Forgotten (Guardian Legacy Book 3)
Page 32
“This is a security matter you should not be concerned with, Princess,” Sir Malax said.
“What have these men done to warrant torture?”
He smiled, his mismatched eyes gleaming evilly. “Princess, your father leaves security matters in my capable hands,” Sir Malax said. “I was told someone came here to see Prisoner Zero the last week.”
“I did. I saw him and all the prisoners.” I placed my hand on the gate and it peeled back, leaving a hole big enough to walk through.
Ruby caught my arm. “Princess, you cannot go in there. The light from the crystals will burn you.”
The Guardian girl, Izzy, had used the crystals to trap demons, which meant the rays couldn’t harm me. “I’ll be fine.”
The guards watched me in horror. Sir Malax’s eyes narrowed with anticipation, as though he couldn’t wait for me to burn. Like I’d said, he was a sadistic bastard. I stepped inside the yard, the light from the crystals dancing around me.
Not even a pinch. I released a breath, but I didn’t have a chance to gloat. Whoever held the poor guard they’d been torturing let go, and I barely managed to freeze him before he hit the ground. I lowered him down gently.
“How did she do that?” a guard whispered behind me.
“The light doesn’t affect her,” another said.
“She is the One,” a third said.
I didn’t look at them, though I heard the awe in their voices. “I’m here, Sir Malax,” I said. “What do you want to know?”
“You walked through the light field without the Kris Dagger,” he said.
I had no idea what the Kris Dagger had to do with anything. But going by the dazed look on his face, it was the only thing that could protect me from the effect of the light. He didn’t know that the powers of the dagger were in me.
“I was here last week and saw all the prisoners. This man did not let me in.” I went down on my knees and checked his injuries. I wanted to heal him, but I remembered Gavyn’s warning. “He’s in a lot of pain.”
Sir Malax glanced at the guard, then me. He still wore a dazed look. “I’ll make sure he receives medical attention, Princess.”
There was reverence in his voice now, and I could feel his fear. “Good luck finding out whoever released the prisoner.”
Sir Malax bowed. “Thank you, Princess.”
I joined the six guards outside the gate. They stepped back. What? They hadn’t believed I was the Chosen One? Father obviously hadn’t sent them the memo, and who would blame him? The Kris Dagger had never responded to me, despite my testing it every week. I couldn’t wait to tell my father that the powers were inside me.
Upstairs, Lady Nemea paced. She stopped when she saw me. “Well?”
“Well what?” I asked, faking ignorance. I removed the cloak and placed it at the foot of my bed.
She picked it up. “What did you tell Malax?”
“I stopped him from hurting those guards.” I sat on the bed and reached for the hot cocoa. “I hope this mess will be over by tomorrow.”
“I hope so, too.” She went to hang up my cloak. She’d replaced the cocoa I’d spilled. Without thinking, I only drank half before putting it down. While I brushed my teeth, she turned down my bed.
“Are you going to finish your drink?” she asked.
“No, I’m done.” I crawled into bed, and the last thought before I fell asleep was how nauseatingly sweet my hot cocoa had tasted.
Something woke me up hours later. I struggled to open my eyes. Panic surged as a thought flashed in my head. I’d experienced this before. Many times before—the red light shining on my eyelids, the awareness of other people in the room, the voices, and the inability to move or talk.
I strained to hear them, but the words were jumbled. The weakness spread, my thoughts becoming hazy. I recognized the feeling. Someone was draining my energy. Why? To keep me docile, like Gavyn had said?
Something hard pushed against my hand. It felt like some sort of weapon. Someone was trying to give me a weapon. I tried to wrap my fingers around it, but couldn’t. What could I possibly do in my state? Even the pool of power that usually started on my lower back was silent. My body could not protect me against these people.
I fought back, strained harder to stay conscious, maybe even identify one of them, but the darkness circled like a predator, attacking my senses until sleep seemed like the only refuge.
Voices woke me again. This time, I recognized them.
“She looks the same,” Katia said to my left.
“Don’t you mean dead?” Lottius whispered on my right.
“Really, Lottie. I swear you’d kick a dog when it is down.”
Did she just compare me to a dog? I tried to open my eyes with little result, then I tried to ping them and tell them I was semiconscious, but I didn’t think I succeeded. I didn’t want to slip into a coma again, especially when I knew someone in the castle was doing this to me.
“No, I wouldn’t,” Lottius said. “I love dogs and everything quadruped. I even like shifters when they’re on all fours. It’s the two-legged species that annoy me. What is Sour Face’s problem?”
“She doesn’t want us here,” Katia said.
“What is she going to do if we decide not to leave? Force us out?” Lottius’s voice drifted to my right.
“She’s in charge of Lilith, Lottie, so what she says goes.”
“How long are they going to keep the stupid vigil down there?” Now she sounded far away. If my guess was right, she was by the window
“Until she wakes up and waves or something,” Katia said. She was still by my side. Warm hands touched my forehead, and once again, I tried to move and ping them. “I wonder what the prisoner did to her.”
Prisoner? I wasn’t attacked by Dante, I wanted to yell.
“Probably drained her psi energy,” Lottius said. “It’s been two days and she’s still out.”
Two days? No wonder I was starving.
“Do you think Lord Valafar knows?” Katia asked.
“I don’t think Sour Face would want him to know Lilith has been attacked while under her care,” Lottius said. “But Sir Malax sent a search team after the prisoner and his accomplice.”
What accomplice? Bran?
“Okay, Lady Nemea is starting to give me the creeps, too,” Katia said. “Let’s go.”
Don’t go, I begged them. Please. Stay and protect me. But I couldn’t hear them anymore. I was alone with people who got some sort of kick from draining my energy.
I must have fallen asleep, because when I woke up, the red light shone on my eyelids again. The energy suckers were back. I tried to channel my energy and stop time, but it was hopeless. This time, I heard them.
“Are you done yet?” Lady Nemea asked.
“Almost,” Solange said. “Did they find Dante?”
“No, but Malax’s men captured him before and they will again.”
Captured him before? Why was everyone lying about Dante? He never attacked me.
I felt a tug and tried to resist it, but I was still too weak.
“Be careful with the crystals,” Lady Nemea warned.
“Is this really necessary anymore?” Solange asked. “I understand why we did it before, but why now? We have enough crystals with her energy.”
“Not enough. It’s exhausting drugging her several times a week just to drain her. You saw what happened when we didn’t. She created lightning bolts. We have to completely drain her once a month, or her powers will peak and she’ll bond with the dagger. She must never bond with the dagger. Queen Coronis was denied the chance to wield it, but you will. As the firstborn, the dagger is rightfully yours, not hers.”
Drugging me? So, that was what the stupid cocoa was for. The mornings I woke up tired always followed the night the cocoa had tasted especially sweet. And all because of that stupid dagger.
“Father is becoming suspicious.” Solange sounded worried. “Today, he asked why she hasn’t responded to his CCs.
We’ll have to ask her to make one or he’ll know something is wrong.”
“Your father became weak the moment that half-Gypsy Guardian came into his life. I should have killed her and kept Lil instead of telling Coronis about them. That was my mistake.”
So Lady Nemea was the one who’d betrayed my parents, not Dante. I should have known. Everything that ever came from her mouth, except Father’s love for me, was false.
“I’ve done everything for you, Solange. Don’t ever forget that. From summoning the Tribunal so we could get our hands on the dagger—”
“Uh, that was my idea, Aunt Nemea,” Solange said.
Aunt Nemea?
“You helped with the summoning, sweetie. Not the same thing. I came up with the solution to erase her memories. It doesn’t matter that your father made it happen.”
So, Father was the one who’d had asked Coronis for help? Why? Did he know that the summoning was to get their hands on my dagger, or that these psychos were draining my energy on a regular basis?
“I just need a few more days,” Lady Nemea mumbled. “A few more crystals and you’ll have all you need to control the Kris Dagger.”
“Maybe we should just let her rule. She’s not so bad. I’ve even grown fond of her.”
“No,” Lady Nemea snapped. “It’s the only way I can fulfill the promise I made to my sister. You will be the queen.”
“I’m done with her. She’s slipped back into a coma.” Despite her words, it felt like Solange squeezed my arm reassuringly. Or maybe I just wanted to think so.
“Now go and keep your father away while I finish here,” Lady Nemea said.
Did that mean that Solange’s mother was Nemea’s sister? All this time and the two of them were working together? My head swam.
The scent of sulfur filled the air and a chill crawled over me. I knew that scent. I’d smelled it on Solange the night she’d appeared drunk, and the next day on her and her friends. I tried to breathe, but couldn’t. My inside roiled when I realized what she was doing—attempting to get inside me. To possess me. I channeled the little energy I had left and zapped her.
She screamed. “You little brat.”
“What are you doing?” a male voice asked sharply. Malax. Finally, someone who would stop her. “I thought Solange was going to do that.”
Whatever hope I’d had that Malax was on my side drained out of me. I should have known he’d be in on it.
“She is too blinded by love for her father to do it. She even talked about letting Lilith rule. Can you believe it? After everything we’ve fought for?”
“There’s something about Lilith that tugs at people’s hearts,” Malax said.
“All I see is a spoiled little brat,” Lady Nemea snapped.
“Don’t stress yourself, love,” Sir Malax said. “We’ll put the rightful queen on the throne. But we’ll be the power behind the throne, not Valafar.”
“As long as Solange believes I’m her aunt, she’ll listen to me.” Her voice grew fainter, as though she was moving away from my bed. “If she stirs before I return, drain her. Don’t use her usual guards. Use men loyal to us.”
I waited until I couldn’t feel their energy, then I relaxed. I didn’t realize I was crying until I felt coolness trail down the side of my face to my ears.
I wasn’t sure why I was crying. My lost innocence? My father, the man I’d thought could never hurt me, had been responsible for my memory loss. Why?
I didn’t know what to do. I was still too weak to move, but Solange had bought me time. It didn’t matter whether she had done it because she was tired of all her “aunt’s” scheming or because she wanted to help me. I had to help myself now.
I did a psi sweep and tried to locate Lottius and Katia, but I was too weak to find them. Desperate for any help, I summoned all my energy and sent a ping.
Help me. Energy low. Being drained.
-23-
I woke up to a buzz of voices. It was just like the day I’d regained consciousness, except I didn’t feel tired. In fact, I felt like I’d had a shot of adrenaline. The voices didn’t bother me either, so I listened in on a conversation.
Princess Lilith is still sleeping? a boy asked.
Yes, baby, a woman answered. We’ll keep coming back until she wakes up.
Why?
Because we need her. When we gather here, our love floats up to her window, fills her heart, and chases away the bad things the traitors did to her.
The traitors will go to Tartarus when the knights catch up with them, won’t they, Mommy?
Yes, baby. They will.
Knights were searching for Dante. That wasn’t good. I sat up and did a quick psi scan. My father wasn’t back, but some seriously powerful people were outside my door. I recognized a few energies, including my friends’, but the more powerful ones belonged to strangers. Going by their brilliance, I recognized them as Specials. I found a robe at the foot of my bed and shrugged it on.
My stomach growled as I walked to the window. The sun must have set hours before, because stars dotted the sky. Fear floated through the window and hit my empathic sense like a hurricane. I looked down and frowned. What looked like the entire population of the island had gathered on the lawn, the light from the crystals in their hands lighting up the yard. The people were scared and needed to see me. Not up here but down there, reassuring them.
Someone saw me and pointed. Whispers of “the princess” followed. I waved. They lifted their crystals, but their fear didn’t lessen. I channeled my powers and sent a mass telepath. Thank you for watching over me. I am okay now.
The whisper of “the princess” became a chant, a demand that I join them. No matter what Lady Nemea and Solange had done to me, these people were innocent. They were my people and they needed me.
I smiled and waved again. I am coming.
Hunger pangs hit me as I cut across my bedroom. How long I had been out? I was starving, yet I didn’t feel weak. With a wave of my hand, the door flew open to reveal Katia, Lottius, Ravan, Skylar, and Gus. Behind them stood Kewpie and Barbie and the Specials they’d introduced to me the first week at the Academy. In the back on the sofa were more people. Children, actually. And Locke? The children were all Specials. No wonder I’d felt their energies.
“Don’t ever scare us like that again,” Katia scolded, hugging me.
Was she or was she not working with Gavyn? “How long was I unconscious?”
“Five days.”
Which meant today was a school night. “Shouldn’t you guys be doing homework or something?” I teased, hugging Lottius.
“School was canceled, thank goodness,” Lottius said. “We should have prison breaks more often.”
Katia rolled her eyes, but the others looked shocked. Guess they weren’t used to Lottius’s glibness. “I’m sure they’ll allow a few inmates to escape just for you, Lottie. Thanks for coming, guys.” I touch Skylar and Ravan’s arms and smiled at the omni girls. I would have expected Tannin and the guys to show up, not the Specials. “Thank you.”
“We had to come.” Kewpie indicated the children behind them. “They picked up your ping just before you passed out two days ago and told us you needed our help.”
“You said someone was draining your energy,” a boy with curly hair said with a lisp. He couldn’t be more than eight.
A girl of about ten pointed at Locke. “And he helped fix you.”
“Fix me?” I asked.
“Your energy was too low,” Katia said. “He gave you some.”
“Oh.” I studied the shy guy. He still couldn’t meet my gaze. “That was a dangerous thing to do. In my weakened state, I could easily have drained him.”
“We know, but he offered when you didn’t recover,” Barbie added.
“He was very careful, though,” Kewpie again.
“Then I owe you a lot more than thanks, Locke.” I glanced at the others. “Let’s all go downstairs. I want to talk to the people.” I pulled Katia and Lottius aside. �
�I’m starving. Can one of you get me something to eat?”
“I’ll do it,” Katia said, and teleported.
The Specials didn’t leave, despite the fact that I’d told them to head downstairs. I also noticed another odd thing. My guards weren’t at their usual station. “Where are my guards?”
Lottius nodded toward the Specials. “When the scary little people got your SOS, they decided you needed new guards. As you can see, they’re still not leaving.”
I wasn’t sure whether to be impressed or worried.
“Even their parents tried to convince them to leave, but they refused,” Lottius continued in a whisper. “Xezbeth and Zagan organized shifts, and they took turns watching over you. Impressive, if you ask me, except for the part where they insisted on invading my head and Katia’s in the name of vetting us.” She glared at Kewpie and Barbie.
“We had to confirm you were not traitors,” Barbie protested.
Lottius made a face. “Yeah, whatever. Just stay away from me.” Bran had already told us to keep an eye on you.
You saw him?
He sent a message with his brother after he tried to come back. Yeah, I know all about Gavyn. I heard something you told him made him change sides. Her dislike for Gavyn was still obvious and justified. He said to tell you the goddess took away his shield, whatever that means.
It meant his deal with the goddesses was over. “You do know we can all hear you,” Kewpie piped in, interrupting our private conversation.
“Then quit eavesdropping, Xezbeth,” Lottius snapped. “Oh, FYI, the guards left.”
“What guards?” I asked.
“The ones upstairs. They’re all gone.”
Upstairs meant the top security team that watched over the island. “Gone where? Never mind. I’ll find out downstairs. Let’s go.”
“There’s something else you need to see, Princess,” Barbie called out before I could teleport.