Authors: Elysa Hendricks
Tags: #Kidnapping, #Fantasy Fiction, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Life on Other Planets, #Revenge, #General, #Love Stories
The weight of his worries were hers as well.
“I will go with you to see Prince Timon.”
“No.” His response was as quick and firm as his hold.
She felt his panic at the thought of her condemned to die on
the spike. An answering shudder went through her. “As long as
I don’t attempt to marry the prince, I am safe from that fate.
But, perhaps between us we can find a way to rescue the
queen and princess from my father without the need of
marriage.”
“You are not going anywhere near the palace, the prince or
your father. You will stay safely here.”
“But....”
“I’ll not let you risk the life of my babe with your foolish
attempts to save your father from my wrath.”
His babe? Hurt, she pulled away from Kyne. Anger heated
her next words. “I have no intention of putting my babe in peril,
but I must go with you to speak with my father, to convince him
to give up his mad scheme. Perhaps I can appeal to some
remnant of his love for me.”
He climbed out of bed and began to dress. “You are beyond
foolish if you believe DiSanti has a care for you. He loves no
one and nothing beyond his quest for power.”
She felt his absence in her arms and, with his words, he
ripped himself away from her heart. Clutching the bed robe to
her chest, she knelt and faced him. “And what do you care for
beyond your pursuit of vengeance? Is there room in your heart
for love? For me? For our babe?”
He kept his back to her as he strapped on his sword and
headed toward the door. “DiSanti killed my heart years ago. Is
his daughter the Eternal One to resurrect it?”
Sianna sensed the lie, but knew Kyne truly believed himself
incapable of love. He thought he could possess her and their
babe, keep them safe, but prevent his own pain by never giving
them his heart. For to love meant the threat of loss, and he
couldn’t bear to lose anyone ever again. He thought DiSanti’s
death would free him of his burden of guilt and pain, but she
knew it would destroy his ka.
Before she could respond, the door closed behind him. The
click of a key in the lock roused her from her stupor. She bolted
from the bed and ran to the door. The knob rattled beneath her
hand, but the door refused to budge. With a cry of despair, she
sank to her knees and leaned her head against the wood.
***
Aside from Betha’s twice daily, silent visits, Sianna saw no
one for the next three days. On the fourth day when the chamber
door opened, she rushed forward.
“Please, Betha, talk to me,” she pleaded. “Where is Kyne?
Katya? Zoa? Graham? How fares Lisha? I must know what is
happening.”
Though pity sparked in Betha’s eyes, she shook her head,
placed a tray of food on the table and turned to leave.
“Please, I’m going mad with worry.”
Since her bonding with Kyne, their connection remained
constant, but she received only vague impressions rather than
clear feelings. Flickers of anger fought with hurt, betrayal with
forgiveness, love with hate. He replaced the solid wall between
them with a locked door and retreated from her presence.
Betha paused at the door and, without turning, whispered,
“Lisha recovers rapidly. Rul Cathor, Katya, Graham and most
of the fighting men are gone from the castle. I’m not privy to
their plans.”
In his effort to keep her safe, Kyne denied the bond between
them and went to confront her father. A shadow of future anguish
shivered through her. They would destroy each other.
“Now that people know your true identity,” Betha continued,
“the Rul locks you in here for your own protection. There are
those who harbor hatred in their hearts for any child of DiSanti
and would do you harm.”
Her own emotions in turmoil, in part because of her father’s
and Kyne’s actions, but mostly due to the influence of the new
life she carried, she found it difficult to focus on Betha’s. Unclear
and unfocused, her babe’s feelings swirled through her and left
her dizzy. Was the strength of her babe’s emotional connection
with her normal? With no one to ask, she made a conscious
effort to contain the babe’s disruptive influence.
“Do you hate me?”
Back still turned to Sianna, Betha’s shoulders sagged. “You
risked your life for my child, and for that I owe you. But you
share the blood of the man who stole my husband and other
sons from me.” She left the room without answering Sianna’s
question.
At least Laila was safe. No one yet knew her identity. But
what of Kyne?
In six days, if she did not wed Prince Timon, her father
would kill the queen and princess. Guilt ate at her. How could
she have run away? Her fingers fluttered over her belly. Were
hers and her child’s lives any more precious than those of Prince
Timon’s mother and sister?
Could she do something to prevent this tragedy? Persuade
her father to abandon his mad quest for power? Reach some
uncorrupted part of him? Perhaps Kyne was right and her father
was truly evil, but she had to try. But how?
She sagged into a chair by the fire and eyed the chamber’s
heavy door. Through the window, the waning light of the day
reflected blue off the Azul Mountains, casting the chamber in a
shadowy gloom. By now last meal would be finished, the great
hall quieting as people went about their final evening chores
before they retired. Soon fires would be banked and silence
would descend for the night.
In a dark corner of the room lay her herb bag. An idea
formed.
When Betha returned with her evening tray, Sianna was
ready to act.
“Are you feeling ill?” A flicker of concern edged Betha’s
question. She placed the tray on the table and stepped over to
the bed where Sianna lay.
As she leaned over, Sianna sat up, opened her hand and
blew the powdered herb she held there into the startled woman’s
face. Before fear could enter Betha’s eyes, they closed. Fast
asleep, she slumped across the bed.
Sianna scrambled up. With a bit of work she managed to
remove Betha’s shawl and outer tunic and tuck her beneath
the bed robe. Anyone glancing inside the chamber would mistake
Betha’s form for her own. By the time Betha awakened, Sianna
would be long gone.
After donning Betha’s tunic over her own, Sianna wrapped
the shawl over her head and shoulders. Similar in height to the
plumper woman, if she kept her head down she might slip by
undetected in the dim light.
She eased the door open and peered out. Warda rose as
she attempted to leave the chamber.
“Don’t try to stop me,” she warned the hound. “I cannot
wait here while Kyne needs my help.”
At the mention of Kyne’s name, Warda whined and shoved
his muzzle beneath her hand. Though far from a simple-minded
beast, his emotions as complex as any person’s, Warda’s
concern for his master was clear and sharp.
She knelt, took Warda’s head between her palms, and looked
into his eyes. “You’re worried about him too, aren’t you? Shall
we go find him?”
Warda didn’t object as she stood and moved down the hall.
He followed at her heels. Together they slipped down the stairs.
At one end of the hall, a fire burned low in the hearth, leaving
most of the large chamber in shadows. The main entryway
loomed ahead. She paused. By herself she could never lift the
heavy beam that secured the latch, nor budge the massive
aronwood door.
“Sianna.” Damaged by her father’s sword stroke, Laila’s
voice rasped from behind her.
Hand to her chest, Sianna spun around. Warda pressed
closer, but otherwise didn’t react. “Laila! Where do you think
you’re going? You shouldn’t yet be out of bed. You’ll tear loose
your stitches.”
Laila gripped Sianna’s arm and pulled her to the edge of
the hall, out of sight of any casual observer. “The same place
as you, I would imagine. To confront our father.” She spat the
words.
Even in the dark, Sianna could see the lines of pain on
Laila’s face, her pallor. “You’re in no condition to confront
anyone. Let me help you back to bed. No one here yet knows
your true identity, so you’re safe. Rest. If not for your own
sake, then for the sake of the babe you carry.”
Laila’s hand covered her belly in a protective gesture, then
her fingers curled into a tight fist. “Aubin’s babe cries to me for
vengeance. Until DiSanti lies dead by my hand, I’ll not rest.”
Sianna couldn’t control her gasp. “You would kill your own
father?”
“Father?” Laila croaked. “I have no father. Planting a seed
in a woman’s belly does not make a man a father.” Her fingers
traced the wound running across her throat and down her chest.
“I owe him for this. And murdering my unborn babe’s father.”
“No,” Sianna whispered. For too long she’d harbored a
hope that Kyne and the others were wrong about her father.
Now she could no longer deny the truth. Remembering the
vicious wound inflicted on Laila, Sianna’s stomach lurched.
“Yes,” Laila insisted. “We have no father, merely a sire
who bred us to further his own ends. You, he seeks to sell into
marriage to cement his base of power. Me, he sought to train
as his successor. And I allowed him to. I never questioned his
actions, his methods, or wondered about the people he hurt in
his quest for dominance. Until Aubin, I was deaf, dumb and
blind to DiSanti’s evil.”
She rested her hand on the hilt of her sword. “Now he will
pay for his crimes with his blood. When he and I meet again,
one of us will die. Are you with me?”
“I cannot contemplate the taking of a life, even a life
committed to evil. It goes against all my training, everything I
know...all I am. I go to see to the safety of Rul Cathor and the
others.”
“Very well, you can play nursemaid to men more than
capable of defending their own interests. I’ll take care of our
father.”
“Killing our father will not bring Aubin back to you.”
“But it will allow him to rest knowing his death has been
avenged. Let us be off before someone wakes and attempts to
stop us. What of the hound?”
“Warda comes too.”
Laila headed toward the kitchens and the smaller door which
led to the stables. Sianna stopped her.
“If I can find a way to save our father’s ka, I will do so.”
Back to Sianna, Laila stiffened. “You may try, but do not
get between him and my sword.”
Eighteen
“Where is my daughter?” DiSanti’s voice carried across
the open land between his encampment and the palace wall.
“Produce her by morn, or face the consequences.”
From his hiding place in the woods, Kyne saw Prince Timon
standing on the palace battlement. Though the distance was
too great for Kyne to make out the boy king’s expression, Kyne
knew the lad’s feelings.
Helpless fear.
“Do your mother and sister mean nothing to you?” DiSanti
dragged Queen Theone from his tent and paraded her in front
of the palace wall.
The woman had been beaten. Her hair hung in dirty, tangled
strands around her bruised face, but she held her head high,
stood straight, and walked with as much dignity as her weakened
state allowed.
She looked up at her son. “Stand firm, my son. Do not
ransom my life with that of others.” Her voice rang clear and
strong in the hush her appearance caused.
DiSanti jerked the queen to her knees and slapped her. “Be
quiet, she-hound!”
Uneasy silence from DiSanti’s troops echoed the growl of
anger emanating from the men lining the palace battlements.
Kyne resisted the urge to send an arrow through DiSanti’s
black heart, knowing others loyal to the man would strike the
queen down. And of Princess Thomasa there was no sign.
Earlier, Katya, disguised as a boy, had infiltrated DiSanti’s
camp, but during her three days there she had found no indication
of where he held the young princess.
Katya came up next to Kyne. “Our forces are gathered
and ready to attack on your command. The rebel leaders brought
every able-bodied man to fight. They grow eager to do battle.”
“Are they so impatient to die?”
“No, to be free. Every day more of DiSanti’s men defect
and join us.”
“Then perhaps in a few more tendays we would stand a
chance in open battle. But we are yet outnumbered two to one,
and time is short.”
“But we have the advantage of surprise. With the palace
controlled by Prince Timon’s guard, DiSanti’s forces will be
caught between. He has no idea he is surrounded. His rage
over his daughter’s abduction has made him careless. When
he left the palace unguarded by his troops he forsook reason.
His madness overwhelms his logic.”
Kyne nodded. “We attack tonight.”
“What of the queen and princess?” Katya voiced the
question that plagued Kyne and had but one answer.
“May the Eternal One protect them. DiSanti must be