Authors: Elysa Hendricks
Tags: #Kidnapping, #Fantasy Fiction, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Life on Other Planets, #Revenge, #General, #Love Stories
unspeakable agonies until death set them free. Nothing cured
them or eased their torment. So powerful was the drug, even
her skills could not touch the source of their pain.
In the flickering firelight, Sianna watched Kyne’s face as
he spoke. Unable to read his emotions, she studied him for
physical clues, which were often as telling. His brow furrowed
above dark eyes flashing with anger. High cheekbones, an
aquiline nose and a square chin created a harsh yet compelling
visage. No smiles had forged the deep lines bracketing his mouth
or the fine lines fanning out from the corners of his eyes.
“What of the young prince? Does DiSanti feed him nika,
as well?” Graham asked.
“I pray not.” Kyne’s voice was strained. “If so, Dramon is
doomed. DiSanti keeps Prince Timon in seclusion, citing his
poor health. I heard talk of a marriage being arranged for the
child.”
“How is that possible? He’s but ten and four annum. Will
the Council allow it?”
“If the king wishes it, the Council will not object. And with
DiSanti doling out the nika, the king will follow his suggestions.
Perhaps that’s where this woman comes in.”
Sianna felt Kyne’s gaze on her. She shivered as if touched
by ice. He had discerned her father’s plans correctly. But what
did he know of her?
“If DiSanti were to marry his daughter to the king’s son, he
would gain even more power in court. And if the king were to
die...”
“DiSanti would in effect rule the country by his daughter
through the prince,” Graham finished Kyne’s thought.
“It was but a rumor.”
“Rumors are often rooted in fact, and this one sounds like
DiSanti.” Graham stirred the dying embers of the fire and added
another log. Flames shot up. Shadows did an eerie dance across
the men’s faces. “Did you have any luck in gaining an audience
with the King of Arete? Will he support us?”
“No. His attention is focused elsewhere. My trip was
wasted.” Failure sat like a physical presence on Kyne’s
shoulders.
“What now? Our forces gather in the mountains. We must
move soon, before winter is upon us, or delay until Spring.”
“Perhaps Katya has given us a way to force DiSanti from
his stronghold.” Kyne looked over at Sianna.
She closed her eyes against the loathing in his, relieved
when he turned back to Graham. “We leave for the fortress at
first light. I’ll make my decision there.”
Graham rose from his place by the fire. “Yes, Rul. I’ll see
to the quinar.”
“Good eve to you, my friend.”
Sianna could hear the hint of laughter in Kyne’s voice.
Graham gave a wry smile and said, “And to you, friend.”
After Graham left, Kyne sat motionless, his gaze resting
on the fire’s glow. She searched his face for any trace of
softness. Other than his obvious affection for Graham and his
love of Katya, Kyne appeared hard and unyielding. Why could
she read nothing of his emotions behind the expressionless mask
of his face? Even with her father and Laila she sensed the
existence of the emotions hidden from her. Her inability to pierce
Kyne’s facade disturbed and frightened her.
“You may cease your pretense of sleep.”
His quiet accusation made her jump. Holding the blanket
around her shoulders, she sat up. She could guess Kyne would
respect courage and disdain begging. Not that she intended to
beg.
Lifting her chin, she faced him. “Why have you abducted
me?”
A look of surprise crossed his face, quickly replaced by
disdain. “I did not abduct you. Katya did. But now that you are
in our hands, you will serve our purpose well. Through you we
will reach your father. He will pay for his crimes.”
“By what right will you be his judge, jury and executioner?”
“The right of blood—the blood of my parents and brother
spilt by your father.”
Sianna forced herself not to cringe in the face of Kyne’s
fierce scowl. “Perhaps you overestimate my value to him.”
His hard stare unnerved her. “I think not. What man
wouldn’t value a daughter such as you—young, lovely, intelligent
and marriageable.” The words rolled off his tongue like vile
insults. “Are you your father’s key to the throne? By himself
he can never truly rule Dramon. Does he think through your
marriage to the young prince can he gain the power he craves?”
Sianna couldn’t argue or refute Kyne’s logic, but neither
would she confirm it. Her father had told her much the same
when he informed her of her betrothal to Prince Timon.
Taking a deep breath, she asked, “Who was Aubin?”
She gasped as Kyne reached out and encircled her throat
with his hand. His fingers felt hot against her chilled flesh.
Emotions—Kyne’s emotions—flooded over her, a torrent of
impressions she could make little sense of, so fast did they hit
her.
“Do not speak his name. I should kill you now and be done
with it. DiSanti need never know we fish with dead bait.”
Fear coiled in Sianna’s belly as his fingers tightened. Wave
after wave of jumbled thoughts and feelings swamped her. Still
she met his gaze steadily. “Kill me if you must, but before you
do answer my question.”
His grip eased. “How innocent you sound. If I didn’t have
proof of your guilt, I might believe you knew nothing of your
father’s plan.” He pulled his hand away and rubbed it absently.
She placed her hand where his had been. As if tossed and
tumbled in a pounding surf, she felt disorientated. Her pulse
beat wildly. “What proof?” When he didn’t answer, she
continued. “Believe what you will. I am innocent. I don’t know
of any plans my father might have, beyond his desire to see me
married to the prince.”
“You lie convincingly, Laila...”
Laila. The rest of Kyne’s words were lost to Sianna. They
believed she was Laila. In shock, she remembered her sister’s
strange distraction on the journey home, and her sudden
disappearance.
“But I’m not...” she started, then stopped as what Kyne
was saying registered.
“...even now you may carry Aubin’s child.”
Understanding dawned. Laila and Aubin had been lovers.
These people believed her sister had somehow conspired with
their father to kill Aubin. Sianna’s heart rejected the possibility
of her father being so wicked, and she knew Laila incapable of
such an act. Sianna thought back to Laila’s impatience to return
home. It hadn’t been the attitude of one contemplating murder,
but that of a person eager to rejoin a loved one.
She started to protest her innocence once again, to reveal
her identity, to speak for her father.
“Pray you hold Aubin’s seed within you. Only the possibility
of his child growing in your belly keeps you alive—at least until
its birth.”
The venom in Katya’s voice from behind her made Sianna
cringe. If she told them of their mistake, would they kill her
merely for being her father’s daughter? Most likely. And what
of Laila? Where was she? Did she indeed carry a child? In an
instant, Sianna decided to continue the charade and hope for a
chance to escape.
She drew herself up and stared at Katya. “Then until you
are certain of my pregnancy, perhaps you should take better
care of me. Being wet, cold and jostled about can’t be good for
the child I might carry.”
At Sianna’s boldness, surprise registered on Katya’s face.
A smile softened the stern set of Kyne’s lips. The skin
around his eyes crinkled and transformed his harsh features.
“She’s correct. We must have a care for her well being. Provide
her with warm clothing, a dry place to sleep and feed her well.”
Color stained Katya’s fair skin. “See to it yourself.” With
an angry snort, she spun around and stalked away.
Kyne gave a bark of laughter and turned back to Sianna.
“So the lambie has teeth.”
“And claws as well.” Sianna chose her next words carefully.
“I’ll no longer sit quietly while you accuse my father and me of
crimes and manhandle me. I’ve done nothing to deserve such
treatment. My only sin is being my father’s daughter. I bear no
guilt for Aubin’s death.” Nor, I pray, does my father.
At the mention of Aubin’s name, amusement faded from
Kyne’s face. Sianna paused, regretting the disappearance of
the briefly viewed gentler Kyne. Humor no longer lit his dark
eyes, but neither did anger tighten his lips. Weariness lay on
him like a heavy yoke, bowing his broad shoulders.
He rose and looked down at her. “Spare me your protests
of innocence. You bear the taint of DiSanti’s blood. Even
without guilt of your own, that is enough to condemn you in my
people’s eyes. Soon enough your fate will be decided.”
She took faint hope in that he refrained from speaking his
own condemnation of her, but discerned nothing from his distant
expression.
“Sleep now. We leave at first light.” For a moment their
eyes met, then he strode away into the darkness, leaving her
alone with her thoughts and fears.
All that remained of her brief contact with him was a
kaleidoscope of emotions chasing through her mind. Other
people’s emotions flowed into her as easily as air into her lungs.
Why was it different with Kyne? Without her inner sight, she
felt blind. To understand Kyne, she must touch him. The thought
made her tremble, whether in dread or anticipation, she couldn’t
tell.
***
At the edge of the clearing, a sentry greeted him, but Kyne
didn’t linger. Though he no longer claimed the title, he knew the
people still considered him their Rul and, as such, he held the
woman’s fate in his hands. He found the weight a difficult one.
His thoughts centered on the slim young woman now curled
by the fire. In exile for the past eight annum, Kyne remembered
little of DiSanti’s only daughter. As a young man at court Kyne
had paid scant attention to the child. But he had thought her
older than Aubin’s eight and ten annum. This woman was barely
more than a girl. Could he sentence a mere child to death?
He remembered the soft curves of her young body. No,
she was not quite a child.
And if she carried Aubin’s babe? What then?
Though he stared into the darkness, he could still see her
dirt-smudged face, a blood-crusted scrape on one cheek marring
her smooth, porcelain complexion. Delicate brows arched over
eyes as blue as the towering peaks of Dramon’s Azul Mountains,
while blue-black hair fell in a tangled mass to her waist.
He scrubbed his palm against his thigh as if by doing so he
could erase the feeling of her cool, silken skin from his memory.
What had happened when he touched her? When his fingers
closed around her throat, he had sensed her hidden fear and
felt the pain of her scrapes and bruises as if they were his own.
The sensation left him shaken. Though he was always conscious
of the feelings of others, this went beyond anything he’d ever
experienced.
Despite his hatred of her and her father, the woman’s show
of courage struck a chord within Kyne. She faced him without
cowering, demanding answers, refusing to acknowledge her
guilt. Her claims of innocence sounded sincere, and her eyes
meet his in censure. Was she perhaps the unknowing dupe of
her evil father?
Kyne shook his head. Aubin, with his dying words,
condemned DiSanti’s daughter. The parchment she wrote was
solid evidence of her responsibility. In it she asked Aubin to
meet her at the pub where he had been attacked and killed by
DiSanti’s men. This proof of her treachery hardened Kyne to
her pleas of innocence. He would do what he must to avenge
his brother and bring about DiSanti’s fall.
***
The next morning, Sianna stretched beneath the heavy fur
rug. Despite Katya’s harsh words the night before, she had
provided Sianna with warm, dry clothing and bedding, as well
as a hearty meal. Though Kyne’s sister served all with a sullen
attitude, Sianna didn’t argue. She needed her strength. Self-
preservation decreed she should run. She looked around the
mountain camp. But where to?
Above, the sky lightened, while a mist hung over the ground.
She threw back the covering and shivered in the moist morning
air. Around her the sounds of camp breaking filled nature’s
silence. The murmur of sleep husky voices, the creak of saddle
leather, the rumbling calls of the quinar being readied for the
trip.
Katya’s strident voice shattered the peace. “I’ll not take
her with me. Deju is worn from hard riding these last few days.”
“You can ride with one of the men and mount the woman
alone on Deju,” came Kyne’s calm reply.
“Are you mad? What if she tries to run? Deju is the fastest
of quinar. How will we catch her? Besides who knows if she
can ride. Mount her with Graham.”
“Graham’s quinar carries more weight with Graham alone
and can no longer bear the extra. The other men’s hatred of