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The Lost Swallow: An Epic Fantasy Romance (Light and Darkness Book 2) by Jayne Castel (31)


30

Our King No More

 

 

MIRA WATCHED EVENTS unfold—frozen to the spot as if her feet had grown roots.

A Nightgenga unfolded itself from where it crouched a yard away and moved toward her. Strangler hands reached out and gripped her by the arms, hauling her up the steps toward the dais. Struggling against the creature’s bruising grip, she glanced over at where Asher fought the grasp of a Hiriel.

“Mira,” he rasped, despair in his eyes. “I—”

The Hiriel yanked him forward. He was a tall man, but the shadow creature dragged him easily up onto the platform. Ninia, herded by a growling Fen Hound, followed close behind.

Upon the dais, Mira stepped close to Ninia and placed an arm around the girl’s trembling shoulders. The Thracken shifted back to the far edge, leaving the three of them alone.

 “Dusk Imps,” Darg called out. “Come forward.”

A howl went up, and a babbling frenzy of small dark imps, their tails switching from side to side, surged out onto the aisle. They pushed and elbowed each other out of the way to get to their destination first, their lean, whip-like bodies quivering with anticipation.

Mira watched them rush toward the platform, shoving the men of Anthor aside as they went. Captain Elias looked on, his face still ashen from the encounter with the Thracken. His gaze met Mira’s for a moment, and held. In the depths of his eyes she saw something move. Pity, despair, vindication—it was difficult to tell.

Mira looked away, following the tide of imps that now clambered up onto the platform. They jabbered, one or two starting to scrap as their blood-lust rose. A squeal of pain echoed through the hall when one of the imps near the front sank its teeth into its neighbor’s neck.

Asher tried to step forward, to provide a physical barrier to Ninia and Mira, but Mira hauled him back. Their gazes met, and she shook her head. “We face this together.”

Next to Mira, Ninia whimpered. They’d all seen how the Dusk Imps killed; they’d witnessed the bloody pulp that soldier had been reduced to the night before.

The imps had worked themselves up to a frenzy now. Some of them were scrabbling at the polished stone floor, sharpening their claws, while others strained forward whining in eagerness. One of the imps let out a howl, while beside it another starting yipping like an overexcited hound. They were waiting for their lord to give the command to attack.

Mira’s chest began to ache, and she realized she was holding her breath, waiting for the frenzy to begin. Her bladder started to tingle.

Ninia was weeping now, her cheeks wet, her eyes wild. Asher had gone still. His gaze swept the surging mass before him. He moved closer to Ninia then and whispered something to her, something that Mira didn’t catch.

Ninia didn’t take her eyes off the imps as he spoke, although her features tightened. She shook her head. “No,” she gasped. “I can’t.”

“You have to,” Asher replied, his voice hard and flat. “Or we all die.” He said something else after that, but the whooping, heckling, and cackling that echoed down from the seats around them drowned his voice out. The shadow creatures were standing up now upon the stone benches, calling for the execution to begin.

“Attack!” The Thracken’s voice sliced through their chatter.

The Dusk Imps surged. A scream rose in Mira’s throat. They were coming for her.

“Ninia!” Asher’s voice cut above the roar, savage with fear. “Do it!”

“No!” Ninia shrieked in reply—but even as she screamed the air inside the great hall shifted.

The darkness around them, the shadowed corners where the otherworldly glow of the Hiriel didn’t reach, came to life. A formless bulk rose from the edges of the cavernous space and roared toward the dais, unleashed.

A dark entity rushed toward them. The men of Anthor threw themselves to the floor, as the howling wind flew overhead.

The darkness flowed like liquid pitch, hurtling into the midst of the crowd of Dusk Imps just as the creatures reached the three of them. The first had just raked its claws down Ninia’s leg, but the girl was oblivious. She stood tall, eyes squeezed shut, her right hand sweeping before her as she gathered the Dark.

The Dark … Mira watched Ninia, confusion warring with terror … but how?

The shadows found their voice; a howl that shook the walls. They clove into the imps, picking up the small creatures and whipping them into a vortex that now raced around Asher, Mira, and Ninia.

Then, when the shadows had gathered the last of the struggling imps up into their embrace, they released them. Dusk Imps scattered like autumn leaves caught by a dust devil. Their bodies writhed, and their limbs cartwheeled. The imps’ mouths were open wide in screams of wordless rage. They flew shrieking through the air, propelled back into the crowd.

At the far edge of the dais, the group of Thracken drew back, crouching low to avoid the edges of the tempest that raged before them.

The Dark continued to roar, rotating around the Ninia, Mira, and Asher for a short while longer, before it quietened to a rippling pool at their feet.

Ninia opened her eyes, her gaze sweeping across the chaos she had wreaked. For a moment, Mira barely recognized her; Ninia looked older and harder, her eyes luminous and ageless. Her expression was savage.

The princess flexed her right hand, and the Dark answered her, expanding and growling upon the dais, readying itself for her next command.

“Enough,” Asher rasped from beside her. “Let them lie for now.”

Ninia blinked, as if realizing that the enchanter stood beside her. She came out of the trance she’d entered after gathering the Dark, and her features softened. The girl Mira knew returned to the world.

At the edge of the platform, the group of Thracken slowly rose to their full height once more. Darg inched forward, careful not to touch the swirling shadows that still warded the three prisoners. Silence fell in the great hall, broken only by the whimpers of the fallen Dusk Imps.

“What trickery is this?” Darg whispered through the stillness.

Ninia’s eyes were huge on her pale face as she stared back at the Thracken.

Mira’s mind whirled. She knew the basic rules of enchantment—there were few alive in The Four Kingdoms who did not. Enchanters could gather either the Light or the Dark. Only Valgarth the Shadow King had ever been able to master both.

Yet she’d seen Ninia do just that. They all had.

“She wields both the Light and the Dark,” Asher said when it was clear Ninia wasn’t going to answer. “Would you deny what you’ve just witnessed?”

Mira’s gaze flicked between her companions’ faces, confusion giving way to a chill that drilled deep into the marrow of her bones. They’d both known, she realized, but Ninia and Asher had deliberately kept the truth from her.

 

Asher glanced across at Mira and saw her face go stiff. A dull sense of fatalism rose within him.

She hasn’t heard the worst of it yet—she’ll hate me when she does.

The hollow rasp of the Lord of the Thracken’s breathing drew Asher’s attention from Mira then. He became aware that the audience of shadow creatures around them—including the Dusk Imps, who had peeled themselves up off the floor—now stood, heads bowed. Meanwhile, Elias and his men had also gotten to their feet, and were looking around them in confusion.

Asher tensed. He too wasn’t sure what this meant.

“Mistress,” Darg whispered. “Forgive us.”

The Lord of the Thracken bowed low, seeming to diminish in size. Darg’s companions followed suit, and then—upon the staircase of benches that circled the dais—the audience of shadow creatures all did the same.

Asher glanced back at Ninia to see her observing the scene before her, a stunned look on her face. “I don’t understand,” she whispered.

The Thracken raised its hood. The void within its cowl appeared a deeper black even than the shadows that now slumbered at Ninia’s feet. “We serve the Master of the Light and the Dark.” Darg’s thin voice grew strident. The Thracken lord raised its arms high into the air. “Valgarth is lost to us, our king no more … all hail, Ninia, Daughter of Light and Darkness. Our queen.”

A roar went up in the great hall, one that shook the walls and echoed high into the domed ceiling. Asher stared, alarmed at the sight of all these creatures who now prostrated themselves before Ninia. He had wanted to believe the princess would learn to use her abilities as a force for good in the world. Would this corrupt her?

He glanced back at Ninia and saw that she was trembling. Stepping close, he put an arm around her shoulders.

“I don’t want this,” she whispered to him, her usual confidence stripped away after all she had endured in this chamber. “They terrify me.”

Asher squeezed her gently. “Good,” he replied, wariness rising within him, as the cheering continued in waves that rose and fell like surf upon a rocky shore. “Never forget what these creatures are.”

Eventually, the cheers died away. The mood had altered in the hall. Gone was the menace; the atmosphere was now reverent. The shadow creatures appeared almost docile.

Standing between Asher and Mira, Ninia relaxed her right hand, and the shadows surrounding them on the dais dissolved, slipping back into the dark corners of the vast chamber.

“What do you wish, mistress?” The Thracken lord prostrated itself further, robes pooling upon the stone. “We exist to serve you.”

Ninia swallowed, her gaze darting around the hall.

“Play along,” Asher whispered to her. “We’re not out of danger yet. They want a queen … so give them one.”

Ninia’s mouth compressed, although she managed a nod. She stepped away from Asher then and moved forward so that she stood before Darg. The Lord of the Thracken still knelt before her.

“You may rise,” she said. Watching her, Asher fought an ironic smile. Of course, this was easy for Ninia—she had been born knowing how to command others.

The Thracken complied, rising to its full height, as did its silent companions.

“You may serve me by escorting me and my two companions to the western edge of this forest,” she continued. “We must leave Thûn.”

“But you will not be safe in Rithmar either, mistress,” Darg replied. “People will fear you … they will try to slay you.”

Ninia gave a tight smile. “They can try.”

“Remain here, mistress. We will protect you. Together we can bring down the kingdoms of men.”

Ninia’s small body tensed. “I’m not Valgarth,” she said after a long pause. “I have no interest in war and conquering. If I am your queen then you must heed me. There will be no campaign against The Four Kingdoms.”

Silence echoed through the hall before the cowled head eventually dipped. “As you wish, mistress.”

A chorus of Hiriel voices shattered the hush that followed. “What of the prince of Anthor and his men?” A few of them slid from their seats and entered the aisle, surrounding Elias and the four battered soldiers that stood with him. “We shall end them for you, mistress.”

The Prince of Anthor straightened his spine, his hands flexing by his sides as he readied himself. He was without weapons. Yet he would fight. Likewise, his men stepped closer to him, preparing to protect their prince with their lives.

“No.” Ninia’s voice cut across the room. “Don’t kill them.”

The Hiriel gave a collective shriek, their opaque forms expanding, and their eyes burning bright. “Why, mistress? These men were hunting you … they would slay you now. They don’t deserve your mercy.”

Ninia shook her head. “Enough blood has been shed. Take them to the eastern edge of the forest, and set them free.”

This command caused a growl of outrage to ripple around the hall. Asher hadn’t expected Ninia to take control like this.

“They’re right, Ninia,” Mira muttered. “Save your mercy for those who deserve it.”

“They were following orders,” Ninia countered. “I’ll not kill them for that.”

A few yards away, Elias of Anthor watched Ninia. His face was taut, for he’d been readying himself to die. The fact he’d been spared probably had not yet sunk in. Around the captain, his men were shaken and pale. The Hiriel, still shrieking their disappointment, drew back, taking their seats once more.

Elias met Ninia’s eye. “Thank you, princess.”

Ninia favored him with a curt nod, before she glanced over at where Darg stood, silently observing her. “The captain and his men are to be set free,” she said firmly. “See it done.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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