Fire and Fantasy: A Limited Edition Collection of Urban and Epic Fantasy
Page 243
“The United States—” the king paused.
“—of America,” Lucienne offered.
“—has no claims or rights to my realm,” the king hissed, his eyes burning with spite. “As for you, nasty little girl, kneel and beg, and perhaps I’ll spare your life and make you my house servant.”
“You’re a fool,” Lucienne said.
The king lunged, swinging his stout arm at Lucienne, aiming for her face.
Faster than a bullet, Lucienne caught the king’s wrist, gave it a yank, and used the heavy man’s weight against him. The king flew over Lucienne’s shoulder and collapsed to the ground with a thud, a groan, and a stunned look.
“A nice girl might put up with you.” Lucienne stepped her booted foot on the king’s neck. “But as you said, I am not one.” Despite the king’s hands being free, he couldn’t move an inch. Her acupoints meridian held him immobile.
“Black magic!” the queen cried.
“Give me a break, lady,” said Lucienne. Ignoring the queen’s whimper, she turned to check on her warriors. The battle had quieted. Six of the king’s guards were on the ground, unconscious or semi-conscious. The other three who remained standing were held by Orlando and his men, their blades against the guards’ throats. With an easy grin, Vladimir sauntered toward her, a lock of hair drenched in sweat dangling at the corner of his bright hazel eye.
Lucienne sucked in a quick breath. Even in the midst of battle, he still had that effect on her. Not wanting him to know he dazed her, Lucienne swept her glance over the rest of the islanders. The farm couple had sat up, still in each other’s arms. The man’s thumb gently wiped the blood off his wife’s split lips, but the wife was more concerned with her husband’s injuries. The redhead was with them.
Vladimir, now standing by Lucienne’s side, snarled. Lucienne followed his line of sight. The blond prince was watching her with a strange blend of hatred, fascination, and lust. “You, blond boy!” Vladimir yelled viciously. “Keep your ugly eyes on the ground!”
The prince fixed his eyes on the ground a few inches from his feet.
Lucienne shook her head. She had dealt with Vladimir’s possessiveness, but now he wouldn’t allow other males to even look at her? But then, the prince had coveted her.
The queen’s Spanish drew Lucienne’s attention back to the king. “I’m queen and Priestess Isis, the gods’ messenger.” The queen’s lips trembled. “The gods will strike you down if you harm King Henry!”
“Will the gods strike me with lightning or fire if I do this?” Lucienne replied in Spanish and pressed her foot on the king’s throat, sending his eyes rolling back. His chunky face reddened, and then turned purple from lack of oxygen.
“Stop!” the queen cried. “We’ll give you whatever you want. The kingdom can’t survive without a king.”
“You have me, Mother,” the prince said.
“The gods are on my side now, not yours.” Lucienne released the pressure of her foot to let the king breathe.
“You’ve conquered us,” the queen said in defeat. “Name your price.”
“What can you offer me?” Lucienne asked.
“I’d rather die than hand you my throne!” the king choked.
“My king!” the queen cried. “This is the darkest day in our kingdom, but we must live up to the gods’ test!”
“I have no desire for your crown,” Lucienne said.
The king and the queen held their breath, staring at Lucienne.
“Must I keep telling you I’m only interested in the weather here?” Lucienne sighed.
“Then you have my permission to . . . investigate.” The king let out a harsh breath. “Under the condition you depart my land as soon as you finish your affair.”
“Your permission, really?” Lucienne laughed.
“You can let the king go, miss,” the queen said.
Lucienne tilted her head, a thin smile of irony tugging the corner of her mouth.
“Please.” The queen’s tone turned into a soft plea. “Please let my husband go.”
“That’s more like it,” Lucienne said. “I don’t intend to take prisoners. That’d cost the tax payers money.” She bent and hit a point on the left side of the king’s neck. “There are more powerful kingdoms than yours, Mr. King,” she chided before releasing him. “And there’s always someone stronger and faster than you. Bear that in mind next time you try to beat someone smaller, especially your own people.”
The king shut his eyes so they wouldn’t betray his hatred. Lucienne stood up, straightened her leather pants, and turned to the farm couple. “If you need medical attention, my men can help.”
The couple shook their heads vehemently and shrank back from her in fear.
The king got up, yelling at the couple in a dialect that Lucienne couldn’t place. She spun around, facing the king. “Do not disturb me again.” Looking down at him icily, she asked, “Have any of you touched the gate?”
“Touch that gate? This forbidden place is cursed! We’ll never touch it,” the prince shouted. “We would never have come if the unruly Ashburn Fury hadn’t led us here.”
“Shut up, Felix!” the king reproached, staring hard at his son. Lucienne read the king’s nasty thoughts. He was angry at the prince for telling her about the curse. The king wanted her to touch the gate and be cursed. A relaxed smile sparked in Lucienne’s eyes—the Eye was safe.
“You kidnapped me and told Ash if he wanted to find me alive, he must go to Hell Gate,” the redhead blurted. “You tricked him, and then you brought the king here to seize Ash, so the king can throw him to the wilderness. You snake!”
“Only the lowest of servant girls with bastard blood would fancy Ashburn the Extra, Violet,” Prince Felix said.
“I’m not that lowly.” Violet smiled viciously. “I share half-blood with you.”
The queen shot the redhead a venomous look while the king coughed and glared at the girl before looking away.
Lucienne had no patience for their quarrel. “Where is this Ashburn boy?” she demanded. “Did he touch the gate?”
“My subject, the crippled Extra, entered this banned place and fled,” said the king.
Lucienne’s heart sank. She had feared the Eye might have been tampered with before her arrival. If no one had touched it, how could there be an outburst of dark matter that reached Sphinxes? And, if it was compromised, why wasn’t it taken?
“How old is this Ashburn?” Lucienne asked.
No one answered until the male farmer finally said in a timid voice, “My son is eighteen moons tomorrow.” And his wife became tearful at hearing that.
The king shot the farm couple a deadly glare. They recoiled. Lucienne knew if she and her men weren’t present, the king would surely whack the farmer, or worse.
Lucienne eyed the wheelchair near the gate. “Does that chair belong to your son?”
The farm couple lowered their heads and dared not emit a sound again, but Lucienne already knew the answer by reading the sorrow on their faces.
“You and your people should leave now,” Lucienne said, gesturing her men to discharge the king’s guards. The commandos removed their knives from their captives’ necks and shoved the guards away. The king’s men stumbled forward as hatred and defeat singed their eyes. They turned away and went to help their comrades regain conscious.
“I’ll pay you a courtesy visit later, Mr. King,” Lucienne said.
“It’ll be unwise for you to enter my city,” the king said.
“That would be awfully rude. Haven’t you learned by now of my distaste for bad manners?” Lucienne asked.
“If you enter Nirvana, I can’t guarantee your safety,” the king said.
“My safety isn’t your concern,” replied Lucienne.
“My people won’t allow any outsiders on our holy land,” the queen said. “You have four skilled warriors, but you can’t possibly expect that five of you will defeat an army. Return to your home world after you investigate the bad wea
ther here.”
“We’ll see,” Lucienne said. “Now, get going, all of you. I need to begin testing the climate without distraction.”
The king signaled for his men to withdraw. The guards went to retrieve their daggers from the ground. “Leave them!” Orlando stepped on a dagger. “My queen didn’t say you could take them back.” The other Sphinxes warriors moved to back him up, leveling their rifles at the king’s guards, as they closed in on Orlando.
The king’s guards spat onto the ground and turned, trailing the royal family back toward town. Lucienne caught a train of their dark thoughts. They were accustomed to using anyone who did not acquiesce as punching bags. Before today they had never been so humiliated. They would want revenge and a rematch with her warriors soon. Lucienne wasn’t worried. The king’s guards may have been well-trained and malicious, but her men were the best of the best. She glanced at her warriors with pride.
Soon the natives were out of sight, disappearing under the darkened sky.
Neither moon nor stars shone above Hell Gate, but a distant, blinding light spread from one vertical point. The remote town blazed in glorious lights.
If it were Eterne, then it was within arm’s reach. The first scroll said there’d be a sign. Was the light a harbinger of an enlightened age? But how could these uncivilized natives live inside the gods’ city?
A vibration hummed on her wrist. Lucienne pulled her gaze away from the town to the watch. No ordinary timepiece, this watch could detect the presence of dark matter. An urgent readout flashed in its window and an arrow inside pointed toward the gate.
“This is the place,” Lucienne spoke quietly to Vladimir.
“Flashlight on gate,” said Vladimir.
The warriors switched on their flashlights, directing the brilliant light onto the gate.
Vladimir took his place at Lucienne’s side before the gate, her case opened between them. She stood on the tips of her toes to gaze into the Eye. Her distorted image reflected on its dark, mirrored lens.
“The Eye of Time,” she said. “I recognize it. I feel it.” Her trembling finger reached for it.
“Lucia,” Vladimir warned. “We don’t know—”
“I know,” Lucienne said. “The Siren’s touch will awaken it.” And she touched the Eye.
Her back arched, Lucienne flew backwards. Vladimir instantly reacted, leaping to catch her, but was too late. “Orlando!” he called urgently.
Orlando, six feet away, acted instinctively. His hand caught Lucienne, but the force was too strong. They both crashed to the ground, with Lucienne landing on top of him. Vladimir ran to them and checked her head for injuries.
“I’m fine,” Lucienne said, despite the pain in her ribs. “Orlando took most of it.” She shot to her feet and turned to Orlando with a concerned look.
The warrior got up, massaging his back. “What was that?” he asked.
Her cheeks flushing with anger, Lucienne stormed back toward the gate. The Eye rejected her! Why? She was the Siren. She was the only one who could—unless someone had stolen her thunder.
“I suggest proceeding with caution,” Vladimir said, keeping up with her.
“Someone activated it,” Lucienne said. “But he didn’t take it. According to the scroll, the Eye of Time will kill anyone who touches it except the Destined One.”
“It didn’t kill you,” Vladimir offered. “And we’re not sure if it’s the Eye of Time.”
“It’s of little comfort that it spared me,” Lucienne said bitterly.
“It offers great comfort to me that you’re alright,” Vladimir said. “Don’t just think of your own feelings.”
Lucienne shot Vladimir a look before focusing on the Eye again. It stared right back. “Someone else has entered the game without our knowledge.” A troubled look clouded her eyes.
“That Eye’s creepy.” Vladimir studied it.
“It’s sentient. I can feel its intelligence,” Lucienne said, “but it’s like looking at it through a glass door.”
Vladimir pulled out a palm-sized data display from his pocket, “Let’s give it a test ride,” and scanned the Eye.
Readouts flashed on the window of the data display, lighting up its visage. Vladimir rasped, “The Eye’s atomic and mass numbers indicate that it’s millions of years old.”
“The scroll says that the Eye of Time came into existence before time formed on Earth.” Lucienne laid a hand on Vladimir’s arm. “It is the Eye of Time and it’s staring right at our faces.”
Vladimir placed his callous hand on top of hers. “I’d go to the end of the universe with you even if we were chasing an illusion, you know that.”
“You’ve become unhappy doing that.”
“I’m only frustrated we can’t—I was afraid we would never be together, and that was ripping me apart from inside,” Vladimir sighed ruefully. Then new hope brightened his face. “Everything has changed. We’ve found the Eye of Time.” He studied Lucienne’s face as she withdrew her hand from his, a raw fear rising into his eyes, turning his hazel color to shadow brown. “You still want me, right?”
“What if I don’t?”
Swallowing, Vladimir said in a devastated tone, “I’ll make you want me again. I’ll gain your trust back. Even if you grow sick and tired of me, I won’t let you go.” His voice turned harsh. “I don’t have much choice. I can’t look at other women while you’re on this planet.”
“And that’s my fault?”
“No.”
“My trust in you hasn’t diminished.”
Vladimir blinked, his eyes turning back to a pair of shining stars deep in space. “You really mean that?”
“You need a token or something, prince?” She tilted her head to look at him.
Vladimir laughed softly. The smile on his face radiated. The heat they’d both held back for too long was rekindled, burning away all the unhappy hours they’d spent apart. Vladimir turned his smoldering gaze to Lucienne’s lips. She knew what he desired the most—a kiss. A kiss with all the promise of deliciousness, tenderness, and long-delayed fulfillment.
“Not yet, Vladimir!” she warned.
“I’m not a fool,” he whispered. “I know we must find the portal first. We’ll find it. Look how we’ve already secured the impossible. Nothing can stop us now, and I’m a patient man.”
“Since when?” She gave him an amused look.
“Fine, I’m in the process,” Vladimir said, his eyes darting back to her lips. “In the meantime, it can’t hurt to look.” Then suddenly, he let out a painful cry.
Oh God! Not again. Lucienne felt her blood freezing in her. They weren’t even touching. They were just looking! Then her eyes went wide. The pain didn’t come from her. Electric sparks and black fire discharged from the data reader Vladimir was holding.
“Drop it!” she cried.
Vladimir tossed it to the ground. Electricity still emanated from the reader. Lucienne reached for Vladimir’s hand, turning it. A series of blisters popped up on his palm.
“It’s nothing,” Vladimir said.
“Go get the medic kit from the airship,” said Lucienne.
“I told you I’m fine,” Vladimir said impatiently. “I’m not leaving you.”
“It’s a second-degree burn. Don’t make me leave the site and go with you. You know I can’t leave while it’s here.”
“And you know I can’t leave you while I’m not sure if you’re safe. So stop fussing. What are a few blisters to a warrior?”
Shaking her head, Lucienne turned back to the Eye of Time. A fascinated expression crossed her face. “It doesn’t like to be tested.”
“Obviously,” Vladimir grunted.
Then, without warning, all the flashlights died. Hell Gate sank into pitch blackness.
Vladimir hit a button on his radio. No sound. He dialed his encrypted Eidolon phone. No reception. “All signals are blocked,” Vladimir stated, wheeling around to seek the threat.
The commandos fanned out into a
defensive position in the absence of light.
“I’m checking BL7,” Orlando called. A moment later, he called again, “The engine’s dead.”
“We’re in a dead zone,” Vladimir said.
Lucienne glued her eyes to the metallic eye that sparkled with a faint, ice-blue light. “It’s communicating.”
As she spoke, strange symbols, numbers, and glyphs swarmed inside the Eye’s dark lens. The display lasted less than half a minute, then the data vanished. The Eye of Time remained quiescent. Only the town in the distance sparkled in a magnificent light.
“Let’s send Orlando in to check out the town,” Vladimir said. “The king and his guards are nasty. They might—”
“The natives have nothing to do with the blackout,” Lucienne said. “The Eye of Time is trying to punish us.” She pulled out a platinum necklace from under her jacket, unclasping it. At the end of the chain was an eye-shaped, gold locket. Lucienne pressed the pin on one side of the pendant. The locket slowly opened, revealing an intricately designed holder that contained a half-white, half-black, and translucent liquid. A wisp of gas hovered over its surface.
“What is that?” Vladimir asked.
“Twilight Water, an heirloom,” Lucienne said. “An object that goes beyond three dimensions.” Over Vladimir’s questioning look, she added. “Former Sirens had it tested, but human technology can’t decode its elements.”
“How many skeletons are you keeping in your closet, Lucia?” Vladimir asked.
“You don’t exactly pour your heart out with me either, Blazek.”
“What do you mean by that? I always bare my secrets at your feet. And now I know I’m the only one doing that.”
“Are we going to argue right now?”
“Should I schedule a time then? Is your book full?”
Biting her lip, Lucienne moved the locket toward the Eye on the gate. “If we can’t control it, we’ll be stuck here, like the natives.” She didn’t tell Vladimir that she knew it’d be much worse for them if they were. She had read a warning of threat from the Eye through her Siren’s link. If the Twilight Water didn’t encompass it at first contact, the Eye of Time would incinerate her to ashes.