Amazon Queen (26 page)

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Authors: Lori Devoti

Tags: #Fantasy, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #General, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fiction - Fantasy, #Fantasy - General, #Fantasy - Contemporary, #Classic science fiction

BOOK: Amazon Queen
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Kale took a drink. Her eyes quiet, her body quiet, she looked at me over the top of her glass. “And she shouldn’t have done that.”

A growl loomed inside me, misplaced loyalty was not going to save the tribe, but before my annoyance grew too big to be contained, she sighed. “Yes, Tess told me. I don’t know if I can believe it . . . another goddess. We never suspected that.” She ran her thumb over her wristband, then looked up. “What can I tell you? What did your mother tell you?”

The growl evaporated. Finally I was going to get the answers I needed. I asked her to start wherever she thought the story started, didn’t explain how little I’d learned from my mother, how little time we’d had for her to tell me anything.

She seemed hesitant, but finally she spoke. “I didn’t suspect anything, not like you are saying. We disagreed on what to do about the sons, but that was nothing new. The council doesn’t tend to agree on anything; unwilling compromise is about the best we can hope for.”

She took another drink.

“But this time it went past that, got more intense, quickly. Valasca brought up the idea of going back to the old ways first. I was surprised, her being a hearth-keeper, but then I figured she was older and probably hadn’t really agreed with the shift when it happened. For a while she seemed to be the only person who really felt that way, and it seemed like there was no rush on deciding. We did our normal thing, what feels like arguing for argument’s sake. Until your mother got pregnant. Then things changed. Padia spoke up; she was for going back to the killing too. Soon Fariba joined her, and one by one they all seemed to follow—everyone but your mother and me.”

Padia, the priestess who had called back when I’d tried to contact Kale, who had told Thea I was no longer queen. Things were beginning to fall into place.

“Mother said there were two groups, with the majority in the middle.”

Kale swallowed. “She didn’t know. They quit talking about it in front of her and I didn’t want to tell her. The more determined they became, the more determined she became, and I knew she wasn’t going to hand over that baby—no matter the ruling. I should have, though. They tricked her or tried to. Your mother took the baby and ran. She told me she was giving him to his father.”

“And she did. That’s who we stole him from.”

“You stole him?” Her expression sharpened.

“Yes, but we lost him soon after. The sons stole him back . . . ” I paused, thinking. “How did the council know where Mateo would be?”

“Mateo?”

“Andres’s father . . . the baby’s father.”

“Oh . . . I don’t know. Padia must have run some kind of spell that located him.”

“So Padia is behind all this?” A priestess, it made sense.

Kale placed her hand over her eyes as if the early evening light bothered them. “Yes. I don’t know why she was so adamant about killing your mother’s child, but she was. . . . I don’t think . . . ” She shook her head and stared at the clumps of green floating in her glass. “What happened to me?” she murmured.

I waited for her to sort out whatever she was going through. “Do you remember anything else? Why you came to the safe camp? When? Do you think someone drugged you?” My mind went to the flask she had dropped when we first entered the clearing.

“Drugged? Could I have been?” she asked. She sat there frowning, seemed lost in her own thoughts. “Drugged . . . that would explain how—” She looked up. “I don’t even know how I got here. I remember leaving the Northwest, knowing I needed to find you for some reason, or maybe it was your mother. That would make sense, that I was going to help her keep the baby from Padia, but . . . ” Her words faded away. Uncertainty . . . insecurity . . . shone from her eyes. She stared down into the glass. There was only an inch or two of the green liquid left.

“How did I come to this?” she murmured.

My fingers dug into the stuffed cow in my lap. The dog, waiting for me to throw it again, looked up expectantly.

I wondered the same thing as Kale.

How had any of us come to this?

Chapter 20

The sheriff showed up
a half hour later. I was still out with the dogs when Bern whistled the alert.

I plucked all three puppies from their box and slapped my leg to call the mother dog to my side. Then I walked quickly in the direction of the main road.

The car, a white sedan with a gold stripe down the side, pulled to the side of the road as I approached. An older man wearing a tan uniform rolled down his window.

“You live around here?” he asked.

I shook my head. “Not lately. My boyfriend owns the house, or what was a house, next door.”

“Oh yeah, sorry about that.” He cast his glance to the home behind me, then back at me, a question in his eyes.

I smiled. “Damn dog.” I gestured to the mother dog walking beside me. “She disappeared the night of the fire. Jack dropped me off so I could look for her. I found a little something extra.”

He laughed. “Looks like you did at that.”

I nodded to the runt. “You wouldn’t want one, would you?”

He held up his hands. “Not me. Might want to tell your boyfriend he needs to get the bitch fixed, though. Or maybe this will teach him.”

With a sigh, I replied, “Maybe.”

After a few more questions, ending with me assuring him there was no one around Jack’s property or his neighbor’s house, he backed the car back out the way he’d come.

The bitch needed to be fixed.

He didn’t know how true the statement was. And now, thanks to my conversation with Kale, I knew who the bitch was . . . I just needed to find her.

After the sheriff left, I went to find Mel. She was standing on the other side of the garage talking on her cell phone. Probably looking for privacy. I walked up and stood a couple feet behind her.

Her shoulders tightened, but she didn’t turn. She didn’t alter her tone, volume, or what she was saying either.

“No more tattoos.”

Pause.

“I don’t care.”

Longer pause.

“Get Peter.”

Short pause accented by Mel moving two short angry strides forward.

“Harmony—”

Her daughter must have hung up. Mel muttered a curse and stared at her phone. She started dialing.

I stepped around her, so we were facing. Her expression said to back off.

I didn’t. “Is she looking at a full sleeve?”

Mel flicked her eyes upward.

“Neck tattoo, or maybe some kind of mask?”

“This isn’t funny.” She had lowered her phone, but I could tell by how she was holding it that she was one good breath away from blowing me off the continent so she could recall Harmony and restart their argument. Finally she sighed. “You asked how I could trust Makis with her? Well, I don’t—not one hundred percent. I’m new to this too. It’s not easy letting go. And I know more than anyone the power tattoos can have. What I don’t know is everything about how the sons use them.” She pressed the heel of her palm to her forehead. “She says it’s purely decoration, on her ankle, but how do I know that?”

I tilted my head in a
do whatever you like
gesture. “If you call her and say no again, she’s just going to want it more.”

Mel’s nostrils flared. I could see she didn’t like my answer, but without replying, she shoved the phone into her pocket . . . hard.

Her arms crossed over her chest, she asked, “You just eavesdropping or did something happen?”

It was a little of both, but she knew that. I filled her in on both my conversation with Kale and the sheriff’s visit.

“So you think Padia is the problem?”

“Or the hearth-keeper who brought it up first, but since Padia’s the one who went after my mother and Andres, she’s my guess.”

“Unless she’s just a minion.”

I twisted my lips. I didn’t like my theory being batted back at me. “Do you think we should start somewhere else?”

Her eyes sparked. She was laughing at me. “Would it matter?”

I ignored her question. “Can you find her?”

Her mouth opened and snapped closed.

“Bubbe found Kale.”

This time when her eyes flashed, it wasn’t with amusement. “I’m not Bubbe.”

I waited. Mel knew I thought she underestimated herself. I’d always thought that, but in the years we were apart, before being reunited last fall, her talents had grown even more. I wouldn’t have been surprised if she could out-priestess her legendary grandmother—not at all.

“I don’t have the tools.”

“What do you need? Totems?” I pulled the stone lion that hung from a leather cord over my head. “We should have, what? Four of them covered.” Mel, Lao, Bern, and myself—none of us shared a clan. “We can get your mother to borrow the others from camp.”

Mel stared at the lion, then turned on her heel without taking it. “Give me an hour.”

I spent the hour getting in some fighting practice with Bern and Jack. The son had never used a weapon with me. I’d stupidly thought he couldn’t.

I was wrong.

He decided to teach me a game he’d watched as a child. He stood fifteen feet away armed with twelve knives. My job was to dodge them as he threw.

Without warning, he began to throw . . . so quickly it seemed as if they were all thrown at once with no more than seconds between each.

I rolled. Three dug into the dirt where I’d been. I leapt to my feet, jumping in the same motion so my knees reached my chest. Two more zinged beneath me. I landed hard, but on my feet, and threw myself to the side as two more flew toward me. Five remained, and I was winded. I lunged for my staff; two more grazed my skin, one cutting a hole in my shorts.

Staff in hand, I bounded back to my feet and batted the last three, which were zipping toward my heart out of the air.

“You cheated,” he said.

“And you didn’t give full disclosure,” I replied. Sweat dripped down my neck, soaking my workout top. I shifted the staff in front of me, unwilling to put it down. “What exactly is your talent?”

He walked to where three of the knives lay buried in the dirt and jerked them out. With his eyes on me he began to juggle—faster and faster until the flashing blades were nothing but one solid silver blur.

“Maybe you should ask what I did as a child. What my father did.”

I moved the staff again, into a position where I could easily deflect another knife if needed . . . or try. “Clown?” I offered.

“Close. Carny. Worked the sideshows. My mother, my adoptive mother, was the living target.”

“How sweet.” I twirled the staff. “Why haven’t I seen you use knives before?”

“Because . . . ” The spinning blur slowed. He jerked his hands to the side and all three blades sank into the ground. “I didn’t need to.”

Bern stood to the side throughout the exchange, her expression unreadable. With his comment, she grunted and began gathering up the rest of the knives.

I tapped my staff against the side of my foot, unsure how or if to respond.

Mel stepping around the side of the house saved me from my dilemma.

“I’m ready.” Two words and she was gone, back in the direction she’d come.

Still holding my staff, I walked past Jack. His voice followed me. “And I did offer to show you my talents. You just haven’t taken me up on it.” His voice sizzled with promise. My libido sizzled in return but, eyes focused on the corner Mel had disappeared behind, I kept walking.

Mel was sitting in the dirt between the detached garage and the house. In front of her was a small fire, surrounded by a ring of rocks. Beside her was a stack of papers.

As I got closer, I could see a
telios
was drawn on each sheet. She handed them to me. “Do you know Padia’s?”

I stiffened. I didn’t, of course. I looked at Mel.

With a patient sigh, she said, “We can do it by process of elimination, but it will take longer.”

We were able to cross off the four high council
telioses
I knew were represented by warriors, but that still left eight.

Mel handed me the stack of papers.

“Put one under each rock, except the first that we’re hoping is Padia’s. Hand that one back to me.”

I did as she asked, glancing at the fire as I did.

She stared at me. “Just because you think I should be able to do something or want me to be able to do something doesn’t mean I can. Bubbe doesn’t need the fire. I do . . . ” She shook her head. “Even with the fire, I don’t know if I can do what she did . . . there might be a delay, or I might get nothing at all.”

I had faith in her. I pulled out the sheet with the hawk on it and handed it to her, then sat down, out of her way.

Like her grandmother, she chanted. Unlike her grandmother, it was in English, but it didn’t matter. I couldn’t follow her words. She fed the sheet I’d given her into the fire, and I concentrated on the smoke that streamed from its blaze.

It took six tries before we got a hit. Even then I wasn’t sure at first if the spell was working. The smoke looked like what you’d expect from any fire, drifting with the slight breeze that blew along the alley formed by the house and garage. But the sixth time it began to snake, forming shapes I could almost, but not quite, identify.

I wanted to reach out and grab the dancing shapes, hold them so I could study them at leisure, but as quickly as one solidified, it would mist away.

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