The Shadow Queen

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The Shadow Queen Page 24

by C. J. Redwine


  Instantly, Gabril’s heart submitted to hers. Her magic pierced him easily, flooding his body and racing through his veins with the barest push of effort from Lorelai. When it came to the swollen knot of bone on his left thigh, light surrounded his leg, and there was a sharp crack as the bone straightened. Gabril cried out and slumped forward, but the pain was already rushing out of him and into Lorelai.

  She clenched her teeth as his agony exploded into her body. It was a sharp, searing pain that left her skin clammy and sent her stomach crawling up the back of her throat.

  Let it out now, Lorelai. Kol’s voice was firm—a lifeline in the midst of the pain that was tearing into her. Gabril’s leg is fine. You did it. Put the wound into the ground.

  She tore her hand from Gabril’s and slammed both of her palms onto the gritty surface of the road. The pain poured out of her and into the ground, and the stone beneath her hands cracked in two, revealing the ground beneath it. She pushed her hand into the crack, ignoring the sharp fragments of stone that scratched her skin, and pressed her palm against the dirt.

  “Please lend me what strength you can,” she whispered as her magic sank into the ground and waited. Her throat tightened, and her chest ached as she silently pleaded with her kingdom to recognize its true queen. “I seek to stop the one who abuses you. Will you help me?”

  The heart of Ravenspire’s ground reached for her, tangling with her magic, but there was a taint to it. A streak of resistance that felt less like the ground and more like . . .

  “Irina,” she whispered as the threads of her power reached a web of magic that waited beneath the fallow ground.

  She’s already fighting you? Where? I don’t see anything.

  She has a trap laid beneath the ground. That means this place is important to her. And it means her response is going to weaken her. She looked up into Kol’s amber eyes. And it means we’ll have to move fast, because the second I speak an incantor, her spell is going to react.

  I’m ready.

  “Pros`rashk!” Her voice rang with power, and magic exploded out of her palms and into the ground, wrapping around the weary heart of Ravenspire and merging until they were united. “Scatter the stones that built this road and crumble them into dust.”

  For a moment, the ground resisted, the taint of Irina’s magic pushing against Lorelai’s. The princess’s heart raced, and anger fanned to life in her chest. She wasn’t losing this battle. She wasn’t going to back down. Irina had controlled Ravenspire’s ground for nearly a decade. It was time to sever those ties.

  The princess threw her head back and yelled, “Pros`rashk!” Power flooded her body, a fire lit from the inside and poured into the ground.

  The field shuddered and heaved. The stones that paved the road cracked and crumbled, scattering dust and bits of rock into the brittle grass. A ripple began beneath Lorelai’s hands and quickly sped along the roads leading east to west, leaving destruction in its wake.

  Lorelai closed her eyes and pushed the magic, pushed the ground to go as far and as fast as possible. She needed the ruin to be widespread. She needed the capital isolated.

  Power thrummed through her veins and roared in her ears, and then Kol had his arms around her waist and was hauling her to her feet.

  Her eyes snapped open as he yelled, Get away from the road!

  She stumbled back a step, and the ripple of destruction on the road disappeared into the distance. What are you doing? I wasn’t finished!

  Listen.

  Gabril said, “We need to leave. Now.”

  She concentrated on hearing more than the thunder of her heartbeat, and nearly fell as the field twitched and bubbled like a pot of water left over a fire. Beneath the ground, something skittered and hissed, growing louder and louder until the grass trembled and cracks began splitting the land into pieces. The skittering and hissing poured out of the cracks, and Lorelai’s throat closed in horror as swarms of beetles, spiders, and centipedes gushed out of the ground and raced toward her.

  “Get to the forest,” Lorelai said, and they ran south, leaping over cracks and crushing bugs beneath their boots.

  They’d traveled half the distance between the ruined road and the forest when the ground in front of them disappeared, sinking out of sight and spewing a horde of insects the size of Lorelai’s hands with long pinchers that clacked and snapped as they crawled toward the princess.

  Oh skies, we’re surrounded.

  Lorelai whirled to find the ground behind them had disappeared as well. She stood with Kol and Gabril on a slender circle of dirt surrounded by swarms of spiders and beetles that chittered and clacked as they raced forward.

  It was Irina’s favorite trick—dominating the hearts of multiple creatures so that there was no way Lorelai could overpower and subdue them all before being overcome.

  Something crawled over Lorelai’s boot, and she shook her foot as Gabril cursed and began stomping the ground. Kol stomped as well, but for every bug they killed, another five took its place. Sasha screamed in fury and dove, but she couldn’t do more than sweep a few bugs away with the power of her wings, and more were already swarming to take their place.

  A spider climbed over Lorelai’s boot and onto her leg, and she slapped at it, but her boots were already overrun with multilegged centipedes, spiders in every size, and those awful huge beetles who chopped other bugs in half as they advanced on the princess.

  She needed something to fight with—the heart of a living creature capable of defeating an insect horde. She needed a stone to crush them. A flood of water to drown them. A ball of fire—

  Use me. Kol’s hand wrapped around hers, and his dragon heart—vicious, powerful, and begging for blood—slammed against her magic and took hold.

  Can you stay in control if we use your dragon heart? she asked, but she was already choosing her incantor as she used her free hand to shake off a centipede that was skittering over her bare arm. A sharp jab of pain pierced her heel as one of the monster beetles skewered her boot with its pinchers.

  I’ll do my best. You can help me if I lose myself, but we’re going to be eaten alive or dragged into the depths of the ground if we don’t do something.

  “Lorelai!” Gabril grabbed something off her back and threw it in the teeming mass that covered the field.

  The ground beneath them heaved, sending them to their knees. Instantly, the bugs converged, swarming over them, biting, clawing and skittering over the top of each other until the three of them were covered.

  Lorelai shuddered and lost her grip on Kol. Flinging her arms out, she swept at the creatures crawling toward her face and then fell forward as another wave of enormous beetles gushed from the ground and raced up her body.

  Pain lit into her in tiny, jagged pieces as pinchers and fangs tore at her skin. Dimly, she heard Gabril cry out, but the whisper-hiss of hundreds of legs scrambling over the dirt, over her clothes, over her drowned out everything else.

  They were tangled in her hair. Clawing at her stomach. Crawling up her neck toward her mouth.

  She pressed her lips closed and struggled to find her footing amid the piles of slippery bodies that covered every inch of the trembling ground.

  I’ve got you. Kol’s hand found hers, and together they pulled themselves to their feet. Gabril was doubled over at the waist beside them, frantically trying to dislodge centipedes from his neck and back.

  The ground beneath them was disappearing rapidly. If Lorelai didn’t act now, they would be buried alive and then consumed.

  Kol’s hand gripped hers, and magic stung her palm. “Kaz`zhech. Bring his fire into me and punish those who harm us.”

  Violent heat surged through Kol’s veins and into hers. She screamed as it gathered in her chest, a molten ball of fury and destruction that felt like it was turning her blood to vapor and her bones to dust.

  Burn them, Kol shouted as he raised their joined hands where the white light of her magic had become a flame of orange and yellow that leaped toward
the swarm at their feet. She raised her other hand, sucked in a breath that felt like razors against the heat inside her chest, and yelled, “Kaz`zhech! Punish them with fire.”

  Flames shot from her palms and scorched the ground, latching on to the brittle grass and sweeping outward in a blaze of orange with brilliant white at the center. The heat seared her from the inside out, and she shook, desperately holding on to the terrible strength of Kol’s dragon heart as she turned to strafe the entire circle around them with fire.

  Insects scrambled away from the flames but then curled up and turned to ash as the fire caught them. The scent of roasted bugs—bitter and pungent—hung heavy in the air, stinging Lorelai’s eyes.

  Her legs trembled, her teeth chattered, and every part of her body throbbed as the dragon’s fire scalded her. The heat was a monstrous presence pushing, pushing, pushing against her chest until she could barely breathe. Until she thought her skin would split, and her bones crumble. She tried to keep her hands raised, but spots were dancing at the edge of her vision, and her muscles had lost their strength.

  Kol let go of her hand and gently lowered her to ground, though she could hear the collar whispering hurt, punish, kill while his dragon heart begged for more violence.

  “You did it,” Gabril said quietly as he crushed one last twitching spider beneath his boot. The field surrounding them was a smoking pit of insect carcasses and burned grass, but the fire, once it had finished the task Lorelai set before it, had extinguished itself.

  The awful heat of Kol’s dragon’s fire seeped out of her, and she drew a breath of the pungent, smoky air. The pain was gone. She was still awake. Kol was still in control. And Irina had once again weakened herself without winning the fight.

  Are you okay? Kol asked as he knelt beside her.

  She was better than okay. Triumph was a radiant light blazing within her. She threw her arms around Kol and laughed.

  We did it. She lost again. And now she’s weaker, the road is destroyed, and we’re one step closer to finishing this.

  His arms came around her and pulled her close for a moment, his heartbeat a wild cadence beneath her ear. We make a good team.

  The warmth behind his words made Lorelai suddenly, excruciatingly aware that she’d thrown herself against him. That she was still holding him. That her heart was beating as wildly as his.

  She dropped her arms and got to her feet on legs that still shook. I’m . . . sorry? Yes. I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to . . . That was great. Really great.

  What was she doing? Had she lost her mind? She looked at Gabril’s face, his brow raised at the two of them as Kol climbed to his feet. Thank heavens the starlight didn’t show the blush that was heating her cheeks.

  I’ll pretend I don’t know about it, then. Kol sounded amused.

  It was just . . . You know what? I don’t want to talk about it.

  He grinned at her, the stars gilding his red-brown hair with silver. Why not? It’s kind of . . . fetching.

  She rolled her eyes. Come on. Let’s get out of here in case Irina recovers fast enough to send something else after us. She hurried to catch up to Gabril, who was nearly at the edge of the Hinderlinde Forest, feeling the warmth of Kol’s affectionate amusement behind her and the heat that still lingered in her cheeks.

  UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

  HarperCollins Publishers

  ..................................................................

  THIRTY-ONE

  THE TINY VOICE of doubt that had whispered relentlessly in Irina’s ear since the night of Lorelai’s betrayal had become an deafening roar.

  How had Lorelai stopped the collar from torturing the Eldrian king? How had she taken control of the mountains, the water, and the land and defeated every spell Irina threw at her?

  How had Lorelai thwarted Irina’s will? Irina’s heart?

  Either she’d had training—unlikely since Irina had kept an eye on every semipowerful mardushka in all Morcant in case the princess tried to return to her mother’s roots—or she somehow had more raw power in her fingertips than Irina had ever realized.

  More power than she should possibly have.

  Her deepest fear had become a reality: Lorelai was stronger than she was. There was no explanation for it. No reason that Irina could find, though she tried.

  Had her birth been unusual? Had one of the fae from the realm of Llorenyae fled its home kingdom and found succor in Ravenspire in exchange for gifting the princess with extraordinary power?

  Irina’s skin grew cold, and a finger of ice slid down her spine.

  She needed answers about Lorelai’s birth—about the magic that ran through the princess’s veins—and there was only one person who could give them to her.

  Her stomach roiled, and her heart beat in sharp, uneven bursts.

  It was time to face what lay beneath the garden’s monolith.

  She swept through the hushed hallways of the castle, Raz clinging to her neck, and kept her expression cold and forbidding as her pulse tapped a frantic rhythm against her skin. She ignored the maids who ducked out of her path, the nobility who turned as if to speak to her, and the pages who scrambled to open doors before their queen reached them, and ignored as well the thread of fear that trembled along her spine. Her guards walked behind her, their hands on the hilts of their swords.

  She burst into the castle’s entrance hall, barely sparing a glance for gleaming floor that had once been covered in blood and destruction.

  She had no time for sentimentality. No room for the ache of loss and betrayal.

  A page threw open the castle’s front entrance, and Irina strode through, her spine straight and her head held high, though she shook as the chill of the early morning air settled against her exposed skin.

  “Your Highness, perhaps a coat would be in order?” her guard asked.

  She ignored him.

  The path to the garden lead down the front drive and then cut to the left and wrapped around the western turret. The monolith glowed beneath the morning sun, and the starpetals that blossomed around it reminded Irina of blood against snow.

  Tatiyana’s blood.

  Tatiyana, who no longer had a voice to speak or a will to overcome, but whose heart still lingered in her bones and would give Irina the answers she sought.

  If she could stand to see what else her sister’s heart contained.

  “Leave me,” she said to her guards as she forced her steps toward the monolith.

  Her steps slowed as she left the crushed stone path to walk on the circle of midnight black dirt that surrounded the monolith. The starpetals seemed to reach for her, their sharp edges eager for a taste of her blood. She bent to allow Raz to slither onto the ground, and then parted the starpetals with her hands, heedless of the tiny thorns that left cuts scattered across her skin.

  Her heart beat faster, and her breath came in sharp, unsteady bursts as she sank to her knees on the rich, black dirt, crimson flowers latching on to her hair and the sleeves of her dress. Facing the glittering white edifice that marked her sister’s grave, she gathered her remaining strength, ignoring the weariness that was already pulling at her, and plunged her hands into the soil.

  The ground was the same Ravenspire ground that had been grudgingly bending its heart to hers since the moment she’d set foot in the kingdom over nine years ago. She’d mined its power and bent it to her will countless times, ignoring the drain she’d put on it for the sake of ensuring her reign.

  This time, there was no ignoring the resistance she met. The depletion of the land’s power that had once surged to the surface every time her bare skin grazed the ground.

  She focused her power, her will, and magic exploded down her veins, out of her palms, and into the ground. “Kaz`prin. Bring me what I seek.”

  The soil bubbled and heaved. Irina held on to the soil’s heart, exerted her will, and refused to falter even as she felt Tatiyana’s heart slowly rise to the surface.

  With one l
ast shudder, the ebony casket ascended from its resting place, split in two with a tremendous crack, and then Irina was holding the bones of her sister.

  Irina tried to speak, but her voice was caught in the suffocating thickness of the panic that closed her throat. The bones in her hand were from her sister’s rib cage, the shelter of Tatiyana’s heart, and the place where the strongest residue of what had once been a living being would still reside.

  Murderer.

  The thought was a whisper in the back of Irina’s mind, and she nearly dropped the bones in shock.

  It wasn’t her sister’s voice. It couldn’t be. The dead were dead. Nothing could bring them back to life to speak new thoughts, new words. It wasn’t her sister’s voice.

  It was Irina’s own.

  Her eyes stung, and she glared down at the bones she held. She wouldn’t have had to kill Tatiyana if her sister had been less desirable, less lovable, just . . . less. Instead, she’d taken their father’s love, their uncle’s favor, and the kingdom that should’ve been Irina’s—and she’d done it all without once acknowledging that she was leaving her older sister out in the cold.

  That she was a thief. A selfish thief who deserved her fate.

  Irina clung to the knowledge that she’d done what had to be done to right the wrongs stacked against her, but her throat didn’t ease. Her eyes still stung.

  And her heart ached in a way that had nothing to do with the toll of magic.

  The bones seemed to burn her palms as she forced herself to say, “Zna`uch. Reveal to me the secret of Lorelai’s power.”

  For a moment, it seemed her sister’s heart would fight hers, but Irina was desperate, and Tatiyana had no will to exert. The queen blinked the tears from her eyes and raised her voice. “Zna`uch. Reveal the secret of Lorelai’s power.”

  Images struck, faded and blurry at the edges. The ebony carriage entering Morcant. The evergreen crashing into Tatiyana and slicing her to pieces. Blood pouring into the pristine snow and carrying splinters of the carriage with it.

  Tatiyana, lying on the ground and looking into the forest, where she locked eyes with her sister.

 

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