Read The Black Prince: Part I Online
Authors: P. J. Fox
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Horror, #Dark Fantasy, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Historical, #Sword & Sorcery
He’d arrested several servitors, having Callas rip them from their beds in the dead of night. Come morning they were simply…missing. He let those remaining do the rest of his work for him, speculating on where they might have gone. The bulk of rumor held that they’d been taken down into the dungeons, to be tortured. That they were there still.
In truth, Callas had, again on Tristan’s orders, taken them into the forest and cut their heads from their shoulders. Their bodies were left for the animals. They were too dangerous to be left alive, even in the dungeons.
And Tristan would have liked to believe that that purge had eradicated Maeve’s web of traitors.
But he couldn’t be certain.
He, of course, gave the impression of thinking Eloise innocent. To Asher, he said nothing. Such a secret was too great of a burden for a child to bear. Even a child so precocious as Asher. Perhaps especially for such.
And so he’d poisoned Eloise at dinner, using strychnine because it was the most painful agent he could devise. As she convulsed, their eyes met. He watched her calmly over the rim of his cup as he sipped his wine. He said nothing. But she knew. He stared into her eyes as she died and saw that she knew.
Strychnine was an interesting poison, the convulsions progressing within the body until the spine arched continually. Eloise’s finally gave with a loud
snap
. She twitched for another hour or so after that, but at length she was still. Tristan didn’t wait for her to finally expire before continuing his meal. Rather, he enjoyed another portion of venison while the show continued. And it was a show. A lovely show, by a lovely woman.
A fitting end for both.
The next morning he’d presented Asher with George, his longed-for horse.
They’d both been…taken aback to meet Isla. Nothing of her was anything Tristan expected from his world. She was, indeed, a lodestar: an ever-bright beacon in darkness, the means by which men found their way home. He…wasn’t capable of love, but she was the first creature he’d ever met, who made him see that as a limitation. Even, perhaps, to regret the lack of feelings he’d rejected as merely an invitation to weakness long ago.
But Asher was capable of love, and Asher loved Isla. The boy was desperately in need of a mother, something he himself seemed to recognize. And he’d found—no, chosen—that mother in Isla. The feeling, Tristan knew, was mutual. A more natural mother than Isla Tristan had never met. He was…gratified by their connection.
He paused, studying his surroundings.
He was near his destination now.
Somewhere, an owl screeched.
The moon overhead was bright, but Tristan blended into the depthless black of the shadows. His cloak was merely one more round, organic shape on the snow. Cast by the snow-heavy tree above, perhaps. The night was alive, but all of the denizens of the forest ignored him. They sensed no life force from him and thus he was no more significant to their comings and goings than a fallen log.
His other wives…there was no point in comparing them to Isla. Doing so would be as futile as comparing the warmth of a candle to that of the sun. And like the sun, Isla was no manmade creation to be snuffed out on a whim but a force of nature that commanded respect.
From the first moment he saw her, he’d known that he had to have her. His need…it was an ache deep within, leaving him restless. He’d watched her during that first dinner, unable to tear his eyes from her for more than a few seconds at a time. He hadn’t thought about the logistical problems this situation presented, hadn’t thought about much at all.
Only felt a new and strange hunger.
That she’d come to him, offered herself to him, seemed beyond belief. And yet losing himself in her eyes, he’d known that she was sincere. Her fear…was intoxicating. He’d wanted nothing more, in that moment, than to take her and make her his own.
She was fragile, so fragile, but she wasn’t timid. Was, indeed, the bravest creature he’d ever known. She knew what he was, or thought that she did. And yet she did not run.
He’d wanted to win her over. To make her feel a love that he could not return. And so he courted her.
Why, he couldn’t have said.
He couldn’t explain these strange and conflicting desires, even to himself.
The things he did for her, he’d never done for any other woman. His wives had been expedient, nothing more. His lovers, too, had served a single purpose. He was a man, with a man’s needs. But never had he envisioned himself finding a true partner.
Wanting
anything of the kind. Wanting to make her laugh, as he wanted to make Isla laugh. Wanting to see her smile. Wanting to know that when she smiled, she smiled for him. Wanting.
Merely wanting.
There had been no ritual with his other wives. No thought of one. Cariad, whom rumor at the time listed as a wife, had wanted it. But he hadn’t wanted her. And then, after Cariad, there had been no question. He’d felt no sense of possession toward them, as he did toward Isla almost from that first glance. When he’d seen her green eyes, and the defiant look flashing in them behind her calm mask, and forgotten he was engaged to her sister.
And now they were bonded.
Forever.
Isla had sacrificed more than she knew, in joining her life to his. A life outside of time, severed from the normal rhythms that dictated growth and decay. As the years stretched into decades, she’d outlive her friends. Outlive even Asher. As Tristan would. He could only hope that his companionship would be solace enough.
Isla was adapting well. The challenges before her were myriad and difficult, but he’d be there to guide her and help her as best as he could. She was…precious to him. He’d come as close as was perhaps possible for him to knowing true fear, immediately after the ritual. Whether performed correctly or no, there was always the chance that the recipient’s body wouldn’t be strong enough to withstand the strain.
Thus, the ultimate outcome was up to the Gods.
As with all sacrifices.
In time, they would truly come to think with one mind. The combination of the ring, and the ritual, was powerful. But he had to move slowly….
He’d learned about the true nature of the ring, and the spell it represented, through studying the accounts of the necromancer Barda. The man who’d, if not built Caer Addanc, then strengthened it into the stronghold it was. An evil man, who’d nonetheless loved a woman: Katrina, she of the blue eyes and flaxen hair. And ready smile, and tender disposition. A woman worthy of love, whose gifts of the spirit pierced even Barda’s cold heart.
Desires of the mind, and heart
, he’d told Isla,
that were neither easily explained nor understood
. He’d wanted his bride to understand him, as Tristan wanted Isla to understand him. The need—no, the craving for union transcended species. No one, even a demon, could live alone. And perhaps…perhaps the more evil the man, the more difficult his desires were to fathom, the more his life depended on that union.
If Tristan could be said to feel concern, his one true concern was that he’d do as Barda had done: push too far, too fast, and so lose everything. Barda had believed that Katrina would accept him, accept all of him, if she could only understand him. If she could see inside his mind and know that, despite his depravities, he valued her above all else. That, in his increasing degeneracy—and Barda was degenerate indeed—he truly did, as Tristan had told Isla, value her all the more. That her light, to him, shone ever bright in his darkness. Such had been more than apparent, from reading his writings.
Had Barda completed the second half of the ritual, Katrina would have survived her fall. But alas, he never did. Barda, robbed of his light, had wasted into a shadow of a man. A shadow capable of terrible, terrible things that Katrina, even had she returned within a few seasons, never would have recognized.
Tristan did feel some…he supposed empathy might be the correct word for Barda. He understood the man, at least. But Barda had also been a fool, not to realize that his lover’s nature was so different from his own. There were some things that, at least until she’d been given time to adjust, to…accept, should have been hidden.
As Tristan hid things from Isla.
Tristan’s principle vexation with Barda was that, as he had been such a fool, there was no opportunity for him to record the effects of the second half of the transformation. A process about which Tristan himself knew little. Even his studies in the East had revealed only the scantest of information.
He was working blind, which…concerned him.
Demons were naturally territorial, and what few existed on this plane gave each other a wide berth. Unless they intended to fight for another demon’s land, or possessions. Tristan, in contemplating his own shortcomings, had reason to wish for the first time that this was not so. He’d suffer the presence of another, if it meant securing Isla’s health.
Desires of the mind, and heart…Tristan had done the one thing that Barda had not, in allowing Isla the chance to leave. Oh, Tristan doubted that Barda had held Katrina hostage. Although he must surely have been tempted to do so, as Tristan was tempted to tie Isla to him from that first night. But he’d known that she could never survive what was coming—not intact—if she wasn’t fully committed.
And he…loved her, he supposed, enough to let her go.
That once, at least.
He’d asked himself, in the months since, whether he would have indeed possessed the courage to uphold his word. He’d felt nothing so much as…in human terms he would have coined it relief when she’d accepted him. A relief so profound it almost brought him to his knees.
He let his mind open, traveling along their bond.
He could block her out, and did, but she remained open to him at all times. She was sitting in the upstairs gallery, curled up before the fire in a mountain of pillows, chatting with Greta as she sipped mulled wine. Greta was telling her a story, which made Isla laugh. Greta had, Tristan gathered, been the one to fetch the throw that warmed her. Dire wolf fur, as white as the snow outside. Isla’s feelings toward Greta, as she appreciated the warmth, were equally warm. Mixed with friendship and gratitude. Gratitude that Greta should be so accepting. That she should be there, to share this moment.
Isla laughed, sending another burst of sunlight through the bond. For that was what it felt like, to Tristan: sunlight. He had no other word to describe the sensation, which was reminiscent of summer days and flower-filled fields. That reminded him of his youth, when the world was still simple and pure.
She poured more wine for Greta, smiling at her friend as the fire crackled. They had many such nights as these, while Tristan was occupied with affairs of state. He’d have liked to take Greta’s place, on this night as on all the others, but such personal indulgences were impossible.
Still, he had to forcibly restrain himself from disemboweling the girl, feeling as he did like she was stealing Isla from him.
He closed his eyes, and when he opened them again, he was once again alone in the snow. Snow that seemed colder now. Snow lit only by an uncaring moon.
He continued on.
T
he woman he was to meet had arrived before him.
He paused at the edge of the clearing, allowing his boot to crunch through the thin crust of ice over the snow so that she’d hear him. She, who thought herself so attuned. She turned, her eyes meeting his. She was flustered, but she covered that quickly. A veil of calm descended and, he supposed, she imagined that he’d never seen the earlier expression.
She wanted to impress him, that much was obvious. Her demeanor was one of straight-backed purpose, as though she were the master and he the supplicant. She’d worn a wool cloak that dragged in the snow, the edges crusted in ice. Black, like the shift beneath it. She’d pulled the hood up over her head. He could see just the merest hint of red curls. Under different circumstances, she might have been beautiful. Her eyes were hard.
“You’re late.”
He made no response.
She sniffed.
He waited.
She turned, scanning the clearing, as though waiting for someone else to appear. At long length, she spoke again. “I did the ritual.” Her manner of speaking was coarse. Too abrupt, her words too clipped. She acted, for all the world, like a dissatisfied customer at a market stall. “Now I want my reward.”
“Indeed.” Tristan still hadn’t moved. His own cloak hung about him in still folds, like those carved from marble, despite the wind gusts. He waited.
“Well?”
He arched an eyebrow. She had, in fact, performed a ritual. A completely useless one, meant to summon one of the greater demons in the church cannon. A demon that did not, at least by that name, exist. The church acknowledged the existence of demons although most educated men, priest and penitent alike, flatly rejected the supernatural. But what the church taught was, for the most part, wrong. So, Tristan supposed, those educated men were—after their own fashion—correct.
A demon wasn’t good. It wasn’t evil. It simply was. Humanity’s various moral constructs had no bearing on its existence. To call it “evil” simply because it failed to conform to the narrative of the church was as foolish as calling a wolf evil for killing a deer. But try explaining that to men like Father Justin, men who saw themselves as the center of the universe and who thus rejected anything that didn’t fit neatly within their own moral framework. The framework that kept them in power.