The Ice Queen (Dark Queens Book 3) (17 page)

Read The Ice Queen (Dark Queens Book 3) Online

Authors: Jovee Winters

Tags: #Kingdom Series, #the ice queen, #centaur romance, #the snow queen, #sexy fairy tales

BOOK: The Ice Queen (Dark Queens Book 3)
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Goddess did he ever.

Watching Luminesa light up for him. Watching as her skin glimmered with her snowy iridescence and her body moved in wave-like motion... she was stunning.

“Walk,” she pleaded brokenly, “walk.”

For a moment he frowned, confused by what she meant. “You want me to walk?”

She didn’t answer, merely wrapped her arms tight around his shoulders and rubbed harder, her grunts were now growing louder, more animalistic. Anyone could hear her.

Anyone

Gods, the children!

Glancing up, Alador couldn’t believe he’d forgotten all about the children. The colts of his herd were used to the inherent sexual nature of their kind, they thought nothing of seeing a stallion and mare coming together. But humans raised their children differently.

Spotting the faint colors of the children’s jackets way up in the distance, he wanted to shout with joy. They were still playing and safe.

“My queen, create a shield of snow around us so that the children cannot see what we’re about.”

Gulping, she opened dazed, liquid bright eyes back at him, nodded almost drunkenly, and immediately a blast of arctic winds full of snow encapsulated them.

Alador couldn’t help but tremble, and not from need this time, but the impossible cold that invaded his bones. Luminesa however was completely immune to it.

He’d not last long in this chill, but at least it helped to kill the fog of lust in his mind. For now he could help her reach her climax.

Pushing off the ground, he walked in a slow and steady canter. His movements felt stiff and frozen, but Luminesa hadn’t relented in her speed and thrusts.

Alador moved in such a way so that each step caused a jolt of muscle to move between her legs. She gasped, trembling violently.

“Oh, Alador, oh gods,” she muttered incoherently and he grinned, strangely proud that he’d caused her to lose her control in this way.

That pride helped him to pick up his speed just a little, ignore the biting cold, and give intermittent hops to help increase the pressure between her thighs.

After the fourth hop she froze—her arms banding so tight across his windpipe that he couldn’t breathe beneath her crushing power. Her entire body stiffened up.

Twisting, so that he could better look at her, he watched as the orgasm consumed her. Her entire body vibrated as she bit down on her molars. Her fingers dug painfully into his biceps, her nails gouged deep grooves in his frozen flesh.

Her orgasm couldn’t have lasted more than a few seconds, but it was as though time stood still for him. He drank her up with his eyes, fascinated by the play of colors rolling across her now lambent skin full of frosty blues and pristine, glittering white.

Gradually her nails digging into his arms relaxed and her stiff body crumpled deeply into him. His lips twitched as he became aware of her own growing awareness.

The way her eyes relaxed first, then her mouth grew lax, her shoulders sagged, her breathing deepened, until finally...she blinked up at him with her soul-deep blue eyes.

“Oh my gods,” she whispered after a tense minute of watching him. “Did I really do what I think I just did?”

Her cheeks blazed scarlet with a slight tint of blue.

And he couldn’t help but chuckle, rubbing his finger along her petal-soft cheek as she buried her face against him.

“Stop laughing,” she squeezed out, even as he heard her own pent-up laughter. “I’m completely mortified, I have no idea what came over me.”

Alador had the most painful erection of his life, he was stiff, aching, but also deliriously happy. The queen—his queen—wanted him as forcefully as he ached for her.

Trembling from the cold, very aware of it now that she’d finished what she’d started, he said, “My love, turn off the cold.”

Immediately the snow ceased. The air warmed by several degrees, comfortable enough for him to begin to thaw out somewhat. He glanced up to where he’d seen the children last, relieved to note that they were still there and appearing to play happily between themselves.

The little snow bees that’d crowned her head now flew around his own, their furry, white bodies rubbing like velvet against the sides of his face, as though they too were now deliriously happy.

“Look at me, Luminesa,” he commanded.

She looked up, her long, frost-tipped black lashes blinked slowly back at him. Alador brushed his thumb along her jaw-line.

“You need never be ashamed of what we’ve done.”

Her cheeks blazed a deeper scarlet. “You must think me a—”

Placing his finger against her lips, he shook his head and said, “I think you’re the most bewitching female I’ve ever met. Centauress or human alike. You fascinate me, woman, and that’s all there is to it.”

The curling of her smile was like the slow rise of the sun on a cool, winter morning.

She kissed the palm of his hand; the touch of it speared him straight through the heart. Goddess what was he doing allowing this madness to continue on with her? Once they left this forgotten realm of ice she’d return to her world and he to his, pairings such as theirs were frowned upon, dalliances only ever allowed in secrecy and even then were highly discouraged.

Chester had been driven from the herd because of the path he’d chosen.

Alador was about to suggest they return back for the children when a scream rent the air, startling birds from trees with squawking cries.

“The children,” Luminesa cried.

“Hang on,” he ordered.

She wrapped her arms around Alador’s shoulders tightly, and he ran. Reaching the distant hill in just moments. His heart hammered in his chest at the first sight of crimson blood staining the pristine white of snow.

Baatha’s shrill scream rent the air. Immediately Alador felt the pain of Luminesa’s transformation from flesh to ice.

“Baatha to me,” she cried, holding out her ice-blue arm to him.

The bird landed in seconds, unruffled by Alador’s speed.

But the blood that’d burned like a beacon suddenly vanished, disappeared, along with any other traces of the children. There were no footprints to follow, no trail to track, there had been blood and prints, and now there were none.

Alador stopped running, turning in a circle as he frantically searched for the children.

“Baatha, you’re bleeding!” Luminesa cried, causing Alador to glance back at them.

She was right. The snow-white falcon’s feathers were matted and stained dark red with blood upon his chest. His breathing was heavy and his tawny eyes bright and wide as he nudged his head into her shoulder.

“What has happened to you? Where are the children? Show me,” she said it swiftly.

Alador watched in wonder as Baatha’s normally golden eyes turned mercurial with silver and then began to swirl with colors. Waves of those colors seeped into the air in front of them and began forming pictures then.

Showing the children and he playing. Kai had been kicking at a pile of snow, and Gerda holding up her hands with a look of pure joy upon her face.

Then giant gusts of snow sparkling with flecks of strange silver suddenly poured down upon their heads, sweeping the children up into a funneling cloud. The scene shifted yet again, showing that same funnel dipping down into a fissure.

“The gorge!” Luminesa cried. Without saying another word she dropped from off of Alador’s back and in one fluid motion shifted yet again into a swirling tower of raging ice-crystals.

The tower moved with astonishing speed, quicker than a centaur at a full gallop.

Alador had to pump his fists to keep up with her, turning and twisting around and in between trees, not looking at anything but the tower of ice she’d become.

By the time they arrived to the mile-long gorge he was heaving and panting for breath and covered in sweat.

In the distance he could hear the cry of children.

Still a tower of ice, Luminesa raced toward them, and slipped over the cliff’s edge.

Alador came to a screeching halt, digging in his hooves to stop his own fall off the ledge. Looking over the edge he prayed to the gods that she’d not fallen to her death a mile below.

Instead he was met by the sight of the children huddled together with Luminesa back in human form hugging them tight to her. They were several hundred feet below him.

“Alador,” she cried out to him.

Heart trapped in his throat, he nodded. “I see you.”

The winds here were driving and brutal, so cold that just the kiss of it against his flesh felt like a scalding burn. In minutes he’d not be able to feel his fingers.

Luminesa’s eyes were huge as she cried up to him, “you’ll need rope to heft them out.”

Cupping his hands around his mouth so that the wind could not snatch his words away he yelled, “I’ll have to return to the castle. Are you safe?”

The ledge they stood on was only big enough to comfortably fit two, not three. And there was no protection from the driving storm headed their way. The whistling and howling winds picked up in intensity, making it hard for him to hear her words back.

She was yelling at him, saying something, but he couldn’t hear her.

Shaking his head, he pointed to his ear, letting her know he couldn’t hear her, then proceeded to pantomime that he’d go back to the castle and be back as soon as he could.

Waving her hands at him in a gesture of “please hurry”, he nodded, twirled on his hooves and raced for the castle.

Chapter 10

Luminesa

It’d been at least an hour since she’d seen Alador last. The gorge was several miles back from where they’d taken their excursion.

The children were shivering, clutching tight to each other’s backs with fingers that’d now turned blue.

Luminesa wanted to cry, furious that all she could create was cold. While she felt none of the chill of the day, she saw the force of the storm leeching through the children’s energy reserves.

Neither of them had spoken a word since she’d found them. But every so often she’d catch Gerda wincing. The girl’s forehead was covered in frozen drops of sweat.

Whatever had happened to her, she was in pain.

“Gerda, please, girl, I wish you’d tell me what’s the matter?” she murmured again.

But the child buried her head in Kai’s shoulder and refused to speak.

Luminesa was in a desperate position. If she clutched them tight to her she doubted she’d be able to impart much warmth, but at the same time, if she didn’t cling to them they’d surely freeze to death if they were forced to stand out here much longer.

The Goblin had struck again. And she’d been a fool for not bringing at least one of the Yeti’s out with them. She hadn’t thought. Of course not, because she’d been too distracted by the thought of some fun with her centaur.

If she’d stayed more focused instead of imagining that they might actually have one day of rest to themselves, she’d have been prepared and the children wouldn’t have suffered for it.

That cloud of silver had done this and there was no one to blame for this but herself, herself and her maddening obsession with Alador. Luminesa was heartily ashamed.

“I’m sorry, children, I’m so sorry,” she murmured, voice cracking with pain, wishing she could take this away from them.

Kai swayed by her feet.

“Child,” she whispered urgently, pressing him tight to her side, wishing she’d worn a gown made of warm furs and not this one built of crystal.

His teeth chattered violently. “Sorry. So...rry,” he murmured over and over again.

Gerda groaned, swaying also.

Luminesa had just enough time to latch onto the girl’s collar before she fell.

“Oh gods,” she whispered as her shoulders tightened and her breath burst in and out of her lungs, they didn’t have much time left to them and as much as she wished it were otherwise, Luminesa could not lift them from the gorge.

“Please hurry, horse, please,” she whispered the ardent prayer to the breeze, imbuing them with a bit of magic in the hopes that they’d reach his ears.

She knew in her heart that he was doing all he could. That he’d have returned by now if he could have.

But her brain filled with horrible images of the Under Goblin mounting an attack against the castle. That somehow he’d captured her male, that he was torturing him, jeering and taunting Alador with whispered promises of vengeance against them all.

That even now the loathsome creature watched with delight as the children slowly froze to death as she stood by helpless to stop it.

She tried to command the storm to move away, but if anything it only seemed to rage harder.

Suddenly Baatha’s cry pierced the air. She glanced up and almost sobbed with joy to see Aldaor’s precious face looking down on them.

He wore a look of utter concentration as he dropped a looped cord of rope down to her.

“Children, you’re saved,” she cried with relief.

Her words caused them to finally glance up, their movements far more sluggish than she would have liked.

Once the looped end finally reached them, Alador gave it a little joggle, silently urging her to hurry.

Knowing he meant to power the children up using nothing but arm strength she decided to go with Kai first since he was lightest.

“Kai, come here, child. Raise your arms.”

The little boy didn’t struggle, just moaned a little as he lifted his arms so that Luminesa could loop it safely around him. Tightening it into several more loops so that it created a type of harness. There was nothing to clip the loops in place, so she pulsed a jet of ice upon it, sealing the loops tight.

“Alador, take him,” she cried, tugging on the rope to let her centaur know it was time to lift.

Kai cried a little, burying his face against the rope as he was raised into the sky. The winds beat at him from every direction and Luminesa prayed to the gods that Alador had the strength to hang on.

His jaw was set, but his movements were precise and smooth and in moments the boy was up and scampering across the ledge to safety.

Breathing a sigh of relief, Luminesa hugged Gerda tighter to her side and the child screamed.

Shocked, she jerked the girl away, staring her in the face. “What’s the matter, Gerda?”

But Gerda couldn’t hardly speak around the tears. The rope was descending once more.

“My arm,” she sobbed hysterically.

Luminesa peeked, but the girl was covered in a thick layer of skins and whatever damage there was she was unable to make it out.

The looped rope was in her hand just a second later.

“Gerda, whatever the problem is, we’ll have to address it once we get you out of here. Do you understand, child? You must be brave.”

Stuttering, Gerda rubbed her eyes with the knuckles of her left hand. “O...kay.”

Devastated that the child was injured and Luminesa hadn’t realized it, she tried to be as gentle as possible as she looped the rope around the girl same as she had with Kai, but anytime she brushed up against her right arm Gerda would scream, clench up tight, and then sway as though ready to faint from the pain.

Pushing aside the agony of hurting the child, Luminesa did what she had to do, but by the time she’d finished she was trembling and not from exhaustion.

“Okay, child. Hang tight, I’m going to get Alador to lift you out now.”

Gerda’s eyes were closed and her already pale skin had gone a shade similar to Luminesa’s own.

Knowing the child needed medical help immediately, she tugged on the cord giving Alador the signal to raise her. But the first upward tug had the girl screaming and then her body went immediately limp.

Even over the din of the wind Luminesa heard Alador’s cry as he stumbled forward from Gerda’s now dead weight.

Thinking fast, desperate Alador not be hurt in the process too, she did the only thing she could do.

Luminesa froze the child. Encasing her completely in ice and maneuvering her body so that she was in a more upright position.

It caused her to weigh twice as much as normal. And when she looked up at Alador she saw him clamping down on his bottom lip wearing a look of dogged determination as he slowly and oh so painstakingly lifted the girl.

Luminesa could only recall one other time in her life when she’d felt such an overwhelming horror of mind-numbing terror. Transforming to a pillar of ice, she tried as best she could to bear some of Gerda’s weight on herself so that Alador wouldn’t be forced to carry all of it.

Gerda was taken up three times as slowly as Kai, due not only to the fact that she was incredibly heavy, but also the storm had now come in full force and was blasting the rope from side to side.

By the time they finally scaled the side of the gorge, even Luminesa was panting, and she’d not borne half the burden he had.

Alador was coated in a thick sheen of sweat.

Luminesa knew that sweat and cold of this magnitude could be a death warrant for him.

Desperate to get them back to the castle, she unthawed Gerda the moment she could.

The child had gone completely blue, almost gray, and wasn’t moving.

Kai was already situated on Alador’s back.

“What’s happened to Gerda?” he cried, reaching out his hand to his sister.

Luminesa had no breath left to answer, nor did Alador. All she could do was grab the girl beneath her arms and help her male lift the child onto his back.

But though Gerda was no longer encased in ice, her form had frozen completely and anytime he moved she’d almost fall to the ground.

There was a thick lather of sweat built up on Alador’s hindquarters.

Luminesa was terrified not only for the children, but him as well.

“Horse,” she whispered urgently after the third time of trying to secure Gerda to his back, “I’ll take her. You get back to the castle with Kai, do you hear me?”

The whites of his eyes had grown wide, he shook his head. “You can’t, you’ll tire, the trek is long, Luminesa and—”

Hugging the girl tight to her side, she shook her head. “I’ll hear no arguments from you. You’re beyond exhausted. All three of you must get back to the castle immediately, this is the only way to make sure you’ll each survive the journey.”

He glanced down at the still unmoving child in her arms. “What are you going to do? You can’t carry her that way.”

He was right of course. “I won’t. I’ll turn her into ice with me.”

Her heart thundered at the words. What she was going to do was dangerous and Luminesa knew it. In fact, it could actually kill the child. But staying out in this cold any longer would surely do it too. The only way to ensure Gerda stood half a chance of survival was to get her back to the castle as soon as could be.

Alador had obviously come to the same conclusion. Gripping her shoulder, he leaned forward and planted a violent kiss against her lips. Both a promise and a question to her.

“I’ll be safe, I vow it. Now go.”

Kai had begun trembling violently again.

“He needs to be warmed more,” Luminesa said, knowing that what she asked would be difficult for Alador, but without the added burden of Gerda on his back, he’d be free to clutch the boy tight to his chest.

Understanding why she’d said so immediately, he grunted, switching the boy from his back to his front. Little Kai huddled into her centaur’s chest, and Alador gripped him tight. She’d never felt anything as warm as her centaur’s arms, the boy would be in good hands.

Alador nodded once at her, grunted loudly, and then twirling on his hooves, ran for the castle. Becoming little more than a dark blur streaking through the white out conditions of a raging blizzard.

Looking down at the girl’s face, Luminesa forget her antipathy toward humans, because it no longer mattered. This was a little child in desperate need of care. A child she’d come to love as if she were her very own.

“Survive this, Gerda, or I shall never forgive myself.”

Then blowing a kiss at the girl’s face she watched as Gerda’s form transformed from flesh to swirls of ice. In seconds she too transformed, becoming a tower of raging snow. Gripping tight to the girl, she raced for home, saying a prayer to the gods that for once they’d show Luminesa mercy and spare the girl.

~*~

Luminesa and Alador had spent the next several hours warming Gerda up. When they’d arrived back at the castle she’d been immobile and so cold Luminesa had feared the poor child would never recover.

Alador had suggested a centaur method of reintroducing Gerda to warmth gradually so as not to send her body in shock.

First they’d focused on warming the girl’s feet, then her legs, her arms, and once those had flooded once more with the healthy stain of pink, they’d centered their efforts on her chest.

Piling heaps of blankets and hot stones over her. Kai had even crawled under the furs with her, hugging his arms tight to her body and hanging on through the worst of the girl’s trembles.

Her teeth had chattered and clacked for hours, but around the time the sun had begun setting the worst of Gerda’s chills had passed. The two of them slept peacefully now.

Luminesa had set ice guardians both inside and outside of their shared room for the night, not wishing to take any chances. She and Alador sat now in her study, watching the wall of ice she’d transformed into a two-way mirror of sorts that helped them to keep a constant and vigilant eye on the children and also the nighttime sky.

The ice demons came pretty much at the same time every night. Around three or four in the morning.

After this long, Luminesa had begun to understand that the Goblin wasn’t truly trying to kill them, he was merely ensuring they hardly knew any rest. That there’d be very little down time for them to relax or breathe easy.

This had become their new norm now.

Baatha, who normally flew to roost in the forest during the night, had also joined them in the study. He was still weak and not fully recovered from the blood loss.

Only because he was such a strong and powerful familiar had he survived the attack on him.

Cradled in the strong arms of her male, Luminesa tried to relax as she watched the crackling snap and burn of white flame dance inside the hearth before them.

But her thoughts were jagged and sharp.

“Relax, female,” Alador’s heated whisper shivered across the nape of her neck as he dropped a gentle kiss behind her ear.

Her body trembled from want of him.

Shoulders stiff, she shook her head. “I’m trying, horse.”

“But you’re upset. About what happened today.”

It wasn’t hard to come to that conclusion, it was all either of them thought about it. They’d worked for hours tending to Gerda, so long they’d all forgotten to eat. Luminesa was exhausted and weary from the stress of trying to understand why the Under Goblin had done this to them.

“Of course I am.” She turned in his arms.

Her male was so warm. His flesh so hot to the touch that there were times she felt she’d be consumed by it, but it was odd, the feeling of burning up even while desperate for more of his heated touch.

Deep green eyes gazed down on her, their depths fathomless and full of mystery.

When this was over, whether she succeeded in thwarting the Under Goblin’s game or not, he’d return to his herd, his peoples...he’d forget about her.

Because his kind and hers, they didn’t mingle. And those who did were excommunicated. Cast out. How could she ever want that for him?

It felt as though her soul had just fractured into a million tiny pieces. Cringing, she shook her head. Desperate to think of something else.

Anything else.

“Gerda was so wounded, her arm broken in three places. How that poor girl managed to remain conscious is a miracle,” she whispered. Luminesa had used what little healing magic she had to her in this place, knitting the bones together with ice splints. The wound would ache, but at least it would heal properly. By tomorrow she should feel much stronger.

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