.” Fermo stabbed his meat with his fork and cut off a chunk, waving it in the air as he continued. “I still stand by my plan to enter into diplomatic talks with Thallus.”

“I refuse to surrender to them.” Ortono’s normally placid temper erupted into something that bordered on dangerous. Spots of red appeared in the young captain’s cheeks. “We’ve fought too hard, suffered too long, to just give up now. We’ve managed to overcome long odds before, and we can do it again, but only if we’re willing to try something they aren’t expecting.”

“You mean like when Kell employed his little witch to take care of the necromancer for him?”

Kell balled his hand into a fist. How he’d love to pound that sneer off Fermo’s face, especially when he was insulting both him and Arden.

But it was Ortono who came to their defense. “I was with Prince Kell that night you’re referring to. He wasn’t hiding behind Lady Arden’s powers. He even tried to send her away. She was the one who chose to take on Sulaino. And if she was here now, I’m sure she’d be willing to call on every ounce of her magic to come to our aid.”

“But she’s not here. She hasn’t even made an effort to return to Ranello.” Fermo snorted. “I’m sure she’s thanking the Lady Moon she got out of Ranello when she did.”

“You’re wrong.” Kell reflexively reached for the pendant that once hung around his neck, remembering his last conversation with Arden, but grasped only air. “I spoke to her on the ship before I was captured, and she’d told me they were keeping any information about Ranello from her. I’d promised her I’d let her know something as soon as I could, but my ship was attacked shortly after that.”

Zara chewed her bottom lip, her brows bunched together. “I don’t understand what you’re saying, Kell. You make it sound like you spoke to her while you sailing back home.”

“I was.”

Bynn stopped chewing, the muscles along his hand and arms forming tight cords. “Kell, you weren’t using magic, were you?”

“Stop being so mistrusting, Bynn. And yes, I was using magic. Arden had given me a mirror pendant she’d enchanted so we could speak to each other over great distances.”

Ortono grinned. “Leave it to Lady Arden to come up with something clever like that. Where is this pendant now?”

Kell wished he could share Ortono’s enthusiasm. “I wish I knew. When I was captured, it disappeared.”

“Then stop whining over it and get back to what we have at hand.” Fermo pointed to the map in the center of the table. “If Thallus is by some chance deciding to invade Gravaria, it may mean a chance for us to negotiate peace with them so they can focus their efforts elsewhere.”

“Or it means that Empress Marist would be more likely to come to our aid before they launched a strike against her.” Kell pushed back from the table and stood. His mind always worked better when his feet were moving. “Unfortunately, I can’t send a message to her until storm season ends. It’s too risky to try to sail across the sea now, and it would take too long to go through the mountains. What I wouldn’t give for Arden’s pendant right now.”

“And what if I could find it for you?”

Zara’s question stopped his pacing. He leaned on the table toward her. “What do you mean?”

“Just that,” she replied in her ever-practical tone. “I found your sword. Chances are good that I’d be able to find that pendant in the same place. I just need to know what it looks like.”

A spark of hope flared within him. “If you find me that pendant, then I know we could get aid from Gravaria.”

“Then I will find it for you, Kell.” She rose from her seat, her shoulders set. “If you will excuse me, I’ll let Parros know that we’ll be leaving in the morning.” She slipped out of the room as quietly as she came in.

Bynn leaned back in his chair, his arms crossed. “Don’t put all your hopes in that magical device, Kell. Even if Zara can find it, Arden won’t be much against an army of Thallian mages. Decindra and Ermane are two of the strongest mages from Thallus, and they make Sulaino’s spells look like the work of an incompetent apprentice.”

“We’d have more than just Arden coming to our aid. The Empress—”

“Your magic thingy will only allow you to send a message to your little witch.” A defiant curl twisted Fermo’s lips. “What makes you think the Empress will even listen to her?”

“Because she’s Marist’s cousin.”

Bynn gasped, but Ortono grinned wider. “I always knew Lady Arden was of noble blood. How could she not be?”

Fermo mumbled something that sounded like a curse before clearing his throat. “Even so, but your plan still depends on a woman putting her life on the line to find a magical pendant that could be anywhere.”

“Are you suggesting that Zara won’t be able to find it?”

“I’m suggesting that she’d be better off staying within this camp and leaving the rebellion up to us men.” Fermo turned to Bynn. “I sincerely hope she’ll stop this headstrong running off whenever she feels like behavior soon. It’s a poor quality to have in a wife.”

Kell sucked in a breath through his nose and held it. He looked to Fermo and then Bynn, praying he hadn’t heard Fermo correctly.

“I make no guarantees for my sister’s behavior,” his best friend replied.

“Then perhaps you should teach her to know her place before the wedding.” Fermo kicked his chair back and drained his cup. “I’ve wasted too much time here. I’m returning home tomorrow. When you decide that the rest of your ideas are futile and want to engage in negotiations with Thallus, let me know.”

“Stop right there, Fermo.” Kell’s command cut through the room with a sharp edge of anger. He couldn’t tell which infuriated him more—the duke’s arrogance or the fact he was staking a claim on Zara. “As long as I am alive, I expect to be treated like the heir to the throne that I am. I make the decisions for my kingdom. I decide what the best course of action is, and I will let you know if you have my permission to leave this camp.”

Fermo’s face paled, and a fine tremor shook his massive hands. He bowed his head. “Y-y-yes, Your Majesty.”

The duke’s use of the title caught Kell off guard. All his life, he’d heard his father called that. Now, he was the one with both the title and the responsibility of King of Ranello. He filled his lungs so his words rang with the same authority his father’s had. “If you dare enter into a treaty with Thallus without my permission, I will consider it an act of treason and act accordingly, Fermo. Understood?”

Fermo bowed his head again. “Yes, Your Majesty.”

“You may leave in the morning, but only if it is with the intention of preparing your troops for battle.” Kell leveled his gaze with Fermo. “We must all fight together, or everything we’ve done so far will become futile. But I promise you this—I am willing to risk my life to give Ranello her freedom. Are you?”

He’d basically called Fermo a coward, and the burly duke responded just like he’d hoped he would. The tremor vanished from his hands, and he lifted his chin. “Yes, Your Majesty.”

“I’m glad we can finally agree on this. And if Zara succeeds on finding that pendant—which I have no doubt that she will—then we may be able to catch Thallus off guard.”

“Meaning they won’t expect us to ally with Gravaria and their magic?” Bynn rubbed his chin. “That sounds crazy enough to work.”

Ortono nodded. “And if I know Lady Arden, she’ll be able to unleash some nasty spells on those Thallians.”

“If we ask her for help, I have no doubt she’ll give it to us.” But at what cost? Arden’s deadliest magic came at the hands of the chaos god living inside her and often left destruction in its wake, not to mention the risk to her sanity if Dev was to be believed. “But in the meantime, we must prepare our people for the battle ahead.”

All three men murmured in agreement. Fermo added, “With your permission, Your Majesty, I wish to retire so I may begin the long journey home in the morning.”

“Go then, and safe travels to you.” Kell’s gaze followed the duke out, hoping he’d made his threat clear enough to prevent any possible betrayal. “If you don’t mind, Ortono, I’d like to have a few words with Lord Bynn alone.”

Other books

The Women in the Walls by Amy Lukavics
The Winter Sea by Susanna Kearsley
The Bride's House by Sandra Dallas
Everybody's Daughter by Michael John Sullivan
The Great Gatenby by John Marsden
Magonia by Maria Dahvana Headley
Gypsy Spirits by Marianne Spitzer