Joely leaned toward her. “This isn’t awkward at all,” she whispered.
Sera smirked.
A set of cushions were brought in and placed on either side of Apfira’s couch. Once they were positioned and the servants who had brought them departed, Korin and a hybrid man came into the room. They sat on the cushions, their legs crossed, and said nothing.
Apfira clapped her hands, and serving women came into view with heaping dishes of fruits and vegetables. They served the queen first, then Theyn, piling food onto his plate. Beno was served next.
A servant came and put a massive helping of food in front of Sera, and the delicate aroma of spices she couldn’t name made her mouth water. She suddenly felt as if she hadn’t eaten in days, and she looked to Theyn for some sign on how to navigate Ylian manners. The servants stood behind the rest of the guests and waited.
Apfira delicately took a bite of her food, something that looked like chutney, and smiled. “Perfection. Uncle, what say you?”
Theyn took a taste from his own plate, the silver fork barely laden before it disappeared between his lips. He smiled. “A taste I remember. My compliments to the chef.”
Apfira nodded, and the servants stepped forward to see to the rest of the guests. When the place settings were all loaded, they hit buttons on the bottoms of the serving dishes, then released them to hover over the table. The servants bowed to the queen and left the banquet hall.
Theyn took another bite. “I’m impressed with the use of Ylian spices. Did you find a way to cultivate them here?”
“We did. As you know, Bruthes has long traded with Ylia for our foodstuffs and agricultural products. Before the first colonists left Bruthes to come here, they were able to obtain seeds and seedlings for various plants from home. Not all of them survived Earth’s climate and atmosphere, but most did.”
“Remarkable,” Sera said. “Our two worlds must be very similar.”
“In most respects, yes,” Theyn nodded. “The gravity on Earth is slightly lighter than that on Ylia, but about the same as on Bruthes.”
One of the other diners, a red-haired woman with glowing golden eyes and a turquoise stud piercing her nose, leaned forward. “Have you ever been to Bruthes, Your Highness?”
“Once, when I was a child.” He sipped his wine. “My Companion was there more recently than I.”
“Not much recent about it, I’d wager,” the hybrid man sitting at the queen’s elbow said with a smile.
Apfira looked at him in displeasure. “Allow me to introduce my husbands,” she said. “This is Korin, whom you’ve already met. He is half Ylian, half Bruthesan.”
Korin nodded to them. “Hello.”
Sera was surprised. She wouldn’t have thought such a mousy man would be married to a woman like Apfira, who clearly loved her power. She took a sip of her water, staying away from the wine. She knew a sip or two of alcohol wouldn’t hurt a human fetus, but she didn’t want to take a chance with the little hybrid she carried. Better safe than sorry.
The introductions at the other end of the table continued. “And this is Heron. He is half human.”
The man nodded his dark head. His eyes were green, like Beno’s, but with white sclera like a human’s. His skin was coffee brown, but with few scales; the few that he had were scattered over his chest and shoulders like freckles. He was more handsome than Korin and broader through the shoulders. “A pleasure to meet you.”
Apfira put a grape into the hybrid man’s mouth. “Heron is outspoken.”
Beno shoved the food around on his plate with his fork. “Korin told us that he and all of the other males are servants here.” The little man on the cushion looked like he wanted the floor to swallow him whole. “He and Heron are the first males we’ve seen since leaving the Cyclops.”
“The rest are protected,” she said. “They prefer to stay in the Men’s Quarters of the palace.”
“Men’s Quarters,” Beno mused. “Interesting.”
The queen looked at him with innocent eyes. “Why is that interesting?”
“There were never Men’s Quarters or Women’s Quarters on the Ylia I knew,” he explained. “The genders always mixed easily. In fact, gender was never a concern outside of breeding season.”
Apfira’s cheeks colored, and a few of the ladies at the table laughed nervously, as if he had said something outrageous and offensive. The queen said, “We have developed more modest means of living.”
Theyn tried to smooth ruffled feathers. “We were hibernating for a very long time. It seems that our society has morphed over the years.”
Another of the guests, this time a handsome older woman with grey curls, spoke up. “Here on Itzela we have our own ways of doing things with regard to husbands and wives. The colony on Bruthes is more similar to what you no doubt remember, Your Highness.”
Asa spoke up. “Do you have space ships that can go between Earth and Bruthes?”
Commander Elina, who was sitting at Theyn’s right, said, “Yes. Of course.”
“Do you make a lot of trips?”
“Once or twice a year, perhaps. It’s a very long journey, so we don’t often go.”
Asa smiled, and Sera had seen that look before. He was the king of fake innocence, and it often led people to underestimate him, usually to their sorrow. He asked, “When’s the next ferry?”
Elina smiled. “Interested in space travel?”
He grinned. “Well, ma’am, we humans cut our teeth on what we call science fiction – stories about flying saucers and aliens and such. I reckon that you’d be hard pressed to find any human being who wouldn’t want a trip to another planet, given the chance.”
The pilot turned to Joely and Sera. “Is that true?”
“I’ll do anything once,” Joely answered.
Sera said, “I would be fascinated by the experience.”
Theyn smiled fondly. “My Selected is an archaeologist, a scientist of the past. She has a prodigious curiosity and a strong mind.”
“Indeed,” Apfira said. Her smile was tight again, as if it was taking everything she had to be civil. “Perhaps that will stand you in good stead, Dr. Cooper.”
Sera frowned. She had been introduced to the queen with her first name only. How did she know her last name, or her title? She glanced at Beno, and the look of distrust on his face made it clear that he was thinking the same thing.
“How so?” She took a small bite, but something in the food was spicy and bitter. Her stomach lurched and she forced herself to swallow.
“How so?” the queen echoed. “Why, we’re going to send my uncle and his Companion back to Bruthes, where they can rejoin the rest of our people.” She turned to Theyn, her eyes wide. “I assume that you meant to take her with you.”
“Of course,” Theyn answered. “Where we go, she goes, and where she goes, we will follow.”
A soft murmur passed between the guests, and Beno glanced at Sera with an encouraging smile.
Why are they so surprised? Sera asked him.
I’m thinking most of these ladies were hoping that we might Select them for the trip and leave you here.
Over my dead body, she fumed.
That’s my girl.
Apfira turned to Asa and Joely. “And would the two of you also like to go to the colony on Bruthes?”
Joely chose her words carefully, which wasn’t really like her. “I would like to see the colony,” she said, “but I’d want to come home to Earth. I don’t have anything against you or your people, but this is my home, and I’d like to be here.”
“I see.” She looked at the Texan. “And you, Mr. Brunner?”
“I’m game to go,” he said, “but I agree with my friend, here. I’d like to come home, too.”
The queen nodded. “Home is a very special thing, isn’t it? And we all know, Your Highness, that Earth is not your home.”
“Neither is Bruthes,” he pointed out.
Beno asked the queen, “Is Earth your home, Your Majes
ty?”
“I was born here on Itzela, so, yes. It is.”
“So would you ever go to Bruthes?”
She looked at Beno with barely concealed displeasure. “I have my people here, and I am queen here. I have no reason to go to Bruthes.”
Sera asked, “When we go to Bruthes, what can we expect?”
“Prince Theyn will be welcomed as a true member of the Imperial Family, and Commander Beno will be welcomed as his Companion. I am not certain what welcome a human will find there, but as you are their Selected, I’m certain you will be warmly greeted, as well.”
There was something in the queen’s tone that Sera didn’t like. The longer she spent around the Ylian woman, the less she trusted her. “And after the greeting?”
Apfira smiled again, but there was no pleasure and less friendliness in the look. “I am not of Bruthes, so I cannot say.”
Elina cleared her throat. “If I may, Your Highness, I have been to Bruthes, and I can tell you what awaits you there.”
“Yes, please,” Theyn said.
The pilot said, “The Bruthesans have been excellent hosts to us for these past several hundred years. They have a few cities, but they have largely safeguarded their wilderness areas. They allowed us to build our home in their northern hemisphere, where the greenery is the thickest. Bruthes is a very lush planet, with wide seas and verdant stretches of virgin forest. The Ylian colony there is in a city of its own, really more of a city-state, and it is ruled according to the old ways by Empress Elera. Our people continue to trade with the Bruthesans, and we are left largely to our own devices.”
Beno sat back, but his fork still played with the morsels on his plate. “Sounds idyllic.”
“In many ways, it is,” the pilot nodded. “They were very generous to give us a part of their forest to call our own.”
Beno asked, “And who is Empress Elera to Empress Kina?”
“She is her great-great-granddaughter, Commander,” the older lady answered.
Theyn smiled toward her. “And your name, if I may ask it?”
“I am Lady Tayne. I am responsible for the protection of this island and the functioning of the fog shield.”
Asa said, “I assume that radar and sonar have a hard time penetrating your fog layer.”
Lady Tayne looked at him with a strange expression, somewhere between amusement and irritation. “You assume correctly. And human satellites cannot detect us from orbit.”
“Clever stuff,” he said, smiling at her. “My compliments.”
The hovering dishes began to make a slow circuit around the table, offering their contents to the dinner guests. Some accepted and some declined, and when the circuit was complete, the dishes floated out of the room through the servants’ entrance, presumably to be cleaned.
The queen rose from her couch, and the other diners followed suit. She smoothed her peplos and looked at them all with a gentle smile that seemed to Sera to be patently false. “Please, join me in the garden for after dinner drinks and entertainment.”
Beno immediately came to Sera and offered her his hand, while the queen’s hands were taken by her husbands. Theyn came to Sera’s other side and echoed Beno’s position, her hand in his, his palm gentle on the small of her back. She felt almost herded, but then again she felt like they were asking her to dance. The gentility of this outcast Ylian court was graceful and cloying at the same time.
She considered shaking them off, but instead she smiled at them. “Thank you.”
Beno knew her well. He smirked. What you really want to say is, ‘I can walk on my own, damn it.’
She chuckled. True.
Thank you for bearing with all of this etiquette, Theyn said. It’s odd to me, too, but familiar enough that I can almost navigate it.
Asa offered Joely his arm. “Care to walk with me in the garden, Miss Thompson?”
Sera’s assistant smiled broadly and put on a Scarlett O’Hara simper. “Why, Mr. Brunner, I never did think you’d ask. It would be my honor to walk with you.”
He tipped his non-existent hat to her and smiled. “Well, then. Much obliged. Right this way, I suppose.”
With Theyn and Beno taking the lead, Sera borne along between them, they followed the Ylian party through an archway and into a fragrant courtyard brimming with night-blooming jasmine. There were white marble walkways flanked by stone benches and plush cushions, and a fountain made of crystal bubbled happily in the center of the garden.
A trio of young hybrid men with golden eyes sat near the fountain holding musical instruments that Sera had never seen before. One instrument was a curving flute, another a circular frame strung with wire strings, and the third was a long reed instrument that branched out into three bells like a triple clarinet.
As soon as the queen sat on an elaborate carved stone seat, servants arrived with cushions for her husbands. The pillows were placed on either side of her chair, and Korin knelt on the cushion to her right while Heron took up position on her left.
Theyn led Sera to a bench facing Apfira’s throne, and he urged her to sit. He sat beside her, and Beno stood behind them. She looked up at him and thought, There’s plenty of room on the bench if you’d like to sit down, too.
He’s on guard, Theyn responded.
Beno nodded. I don’t trust these people.
Asa and Joely and the other dinner guests arrayed themselves around the royal party, sitting on benches or reclining in the grass. Only Elina remained standing, holding back from the rest of the group.
At a signal from the queen, the musicians began to play. The music was gentle and sweet, lilting with a sentimental and almost wistful quality. There was something sad about the song, and Sera’s eyes pricked with the first warning of impending tears. She blinked the sensation away and steeled herself against those feelings.
Servants arrived with crystal glasses filled with amber-colored liquid, arranged pleasingly on silver trays. Each of the guests was presented with a glass, and then the queen raised her glass in a toast.
“To long lost family,” she said.
“To family,” Theyn responded.
Asa tapped his glass against Joely’s, and they all took a sip.
Whatever this drink was, it burned. Sera felt her face flush and her eyes watered, this time not from emotion but from the ravages of the wine. Asa and Joely seemed equally affected, but the Ylians among them did not respond at all. Sera coughed.
Are you all right? Theyn asked. He put a hand on her knee.
She shook her head and coughed again. Her chest was tight, and it felt as if something was wrapping around her throat and squeezing. She gripped his hand in hers. It warmed and glowed as he tried to give her healing, but her body rejected his attempts.
“Dr. Cooper?” the queen said, sounding neither alarmed nor surprised. “Does the drink not please you?”
Sera’s head whirled. Her heart was beating so loudly in her ears that she could barely hear anyone speaking. Beno’s hands were strong on her shoulders, helping to hold her up, and Theyn continued to pump healing energy into her. She saw Joely and Asa crumple to the ground, their faces red and puffy. It was the last thing she saw.
Chapter Nineteen
Theyn rushed to Sera’s side when she collapsed, and Beno vaulted over the bench to help. The queen looked on with a smirk on her face, her hands folded in her lap.
Check the others, Theyn told Beno. He pressed his hand against Sera’s solar plexus and gauged her energies. They were disrupted and slowed, but not in a harmful way. He turned to Apfira with a fierce glare.
“What have you done?”
She was unmoved. “Your human friends will recover soon enough. They are sedated, not dead. Calm yourself, Uncle.”
Beno checked Asa and Joely, his hands on their abdomens. They’re sleeping but they don’t seem to be otherwise affected.
“Why did you do this?” Theyn demanded.
“We need to speak, and they do not need to hear.”
&nbs
p; He shifted so he was sitting on the ground with Sera’s head in his lap. He ran his hand lower on her abdomen, reaching out to sense the baby’s energy, and he found it unchanged and as strong as ever. He let out a sigh of relief and relaxed a bit.
“What do you need to speak about?” Beno asked. He shifted Asa and Joely into more comfortable positions, straightening their limbs and untwisting their torsos.
“About the Taluans,” she said.
“What about them?”
“They came for Bruthes two hundred and sixty years ago.”
Theyn frowned. “Then the rest of our people should be dead. I don’t understand.”
“The Bruthesans and the Taluans reached an agreement.” She looked down, suddenly unable to look Theyn in the eye. “When they began to absorb our people - “
“Eat,” Beno corrected. “They ate our people.”
She sighed. “Yes. When they began eating our people, the Taluans realized that they were gaining some of our abilities. Telepathy. Telekinesis. Ergokinesis. All of these things they gained by consuming Ylians. They wanted more, and they found a ready population on Bruthes that they could breed and keep as livestock. The Bruthesans agreed to save their planet, and since then, our people have been prisoners. Every year, the Taluans come to the colony and cull the old and the new born.”
Theyn’s mouth dropped open, but Beno clenched his teeth. The queen continued.
“We were sent here to Earth under the pretense of finding you so that we could bring you back to Bruthes. We have to keep connection with the older colony, and we shuttle back and forth between the two. We bring the aged, the infirm and the newborn here for protection, and when the Taluans send their cull lists, we send some of our own to take their place. We feed them our half-bloods and keep the full-blooded here as much as possible.”
Awakening Page 17