Destiny's Dark Fantasy Boxed Set (Eight Book Bundle)

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Destiny's Dark Fantasy Boxed Set (Eight Book Bundle) Page 91

by Tamara Rose Blodgett


  Matthew was suddenly there behind her and Clara struggled not to show open relief. Only years of training to blank her expression enabled Clara to obscure her emotions.

  Ada flicked her eyes to the huge male which came to stand behind Clara. Most curious, the Queen thought. He lingered about the girl, as if branding her. His whole being seemed poised to take on whoever dare go near her. Ada paused. She did not like this male, he was entirely too concerned over Clara. That would not do. Then her eyes took in Charles, to the left of Clara. She scowled. That dreadful young man was like a weed which came up in the same spot in the hot house of roses. He would need to be dealt with as well, a thorn in her side. And Clarence, her scowl deepening. He had obviously been behind the escape from the beginning. Traitor. So be it. Queen Ada liked to solve problems, it came to her so easily; discipline to all. Why King Raymond never saw the logic of that precept was beyond her. He was soft. She had always known that of him.

  “Who are you?” Matthew asked, looking at the flag which bore the symbol of the sphere, framing the Queen perfectly.

  Queen Ada let her eyes begin at his leather-clad feet, shod in shoes which laced up calves that swelled deliciously to powerfully constructed knees and joined thighs built like heavily-muscled timber, the like of which they had just traveled through. She was not accustomed to such flesh exposed on a male. Shocking indeed, but she found she liked it, she liked it very much. She took in his trim waist which broadened across a chest in a leather tunic which hung shoulder to mid-thigh, his hair swinging free in loose waves which moved in the wind. But it was his eyes which captured hers. Utterly wild, he was an untamed thing. And as she stared he placed a palm around Clara's neck, meant to steady, the hand encircling the girl's throat easily. And a look of relaxation slid into her eyes, as if she felt protected by the brute. This was not good, not good at all.

  She liked Clara in a state of unbalance., teetering.

  “My Queen?” Henry asked. And Ada was snapped out of her reverie.

  Matthew stared at her and she answered, “I am Queen Ada, sovereign ruler of the Kingdom of Ohio,” she responded in her imperious manner.

  Then she told Henry, without looking at him, “Bring my traveling goblet, guard.”

  “Yes, my Queen.” Henry walked to the travel bag which hung in a jeweled case of brass, welded onto the side of her traveling cocoon. He brought out the cup, fashioned by a blacksmith from her home sphere in the finest metal, titanium-lightweight and travel ready.

  Matthew looked at the female and could not see a mustard seed of kinship between the two women. Clara had said they were mother and daughter but he could not see it. This woman was as tall as some men. Raven-colored hair and a ferret's face, feral and sharp and too thin by far. Did they not have adequate food in their kingdom? He felt Clara tremble slightly and his hand squeezed around her fragile neck. He alone knew that the Queen meant her physical harm. The other Band did not. That friend of hers, Charles, would know of her mistreatment, certainly he must. He wished opportunity to confer with them as this detail mattered. But, of course, as was typical... danger of circumstance preceded useful knowledge.

  The Queen swaggered forward, coming to stand before Clara. Looking down on her she took in the disarray of her wardrobe, her eyes lingering on Clara's healing face. The length and weight of the stare grew uncomfortable but Clara had learned to never take her eyes off of Ada, so she waited.

  Finally, Queen Ada said, “We have come to bring you back to the sphere. There is much planning and discussion for your Wedded Day.”

  Clara knew what would happen but she spoke the words out loud, “I will not go back. I do not wish to be wife to Prince Frederick.”

  The slap rang out in the meadow, Clara's head rocking back and hitting Matthew's chest. The Queen raised her hand again and Matthew captured her scrawny wrist easily, jerking her close to his face, while putting Clara behind him. “You will never lift a hand against her again.” he growled out as he released her so hard she stumbled backward, Henry catching her, his eyes meeting those of the savage.

  Yes, Henry thought wildly, this goes most badly. He held the Queen, her state of drunkenness notwithstanding as she could be quite lucid when deep in the cup.

  “I am not wont to strike a female, madame,” he said the word like rodent, “but for you, I would make an exception,” his eyes glittering with intent. Ada immediately understood the potential in them.

  She turned her eyes to Clara, seeing her hand print upon the girl's face and realized that mayhap if she had handled that differently, the girl would have gone with her. Now she saw all the eyes of the savages look at her with disdain. How dare they? her eyes narrowed to slits. She was Queen here; they were nothing. She slapped at Henry's hands when he would keep her from saying more.

  Charles and Matthew blocked Clara from her sight, but she would be undeterred.

  It was Clara who parted the men and came forward. “Beating me will not make me accompany you, nothing will.” That was not entirely true but Clara suspected what awaited her return. “I have left our home sphere for my own safety,” the Queen rolled her eyes at Clara, looking as though she would weep with boredom. Clara forged ahead, “and will not return for more abuse such as I received from the Prince.” Clara left off the and you.

  “A little discipline is good for all of us Clara. Look at you, you heal already. No permanent damage was wrought.”

  Matthew frowned at Queen Ada, was the wretched creature deranged? Could she not see that Clara was still healing? Did she not just strike her own daughter?

  Clarence said out loud what they had been entertaining, “Are you quite mad? Do you not see the abuse which still heals upon her face? Did you not just add to it by striking her?” he started pacing.

  “You overstep yourself, guard,” Ada said, her glance telling him that she would never forget the comment. He cared not, he was not in the kingdom, so she was not Queen here this day, in this time.

  “The Prince attacked me before I could escape the sphere. He meant to...,” Clara paused, momentarily embarrassed but pressed on, “have his way with me,” she ended flatly.

  “Now that is a tale I would be careful in bearing, Clara. Very careful indeed.” Her guard's horses shuffling nervously, their hooves making the grass rustle.

  “It is not a tale,” Bracus began. “We were there, we saw what it was. This one,” and he pointed to Charles, who had come to stand at Clara's side once more, “was overpowered and could not defend her against the Prince,” he said with clear distaste dripping from his voice.

  The Queen stared at him. This one seemed to clearly be in charge, she would reason with him. Surely he understood hierarchy? Even as a mongrel, he seemed to have a sense of protocol.

  She looked around her, seeing the biggest of the savages appeared to have a deep wound in his side that he was favoring. A great many bodies were piled four deep a small distance away where flies droned in lazy circles above the hill of death.

  Queen Ada switched tactics. “What has happened here? Was my daughter involved in battle without protection?” she asked, crossing her arms over her bony chest. Let her plant the seed of doubt that they were inadequate to protect a Princess.

  Which of course they were!

  “We do not use females in battle,” James scoffed. How ridiculous was that idea? They had too few females even if they wished to use them in that way, which they did not. He thought this horrible woman crazy. She spoke with foolishness and circular arguments.

  Queen Ada smiled. She liked that they became defensive. She could feel herself gaining verbal control and relished the power of it.

  Clara knew what the Queen was capable of and saw her games even if the Band did not. She would put a stop to it and as she opened her mouth for rebuttal just as horses came galloping out of the woods. It was Stephen and Joseph of the Band.

  What was this?

  They pulled up short of the group. Their steed's hooves driving into the meadow grass, di
gging into the soft earth below and sliding to a stop. Dismounting in a rush with weapons laid bare, Stephen glanced but for a moment at the queen and her royal guard, his eyes touching on Clara and Matthew, then finally, Bracus.

  “Captain,” he put his fist to his heart and Bracus returned the gesture, “a large contingent approaches. It is the same from the sphere tunnel.”

  The Prince, Clara thought with an anguish like heat washing up from her feet to head. She sat down with an unladylike plop and put her head between her knees. It was that or she would spray vomit where she stood. She was shaking uncontrollably, the mere thought of being in his presence after the recent assault was too alarming for words.

  Charles knelt by her side. “He will not have you or harm you. We will die before we allow it.”

  Matthew drew her up against his body. Bracus and Charles both looked at him with identical expressions of irritation. They wished to be the men to comfort her, not he. Matthew tightened his grip.

  Clara could feel the heat of him, the wonderful masculine smell as that special warmth burnt between them. She allowed herself to be comforted for a moment, his heart beating against her ear where it lay just below. Then she pulled away, she had to look...to watch. She turned in the circle of his arms and what she saw stole her breath.

  There were so many, she thought with dismay.

  The Prince had the entire guard with him.

  They had only seven of the Band and one injured; Clarence and Charles. There were thirty of the guard, thirty.

  She felt Matthew tense around her and understood what he thought of the odds.

  The Prince saw the group of savages standing some distance from a pile of corpses and blood which littered the field before them. Good. They were tired from their battle with other savages or whoever they were. It mattered not. He looked upon the Queen in typical drunken indignation and thought it excellent that soon she would never be indignant again. Finally, his gaze slid to Clara. She had been within his grasp! He felt his heart speed with excitement, she would be underneath him again. He knew that as sure as he sat on his mount, smelling the remnants of battle around him. His gaze darkened as he saw the huge male that held her close to him and his vision instantly went red. How dare another man touch her? What had she done with him? Had she become a whore so quickly? He wondered and approached the group.

  Queen Ada came stalking toward him, her rare pearls swinging between her knees and an image came to him of strangling her with those pearls. It made a smile come into place where none had been before. His anger at Clara clawed like an animal in a cage wishing to be free.

  Bracus looked upon the Prince, taking his measure as a male. He was without a moral compass, Bracus knew, to harm a female as he had attempted with Clara. Bracus was unsure of the communion between this Prince and the Queen. He would watch but signal the Band to be ready.

  The Queen saw the smile on Frederic's face and her step faltered, an internal alarm going off, which she promptly ignored. Instead, she thought: more wine will make all this dreadfulness go away. Clara will return to the sphere with the Prince, marry him, and she would have grapes aplenty. Immensely satisfied with her internal musings she rushed forward and as she neared the horse Clara had a sudden, internal portent and shouted a moment too late, “Mother, no!”

  Too late, her guard responded to Clara's anguished cry, fierce hate and love intermingled in a confusing tide of emotion. Ada turned her head to gaze at Clara just as the Prince hooked his fist in the pearl's that hung around Ada's neck, jerking her close to his horse. With his opposite hand a small dagger arced, piercing her chest as he dumped her body away from him, her side hitting the horse on the descent then landing on her back. The pearls wrapped the hilt and fell about the grass like black beetles let loose from a jar.

  There was utter silence for a moment when nothing stirred, not a savage, guard, bird, animal, even the flies ceased their droning. Then the world slid into an abyss of clashing metal and diving swords. The men launched themselves at each other and Clara hit the ground, Evelyn crawling after her.

  She reached Ada and lifted her head, cradling it as blood welled brightly. A shiny flood of rubies cascaded down her pale flesh, soaking the deep purple velvet and turning it to black.

  Her eyes were becoming glassy and Clara knew she would not last in this realm much longer. After so long living in fear Clara found an abiding sadness taking residence in her heart. All the lost time with the Queen, her mother, now gone.

  With the sounds of battle all around her she held her mother's dying head and saw that she was trying to say something.

  “Yes... my Queen, mother,” Clara said.

  The name felt foreign on her tongue.

  “...not... not... your...” Queen Ada gasped, her dark eyes bulging in their sockets.

  “What are you not?” Clara asked, Evelyn beside her crouched in a semi-fetal position.

  “...your mother,” she whispered, her breath coming in shallow breaths.

  Clara felt her mouth open. She had just told Clara that they were not mother and daughter.

  Queen Ada raised a claw-like hand and beckoned for her to move closer.

  Clara did.

  Queen Ada grasped her ruined blouse and jerked Clara against her, their chests touching, new blood mingled with the old.

  With her last ounce of breath she said, “The mermaid...” and died.

  Her hand loosened from the tangle of clothing Clara wore. Those eyes that had looked into Clara's a thousand times with loathing, disappointment, anger and disdain... saw her no more.

  CHAPTER 33

  Clara let her mother's head slide out of her grasp, falling to the grass, the flesh still warm and reached for Evelyn, who grabbed her hand like a lifeline. Looking about, Clara could not make out one from another, the Queen's guard blended with the Prince's. Only the savages stood out in stark relief, their movements choreographed like a beautiful, macabre dance of violence-in-motion. She and Evelyn huddled together, the horses scattered about as far away from the battle as they could be.

  She saw Henry laying on the ground with his throat open and spraying blood leaking through his fingers while his mouth opened and closed. She turned to Evelyn, burying the girl's head in her bosom, marking her with Ada's slick blood. She watched one of the Prince's guards remove his head with a saber of some length, then he turned his attention to Clara. He sheathed his sword, making his way toward her, blood splatter from ruined throats decorating his uniform in a ghastly crimson pattern of death. Clara did not pause, jerking the girl to her feet and ran to where the Band's horses stood. She could feel her pursuer gaining and fought not to turn, the girl as fast as she.

  She was almost upon the horses when Evelyn was ripped from her grasp and she turned without hesitation, launching herself at the Prince's guard, understanding the futility even as she moved against him.

  She knew what it was to be unprotected.

  The guard had Evelyn tightly held and Clara came at him like a wild animal, latching onto his forearm trying to meet her teeth as they connected with his flesh. He howled and released Evelyn. He lunged at Clara but she managed to avoid his fist as he was off-balance with a bleeding and throbbing arm.

  Matthew's attention swung to Clara and saw her leap upon the guard. He let the dead guard slide down his body, then heaved him to the ground in front of him.

  He ran to Clara.

  Clara was playing a deadly dodging game with the guard. He would rush forward and she would back behind a horse. He would slap its hindquarters, it would trot off, revealing her.

  Clara now stood before the guard. Evelyn had the sense to make her way into the midst of the horses, camouflaging her position. The guard's focus was all for Clara, which was what she had wanted all along.

  To protect Evelyn.

  “You are coming with me Princess, that is Prince Frederic's order. Do not attempt to bite me again,” he ground out, warily approaching her and she stifled a wild bubble of laughter. T
hat a big brute such as he would be wary of her, then her eyes dipped to the wound that her mouth had caused and it was a disaster upon his arm.

  She knew better than to take her eyes off him but too late she was wrapped in his embrace and an evil look overcame him as he searched for some place to take her. Suddenly, his eyes bulged and his body stiffened, a surprised cry escaping him and his arms loosened about her. He slid to the left, falling in a crumpled heap to the ground. A dagger stuck out of his back, a thick agate embedded in its hilt. She looked up and it was Matthew who calmly crouched above the guard, taking the dagger out and wiping it casually on the guard's uniform before sheathing it.

  “Clara,” he said, moving toward her.

  Her lip trembled and she told herself that she would not cry. Her relief was as profound as any she had ever known as she burst into tears. He drew her into his body, shielding her from the war which raged about them, the sounds of swords finally diminishing until the clatter ceased.

  An unnatural silence took hold of the meadow, the sun slanting along the ruined and bloodied grass, the whole of it looking like it was on fire.

  ****

  As soon as Clara could gain a measure of control, she backed away from Matthew, shaky and spent. Looking about her, she saw the Queen dead, looking as pale in the repose of death as she had when she lived. Clara shuddered, feeling numb.

  Charles approached her at a jog. Following her gaze his eyes landed on Queen Ada and he flashed back to her, wrapping his arms around her. But she could not cry any longer, her emotions depleted.

  He pulled away and looked down on her. “I am so sorry, Clara,” he thought but for a moment. “I know she showed you every unkindness, but she was still your mother.”

  No, she was not, Clara thought, but said nothing. She would reflect on that disturbing revelation at another time. At present, she needed to take stock of what had happened.

  Quite a lot, apparently. Her eyes took in the battlefield where no less than thirty new corpses lay. As she looked, she grew more frantic. The Prince did not appear to be among them.

 

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