King’s Wrath (36 page)

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Authors: Fiona McIntosh

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Epic, #General

BOOK: King’s Wrath
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‘Is that all it means?’

She shook her head and her breathing changed. ‘No. It’s very important to me — as a doctor — that I find solutions for people’s ails.’

His stare intensified. ‘That’s it?’ For what felt like the first time in his life Kilt acted impulsively. He lifted her hand to his lips again and softly but sensually let them mould gently around her small, neat row of knuckles. Then he placed her hand against his stubbled cheek, sighing. He let her hand go. ‘Forgive me, your highness. I … er, I’m not sure what came over me then. Relief, no doubt.’

She blinked, looking unsure of herself, of him. ‘You should go. Run, Kilt. Please, run from me.’

He smiled sadly. ‘I should but I don’t want to.’

She shook her head slowly. ‘Please, it’s your chance.’

Still surprising himself, still unsure of what he was doing or why, but feeling a fresh intoxication — nothing to do with his magic — he drew her back beneath the cover of the small orchard that the nuns tended.

‘Genevieve,’ he murmured, ‘I …’

‘Just kiss me,’ she said and then added, ‘Please,’ as though her urgency matched his.

He paused for a heartbeat as his eyes drank in the sight of her own closed eyes, long dark lashes resting against the creamy complexion, her cheeks infused with a blush of desire. Their lips met, soft and hesitant. And then Kilt had no further rational thought; instinct took over. Suddenly all those emotional responses he had never paid attention to welled up in him and spilled over; yearning, passion and a longing for love overwhelmed his control. He kissed the Valisar princess more
tenderly and yet more deeply than he had ever permitted himself to kiss a woman previously.

He felt naked. It was as though Genevieve had stripped back all the disguises, all the barriers he had spent a lifetime guarding. She had found him. He was hers. He couldn’t run from her even if he’d wanted to.

Kilt didn’t know how long they kissed but their ardour had intensified. There was nothing hesitant about their longing any more. And it took his entire reserve of will to pull his head back from hers, sighing as he did so with deep regret as he felt the loss.

‘Don’t say anything,’ she whispered. Her face was cupped in his hands, her eyes were misted with emotion. ‘Do you believe in love at first sight?’

His mouth feeling deliciously swollen from their kissing, he twitched a grin. ‘I didn’t.’

‘I always have. I’ve always wanted my Prince Charming to come along, sweep me off my feet.’

He looked back at her, frowning quizzically. ‘Who is Prince Charming?’

She chuckled. ‘No one real. Someone many women dream of.’ She shrugged. ‘We like to believe there is someone perfectly matched to our needs, our wants and desires … to who we are. Someone who will protect us and always love us, want us, never tire of being with us … even when we’re old and fat.’

‘I could never tire of you. If you’re not making me feel nauseous, you make me feel drunk. Either way, I’m dizzy and lightheaded around you. And no woman has ever done that for me.’

She gave a soft smirk. ‘I’m not sure I can believe that.’

Kilt clasped her hands, searching her face. ‘You can. I have pushed away every woman I’ve known … walked away from more than you could count.’

‘Then you would walk away from me.’

‘No,’ he insisted. ‘I don’t think I can. You own me now and in more ways than are obvious. I have never looked for love. I didn’t
think it existed. I was prepared to settle for affectionate companionship.’

She shrank. ‘There’s a woman in your life? How silly of me. Look at you. Of course there would be.’ She tried to pull away but Kilt held her hands too firmly, pulled her back.

‘She loves another. She married him, even. I have been coming to terms with losing her but, Genevieve, the truth is, I was never good enough for her because I only pretended to love her.’

Evie’s eyes narrowed as she considered this, her gaze never leaving his.

‘But … but this bond, this amazing feeling I have with you has shocked me,’ Kilt finished.

‘It’s the magic, it’s —’

‘It’s not the Valisar magic. It’s not my magic or your magic. It’s our magic, the magic two people feel when they find the person they want to share everything with. I’ve never had that with anyone until now.’

Her eyes flashed with a fiery spark. ‘The moment I was close enough to see you clearly I felt a catch in my throat. Once I’d touched you, I was struggling to be matter of fact about it, but magic aside, I loved you on sight.’

‘I can’t be without you,’ Kilt admitted.

‘Do you really mean that?’

He nodded. ‘I’m helpless.’ He shrugged. ‘You might as well hack off a piece of me now and cook it.’

‘Don’t ever speak to me of that again.’

He pulled her close and wrapped his arms around her, kissing the top of her soft shiny hair. ‘I will not leave you. I cannot. I … ’ It felt so strange and clumsy to try and attempt to say it. ‘Genevieve, I … ’

She pulled back. ‘What?’ she said, searching his eyes.

‘I want to be with you. I believe myself hopelessly in love with you.’

‘You don’t even know me.’

‘I know everything about you that’s important. You’ve told me all the elements that make you who you are. The rest, if you belch like a man or pick your nose while I’m eating …’ She began to laugh. ‘Well, let’s just say I’ll discover that as we grow old together.’

‘Grow old together.’ She gave a start.

‘What’s wrong?’

‘Corbel. He’ll be worried. I made him promise to leave me alone with you. How long have we been alone?’

‘Long enough that a man in love would be anxious.’

‘A man in love? What do you mean?’

‘For an intelligent woman, you surprise me. Isn’t it obvious to you that Corbel de Vis worships you?’

‘No, no,’ she said, smiling, embarrassed. ‘Corbel’s looked out for me for so long it probably looks that way but we’re just close friends. He —’

‘Genevieve … the man is deeply in love with you. Either you’re highly insensitive to the relationship you have with him or he works very diligently to hide his true feelings.’

She stared at Kilt with a look akin to sorrow. ‘Has he told you that?’

‘He didn’t have to. You can hear it in his voice, see it in his eyes — just as I told you about Kirin and how he felt about Lily.’

‘Lily’s the woman you mentioned?’

He nodded. Then gave a small, mirthless gust of a laugh. ‘Gavriel de Vis fell for her when we were briefly together but she chose me. Now I’m stealing Corbel de Vis’s girl too.’

‘Are you?’

He stared deep into her eyes. ‘If she’ll agree to being stolen.’

‘I love Corbel but not in the way you think he may love me.’ She shook her head. ‘I love him as a brother.’

Kilt smirked, but not unkindly. ‘Please don’t ever say that to him. Those are words that chill a man who loves a woman.’

‘I’ll trust you on that,’ she said, her voice full of sorrow. ‘Why didn’t he ever say anything?’

‘You know him much better than I but from the little time I’ve spent with him I know he’s a very private, very reserved person. Very different from his brother.’

‘Gavriel? That’s a nice name.’

‘And like his twin he’s a good, loyal person. But you know what Gavriel is thinking because he tells you. Corbel might be saying one thing but thinking another.’ He held up a hand. ‘I’m not calling him a liar. What I mean is, he doesn’t allow anyone to see the real him. I know the feeling and I think it’s why I find him easy to like.’

‘Back … ’ she sighed. ‘Where we’ve been living he had no friend but myself. I mean no one. He was a loner.’

Kilt nodded. ‘Try and put yourself into his position. Imagine what he has had to do for his sovereign, the price he’s paid and continues to pay for his loyalty. He’s given up his life, his family, his world.’

She looked suddenly guilty and turned away. ‘I haven’t really paused to consider any of this from his perspective.’

‘Well, the Valisars are known to have a selfish streak,’ he replied, his tone dry.

Evie turned and punched him lightly. ‘I am not one of them.’

‘Oh, my sweet girl, I’m afraid you are. But, to the business at hand. Thank you for releasing me from your spell but I cannot accept the gift.’

‘Kilt,’ she began, shaking her head, a look of plea in her eyes.

‘Listen to me,’ he said. ‘My feelings, de Vis’s feelings, your feelings aside, we must return to the original problem — that you are in mortal danger. Whether or not you care about your crown is not the issue. You could be killed for simply being a Valisar heir.’ He inhaled and made a tutting sound as she began to protest. ‘Wait, let me finish. What has happened between us changes everything. I want to be bonded to you. Trammel me now or break my heart forever.’

She swallowed. ‘I refuse.’

‘You can’t. You cannot ignore my feelings for you. I will wear down your healing resistance. And even if I can’t, even if you can keep channelling that healing magic, it can’t stop my loving you. Either way, magic or through love, I am yours.’

‘I should heal you of your love, then!’

‘Is that what you want?’

‘I don’t want to trammel you.’

‘I don’t want you to die. And die you will when Leo or Loethar catches up with you. But if you have an aegis, no one can touch you. You don’t have to do anything with that aegis magic except use it to defend your life and those of the others you care about — Corbel de Vis for instance, or me. If you care a whit about me, trammel me. I never thought I’d hear myself beg for such a thing but, your highness, I’m urging you to use the magic bond for good, to save lives.’

She bit her lip. ‘I won’t eat your flesh.’

‘You have to!’

‘Wait. Listen to me now. I’ve been thinking. This great aegis magic you tell me was conceived hundreds of years ago.’

‘Correct,’ he said.

‘And so presumably you would consider the era that you live in far more advanced and civilised than then, right?’

‘Right. That was the time of Cormoron, First of the Valisars. My reading of history tells me he was something of a barbarian himself in the way he invaded and cowed the tribes of the region that he ultimately called Penraven.’

‘Good, so try and follow my line of thought here. I am imagining that this whole idea of the aegis was written down somewhere. And wherever it was first put down, it was recorded in a more ancient language. What if that language needs to be interpreted?’ He frowned at her. ‘Hear me out,’ she continued. ‘From what you’ve explained the key word regarding the aegis magic is that the Valisar must
consume
his or her aegis.’

‘Or any aegis,’ Kilt corrected.

‘But they must be consumed. Am I right, that’s the term?’

‘Yes,’ he said, looking bewildered.

She smiled ferociously. ‘Kilt, the word consume doesn’t just mean to eat. It can mean destroy, as a fire might consume all in its path. And it can mean to spend … as, as … ’ She searched for the right comparison. ‘As in consuming all one’s money in worthless goods.’

He blinked.

‘And it can mean to devour … as in to eat or drink — but it could also mean to be engrossed,’ she said, almost lecturing him. ‘As in you and I are so consumed by each other that we forgot the time. To consume can mean all of those things but it can also mean to absorb,’ she said, slowly, clearly, as though holding his hand and leading him down a path. ‘Will you accept that?’

He considered her premise. ‘To absorb?’ She nodded and he echoed her gesture. ‘Yes, absolutely it could mean that, but I don’t see how this relates to —’

‘Hell, men are dunderheads sometimes. Think, Kilt. How else can I consume you if I don’t eat or destroy or devour you?’

He shook his head, lost.

She gave a groan. ‘All right, make me say it, then!’ She turned away and leaned against the nearby tree. ‘If you made love to me, I would not only take your living flesh inside me but if we do it right,’ she said, turning back, cheeks flushed with embarrassment, ‘then you would leave behind a part of yourself that I would absorb … that I would consume into my body.’

‘My seed,’ he said, enlightenment dawning.

She smiled. ‘Yes.’

His gaze snapped back to hers and he kissed her hard. ‘Amazing, just amazing! You are easily the cleverest and most cunning of all the Valisars. I think you’ve just found the secret to outwitting their own clever magic!’

She shrugged. ‘It’s just a theory.’

‘It has to work. It has to. There is nothing in anything I’ve read about my aegis magic that specifies I have to be eaten. The word is consumed and you’re so right, it’s open to interpretation. Perhaps the devouring of an aegis by gorging on it was always a poor interpretation. Genevieve, you’re incredible.’

She grinned and there was a wicked sparkle in her eyes now. ‘I just didn’t think it was worth wasting that,’ she said, looking down and pointing.

His laughter echoed around the orchard.

27
 

Perl slumped in a corner, motionless. She hadn’t spoken since the trammelling and everyone had wisely left her alone, even as they had tested the magic.

‘Protect me, Perl!’ Leo had commanded. She made no sound, didn’t even glance his way, but he nodded and beckoned to Reuth. ‘Now, Reuth. Come.’

Tentatively, then with more and more force, Reuth tried to stab the king. Leo had laughed the loudest of all when the blade slid away, time after time.

‘Now do you see, Marth?’ he raged, pacing the small hut, puffed like a mating raker bird, swelled with his importance and invincibility. ‘Now we have our king, we have our weapon, we have our means to simply break free of the shackles of the barbarians.’

‘Perl,’ Reuth tried. ‘You did it. And now we can be free.’

‘You maybe, Reuth, but not I. I am more of a prisoner than I have ever been previously,’ she said, her formerly distant gaze suddenly viciously focused.

Leo threw her an offhand look of disdain. ‘Stop bleating, Perl. This is war. And I need you.’

‘So much for the famed Valisar magic,’ she sneered.

Reuth looked at her, aghast. ‘He’s the king, Perl. Show some care.’

‘Why? What do you think he’s going to do to me? Hurt me? Kill me perhaps? Make my life miserable? He’s already done the worst he can and now I have to protect him anyway. So no, I don’t believe I have to show care at all towards our merciful Valisar king!’ She spat on the ground. ‘You have no magic to speak of of your own and if I wasn’t your true aegis, I could have evaded you entirely but not the others.’

Reuth, still looking shocked, blinked. ‘Others?’

‘Loethar and the halfwit child,’ Perl said matter of factly.

‘Be quiet!’ Leo warned, taking more notice of Perl now.

But Reuth couldn’t let it go now. ‘Loethar isn’t Valisar.’

‘Isn’t he?’ Perl asked, looking around at everyone. ‘Why do you think he’s trying to shut me up?’ she said, nodding at Leo with her own measure of disdain. ‘Loethar
is
Valisar, you poor fools. Look at him, look how angry I’ve made him.’ She laughed, genuine delight creasing her face. Reuth had never seen her so animated.

It was Marth who was most intrigued, though. His face had grown heavy with concern. ‘How do you know this, Perl? Er, no,’ he said at Leo’s attempt to interrupt. ‘I need to hear this. I told you, while you may be Penraven’s heir, you are not my king. My king is dead. And while I am loyal to the Set and thus the Valisars, I will still satisfy myself.’

Leo’s scowl intensified. ‘So what if he’s Valisar. He’s not the rightful crown bearer. I am!’

Reuth gasped, genuinely shocked.

‘You knew?’ Marth asked, sounding angry and confused.

‘He’s a bastard son. Darros must have idly cast his wild seed on the plains and promptly forgot about the bitch he lay with.’

‘The bitch being Dara Negev, presumably?’

Leo shrugged. ‘She deserves no title but to be remembered as the old whore who treated my mother — your queen, Reuth,’ he said, pointing an accusing finger at her, ‘like scum. My mother didn’t have to steal a throne, she didn’t even need a Valisar
marriage; she was a royal in her own right!’ His voice broke with the emotion fuelling his rage.

Reuth nodded. ‘We all understand how you feel, majesty. But you are relying on us to win you the throne. The least you can do for us is honesty. You should have told us the truth about Loethar.’

Marth still looked dumbfounded. ‘He’s Valisar. How can we be sure?’

‘The magic doesn’t lie,’ Perl snarled. ‘I know, I live with it. When I was taken to the palace, we were led to some rooms in a far wing and we saw the man that I later learned was the self-proclaimed emperor cross one of the courtyards. My reaction was instant.’

‘You swooned, that’s right,’ Reuth said, wonder in her voice as she recalled the memory of many anni previous. ‘Hedray and I helped you.’

Perl nodded. ‘If it was just one of them I might have caught my reaction in time but not two of them.’ She smiled maliciously at Leo. ‘Truth time, your majesty,’ she said, pronouncing his title in a tone loaded with derision.

Leo regarded the stares of enquiry and shrugged. ‘Then she knew long before I ever did.’

‘What?’ Marth demanded. ‘What is Perl alluding to?’

‘She’s enjoying her knowledge that my brother, Piven, who we all believed was adopted, is in fact a blood brother.’

‘Clovis was right,’ Reuth said, bewildered. ‘I never believed him but Clovis was right. He knew that lad from the south was the prince.’

‘Well, Reuth, I was going to spare you this but since we’re on this pathway of honesty now you might as well hear it all. It was Piven, my true Valisar brother, who slaughtered your husband, Clovis.’

The blood drained from Reuth’s face. ‘What?’ she whispered.

‘Clovis was unarmed, Reuth. He simply wanted to talk to Piven. And here’s another truth for you all: Piven is no longer the
halfwit everyone believes him to be. He is now whole and what’s more he’s on a killing spree. He has his aegis and he is crazed with his new-found power, hellbent on revenge.’

‘Revenge?’ Marth asked, his face a story of his own series of shocks.

‘Yes, revenge on Loethar, revenge on me, revenge on anyone who stands between him and the throne of Penraven. He has simply replaced one form of madness with another. And now he has the capacity to kill at will whomever he chooses.’

‘So do you,’ Perl snarled.

‘I am rational, Perl. I am returning order to Penraven and ultimately the Set. General Marth here will be able to reinstate the royal bloodline of Barronel — I will help him to do just that. My intention as king is to return all the realms to their rightful royals. I do not want to rule an empire.’

Marth sighed. ‘Well said, majesty. Despite the shock, I think we know we’re doing the right thing. Perl, it is done now. I am sorry for your suffering but it was for the greater good, not just for the Vested or the royals but for all the people of the Set.’

‘And with Marth and Reuth as my witness,’ Leo said, ‘I give you my word that I will do everything I can to make your life pleasant. You may live as far away from me as you can stand; you will have all the comforts and wealth that you desire, or don’t … as you wish. You will lead your own life, Perl, as much as the magic will permit. I will make no further demands upon you once we have won back the throne. Do you all hear me?’

Reuth nodded, and saw that Marth did too. ‘We hear you,’ they repeated.

Reuth touched Perl, looking amazed by her clean scalp; the birthmark that anointed her as an aegis had disappeared with the trammelling. ‘He’s being fair. Can’t you move past your despair and be optimistic; help us to help yourself?’

Perl had been jingling her runestones in her pocket and now she cast them on the table nearby. ‘I will consult the stones.’

Reuth sighed and looked up at the others, shaking her head. ‘So what now? We know you are invincible, Leo, but how do we now take on the barbarian army? Perl can presumably protect some of us but what can a few of us achieve? We are still vulnerable to their arrows, their swords, their numbers.’

‘How many people are in the camp here?’ Leo asked.

Marth shrugged. ‘Around four hundred Vested, including children and infirm.’

‘So perhaps two hundred and fifty useful bodies?’

‘I’d say that, yes,’ Marth agreed.

‘None of them fighters,’ Reuth qualified, glaring at Marth. ‘Farmers, bootmakers, tanners, bakers … They can’t wield swords and wouldn’t anyway.’

‘Think about the magic that is here, though,’ Leo tried. ‘Think hard. Does anyone have a magic that we can use against the barbarians?’

Reuth shook her head. ‘Unless it hasn’t been declared or discovered, the most intriguing is someone like Tolt who can correctly predict events. The rest is all practical but harmless magic like weather reading, water divination.’

Perl smirked. ‘I can assure you that half of the people here probably possess more interesting powers but won’t admit it. I have seen it in the stones.’

‘Why haven’t you ever said anything?’ Reuth asked.

Perl touched her damaged ear. ‘Because people are not good to one another if they know too much.’ She stared at one of the stones she’d picked up, blood from her fingers wetting it, and suddenly laughed mirthlessly. ‘The solution is staring at us.’

‘What did you just see?’ Reuth said, grabbing the pebble from her friend’s hand. ‘Tell us.’

Perl was still smiling. She shook her head. ‘Why should I?’

‘What do you want?’ Leo asked, his voice betraying his frustration with her.

She shrugged. ‘What every girl wants I suppose.’

Everyone looked at her slightly befuddled. And then Reuth scoffed. ‘Perl, you’ve never shown any interest at
all,’
she claimed, staring around at the men.

Perl’s expression became uncharacteristically petulant. ‘Well, maybe now I do. Why shouldn’t I ask for this? I’m giving my life for it anyway. Who deserves it more?’

‘What in Lo’s name does she want?’ Leo asked. ‘If you have a solution for how to make us all safe, Perl, please share it with us. I will grant you now whatever you want, if it’s within my power.’

She laughed and clapped her hands. ‘Oh, it’s within your power, your majesty,’ she said, again adding a snide tone to the royal title. ‘Where is Father Cloony?’

‘Father Cloony?’ Marth repeated.

Leo looked between them in consternation. ‘Why do we need a priest?’

‘So we can be married immediately, majesty. I’m going to be Queen Perl as of today,’ she declared. ‘And then you will be as trapped as I am,’ she snarled.

Evie sucked in a helplessly deep breath and then even though she didn’t mean it to happen, a small ecstatic shriek escaped her. Kilt Faris clung to her, rigid. She felt the pulse within her and forcing her eyes open she saw her lover grit his teeth as he began to groan. It was partly the pleasure of his release, she knew, but mostly terror of the final imprisonment as she sensed a pain rip through him and the bonding process begin.

‘It’s happening,’ Kilt murmured, still in the midst of his ecstasy but plummeting fast into the trammelling.

And then she too was lost. She could feel her heart pound and was sure she could feel his heart hammering above her chest. They clung to each other as Evie heard strange words enter her mind and without any control she began to recite them in a language she didn’t recognise. Meanwhile, Kilt, his mouth pulled open now in a silent scream that looked nothing akin to pleasure,
held her tight, and then tighter still until she was sure she could no longer tell their bodies apart; they felt as one.

And as one they became, their ardour spent as their connection to one another was no longer physical but mental and indeed spiritual.

‘That’s like no other finish with a woman I’ve ever experienced,’ his voice murmured, muffled, near her neck. ‘Was it good for you too?’

She laughed helplessly despite the gravity of their situation. She knew also that even though she was now magically shackled to Faris, he would be very hard not to love. His charm, his manner, his ability to amuse her even in dire circumstances only made her feel even more drawn to him.

‘Genevieve, I know you’re new to this but you’re not meant to laugh,’ he groaned, reluctantly withdrawing from her. ‘You’re meant to now be telling me that I am the best lover you know.’

Her amusement increased. ‘You’re the only lover I know.’

‘We shall be keeping it that way,’ he said. Then he lowered his head to kiss her tenderly again. ‘I am entirely yours now … body, mind, soul,’ he added, his arch tone gone.

‘Kilt, I can hear your heartbeat,’ she whispered, wondering if his pain was over.

‘And I can feel you, without having to touch you, although touching you is a very special bonus to this whole aegis arrangement.’

She grinned again, feeling like a loon. ‘I’m not using any healing power. Has the pain stopped?’

He nodded. ‘Gone.’

Evie hugged him. ‘Suddenly coming here doesn’t feel so bad.’

‘I hate to spoil our tender moment,’ he said reluctantly. ‘We should be languishing in a tangle of naked limbs instead of partly dressed and in quite such a hurry, but I think we do need to get back.’

‘Yes, yes, of course,’ she replied, hurrying to straighten her clothes. ‘All these fasteners,’ she complained and then looked at him, imagining how to explain buttons, let alone zips. And then she let it go; easily, let everything about her former life go. Suddenly all that mattered was Kilt; she didn’t care at all about being Valisar or claiming thrones or righting the way this world should be. She was in love, she realised, and she felt deep within herself a private glow at finally giving up something she had always thought precious and had begun to wonder whether she would ever relinquish.

‘I should tell you I think we were seen,’ Kilt admitted sheepishly.

‘Who?’ she said, spinning around. ‘Corbel?’

‘No, another fellow. He doesn’t realise I glimpsed him.’ He shrugged. ‘Habit,’ he admitted, ‘ever cautious. Anyway, it wasn’t de Vis but neither was it my friend, Jewd.’

‘Barro probably,’ she said. ‘He’s travelling with us. How much did he see?’

‘Only us disappearing into the orchard.’

‘Then he can’t tell Corbel anything.’

‘But we must,’ he warned. ‘He deserves that much.’

‘I plan to, but, Kilt, after what you’ve said about Corbel, can you let me tell him, please?’

He nodded. ‘It’s not something I relish telling any man, so go ahead. But it has to be done immediately.’

She nodded. ‘How do you feel?’ she asked, unable to help the doctor in her.

‘I don’t think any aegis could ever feel as fortunate as I do.’

She nodded gravely. ‘Me too; I feel very lucky. I’m so glad Loethar didn’t get you.’

‘Indeed. He doesn’t have such great tits!’

Princess Genevieve’s delighted laughter filled the orchard.

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