The Kingdoms of Sky and Shadow Box Set: A Fantasy Romance

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The Kingdoms of Sky and Shadow Box Set: A Fantasy Romance Page 69

by Lidiya Foxglove


  “I am your queen,” she said. “I am the sole ruler of the mist dragons, and so I shall be. All of you are here because you tried to hide from me, instead of joining with me. Do you not realize that I am the only person standing against the injustices of the high dragons? I am the only person who will bring our people back into power. I am fighting for you, and you have decided to fight against me.”

  “We weren’t fighting, we just don’t want to be at war anymore!” one woman shouted.

  “This is no time for pacifism. You are alleged to have been trading mist with the high dragons. What do you say to this charge? What were you doing so close to Irandal?”

  “Making an honest living, minding my own business, getting along with my neighbors.”

  “Your ‘neighbors’ have barred you from entering the halls of Irandal for hundreds of years. You are swamp scum to them.” Izeria glanced around the room. “All young women old enough to have your menses but under thirty years of age,” she said. “Come forward and line up here at the gate. Come, come, before you have to be dragged out.”

  She looked at them like she hated them, down to the youngest, who looked even younger than Imaru and was shaking and sobbing.

  “I am a merciful queen,” Izeria said. “I want you to know that I have given every inch of my scales to making the mist dragons stronger, and I will continue to do so. You are the ones who are undermining me. But…I will always give you a second chance. You are my people. You girls—you are young. These fine soldiers will choose among you for their brides, and you must raise your children to love me, and all will be forgiven. I’m looking for the next prince of the mist dragons, and if you exceed expectations, perhaps I will even hand the crown to your child someday. You could be the mother of a king and you’ll have everything you’ve ever wished for, especially once we join with the humans. Remember this.”

  One of the men opened the gate. “Come out,” he told the girls. “Step quick, now.”

  The soldiers ogled the girls, arguing over them. “Nah, you don’t want that one. She’s so skinny. Orthan likes them skinny.” “I want her.” “We all want her. She has the best hips.” “I don’t, I like this little one here.” “Can’t we see them with tails? Aren’t they for us?”

  “They are not courtesans,” Izeria said. “They will be your wives.”

  Some of the girls were crying while others were defiant, batting the men away and arguing until they were smacked into silence. The dragons still behind the gate were pleading, glaring, and covering the eyes of their children.

  “They will be well taken care of,” Izeria said. “I wouldn’t plead for them. Your trials will be worse. If you have betrayed me before, you have to prove yourself now. Why should I spare your lives when you wouldn’t help me win my war? Do you think King Aurek would give you any mercy? He would spit on you. If you have good hands to work, I will spare your hands. If you have a strong back, I won’t break it. You see where I am going with this?”

  “King Seron wouldn’t spit on you,” I said. “And King Aurekdel is starting to realize he was wrong.”

  Izeria looked at me like she’d forgotten I was there. “Oh yes. My human.”

  I kept my eyes on her. “They are trying to find a way toward peace. And that’s why the rock dragons are turning against you.”

  I knew I was about to lose my tongue anyway. Might as well use it while I had it.

  The mist dragon rebels looked at me.

  “I’m Oszin, since it looks like you’re wondering,” I said. “I’m the champion of the high dragon queen. I killed King Dvaro. She’s probably going to kill me now. Maybe she’ll stick to the original plan and cut out my tongue. Either way, I know she will silence me, and since there’s nothing I can do—” One of the guards threw open the door lunged for me.

  I ducked out of his grasp and swept one of my feet past his as his motion was throwing him off balance.

  This is it. Time to go down fighting, it’s all I can do.

  “The high dragons do want peace!” I cried. “They don’t always know how to get it, but they don’t want to hurt you. And Tanu is one of them! He’s the king, the champion! He doesn’t belong to her!”

  “Yes, he does,” Izeria said. “Look into his eyes and you won’t see your friend anymore.”

  I dodged the guard again. One of the mist dragon men jumped in, throwing him to the ground while one of them women sprouted claws and swiped his face. The man pried his sword away.

  Izeria backed up. “Get this under control!”

  The drunken soldiers were slow to respond, busy as they were trying to feel up the girls.

  The mist dragon man handed me the sword. “I’ve got claws.”

  “This is our only chance,” I said.

  The rebels nodded.

  The soldiers tugged their attention away from the girls, cursing at the intrusion. One of them staggered into the wall. Izeria ran for more help. Thank the gods, I thought. She must not have any mists on her.

  Then I remembered—my allies were mist dragons too. I was the only one susceptible to the mist, so they weren’t as likely to use it. “Maybe we have a chance if we can get out of here quickly while everyone’s busy celebrating and drinking.”

  “We need to run,” the woman with the claws agreed.

  “Kita!” Some of the mist dragons ran toward the girls to get them back from the soldiers.

  Damn it. I just don’t have the time.

  I had to get back to Himika and Aurekdel and tell them what had happened to Seron. But what a mess I would leave behind. Any mist dragon rebel who didn’t run for their lives would undoubtedly be treated even worse than before. In a situation like this, it was kill or be killed—every man and woman for themselves.

  I ran. Some of the mist dragons were with me. I had the sword gripped in my hand and I went into battle mode. A soldier turned the corner and I drove the sword through him while the man who had given the sword to me struck his face. We got his weapon as well: a spiked club.

  It looked like about seven mist dragons had run out with me. It wasn’t much, but they seemed to have quick reflexes.

  “Do you know a way out of here, by any chance?” I asked.

  “I think so,” the woman said. “But we need to get past the supply rooms there. I don’t know how many men they’ll send out to fight us.”

  “We’ve got nothing to lose,” a younger man said. “Look what they’re doing to those girls.”

  “She’ll dig our eyes out of our heads if she catches us now. And eat ‘em,” the woman muttered. “Bitch.”

  We kept moving, and our luck couldn’t hold out long. Five soldiers rounded the corner and I had to let all my fear go and just fight for my damn life. Instinct took over. The weight of this sword was unfamiliar to me, but just having a weapon in my hand and I thought I could survive. I’d been fighting all my life, one way or another.

  My sword clashed with a dragon’s weapon. I dug in my heels, refusing to let him push me back even though he was bigger than me. My muscles must be straining, but I hardly felt anything except my drive to fight my way through these guys, and fast, before the entire army descended on us.

  “Hah!” The passageway was filled with the sound of grunting and shouting, steel grinding on steel. One of the female dragons struck my opponent’s head with a rock and I drove my sword into him.

  “Thanks.” We moved on, taking our next opponent as a pair. She tried to sweep his legs with her tail; he grabbed her arm and threw her into the rock wall, but he wasn’t quick enough to avoid my sword. He looked surprised as I killed him. Like he didn’t expect a human could take him out; just like that, it was over for him.

  I smelled blood now, mingling with the mineral scent of rock, blending together. I hated that smell. I hated all of this. Blood, sticky on my hands, and men’s lives on my head. Why hadn’t I become a farmer?

  I must not hate it as much as I thought I did.

  One of the mist dragons was killed, so quic
kly he didn’t even manage a scream, by the last of the five soldiers. The other mist dragons swept in to avenge their own, but more soldiers were coming.

  “Oszin!” Ijaru beckoned me from one of the doors. Her father was standing behind her and nodding eagerly. “This way!”

  Well, that was the last thing I needed to see. Apparently I’d just plain been adopted by Ijaru and her dad, and this wasn’t going to end well. I shot them an incredulous look. “Kinda busy here!”

  “We know a way out,” Morhu said. “We used to live here. You’ll never fight the whole army.”

  Gods.

  I ran over to them and Ijaru grabbed me, hauling me out of sight.

  “We were already hoping to escape when we got to the north. This is the perfect diversion,” Morhu said. “Our only hope is to hide out and wait for the high dragons to come.”

  “But I’m helping the other mist dragons escape.”

  “They’re all going to be killed,” Morhu said. “You know this, deep down, don’t you?”

  “I…”

  “He said there is always hope,” Imaru said. “But…this is the only hope we might have. Don’t sacrifice yourself, Oszin!”

  “And how are you planning to evade Izeria’s scouts afterward?”

  “You think I know all the answers? I’m just trying to save you from getting chopped to pieces by fifty mist dragons this very minute, boy,” Morhu said, shaking the bandaged stump of his hand at me. “And the only reason I bothered is because you were good to my daughter.”

  “You really didn’t have to bother.”

  “I have a sense of honor,” Morhu said, sounding vaguely insulted. “Come on.”

  I relented, following them down a sloping passage that led out into a cavern. I could barely see. I just had to trust them, which wasn’t easy. These two had already been captured by Izeria once, after all. Still, it was nice to have friends with me.

  “Where are you going?”

  I stopped dead in my tracks as I heard a voice behind me that was familiar—and utterly unfamiliar.

  Seron had slipped out of some other passageway, completely unseen to me in the darkness. I already knew he could be very quiet.

  “Seron…”

  I could see his eyes by the faint light of a crystal he was holding in one hand. In his other, he held a sword. Not the two-edged blade he favored, but a one-sided blade like Aurekdel preferred. Maybe that was one point for me in a fight. He didn’t have his favorite sword.

  His eyes were dead.

  If Himika saw him like this, her heart would shatter. Hell, I was feeling more emotional than I expected. Seron was such a noble man, and for them to do this to him…

  “Human,” he said.

  A chill slid down my spine.

  “Seron,” I said. “Remember who you are. You’re King Seron. Remember Himika and Aurekdel?”

  “You—” He seemed to struggle with the word. “My queen wants me to cut your tongue out.”

  Ijaru and Morhu were clutching each other behind me, afraid to move.

  “Are you alone?” I asked.

  “I can sense things they can’t,” he said. Then he lunged at me.

  Shit. Here we go.

  I barely managed to block him. My arms were shaking a little. Then I felt the battle adrenaline coursing back into me. Could I hurt Seron? Kill him? What was I supposed to do here?

  “Seron, Izeria is your enemy. She’s manipulating you with—the mist—“ While I blocked his sword, he swung his arm at me and knocked me down against the rocks. I stumbled. I still couldn’t see that well, and I couldn’t judge the terrain enough to keep a good footing.

  “Fuck!” I screamed out of sheer frustration. I was either going to die by Seron’s hand or kill him. “Seron, Himika loves you! Aurekdel is your best friend! Stop this shit!”

  “Aurekdel is the high dragon king,” he said, his voice dull. “He always gets what he wants. He ordered me around. He took all the swords.”

  I guess Izeria’s mist magic was tapping into some childhood grievance. No doubt, if you took Himika and her brother and reduced their brains down to their worst moments, they’d be at each other’s throats too. Seriously, it was a nasty trick. Mist magic really was playing dirty if you used it like that.

  I realized, however, that Seron wasn’t attacking me.

  He was just standing there, his arms lowered. Looking at me. I saw something flicker in his eyes, briefly, like he was trapped.

  “Seron? Come with us.”

  He clutched his head, and then his eyes turned back to dullness. “Tanu,” he said. “I’m Tanu.” He seemed to be wrestling. “I serve the queen.”

  Ijaru grabbed my elbow. “Run,” she said.

  “But—”

  “He’s not going to win that fight,” Morhu said. “The mist is too powerful. The queen doesn’t really want to make your friend her champion. She wants to destroy him, and she wants Aurekdel to see it. It’s too late for him.”

  I ran. It didn’t feel like the right thing, but I ran.

  Chapter Eighteen

  Seron

  I let them go.

  But it was for a reason.

  Yes. To please my queen.

  I recognized that man. He knows my foe, the king of the high dragons. And he knows this man that my queen keeps crying about.

  The dragon named Tanu rushed to his queen, through the chaos of battle. The rebel mist dragons were killed or rounded up before long as the soldiers swamped them.

  “Tanu! What are you doing back here! What happened to the human?”

  “My queen. You want this man Ezeru. He is your son and you would stop feeling so sad if he was at your side, wouldn’t you?”

  She looked completely startled. Tanu didn’t have time for that.

  “My queen,” he insisted. “He knows where Ezeru is. Send a spy after him.”

  “Tanu…” She patted Tanu’s doublet and moved him back into another room, farther away from her brother. Tanu noticed they were arguing a lot. When two people try to rule at once, they do squabble. The high dragon king was like that. He always had to have an opinion.

  “My queen! He’ll get away!” Tanu said.

  “Tanu, that is considerate of you. But I chose you over Ezeru…as it worked out.”

  “I don’t understand what you want. You seemed distraught over him. Why not take an opportunity to bring him to your side? I remember that man. He knows something.”

  She looked like she was going to keep arguing.

  “Do you want the crystal dragon queen to have your son?” he asked.

  That got her. “No. I do not.” She paused. “Thank you.”

  Tanu had read her desires correctly. She yearned for this lost son. Of course she did. It was natural to yearn for one’s child.

  “But I want you to go with the scouting party,” she said. “Rothair has his plan. But I’m afraid. If his plans to instill a new priestess fails, then we have nothing. I think he puts too much on his own cleverness and these human mages. I’m tired of careful machinations. I want to destroy the high dragon king, and everything he loves.”

  “Yes,” Tanu said. “So do I.”

  Chapter Nineteen

  Himika

  “So, you’re spending a lot of time with Mr. Sewell, huh?”

  Raia looked up from my jewelry box and stiffened. “Er…it’s not serious.”

  “It’s not? Weren’t you taking a walk with him alone yesterday?”

  “Is walking serious to humans? It was just a walk. We talk about things. He’s a very interesting man. He was telling me about mathematics. I thought it was just…adding and multiplying and navigation. But it’s actually so much more!”

  I laughed. “Sounds like courting to me.”

  “It’s not!”

  “Okay, okay. If you really mean it, I won’t tease you, but—”

  “Well…” She looked down and then flicked my jade pendant back into the box. “Auggh!”

  “Oh no—
did something bad happen?”

  “Sort of. I—I kissed him, actually. I should have known better. I know how human ladies are, and that men like to make the first move, but I was getting so impatient. I mean, at this point we’ve been walking and talking for a month.”

  “Did he rebuff you?” I was incensed just seeing Raia getting all squirmy and unsure of herself. Phoebe and I had been the ones to set her up with this stupid bachelor, after all. It was his own fault if he couldn’t handle a cute, red-headed dragon who could handle a weapon. Maybe he was intimidated.

  “He kissed me back. Quite eagerly,” Raia said. “I tell you, it’s been a couple of years since I was with a man at this point. It felt really good. And you’ve seen Merrick. I know you have a whole parade in your bedroom but—”

  “Ooh, ‘Merrick’, huh? That’s new. But I don’t have a parade. Especially…right now. What did he say?”

  “Sorry, my lady. I shouldn’t have said that. My mouth is bigger than my brain. Uhh, anyway, Merrick said he can’t get involved right now, with the war. He needs to focus. And then my brother came over.” She wandered over to the bed and collapsed on it. “It was so embarrassing. He said, ‘What is going on here, sister? You’ve been spending a lot of time with Mr. Sewell’—” She did a monotone deep voice that I guess was her Abel impression. “I don’t know if he was mad at me, or if he even cared. I can’t read him. But it really killed the mood. I thought that was the end of it—that was two days ago, but then today Merrick still asked me to talk a walk like nothing had happened, and here we were. Talking about mathematics.”

  “I guess he has a point. About the war…”

  “We can still go to war and have sex,” Raia said. “I focus better when I’m satisfied.”

  “Maybe he needs time to figure it out.”

  “I’m so confused. Whenever we’re talking I feel like the vibes are insane.” She waved her hands.

  “Love is confusing sometimes…”

  “This is why I was avoiding it!”

  “I’m sorry.”

  “Don’t be sorry. You’re looking out for me. I think he thinks I’m a little scattered. I’m still not entirely sure what I want.”

 

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