Maxon (27 page)

Read Maxon Online

Authors: Christina Bauer

BOOK: Maxon
6.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Well, you can be a touchy bastard sometimes.”

“And you're an awful lad that I keep meaning to remove from my line of succession. Next month, for sure.”

“You always say that.”

“I always mean it.”

A moan sounds from beside me. Spinning around, I find that Raj has collapsed. None of Silas's creations are left nearby, but my buddies are a mess. Tyberius races out from the trees.

“The dragons set me down near you,” says Ty while panting for breath. “Then I got lost in the battle. Finally, I had to cast a locator charm and…”

“You can tell the story later,” I say quickly. “These guys need your help.”

Ty finally pauses enough to see the guys. Uther and Raj are now lying on the ground, passed out. Zee is kneeling with his eyes rolled up into his head.

“I've got to teleport them out of here,” says Ty.

Tempest nods. “Do it now. My troops are still flying in, so the portal's open.”

Ty frowns. “Once I teleport them, I'll be wiped out. These injuries are serious. I won't have enough magic to save them.”

“Take them to my palace,” says Tempest. “The Hexenwings can help you.”

“Thanks, T.” I pat Tempest on the shoulder and turn to my friend. “Get them out of here, Ty.”

Tyberius raises his arms and starts chanting. For a few seconds, a light purple mist surrounds him, Uther, Raj, and Nizam. A loud crack tears through the air and then they all disappear. I stare at the spot for a few seconds.

“I hope they're holding up,” I say in a low voice.

“You've other things to worry about, lad.”

I turn to face Tempest. “Like what?”

He points to the white figures that are now filling the forest.

Air Valta. Hundreds of them.

“We can hold them for a while,” says Tempest. “Get out of here and find your girl.”

“I don't know where she is.”

“I caught a scent on that demon,” Tempest nods toward the charred body of Silas. “Elemental and antiseptic. He was near your monarkki. They must be holding her in one of the infirmary buildings. I saw them on the flight in—wooden structures along the back of the compound.”

“Thanks, T.” I turn on my heel, ready to sprint away.

“Oh, and Maxon?”

I pause. “Yeah?”

“I scented Chimera there, too.” Tempest's eyes flare red. “He's mine.”

“Understood.” I take off at a run.

Lianna

At last, I can move my eyes. No more staring at the same spot on the infirmary wall.

Hallelujah.

Chimera's paralytic is finally starting to wear off a little. These moments are rare. Normally, Chimera gives me more than enough venom ages before I need it.

I'm still thirsty as hell, though. They won't give me water in case it strengthens me enough to escape. Good thinking, actually.

A pair of elemental heliae float-walk into the room. They're the nurses of this place. The heliae have super-long necks, hollow sockets for eyes, and long silver hair that hangs down to their waists. Their skinny arms sport an extra set of elbows, so they can grab a syringe and stick you before you have time to realize what's going on. I learned that one the hard way.

“Treatment,” says the first heliae. He speaks in a slow, rough howl that reminds me of harsh winter wind. “Chimera.”

Not a chatty bunch, the heliae.
This is his way of asking why Chimera isn't here to jam more venom into my neck. I'd say there's no rush, but I can't speak yet.

“Audience,” says the second. This one's a woman; I can tell because her winding-sheet robe covers her from shoulder to ankle. Her voice quivers with fear. “Zephyr.”

A spark of hope ignites in my soul. I know what that shaky voice means. It's the same one all the heliae use when Zephyr's temper is up. Half the infirmary is packed with air elementals that Zephyr hit or hurt. One guy got his legs torn off for addressing Zephyr as
Your
Eminence instead of
The
Eminence.

Man, I can't wait to get out of here and kill that monster.

Fresh voices sound in the hallway. The heliae gasp, turn into their smoke forms, and drift silently away. That can only mean one thing.

Zephyr's coming to visit.

I hear him talking outside my room. “Silas's work in the forest is an utter failure,” says Zephyr. “I need every Air Valta there to clean them out.”

If I could smile, I would. Maybe I'd even cheer, too. Sounds like Silas is in trouble.

A new voice sounds from the hallway. “And what do you wish of me?” That one's Chimera.

“What I always want,” says Zephyr. “Your venom. Her powers.”

“Before we discuss this, there is another matter I wish to raise. Perhaps I can be of more use…”

“Silence! You said you were an expert in torture.” Zephyr's voice takes on the roar of a cyclone. “So, why must I watch over you like a child? You know what I expect of you. If the girl transfers her power to that Kristalli, I'll continue to keep you safe from Tempest.” I hear his fist pound the wall with each word. “That is all.”

“Then, I shall do as The Eminence commands.”

“At last.” A whoosh of air follows those last words. Zephyr is gone.

Chimera growls under his breath. “That monarkki needs a strong general to keep him in line.” When Chimera speaks again, he raises his voice. “You there. Heliae.”

“Sir.”

Chimera starts rattling off commands at the heliae. My mind can't focus on his words. Instead, the mention of ‘general' has my thoughts returning to old paths of worry.

Fisk.

Once again, I wonder what happened to my friend. With any luck, all Zephyr wanted was the Kristalli of Water. Once he had the stone, Zephyr should've let Fisk go.

A long creak sounds as the door opens, jarring me from my thoughts. Heavy footsteps tromp across the floor. Chimera's here. He's in his hybrid human-dragon form, so his two necks sway as he steps to my bedside. Chimera lifts my right hand, examining the Kristalli that's still tied to my palm.

“The stone's dark,” he whines.

And it'll stay that way.

“You're incredibly stubborn.” Chimera paces along the back wall. “Zephyr says that I should torture you. Pull out your nails. Punch in your eyes. Elementals heal so quickly, you'd feel an exquisite sort of pain.”

What I wouldn't give to flip him the finger right now.
And then maybe scream and run for cover. That torture stuff would suck.

“Then again, you
are
a warrior.” Chimera's voice lowers an octave. “For one such as you, there are more effective means of delivering pain.”

Icy fear trickles down my spine. He's right. Namare trained me to handle physical torture. She always worried that Zephyr would capture me and do his worst. On the other hand, Chimera seems like the type who likes mental torture. Not something I'm familiar with.

“Last chance,” says Chimera in a sing-song voice. “Transfer your powers back to the Kristalli and I will kill you quickly. You'll get no such promise from Zephyr.”

My mind races for a way out of this mess; I come up empty. With a flash of realization, I know that I'm about to die. At this point, my only choice is
how
.

Do I go while giving Zephyr what he wants?

No way. After all these years, I can't give the evil freak anything. If holding back the Kristalli is the only victory I can have over him, I'll take it.

Chimera leans across the base of the bed. His reptilian-slitted eyes stare directly into mine. “Oh, no. You can move your gaze. Let's fix that, shall we?” He smiles at me for a long moment, and I know another needle is coming my way.

And so it does.

Chimera drags out the process of filling up another syringe and then pumping it into my neck. Once he's done, he steps into my frozen line of vision, his pair of lipless reptilian faces winding into ever-wider smiles. “Let's get down to business, shall we?” As always, his heads speak in unison.

A cold bead of sweat slowly dips down my back.

What's he planning to do, exactly?

Chimera waves his scaled hand before my eyes, ensuring that my gaze is once again locked at a certain spot on the wall. Whatever he has planned, it requires that I can't look away. Fear twists my insides.

“It seems I can't convince you to transfer your power,” Chimera says with a dramatic sigh. “And I very much need Zephyr's help. You see, my son is causing all sorts of trouble and I'd much rather be scheming against him than wasting time with you. So, I've decided to bring someone else in… An expert in changing minds.”

Chimera drags a chair so it's placed directly in line my sight.

Terror overwhelms my mind. All I can think about is the chair and empty stretch of wall. This is some kind of performance for my benefit.

Chances are, it won't be pleasant.

Chimera bangs on the door. “Bring it in!”

A pair of heliae haul in a pale figure. With a great heave, they set the lifeless form onto the empty chair. My skin crawls with grief and horror.

It's Fisk.

And he's dead.

The man I once loved has his throat torn out. Ligaments and bone protrude from the open wound. His beautiful sea green eyes stare at me, while his mouth rounds into a silent scream. Tears stream down my face. Everything in me wants to turn away from this sight, but I can't. And the worst part of all?
I'm
the reason his life's over.

This is torture. Pure. Raw. Unthinkable.

I don't consciously will it to happen, but the Kristalli in my hand glows with a pale blue light. Fisk's empty eyes seem to plead with me to join him in the next world. We'll reunite in friendship, free of pain and loss. My fears were right, all along. I was never strong enough to be the monarkki. Now, I crave a simple end to my useless life.

Chimera promised me a swift death.
I hold onto that thought as my power slowly seeps away. I'm vaguely aware of raised voices somewhere in the infirmary.

Zephyr must be at it again. More heliae are about to die.

I brace my soul for the screams that inevitably follow one of Zephyr's rages.

They don't come.

Instead, there are rushed footsteps in the outer hallway. The heliae sound frantic. I focus on their wispy voices.

“Evacuate.”

“Warrior.”

“Front door.”

My thoughts freeze. Zephyr sent all the Air Valta to the forest. So who's trying to break through the front door?

A thrill of realization moves through me. Maybe Zephyr wasn't fighting Silas after all.

Perhaps Maxon is here.

As soon as the thought strikes my mind, I dismiss it. There is no rescue from an elemental realm. Zephyr only allows those he chooses into his compound. Maxon couldn't have found a way in, could he?

Another heliae voice reaches my ears. “Thrax.”

Pure joy zings through me. A thrax warrior in Zephyr's realm? It must be Maxon.

Chimera has the same thought. He bolts to his feet, races to the door, and pulls it open. “Come here, you.”

“Yes?” asks a heliae.

“I heard someone speaking of a thrax. Who is here?”

“Warrior.” The heliae's voice quivers with fear.

Chimera speaks slowly and with a menacing edge. “What's the name?”

“Maxon.”

I sense more than see Chimera dragging the heliae into my room.

“You know how to use a syringe?” he asks.

“Yes,” answers the heliae.

In my peripheral vision, I see Chimera open a supply drawer and pull out a fresh vial. He plunges the needle into his throat, draws a full dose of green paralytic venom and then sets the syringe into the heliae's hand.

“Inject her in fifteen minutes,” orders Chimera.

“Evacuation,” says the heliae. “My people.”

“You're not going anywhere.” Chimera voice comes out a low growl. “Stay right here with her.”

“You stay,” replies the heliae. “Zephyr says.”

“Blast Zephyr!” roars Chimera. “Prince Maxon and I have unfinished business. No one cuts me and lives.” Chimera bolts from the room, leaving the heliae waiting and silent.

A full minute passes before the heliae lets off a string of odd words. I don't need to speak air elemental to get the gist. The heliae is cursing out Chimera. With a dramatic swoosh of his extra-long arms, the heliae resets the syringe back into its drawer and slams it shut.

“My people,” hisses the heliae. “Evacuate.”

As the heliae leaves the room, a great crash sounds from the far side of the infirmary. An unmistakable noise follows—the happy gurgle of water as it tumbles from a broken cistern.

I sense the clean liquid as it flows under my doorway and beneath my bed. Hope lightens me, body and soul. Maybe I can cleanse myself with the fresh water, just like I cleansed Maxon in the cave.

Only one way to find out.

On my command, the water in my room transforms into mist. A blue haze surrounds me, soaking into my skin. I focus on each molecule as it moves through my body, asking it to remove the harmful venom.

Seconds tick by, then minutes. At last, the process works. My skin flares blue with glee as I move my eyes once again. Soon, I can twiddle my fingers and toes.

This is happening. If I can move, I can escape.

A new voice rings in my ears, chilling me over with cold despair.

“Where is he? Where's Chimera?”

It's Zephyr. And man, does he ever sound pissed.

I focus my energy on the fresh trickle of water nearby. More and more, I ask it to rise into my body, clearing away Chimera's paralytic. Next, I can move my legs. After that, my shoulders are mine to control as well.

Meanwhile, light footsteps speed down the outer corridor.

Zephyr.

If he reaches the door before I'm fully healed, I'm in deep trouble. I can't fight back. I can't even scream. He'll whisk me off somewhere and find a new minion to torture me.

Other books

The Nosferatu Scroll by James Becker
The Dark Ones by Smith, Bryan
Death Comes to London by Catherine Lloyd
Driven to Distraction (Silhouette Desire S.) by Dixie Browning, Sheri Whitefeather
All the Colours of the Town by McIlvanney, Liam
The Landing of the Pilgrims by James Daugherty
Dog Days of Summer by P. J. Fiala