Queen of the Darkness (38 page)

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Authors: Anne Bishop

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Epic

BOOK: Queen of the Darkness
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3 / Kaeleer

The Green-Jeweled Eyrien Warlord Prince looked upon the carnage with satisfaction. This Gate was now secured for the Dark Priestess’s use. She had already selected the sixty pale-skinned, fair-haired people who would replace the ones he and his men had just slaughtered—people she had acquired at the last couple of service fairs. As long as the village looked inhabited and the people appeared to be going about their usual business, he doubted anyone would give any of them a second look. And if a visitor
should
know the village well enough to realize that the people were all strangers, what was one more corpse?

He turned as the Warlord who was his second-in-command approached. ”Did that old bitch Priestess send the message?”

The Warlord nodded. ”Sent to Lord Morton, the Glacian Queen’s cousin and First Escort.”

”And he usually responds to those messages?”

”Yes. And he usually comes alone.”

”Then we’d better figure on having company soon. Assign five men with longbows to take up a position behind the landing web.”

The Warlord studied the carnage. ”If Morton sees this, he might just catch the Winds again and go back to report.”

”Then I’ll just have to make sure I provide a strong enough lure to get him off the landing web but still within easy range of the bowmen,” the Warlord Prince said. ”The old Priestess is dead?”

”Yes, Prince.”

He heard a faint, pain-filled cry. ”And the young Priestess?”

The Warlord smiled viciously. ”She’s getting the appropriate reward for betraying her own people.”

4 / Kaeleer

Daemon followed Khardeen into the house. ”It was kind of you to invite me to dinner.”

”Kindness has nothing to do with it,” Khary replied.

”There’s no sense having you rattle around by yourself while you’re waiting for Jaenelle.”

He’d accompanied her for much of the Spring visit to the Kaeleer Territories, but when it came time to visit the kindred, she had gently but firmly suggested that he go on to Scelt, where she would meet him.

They would spend a few days here before visiting the rest of the Territories on this side of the Realm.

”Well, you didn’t have to give up an afternoon to show me around Maghre. I could have wandered about the village by myself.”

”That wasn’t kindness either,” Khary said after requesting coffee and cakes. He settled into a comfortable chair by the fire. ”It got me out of the house. As for dinner, it’ll be a pleasure talking to someone who isn’t going to snarl at me because of a queasy stomach.”

”Is Morghann feeling all right otherwise?” Daemon asked, taking the other chair.

”Oh, she’s doing fine for a dark-Jeweled witch in the early stages of pregnancy. Or so Maeve tells me often enough.” Khary’s smile was a bit rueful.

”But a Territory Queen who’s suddenly restricted to basic Craft while she carries a babe is not a Lady with a smooth temper.”

”Since you both had to stop drinking the contraceptive brew for this to happen, you’re not entirely to blame,” Daemon said with a smile.

”Ah, but I’m not the one who loses my breakfast. That seems to make a difference. And there are other—frustrations—for her at the moment. You didn’t hear the tussle this morning? I’m surprised since your house is barely a half mile from ours. I was sure all of Maghre heard her shouting this morning.”

”At you?”

”No, thank the Darkness. At Sundancer.” After thanking the maid who brought the tray, Khary poured the coffee. ”Morghann wanted to go riding this morning. Maeve, who’s the Healer in Maghre, had said it was fine.
Jaenelle
had said it was fine as long as Morghann felt well enough.”

”But?” Daemon said, the coffee cup halfway to his lips.

”Sundancer didn’t think it was fine. He said that since mares in foal weren’t ridden, he didn’t think a human mare in foal should ride.”

”Oh, dear,” Daemon said—and then laughed. ”No wonder you wanted to get out of the house.”

The door opened. Morghann scowled at the tray, then at Khary. But she smiled at Daemon.

Setting his cup down, he rose to give her a kiss. In the months since he’d come to Kaeleer, he’d learned the value of these little gestures of affection—and he’d learned to take pleasure in them.

Khary, he noticed with some amusement and a good dollop of sympathy, had also risen but had wisely not tried to approach his wife.

A maid appeared at the door. ”Would you be wanting a cup of that herbal tea Maeve made up for you, Lady Morghann?”

”I suppose,” Morghann growled.

Giving Khary a quick glance, Daemon put on his best smile. ”Darling,” he said to Morghann, ”I’m so glad you joined us.”

”Why?” Morghann said darkly as she took a seat.

”Because Jaenelle’s birthday is in a couple of months, and I wanted your advice about a gift.”

As they discussed ideas, Morghann became involved enough not to notice she was drinking a Healer’s tea instead of coffee. She even nibbled a little piece of nutcake— which meant the men could have some without having the tray dumped over their heads.

At the end of an hour, Morghann rose. ”I have some correspondence to take care of. I’ll see you at dinner?”

”I look forward to it,” Daemon replied.

She kissed his cheek—and then gave Khary a more generous kiss.

Khary waited a minute after the door had closed behind her. He lifted his coffee cup in a salute. ”That was very well done, Prince Sadi. My thanks.”

Daemon lifted his cup in response. ”It was my pleasure, Lord Khardeen.”

5 / Kaeleer

Morton took a couple of steps away from the landing web and froze, unable to take his eyes off the bodies lying in the snow.

What in the name of Hell had happened?

He felt a mild hum from his Ring of Honor, almost like a question. That snapped him out of his shock enough to create an Opal shield. He almost activated the shield in the Ring, then hesitated. That would summon the other boyos—and alarm Karla. He didn’t want to do either of those things. Not yet.

He tried probing the area, but didn’t pick up anything that would lead him to believe he was in danger.

But he
did
sense the presence of several living people.

His first reaction was to rush forward to help the survivors. Then his training kicked in. Whatever had happened here was more than he could handle alone. And now that he’d been here for a minute, something more than the slaughter felt
wrong
about this place.

He took a step back, intending to catch the Winds, head for the nearest village, and bring back help.

As he took another step back, an Eyrien came around the corner of a building and saw him.

”Lord Morton?” the Eyrien called.

Morton didn’t recognize the Green-Jeweled Warlord Prince. He tensed, ready to catch the Winds and run.

”Lord Morton!” The Eyrien raised a hand and hurried toward him. ”Thank the Darkness, you got Yaslana’s message!”

That name was enough to catapult Morton a few feet toward the Eyrien. ”What happened here?”

”We’re not sure,” the Eyrien answered, stopping a few feet away. ”Yaslana found tracks heading away from the Dark Altar. He took some of the men and followed them.” He looked over Morton’s shoulder, his face stamped with concern. ”Didn’t you bring any Healers?”

”No, I—”

It happened too fast. A blast of the Eyrien’s Green-Jeweled power shattered his Opal shield at the same moment three arrows pierced his body. The Ebony shield in Jaenelle’s Ring of Honor snapped up around him. Two more arrows hit the shield and turned to dust.

He used Craft to remain standing and cursed himself for a thrice-times fool for not activating the shield in the first place. But there was nothing they could do to him now, not even stop him from walking or crawling back to the landing web and riding the Winds away from there. And the wounds, while painful, weren’t that serious. He had an arrow in each leg and one in the left shoulder, but it was high enough ...

He felt a deadly cold filling in his limbs and knew what it had to be. Poison on the arrow tips. But how virulent a poison?

He saw the answer in the Eyrien’s cruel smile.

He fell to his knees. No time to give all the warnings he needed to give. No time. So he focused on sending a warning to the person who had always mattered the most to him.

As the body’s death closed in on him, he gathered his strength and sent one word.
KARLA!

6 / Kaeleer

Karla sat at her dressing table, one hand braced on the table, the other pressed against her abdomen.

The cramps didn’t usually last this long, and they weren’t usually this painful.

”Here you are,” Ulka said sympathetically, setting a steaming mug on the dressing table. ”This moontime brew will make you feel different in no time.”

”Thanks, Ulka,” Karla murmured. She had accepted Ulka into her Third Circle for the same reason she had accepted other witches from Glacia’s aristo families—to placate them after she had exiled her uncle, Hobart. And while she didn’t personally like Ulka, she had to admit the woman had been a solicitous companion this winter, fussing a little too much over the minor illnesses but having a good instinct of when to gossip and when to stay quiet.

As soon as the brew cooled enough, Karla took a large swallow. Making a disgusted face, she set the mug down. The brew had an odd, rancid taste. Hell’s fire, had some of the herbs gotten moldy or gone bad somehow? Then again, a lot of things hadn’t tasted quite right to her all winter. Or maybe she’d just gotten spoiled by the delicious-tasting brews Jaenelle made. It didn’t matter how it tasted. It wasn’t going to ease the pain if it sat in the cup.

As she reached for the mug again, she looked in the mirror. A chill ran through her when she saw the watchful anticipation in Ulka’s eyes. ”You poisoned it, didn’t you?” Karla said flatly.

”Yes,” Ulka said, sounding smug and pleased.

Karla felt her body sluggishly gathering itself to fight off the poison. Because she was a Black Widow, she had a stronger tolerance for poisons than other people would have, but even a Black Widow could succumb to a poison her body couldn’t recognize or tolerate.

As she stared at the other woman’s reflection, she finally knew. All the minor illnesses, all the foods that had tasted a little off. And Ulka always there, being so helpful, acting so concerned. ”You’ve slipped mild poisons into a lot of things this winter.”

”Yes.”

Poisons which had weakened her body but never made her ill enough to become suspicious—despite having been warned of her own death in the tangled web she’d created last fall. Oh, she’d been careful.

She knew too much about poisons not to be. The fact that she hadn’t been able to detect the poisons meant that whatever plants had been used weren’t native to Glacia. She would have recognized one of
those
instantly, no matter how it was disguised.

With effort, Karla got to her feet. One moment her legs were full of fiery spikes, the next they were numb. She flooded her body with her Gray strength, accepting the pain her own power caused during her moontime in order to fight the poison.

As one staggering wave of pain ripped through her, she felt the Ebony shield in the ring Jaenelle had given her surround her.

”Why?” Karla asked. How could she have misjudged this bitch so badly? What had she missed?

Ulka pouted. ”I thought I would be an important Lady in your court. I should have been in your First Circle, not the
Third.

”A witch who would poison her Queen isn’t suitable to serve in the First Circle,” Karla said dryly. ”It’s a question of loyalty.”

”I
was
loyal,” Ulka snapped. ”But being loyal to you didn’t get me anywhere. And then I got a better offer. Once you’re gone and Lord Hobart controls Glacia again, I
will
be an important Lady.”

”All you’ll be is some man’s whore,” Karla said flatly.

Ulka’s face became ugly. ”And you’ll be dead! And don’t think they won’t finish the kill to make sure they’re rid of
all
of you!”

The ring Jaenelle had given her produced a sharp, warning tingle seconds before Morton’s warning cry filled her mind.

KARLA!

Morton?
Morton!

Nothing. An emptiness where someone had been for as long as she could remember.

Another kind of cold filled Karla—a cold that fed her body, gave her strength. ”You killed Morton,” she said too quietly.


I
didn’t,” Ulka replied. ”But he’s dead by now.”

The bladed Eyrien stick Lucivar had given her was in her hands and whistling through the air before Ulka had time to realize the danger. The blades, honed to a killing edge, swept through Ulka’s leg bones as easily as they swept through the woman’s wool dress.

Blood gushed. Ulka fell, screaming.

Karla staggered, braced herself. She couldn’t use her body this way and fight the poison long enough for

...

For what? With Morton dead, who would be able to reach her fast enough? No matter. She would fight to live for as long as she could. And she had more power at her disposal than her enemies had imagined since she didn’t have to use her Gray Jewels to shield herself.

Looking down at Ulka, Karla raised the bladed stick. ”Well, bitch, I may not be able to finish the kill, but I can make damn sure you’re of no use to anyone when you become demon-dead.”

She cut off Ulka’s hands, then her head. The last stroke tore through the belly and severed the spine.

Karla staggered back a few steps, away from the growing pool of blood. Sinking to the floor, she carefully stretched out, her right arm wrapped around her belly, her left hand clamped around the bladed stick.

She had seen her own death in her tangled web, and she’d done what she could to change that part of the vision. But if she had to die now, she would accept it.

Dark power washed over her, warming icy limbs. She felt a tendril of power wrap around her and recognized a healing thread helping her fight against the poison.

Cradled by Jaenelle’s strength, she turned inward to concentrate on the battlefield her body had become.

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