Authors: Elysa Hendricks
Tags: #Kidnapping, #Fantasy Fiction, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Life on Other Planets, #Revenge, #General, #Love Stories
Twisted in disgust, his face hovered inches above hers.
“The others may be content to let Rul Cathor decide your fate.
Not I. Aubin....” His voice cracked on the name. “...Aubin
was...he was....” He searched vainly for words to describe his
attachment to Aubin.
From the emotions of her captors since her abduction,
Sianna had formed a picture of Aubin—a vibrant young man,
full of laughter, loving and much loved. That these people should
seek vengeance for his loss did not surprise her, but she could
glean nothing of the how or why of Aubin’s death, only that
somehow they held her and her father responsible.
Sianna felt the battle waging within Je’al. She reached out
to him, but feared she lacked the skill and strength to shatter
the rage surrounding him, to reach his true self, the caring young
man she sensed dwelling beneath his shell of anguish.
Still, she tried. “I didn’t kill Aubin. I didn’t even know him.
You don’t want to hurt me, Je’al. Please stop before you do
something you’ll always regret.”
“You lie!” He stripped away her coat.
Her scream echoed loud in the night silence. His hand swung
down and hit her cheek. A hot, white light burst behind her
eyes, cutting short her cry. She went limp, unable to fight off
the lethargy stealing over her.
Had anyone heard her cry? Would anyone come to her
aid? Or was this just the first of many such attacks? The
thoughts floated randomly in her mind. Somehow they no longer
seemed important.
“You’ll not escape so easily. Open your eyes.”
She blinked. A groan slipped through her lips.
In the past she’d taken on the suffering of others, absorbing
it as she helped them heal. The experience did not prepare her
for the agony of her own pain. Dull aches throbbed a
counterpoint to the sharp pangs shooting through her head.
The night swam back into focus. Je’al knelt over her. She
felt the prick of his knife pressed against her belly. The heat
from his body, so close to hers, did not warm her.
“I want you to feel as my blade slices into you.”
She sucked in her breath. For a second the blade no longer
touched her. She had mistaken his intent. He lusted for her
blood rather than her person. “I had nothing to do with Aubin’s
death. You must believe me.”
Je’al laughed softly. “You can’t escape. Nor will you die
quickly.” He lowered the knife until it pierced her skin. “Like
Aubin, you’re young and healthy. With a belly wound, you’ll
take days to die. At the end,” his voice broke, then firmed in
anger, “Aubin begged and screamed for us to put him out of
his misery.”
Sianna knew Je’al spoke the truth. She’d once cared for a
man with a punctured abdomen. Brought to her days after the
injury, her skill proved too little to save him. She could only ease
his torment until the end.
“Will you beg then?” Je’al asked.
Sianna tore her gaze from him. She could no longer endure
his emotions. Like a hail of sharp stones, they battered her.
Even the plunge of his knife could not cause her as much pain.
She looked past him into the moonlit woods.
And forgot to breathe.
Silhouetted against the setting moons stood a Dark Angel.
Legs spread wide, his black cloak billowing in the night breeze,
he appeared a demon come to claim her ka, her soul.
Sword in hand, he moved forward. The red blade caught
and splintered the moonlight.
With a gasp, she squeezed her eyes shut.
“What...” Je’al started, his words cut short. Then his weight
lifted from her.
There was a muffled grunt and a thud. Je’al’s emotions
went silent. Was he dead? No. Sianna sensed him, alive but
unaware.
Stunned, she lay still. No other presence touched her. Was
the man truly a Dark Angel? She kept her eyes closed. To lose
her ka would be a worse fate than any Je’al or the others
planned for her.
She strained to hear, to sense. Other than the whisper of
air through the trees and the rasp of Je’al’s breathing, she heard
nothing. She gathered her courage and lifted her eyelids. Here
was her chance to escape.
A few feet away Je’al lay sprawled on his back. As if
asleep, his chest rose and fell evenly. He appeared little more
than a boy, his manly features barely formed. She sensed his
deep turmoil and suffering, but despite the Sister’s teachings
she would have to work at forgiving him.
Rising to her knees, she glanced around for the Dark Angel.
Had she imagined him? No. Je’al’s limp form proved the Dark
Angel had come. But where was he now? And what would he
want in payment for his favor?
Sianna remembered the Sisters’ tales of the Dark Angels.
Lost souls, forbidden entry into eternity for their misdeeds in
life, yet not evil enough to be condemned to oblivion, they
wandered the land in search of salvation. They offered help to
those in need, but to call upon them was to court danger.
Dispensing justice with their red crystal swords, Dark Angels
often did not distinguish between the guilty and the innocent.
Perhaps in this instance, the Dark Angel had come and
gone, without thought of payment. Once safely back with the
good sisters, she would offer prayers for the Dark Angel’s ka.
For now she would flee.
Sianna rose. Though her legs trembled, she knew she could
not delay. Soon Katya and the others would notice her absence.
Her only hope was to put as much distance between them and
herself as possible. She shivered. What chance did she have of
finding her way back to the sisters? Alone. Lost in the dark.
She had no choice. To stay meant death.
Kala and her crystal twin, Dema, no longer lightened the
night sky. A heavy blanket of darkness surrounded her. She
grabbed Graham’s coat and wrapped it around her, grateful for
its warmth.
She turned and crashed into something solid. Smothering a
startled scream, she looked up.
Her eyes locked with those of the Dark Angel. Deep as
the moonless night, his eyes speared her and held her motionless.
Black hair fell loose around his face, just touching his shoulders.
Though not fair skinned, his face appeared light compared to
the night surrounding him.
Many things could interfere with her ability to read people’s
emotions correctly, but always she felt those emotions hiding
within. Yet she sensed nothing from this man. Was he truly a
Dark Angel?
“Why did Je’al wish to kill you?” the Dark Angel asked.
“He blames me for another’s death.”
“Who are you, woman?”
“Sianna Di....”
“Je’al.” Graham’s booming voice drowned her whispered
answer.
With one hand the Dark Angel pushed Sianna behind him,
the other gripped his sword. He stood waiting as Graham and
Katya burst through the trees. They first saw Je’al lying on the
ground, then Katya noticed the Dark Angel.
“Kyne,” she cried and launched herself at the man.
Two
“Could so delicate a flower be capable of such evil?”
Lying on the ground near the fire, a coarse blanket draped
over her against the night chill, Sianna listened to the sound of
Graham’s deep rumble. She made no noise. Perhaps by feigning
sleep, she could learn what these people intended for her.
“She’s as beautiful as a nika flower,” the Dark Angel
answered, his tone low. Not a Dark Angel, she reminded herself,
but worse, Kyne Cathor, these people’s Rul, and the man who
would determine her fate.
She peeked out from under her lashes to watch the two
men seated near her. Though she easily read Graham’s emotions,
she still received nothing from Rul Cathor. On the far side of
the fire, other men curled into their bedrolls, while several guards
walked along the edge of the camp. Of Je’al or Katya there
was no sight.
“And as dangerous, Rul Cathor?” Graham lifted one hairy
brow.
“Kyne to you, Graham. How many times must I remind
you?” He laughed as if this were an old argument between
them, one he despaired of winning.
Graham’s answer confirmed her impression. “It is difficult
to change the habits of a lifetime. You are your father’s son;
therefore, to me you are Rul Cathor.”
“My father is long dead, his lands and estates confiscated.
To be Rul one must have a portion. Now I am simply Kyne
Cathor.”
Grief laced his words, but Sianna could not read his
emotions. This confused her. The only people closed to her
empathic abilities were those of her own blood. As part of her
academic studies with the Sisters she’d traced the lineage of
all the major families of Dramon. The Cathor line and the DiSanti
line never merged. What connection could she have with this
enemy of her father?
“As you wish, Kyne.”
For the moment. She knew Graham would continue to serve
his Rul, even though Kyne refused to acknowledge his position.
“How could you let Katya do such a foolish thing?” Kyne
asked. “If DiSanti had captured her, her fate would have been
worse than Aubin’s. In my absence I charged you with keeping
her safe.”
Graham’s amusement rolled over Sianna like a warm
breeze. “If you are foolish enough to leave the woolie in charge
of the wolve, you must accept the consequences. Like you,
Katya does not listen to my counsel.”
“You are no woolie, though I must admit, Katya is a sly and
cunning wolve.” Humor lightened Kyne’s voice. “Still, I was
gone for but a tenday. Could you not keep her under control for
that short a time?” This too sounded like an old argument.
Sianna doubted Katya listened to many people. She was
too comfortable in Graham’s affection for her to take him
seriously.
“Only by locking her in the tower. Even then I fear she
would have climbed out the window. She gave no warning of
what she intended. I thought her resigned to the fact DiSanti
was beyond our reach, at least for the time. After I found her
gone, we followed at once. We had stopped to rest the quinar
when Katya came upon us with the woman. She claimed she
was not followed, but we left immediately. I have seen no
evidence of pursuit.”
“Good. I would not like to lead the enemy to our lair.” He
paused, his features strained. “And I would not lose another
that I love to DiSanti.”
Graham turned to look at Sianna. She closed her eyes. “I
can see why Aubin was tempted by this woman. She appears
much younger than I thought, barely more than a girl. To look in
her eyes, you’d swear her an innocent.”
A glimmer of emotion reached her from Kyne. Before she
could identify it, it was gone.
“Do you think perhaps DiSanti duped her as well?” Graham
asked.
“No, by her own hand she condemns herself. I have no
doubt she plotted Aubin’s death along with her father. When
the time comes, she’ll be punished as well.”
No! She bit her lip to keep from crying out in denial. They
would not believe her.
For a brief moment, she sensed Kyne’s emotional storm. It
tore through her, leaving her hopes in shreds. Like a Dark Angel,
Kyne would destroy her, no matter her guilt or innocence.
“A shame to waste such beauty,” Graham said.
“Appearance is a poor way to judge a person’s character.
Because DiSanti was fair to look upon, he fooled my father
into believing he was a good man.”
“DiSanti tricked your father by his deceptions, not by his
looks.” Anger made Graham’s voice hard. “Many others were
taken in as well by his smooth words. He holds the old king’s
favor. Without DiSanti’s approval, no one can gain an audience,
so the king hears none of what goes on.”
Sianna sensed a guilt Graham kept buried.
“Even if the king heard, he would not hear. I’ve learned
King Dracken eats nika.”
“For how long?” Graham asked in horror.
“For many years, maybe since DiSanti became First
Minister. DiSanti controls nika and in turn controls the king. As
long as DiSanti lives, our country will continue to sink into
despair.”
Sianna gasped softly, then froze. Neither Graham nor Kyne
seemed to hear.
Her father dealt in nika, the most dangerous of drugs? He
made his fortune selling a life of addiction and degradation to
people? Kyne’s words pierced her heart and shattered her
childish dreams of home and family.
She longed to deny their words. She longed to love her
father. She longed for her father to love her. Because he was a
close blood relative, Sianna couldn’t read her father’s emotions.
In addition, he guarded his feelings well. Though he treated her
coolly, she had never sensed evil inside him. But to deal in nika
would take a monster. Was her father the monster these people
claimed?
On occasion Sianna had been called upon to minister to
nika addicts. After ingesting a small amount of the drug, people
became lifelong addicts. Without a daily dose, they suffered