Giant's Daughter
Page 1
W I N T E R ’ S Q U E E N T R I L O G Y B O O K T WO
G I A N T’ S
DAUGHTER
J E N N I F E R A L L I S P ROVO S T
Table of Contents
Title Page
Giant's Daughter (Winter's Queen)
Chapter One | Anya
Chapter Two | Chris
Chapter Three | Anya
Chapter Four | Chris
Chapter Five | Anya
Chapter Six | Chris
Chapter Seven | Anya
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine | Anya
Chapter Ten | Chris
Chapter Eleven | Anya
Chapter Twelve | Chris
Chapter Thirteen | Anya
Chapter Fourteen | Chris
Chapter Fifteen | Anya
Chapter Sixteen | Chris
Chapter Seventeen | Anya
Chapter Eighteen | Chris
Chapter Nineteen | Anya
Chapter Twenty | Chris
Chapter Twenty One | Anya
Chapter Twenty Two | Chris
Chapter Twenty Three | Anya
Chapter Twenty Four | Chris
Chapter Twenty Five | Anya
Chapter Twenty Six | Chris
Chapter Twenty Seven | Anya
Chapter Twenty Eight | Chris
Chapter Twenty Nine | Anya
Chapter Thirty | Chris
Glossary
Chapter One
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Giant’s Daughter
Winter’s Queen Trilogy Book Two
By Jennifer Allis Provost
Published by Bellatrix Press
Copyright 2021 Jennifer Allis Provost
All rights reserved
Publisher’s Note
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.
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Cover by Cover Villain
Chapter One
Anya
IT WAS THE SECOND DAY of winter, and Christopher and I were standing in front of the old shieling with its courtyard of small, man-shaped stones at Glen Lyon. Today was the day we’d free my da, the giant called the Bodach, and my brothers from the stones they’d been imprisoned in for more than two hundred years. At least, we hoped we would free them.
We’d held off acting on our plan until after Samhain, in order to allow winter to begin and my new abilities as its queen time to fully manifest. Mum’s theory was that since it had taken the full might of the Seelie King to imprison Da and the boys, it would likely take all of the Winter Queen’s power to undo the curse. Never mind that when Mum was Queen of Winter she had attempted to free them time and again and nothing had happened, not even when she threw every spell and trick she knew at the stones. Still, even though my mother had reigned for thousands of years, and my reign had lasted mere days, I had an advantage she’d never have: my true father’s blood.
No one, least of all myself, had suspected I’d been fathered by Udane, or anyone other than the Bodach. Udane had once been the counterpart to my mother as Elphame’s Summer King. He was now known as Maelgwyn, the Unseelie King. This odd branch on my family tree meant I had inherited a portion of my father’s power, which, along with what I’d gotten from Mum, meant I was more powerful that either of them.
It meant that I might actually be able to free my family.
A raw gust of air pummeled me, and I hunkered down into my coat; for all that I controlled winter I still felt the cold in every bone and sinew in my body. The sun shone brightly in spite of the frigid wind, and we were lucky it was as warm as it was. Sometimes, the countryside in and around Glen Lyon saw snow this early in the season.
Sometimes, I let myself get distracted by small things like the weather to avoid doing what I’d set out to accomplish. Namely, reuniting my family once and for all.
And what if I could free them, and live among Da and my brothers as a complete family again? I’d wanted this for so long I could feel it. Needed it so much I could taste it.
Gods below, what if I fail?
I took a deep breath, and closed my eyes.
Don’t worry, Da. I’ve almost got you.
I reached out not toward the stones, but to my right. Christopher, there as he always was, grasped my hand and squeezed.
“Are you ready?” he asked.
“Yes. Speaking of ready, do you have your phone?”
“I do.”
Christopher held up his phone, revealing his sister’s information queued up on the screen. We probably wouldn’t need Karina’s assistance, but Maelgwyn had pointed out that the stones may be portals, thus meaning Da and the rest might actually be imprisoned elsewhere in Scotland, or on an entirely different plane. If portals were involved, best to have Karina, the only living walker between worlds, on hand to deal with them.
“I doubt they’re portals,” Christopher said, sensing my thoughts as he always did. “When we freed Long Meg and her crew we took them directly out of their stones. I imagine it will be much the same here.”
I nodded, and refocused my attention on the stones. When we’d retrieved Long Meg—yet another giant; my family was fair riddled with them—Christopher and I had walked widdershins around the stone that held her, thus undoing the knot of spells that held her fast. It was a brilliant spell, elegant in its simplicity. I hoped someday to be able to create such graceful and sophisticated spells myself.
I didn’t sense the same type of spell around the shieling or its stones. This spell was simple, but it rather than the elegance that wove through Meg’s spell true and fast, this was coarse, as if it had been thrown together in a rush and the caster had never bothered to revisit and fine-tune his work. If that wasn’t an apt description of the Seelie King, throwing gobs of power at a problem and hoping for a speedy resolution, I didn’t know what was.
Despite the sloppy spellwork, the prison had held these many years. Whatever was holding my family in the stones was an enchantment I was unfamiliar with, but I was certain it wasn’t a web of knots.
“If not knots, then what?”
“What was that?” Christopher asked.
“Just thinking out loud.”
I squinted at the stones, wondering if I could see evidence of whatever magic had been used. I’d never seen such things before, but I’d never been the Queen of Winter before, either. What this magic would look like, I couldn’t guess. Sparkles, maybe? Just as I was about to ask Christopher to call his sister and ask if she had any ideas, I spied something near the largest stone’s base.
“Could this be it?” I wondered, crouching down to have a closer look. Around the base of Da’s stone weren’t any sparkles or runes or other obvious signs of spell craf
t, but the area looked different. The colors of the grasses were more vibrant, and the air smelled of lightning.
“The spell is in the base,” I said. “Whatever’s holding them inside the stones, it’s where the stones meet the ground.”
Christopher crouched beside me. I wondered what he saw, this brilliant mortal who’d been touched by Elphame. “Does that mean if we tip the stones over, your family will be free? They can just climb on out?”
I blinked. It couldn’t be that easy, could it?
“Only one way to find out.” I got on my knees and heaved at Da’s stone. I’ve always been strong; I used to think it was on account of being a giant’s daughter. Now I know my strength comes from elsewhere, but it was the memory of the man that raised me I pulled on. Still, the stone, small though it was, did not budge.
“Maybe we need to rock it back and forth,” Christopher suggested. “It’s been here a while, right? Maybe it’s just stuck.”
“All right, then.” We positioned ourselves on either side of the stone. “Toward me.”
Christopher pushed, then I heaved it back toward him. After we did this a few times, the stone moved. It was the barest movement, but it was there.
“It’s working,” Christopher said. “Harder, now.”
We kept rocking the stone back and forth, each push and pull loosening it ever so slightly. Then the stone moved of its own accord, trembled like a leaf in a gale, and flopped to the side. Underneath the stone was a deep, dark hole. I peered inside, and called, “Da?”
“Anya?”
“Da!”
I went down flat on my belly and thrust my hand as far into the hole as it would go. “Da, grab on!”
I felt a set of fingers, gritty from years in the ground, wrap around my wrist. Christopher latched onto my waist and together we hauled my Da, the legendary Bodach himself, up and out of his dark prison. As soon as he was fully out I threw myself into his arms.
“Easy now,” Da said, patting my hair. “I’ve no wish to land back in that hole just yet.”
“Da, I missed you so much,” I said, my words muffled by his chest.
“As I missed you, my wee one. Och, it’s bright up here,” Da said, blinking in the sunlight.
“Have you really been down there in the dark this whole time?” I asked.
“Aye, lass, that I have.” Da have me a squeeze that flattened my lungs and near cracked my spine. How I’d missed these squeezes! “Let me look at you.”
I drew back, and got a good, full look at my father for the first time in more than two hundred years. Da was a giant and therefore capable of growing as tall as any mountain, but he’d kept himself human-sized. That meant he was tall and broad, with hands the size of hams and feet so big it took a full cowhide to make him a single pair of boots. He looked just the same as he always had, even if he was a bit dirtier. More than my glimpse of him, Da got a look at me.
“You’re grown,” Da said; I’d still been a girl hurtling barefoot over the fields when he’d gone away. “Anya, you are no longer my wee lass.”
“Da,” I said as sobs choked me. “I’m still her.”
He ran his hand over my hair, and cupped my chin. “Bonnie like your mum, that you are.” Da scanned the area around the shieling. “Where is she? And who is this?” he asked, his gaze landing on Christopher.
“Christopher Stewart.” He stepped forward and stuck out his hand. Da looked down at him like he was a bug. “I am with Anya.”
“I recognize your voice,” Da said. “You’ve been here before. You spoke to us through the stones.”
“Yes, sir, that’s true.”
“That was good of you.” Da faced me. “And now you will tell me where my wife is.”
“She couldn’t be here,” I began. “Oh, Da, so very much has changed. For starters, Mum’s no longer the Queen of Winter. I am.”
Da nodded, his dark brows low over his eyes. “Well, then. I supposed we’d best set about freeing the boys, and you can share the rest of the news with all of us at once. Christopher!”
“Here, sir.”
“First of all, you can dispense with calling me sir. It’s Bod, or Old Man, or whatever other names we devise while in our cups. Understand?”
“I do, Bod.”
Da smiled. For all that he was a bruiser he valued a quick mind. “Good. Now then, I have a great many sons trapped under these rocks, and my back is weak and may give out at any time. Can I count on you to help me with these boulders?”
“Absolutely.” Christopher pushed up his sleeves. “Which one should we start with?”
Chapter Two
Chris
FOR ALL OF BOD’S COMPLAINTS about his about his sore back and waning strength, between him and Anya all of his boys were free in less than an hour. What really helped speed things up was that after the first few boys were back on the surface, they were eager to free the rest of their brothers and began tossing stones to the side as if they were weightless. It was like a deadly game of dodgeball where each team earned more players instead of points.
I have no idea how many brothers Anya had. We overturned ten stones, so logic would dictate ten brothers, right? Only there were more than ten. There may have been more than one hundred. Everywhere I looked I saw strapping Scottish lads climbing out of their prisons, clapping each other on the back, and a few were passing mugs of beer and congratulating each other on their recent freedom.
Where had the beers come from? I didn’t know the answer to that, either.
“Christopher!”
Anya skipped toward me and grabbed my hands. “Isn’t it wonderful? We haven’t seen each other for so long and we’re all just the same.” She paused, glancing down at herself. “Well, I suppose I’ve changed a wee bit. But the boys and Da are exactly as I remember them.”
“There certainly are a lot of them.” The Bodach’s sons all resembled him, with their broad shoulders, and dark hair and eyes. Not one of them resembled Beira in the slightest, except for Anya; then again, with her iridescent gray eyes and yellow blonde hair, she resembled Maelgwyn more than her mother.
I spied the tallest brother—and that’s saying something in a family of giants—and a few others raising their mugs in yet another toast. “Are they magical? I mean, I know they’re giants, but do they have other abilities, too?”
“Of course. We’ve all inherited a bit of Mum’s magic, and...”
Anya’s voice trailed off, and I felt like an idiot. In the midst of what should have been a very happy day I reminded her that she hadn’t inherited anything from Old Bod. All of her abilities came from Beira, and Maelgwyn.
Seeking to recover, I said, “Maybe we should think about getting them home.”
Anya smiled, but it didn’t reach her eyes. “Aye. I’ll see to rounding them up.”
GATHERING UP BOD AND his sons didn’t take long, and within half an hour all of us were standing in the Winter Palace’s icy foyer. Now that Anya had fully come into her powers, she could teleport groups of people at once, much like Rina did with her portals. Even Bod was impressed when she moved her entire gaggle of siblings in one fell swoop.
Sarmi, an elf who was a combination of a trusted head servant and gruff aunt, stood at attention next to the entrance to the rest of the palace. According to Anya, Sarmi had overseen the daily operations of the Winter Palace since its creation. There was no aspect of the palace she didn’t understand, and almost nothing she could accomplish. She also had a rather large crush on Bod.
“Master Bod, how delightful it is to have you back home,” Sarmi greeted. “Anya shared with me that she was off to free you, but I didn’t dare hope for her success.”
“Free me she did, but what I am hoping for is a mug of your ale. I thought of it near every day I was gone,” Bod said, and Sarmi blushed crimson. “Tell me you still make it just the same.”
“Of course I do. I’ll have a cask brought up directly.”
Sarmi disappeared toward the kitchens, while the
brothers wandered toward the living areas of the palace. As for Bod, he approached the stairway that led to the sleeping chambers.
“Beira,” Bod bellowed up the stairs. “Beira, where are you, love? I have been dreaming of this night for nearly three centuries!”
“She’s not here,” Anya said. “Did I tell you we freed Long Meg? I’m sure she’ll be by to say hello.”
“Anya.”
“Are you hungry?” Anya continued. “I’m sure you’re all famished. I’ll ask Sarmi to see about supper. After she’s brought up the ale, of course.”
“Anya!”
Bod’s voice reverberated through the palace, cracking the walls and making the staircase list to the side.
“Have a care, Da.” Anya raised her hand, and the cracks disappeared as the stairs righted themselves. Good to know we wouldn’t end up suffocating underneath a collapsed glacier after every family squabble. “I cannot have you shouting until the walls come down. I just got this place to rights.”
Bod regarded Anya for a moment, then he turned to me. “Where is my wife?”
“What?” I countered, panic squeezing my throat so I squeaked like a teenager. “Why ask me?”
“Because Anya is like her mum in that she believes that omitting the truth may spare a man’s feelings,” Bod replied. “But you would never lie to me, would you, Christopher? Not to the father of the woman you profess to love?”
Wonderful. His voice was strong enough to topple palaces and he was adept at emotional manipulation. “Beira is at the Unseelie Court.”
“Why would she be there?” Bod asked, then he glanced at Anya. “Ah.”
“Ah?” Anya repeated. “What does that mean?”
Bod narrowed his gaze, and countered, “Is Udane still playing at being Unseelie, rather than the Summer King?”
Anya drew back, eyes wide and mouth gaping. Beira had told us that Bod was aware of Anya’s true parentage, but I don’t think she expected him to be so free with the knowledge. I know I wasn’t.
“He is,” I said, when Anya remained silent. “Beira went there shortly after she lost her power.”