The Wizard's Heir (15 page)

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Authors: Devri Walls

Tags: #Romance, #Sword & Sorcery, #coming of age, #wizard, #Warrior, #Fantasy, #Magic, #Dark Fantasy, #quest

BOOK: The Wizard's Heir
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The hesitation was only momentary. She ran past Terric, shouldering the door open. A burst of heat and smoke smashed into her. Her arm came up automatically, trying fruitlessly to shield herself from the inferno.

“Father!” she called. The air seared the inside of her lungs and she bent over, coughing. The air was cooler down here. She dropped to her hands and knees and peered around the tiny cottage. “Father, where are you?”

The bed danced with flames. They spread up the wall and skipped across the ceiling.

She crawled over to the chair and washbasin, desperately looking for any form that could be a human body. She grabbed what could’ve been a leg but it collapsed under her grasp—a spare blanket.

The room was filling with smoke so thick it was incapacitating. It sank to the floor, suffocating her. She needed air.

Auriella moved back towards the door—she would just take a few good breaths and go back in. She stumbled out, coughing.

The sound of Terric’s laughter puller her head up. He was on the back of his horse. Behind him, thrown over the saddle, was her father. “I wondered how long you’d look for him in there. For a minute there I thought I’d have to come in after you, can’t have you dead. Rowan would be very angry.”

“What are you doing with him?” Her throat was raw and it burned to speak.

“Retrieving King Rowan’s insurance.”

Auriella’s fingers wrapped around the hilt of her dagger.

Terric moved before she could leap, pulling his own sword and turning it behind him. The tip of the blade pressed against her father’s side. “One move and I will put this through him without the slightest hesitation. In fact, I’d enjoy it. So go ahead, Auriella, try to attack me again.”

Auriella looked carefully at her father’s body, worried he was already dead. But his back rose and fell gently.

“What do you want?”

Terric eyed the blade for a moment, spinning it a quarter of a turn with a look of regret. He wanted to kill them both, that much was clear. “If you want your father back, you’ll have to go to the castle.” He turned his horse and galloped away.

Why hadn’t she brought her damn horse? She turned and ran towards the cliffs in search of Fire Dancer. As she ran, the sound of bells from the castle floated across the island. They tolled—once, twice, three times. There was a pause, and then the bells tolled again, three more times.

The queen was dead.

 

 

Tybolt’s head jerked up at the sound of the bells. “Fine, Gamel,” he said hastily. “What did you want to tell me?”

Gamel gathered his feet beneath him and stood, painfully slow. “Do you promise to hear me out until the end?”

“I promise.”

“Tybolt, I am asking for your word.”

Tybolt looked at the old man. Gamel stood straight, his hands folded in front of him, his eyes dead serious and ringed with fear.

“What are you so scared of?”

“The gallows.”

“You think I’ll tell the king whatever ridiculous accusations you’re about to throw?” He leaned forward, mocking. “Now why would I turn in my favorite informant?”

“Because I’m not who you think I am.” The man he knew as Gamel waved a hand over his face and whispered. His form shimmered, and his shape began to change.

“Wizard,” Tybolt whispered. His hand went for his sword but only had it halfway out of its scabbard when he stopped. Gamel looked nothing like himself, but he now wore a face that Tybolt hadn’t seen in years. He staggered back. “Hess?”

“That was the name I gave you, yes.”

Tybolt shook his head, trying to clear it. “No, that’s not possible. You’re not…you can’t be.” He didn’t want to believe it, but the face, the voice…it had always been the same voice, even as Gamel. He could hear it now. “Where have you been?”

“Tybolt—”

“No! You appear in my life, only to vanish, and now you stand here…” He sputtered, not able to organize the chaos of thoughts. “You know what I do to Wizards, Hess…or Gamel, or whoever you are. The Hold is worse than the gallows.”

“You promised you would listen.”

“Oh no, I promised I would listen to the town drunk, not you.” Tybolt waved him off and unhooked Widow Maker from the tree. “Get out of here before I change my mind and haul you back in irons.”

“You have to listen to me.”

“Oh really? Then who are you?”

Before Gamel answered, the smell of smoke drifted into the clearing. Tybolt turned his head, sniffing. Widow Maker snorted and tossed his head, pawing at the ground. “Hold on.” Tybolt leaped up and swung around the tree branch, landing on the branch above. He quickly scrambled up.

A black pillar of smoke rose from the thieves’ forest. It was too isolated and too thick to be a forest fire—something small was burning. It had to be a house or a barn. But he only knew of one such structure in that direction.

He dropped from the branches as fast as he could. “I have to go. Auriella’s in trouble.”

“Tybolt, no. You have to listen, there isn’t time—”

“Let me be very clear. The only reason I’m walking away is because you saved my life that night, a debt I will repay now. But if I see you again, I will bring you in.” Tybolt pulled himself up on his horse and spurred forward without looking back. The tree branches threatened to knock him off Widow Maker’s back, and he hunkered low.

Tybolt didn’t know how far he’d gone when pain began burning in his stomach. He rubbed it absently, but the pain increased dramatically with each second. He leaned over and wrapped his arms across his middle. Sweat dripped down his forehead as his temperature soared. It felt like a flaming inferno burned deep inside.

Tybolt cried out, falling off Widow Maker. He thrashed from side to side and curled into a ball, screaming. His skin snapped and crackled, and his balled fist erupted in flames. Tybolt yelled and scrambled away, but more bursts of fire ignited. Orange heat scampered up to his shoulders. He rolled back and forth, trying to put out the flames, but they only grew larger. He stumbled to his feet, horrified as rivulets of fire ran down his arms and dripped from his fingertips.

A small stream trickled nearby and he lurched towards it, throwing himself in. It was barely deep enough to submerge his arms. Although the water finally extinguished the physical flames, it did nothing to diminish his temperature. He was burning from the inside out.

Hess ran towards him. “Hold still,” he called. “Let me help you.”

Tybolt tried to struggle to his feet, but the rocks were slick and his legs flew out from beneath him. Arms slid under him and yanked him to the bank.

“Why don’t you ever listen, boy? I told you not to go.”

Tybolt rolled over, barely coherent. Blurry faces he didn’t recognize looked down at him.

“You better hurry,” one said. “We have to get him back.”

“Just speak the blasted spell,” the other said. “He’s going to burn to death.”

Tybolt tried to twist away but the flames were back, running down his arm and fingers. He heard words, flowing words, words of magic. Then everything went black.

 

 

Auriella found an extra cloak in the stables and clasped it around her neck, wrapping the sides tightly around her ruined clothes. She stormed towards the throne room, allowing her fury to override her fear. The guards must’ve been told she was coming, because they stayed to the side. She shoved the doors open. King Rowan sat on his throne with Terric standing next to him.

“Ah, Auriella. I’ve been waiting for you,” Rowan said.

She glowered, focusing on the king. “I’m sure you have.”

He laughed. “You have so much fire. I’ve known that about you from the beginning. You did quite a number on Terric here.”

That she had. His face was destroyed. Gone were the days when girls would follow him through the streets. She ignored Terric entirely. “You have my father.”

Rowan smirked. “I do.”

Terric pulled out a simple gold band and tossed it. She barely had time to react, snatching it from the air before it clattered to the floor. “What is this?” she asked.

“Look inside,” Terric said. “I almost had to take his finger to get to it. I can see now where you get your stubbornness.”

Auriella’s mouth went dry. She held the ring between two fingers and examined it. She knew what she was looking for—on the inside of the band were engraved the words she didn’t want to see.
Until Forever
. She didn’t know he’d kept it. He’d been careful not to wear it when she was around. Too many dark memories.

Auriella closed her fist over the ring. “My father has nothing to do with this. You can’t keep him.”

King Rowan, face hard and eyes feral, leapt from his chair. “He is my guarantee that you will do as I say. You defied me last night, tearing through the streets like a madwoman. You left the city during Festival—”

Auriella pointed to Terric. “He tried to rape me!”

“—with no intention of ever coming back.”

“I came back!” She looked down at her fist, the cold metal of her father’s ring chilling her skin. “How—”

“How did I know?” Rowan stepped down and put his face within inches of hers. “I have kept tabs on your father for a long time now, ever since he showed up and tried to take you away from me. I kept the information here.” He tapped his temple. “In case I needed help rendering you more malleable. I was not blind to your efforts to avoid me during the celebration. The fact that you left the city only speaks to your refusal to conform. You will be my wife, or I will kill your father in front of you so you can watch him bleed out, knowing it’s your fault he’s dead.” He leaned even closer, whispering in her ear. “Then you can have two dead parents on your conscience, Lady Auriella.”

She gasped. How could he possibly know that? “I’ll do whatever you want. Just don’t hurt him.”

“The wedding is in a week, and I will have a smiling bride.” He stepped back. “Terric, take her to her new quarters.”

“Wait! Where is he? I want to see him.”

They both ignored her and Terric smiled, the wound across his cheek crinkling. The stitches were separating in the middle and a drop of blood appeared. “With pleasure.”

“Terric, do keep yourself in check. I don’t want any bruises on my new bride.”

 

 

Tybolt woke to someone shaking him. The movement was agony—his body hurt from the inside out. He jerked straight up with a yell, brushing at the flames he remembered, but there were none. He was soaking wet and sitting in the small stream he’d thrown himself in.

Hess knelt before him. “Tybolt, we have to go before we’re found.”

Tybolt looked over Gamel’s shoulder to see three other men behind him. Blue-eyed wizards, all of them. “What is going on?”

“I’ll explain everything, but you need to come with us.”

Tybolt shook his wet hair and went to stand. The pain was enough that he stumbled forward. He straightened. “No.”

“I told you this would not end well.”

Gamel looked over his shoulder at the wizard who’d spoken. “Not now, Carac.”

What was going on? Tybolt pulled his sword. “We can do this any number of ways, but I’m not staying here.”

Gamel sighed. “Don’t you have any questions for me? You did just burst into flame.”

Yes, he had questions. But he wouldn’t take time to think about them while Auriella was in trouble. “Get out of my way.”

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