Jessica’s first introduction to Queen Navril took place with her hands tied and a guard with a sword standing behind her.
Her hands were tied because she’d fought, even though Kel had called out to her to surrender. But that wasn’t a word she felt like adding to her vocabulary. When the guards had approached her she’d struck out with feet and fists. She’d been reaching for the knife in her ankle sheath when Edrik himself slammed a knee into her abdomen, which had slowed her down enough that the guards had been able to restrain her.
The cords they’d used to tie her wrists behind her back were tight. As she and Mary and Kel were marched down the corridor past the prisoners’ cells, she tried in vain to loosen the bonds.
When she and Kel were jostled together as they were forced up a spiral staircase, he whispered to her, “Even if you get your hands free, you can’t use the portal stone down here. The dungeons are warded against them. You’ll have to wait until you’re upstairs.”
He was separated from her before she could tell him that she had no intention of using the stone and leaving him and Mary behind in danger. Did he really think so little of her?
Not that it was likely to be an issue any time soon, she thought wryly, feeling the cords cutting into the skin of her wrists.
At the top of the staircase they emerged into what looked like a high-ceilinged corridor. When she felt the cold wind against her cheek, she realized it was actually a covered bridge. The arches between the stone columns were open to the mountain air. Jessica breathed it in gratefully after the fetid odor of the dungeons.
Then she glanced through one of the archways, over the side, and her heart seized in a quick spasm. The bridge spanned the gap between one mountain crag to another, over a drop into the jagged rocks far below.
“Other prisoners have sought that way out,” a voice whispered in her ear, and she turned her head to see Edrik staring at her. He was smiling at her with those strange, hate-filled eyes, and the sight was more chilling than the view from the bridge. He leaned closer to her as they walked. “But I don’t think your death will be so easy.”
“Don’t speak to her,” Kel said, his voice like ice.
Edrik turned his gaze on his brother. Kel had not been restrained, and the guards didn’t point their weapons directly at him, but it was clear that he wasn’t walking free.
“Concerned for your bride-to-be? What does your vampire whore think of that?”
Something flashed into Kel’s eyes that was almost as ugly as the look in his brother’s, but before he could respond, their party came to a halt before an immense wooden door, guarded by two Fae wearing crimson and silver.
There was a murmured discussion between them and Edrik’s men. Then the bar was drawn back, and the door opened into a large hall.
Jessica was dazzled by the sunlight spilling in through enormous windows. Because of this, it took her a minute to see the people at the far end of the room.
Once she spotted them, though, it was impossible to look anywhere else.
Queen Navril sat at the head of a marble table with about two dozen other Fae, both men and women.
Their small group stood in silence as the queen regarded them. After a moment she stood, which of course brought everyone else at the table hastily to their feet.
She was a redhead, and her white face, pale brows, and elaborate gown made Jessica think of Queen Elizabeth the First.
She took in the group before her as if she were in no particular hurry, her eyes going from Mary, to Kel, to Jessica, and finally to Edrik with no discernible change in her cool expression.
After a minute she turned to the others at the table.
“Leave us,” was all she said.
Without a word they left their places and scurried out, using a smaller doorway at the other end of the room.
The queen approached them slowly, stopping a few yards away from Edrik’s men. Then she summoned her own guards with a single gesture of her hand.
They came to stand before her as she spoke to Edrik. “Did you order that Princess Jessica’s hands be bound?”
Jessica glanced at Edrik out of the corner of her eye and saw that he had flushed to the roots of his hair. “Yes, Mother, but you don’t know what she was—”
“It was by your order that these men laid hands upon royalty?”
His tongue darted out to wet his lips. “Yes.”
“You, too, are royalty. I cannot inflict punishment on your person as I might desire. Let it, therefore, be inflicted on your servants.”
She looked at Edrik’s guards. “They shall not be killed, for my justice is tempered with mercy. But let their eyes be gouged out that they may no longer look upon their betters. And let their sword hands be cut off that they might not be used against their betters.” A very faint smile twisted the corners of her mouth. “They may keep their ears and their tongues.”
Horror trickled down Jessica’s spine at the coolness with which the queen delivered her sentence. The guards were behind her, so she couldn’t see their reactions. But a moment later, Navril’s guards had taken Edrik’s men away.
“Kel, of your courtesy, remove the cords from Princess Jessica’s hands.”
Kel did so immediately, moving behind her and using a knife to cut her bonds. He came around to stand before her, saying formally, “The royal house of Andon offers you apologies for your treatment here, Your Highness.” Then he let his eyes move deliberately to the tiny bump behind her shirt where the portal stone was. Now, he mouthed, before moving to stand beside her again.
“Mother!” Edrik cried out. “Kel signaled to her. Told her to do something. I tell you they’re in collusion, they’re plotting against you, they—”
“I will not ask you again to keep silent. Do not say another word unless it is in answer to a question. And do not make the mistake of thinking me a fool. It is obvious that Kel was reminding his fiancée that she could use the portal stone he gave her to return to her world. But I think that if she were going to do so, she would have done it the second her hands were free.”
Now her eyes were on Jessica. They were the palest blue she had ever seen.
“But in case I am wrong about that, you are free to use the stone now. Is that your wish?”
“No, Your Highness.”
“Think carefully, Princess, for you have two choices. You may use the stone now, and return to Earth. But if you do not, you must give the stone to me, and stay here until I permit you to go. Choose.”
Jessica didn’t hesitate. She reached for the chain around her neck, undid the clasp, and handed it to Navril.
She heard Kel’s swift intake of breath, but she didn’t take her eyes off the queen.
“Thank you,” Navril said softly. “And do not be worried, child—I am not angry with you for coming to this realm uninvited. If I were a young woman in your position, I, too, would have wished to know more about my new home before my marriage.” She looped the portal stone around her jeweled belt and smiled at Jessica. “And now, if you don’t mind, I would like to hear what made my younger son take such precipitate and ill-advised action against you. I do not wish to hear it from him, as his voice sets my teeth on edge.”
It was really a rather clever move on the queen’s part. If Jessica lied or stayed silent, Edrik could still be called upon to relate what had happened.
So she had to speak the truth. But could she do it in a way that drew the queen’s ire on herself, and away from Mary? Or was Mary doomed no matter what she did?
“I’m afraid that your son was extremely distraught on his brother’s account. Perhaps that is what caused him to act so hastily. You see, I told Kel that I can’t marry him after all. Because I love someone else.”
“You love someone else? Who?” The queen asked sharply.
“A man named Hawk.”
She used the name deliberately. She wanted Mary to know that she was no threat to her love for Kel, or his for her—and that she was on Mary’s side. How else could she convey all that in their current circumstances?
But as she spoke the words out loud, she realized something. Something she wasn’t prepared for.
What she had said was the truth.
She wasn’t given any time to process this astonishing revelation. Navril stared at her with those pale blue eyes under their pale blonde brows, and began to speak in a low, almost hypnotic voice.
“Child. Child. You’re so young, so innocent. But you are your mother’s daughter, and I know that in the end your decisions will lead you to survival and not destruction. You are your mother’s daughter, and I know that if the choice were to kill or be killed, you would kill.”
Navril stepped closer. “There are some realizations that should come slowly, through the experience of years and decades and even centuries. But we don’t have years or decades or centuries now. So let me give you something, Jessica—a piece of knowledge that’s already woven into your DNA. A piece of knowledge that will guide the course of your life.”
Those pale blue eyes stared at her without blinking. “You can’t have both love and power. You have to choose between them.”
A moment of stark silence. And then, Edrik’s voice. “Mother!”
Navril whipped around to face her younger son. “I told you to keep silent.”
“But it is my right to speak! You can’t deny me the right of kimru.”
The queen frowned, while Jessica racked her brain. She’d heard the word before, during half-forgotten history lessons. It was one of the ancient customs the Earth Fae no longer followed.
“You claim a life here?”
That was it—a demand for execution, for violating Fae law.
“The life of this vampire. Mary Blakestone. She has broken one of our most ancient laws, by seducing and corrupting the royal person of my brother. Everyone here knows that if a demon attempts to lure a Fae into an unclean coupling, that demon’s life is forfeit.”
Navril’s eyes went to Mary, who was standing behind Jessica.
“My son is correct, although it has been many, many years since this law was enforced. I have had occasion to speak to Kel before regarding his preference for you. But it seems that my advice went unheeded. What say you to this accusation, slave?”
Mary’s voice, when she spoke, was clear and strong. “I have never attempted to lure Kel into doing anything. I have always respected his position, and I have never forgotten my own.”
“She speaks the truth,” Kel said, his voice cold.
There was a short pause. “I hope you continue to speak the truth. Bear in mind that if I question your veracity, I will call in a spellcaster to perform a truth spell. With that knowledge, I ask you this, Mary. Do you love my son?”
Silence. Jessica felt her heart throb in agonized sympathy for Mary. Kel was about to learn the truth of her feelings in the worst circumstances imaginable.
When Mary spoke again, her voice was no longer clear and strong. It was barely more than a whisper.
“Yes. I love him.”
Kel whipped his head around to look at her.
“Mary,” he breathed, and Jessica’s heart clenched with pity and fear.
There was no way this could end well.
She kept her own eyes on the queen. A slight flaring of Navril’s nostrils was the only outward sign of her displeasure—at least until she spoke.
“Apparently I’ve given birth to two fools,” she said dryly. She glanced at Jessica. “In the circumstances, I can hardly blame you for your disinclination to marry my son. Not because of his feelings for this vampire, which will surely fade, but because of his weakness and poor judgment.”
Her gaze shifted to Kel. “Unfortunately for you, I have little patience for this right now. The work I have undertaken leaves me no time for the fumbling of idiots. What I require from my family is strength and acuity. Edrik’s judgment is clouded by his irrational jealousy of you, and yours is clouded by this woman. I have been overly indulgent in the past, but that ends now.”
She took a step back and spoke to Mary. There was no emotion at all in her voice. “By the law of the Fae, I condemn you to death. Sentence will be carried out tomorrow morning, three hours after dawn.”
Kel cried out, but before he could say anything Jessica stepped forward and spoke directly to the queen.
“In our world, the ancient tradition of kimru allows for a champion to challenge the accuser. If the champion is killed, sentence is carried out. If the accuser is killed, the accused is pardoned.”
Navril raised one pale brow. “In our world, as well. But no one involved in the accusation may act as champion. So Prince Kel cannot—”
“Not Prince Kel. I meant myself.”
The queen blinked. “What?”
“I will be Mary’s champion.”
An electric pause. “What is the vampire to you?” The queen asked sharply.
This would be the tricky part. “Nothing. It means little to me whether she lives or dies. Your son Edrik, on the other hand, does mean something to me. He dishonored and humiliated me, and for that I would welcome the opportunity to kill him.”
A tiny smile hovered around the queen’s mouth. “As I thought,” she said softly. “Your mother’s daughter, and a worthy wife for my son. But you would not wish your married life to begin with a rival under the same roof?”
Since the queen had chosen to ignore the fact that Jessica had declared her intention not to marry Kel, she might as well ignore it, too. “She wouldn’t be living under this roof. If I am victorious, I will send her back to Earth.”
Navril pondered this. Jessica had created a win-win situation for her, at least as far as Mary went. Whatever the outcome of a duel between her and Edrik might be, Mary would no longer be a thorn in her side.
And she couldn’t deny Jessica the right to challenge Edrik. The right of challenge was inviolable.
“It is not our custom to free slaves,” Navril said after a moment. “But it is not the custom of Fae to champion them, either. If you do so and win, you may do with her what you will.”
She took a step closer to Jessica again. “One thing you must know before you make a formal challenge,” she said. “My son is a fool, and woefully subject to his emotions, but he is a deadly fighter. Your royal mother would be pained to hear of your death—to say nothing of my own disappointment if that is the outcome. You are the wife I want for my son and the mother I want for my grandchildren. It would be a pity if your desire for revenge leads to your death.”
A deadly fighter? She glanced at Edrik, and found it hard to believe. Not that it mattered. This was the only chance she had to save Mary’s life and send her back to her brother.
She stepped in front of Edrik so that a foot of space separated them.
Before she could speak, Mary was at her side, clutching at her sleeve. “You can’t do this. You can’t. You—”
Jessica jerked her arm away from Mary’s with pretended disgust. “Don’t touch me, vampire. I’m not doing this for you. Stand aside from your betters.” She glanced back at Navril, as though they were allies, and Navril immediately called over her guards. “Take the vampire female back to the dungeons, and lock her in a cell.”
Mary went quietly, without another word—trapped into silence by Jessica’s ploy. Kel, at least, had had the good sense to remain quiet. Now she was free to turn back to Edrik.
“By the law and custom of our kind I challenge you. I am champion to the vampire Mary and will prove her innocence with my body, in armed combat. Do you accept the challenge?”
“With pleasure.” He trembled with eagerness, and his expression would have been lascivious if it hadn’t been so hate-filled.
Maybe it was both. Jessica had seen enough psychopaths in action to know that for some, there was a sexual component to killing.
Navril spoke again. “It is the accuser’s right to choose the weapons you will fight with.”
Edrik studied her for a moment.
“Knives,” he said, which surprised her. Duels were rare among Earth Fae but they were always fought with swords.
The knife was her least favorite weapon. Her greatest skill in combat lay with the bow and the sword. Had Edrik known that, somehow? But that didn’t seem possible.
Not that it mattered. If she needed to defeat this bastard with a knife, she would.
“So be it,” Navril said. “The duel will be fought tomorrow morning, three hours after dawn. You will be presented with a selection of knives at the field of combat. Until then…”
She studied Jessica for a moment. “Until then, we will install you in a guestroom fit for visiting royalty—and my son’s future bride. But because I’m anxious to ensure that you encounter no further unpleasantness while you’re under my roof, you will be locked in—for your own protection, of course.”
Jessica understood very well. Navril didn’t trust her yet.
She should have expected something like this, but her heart still sank. There went any opportunity she might have had to come up with an alternative plan with Kel, or to try to rescue Mary before tomorrow. Jessica was confident in her abilities as a fighter but the thought that the other woman would live or die by her right arm made her stomach tense. But it seemed there was no other way.
“Mother,” Kel said coldly. “Is that really necessary?”
“For her protection, Kel. As I said.”
“Then at least allow me to go with her and bear her company until the duel.”
“I’m sure the princess would prefer to be alone, to rest and meditate.”
Kel looked like he might protest, but Jessica stopped him with a look. “Your mother is right,” she said smoothly. “But we will have time to talk again, after I’ve killed your brother.”
Out of the corner of her eye she saw a shudder pass over Edrik, and she knew that eagerness was sweeping through him again. She felt a little nauseous at the thought.
“I will not make your dying easy,” he whispered now, just loud enough for her to hear him.
“I’m ready for rest and meditation now, Your Highness,” Jessica said to the queen. “And for food and drink.”
“Of course,” Navril said, signaling to her guards. “Anything you require. You will find clothing in your room, as well, should you wish to change.”
“Jessica.”
It was Kel. She turned to face him, and there was almost as much emotion on his face as there had been when he knelt in hopeless despair at Mary’s feet.
She watched him search for something to say. After a long moment, he shifted so he had his back to his mother and to Edrik. When he did finally speak, he mouthed the words so only she could see.
Thank you.
She nodded, keeping her expression cool. Then she dropped a low curtsey to Navril—an archaic tradition among her people, but one Fae children still learned—and accepted the arm one of the queen’s guards extended to her, in keeping with the illusion that her incarceration was actually hospitality.
* * *
The room that would be her prison for the next sixteen hours was large and well appointed. The furniture was similar to what she’d seen in Kel’s room, and now that she had time to look at it she could appreciate the intricate carving and beautiful design. The stone walls were carved, too, as Kel’s had been. There were obviously wonderful craftsmen in the Dark Fae realm.
She went over to the windows, but there was no possible means of exit that way—none that didn’t involve a plunge of a thousand feet, anyway. The outer walls of the fortress were free of carving or anything that might provide a hand or foothold.
Now she was looking out only to look out. The sun was setting over the forest, turning the lake far below into molten gold and touching the snow-capped mountains with fire. The mountain peaks above and around the fortress looked wild and fierce and lonely.
It was truly a beautiful world. One that deserved a better ruler.
A knock on the door heralded a servant bearing an enormous tray of food. He set it down on a table by the window, bowed, and left, all without saying a word, even though Jessica had greeted him politely.
She remembered Navril’s declaration that Edrik’s men could keep their tongues. Maybe this man had none. Navril might prefer to use mute servants to wait on prisoners.
There was too much food on the tray for one person, so she could pick and choose. She ate a little roast fowl, a little baked fish, and some light, fresh-baked bread with a soft cheese. She had apples for dessert. There was wine and green absinthe on the tray, but she chose to drink only water.
She wondered about the absinthe. Was it simply an ordinary spirit here, as opposed to the sacred ritual drink it was on Earth?
There were no books in the room. After she finished her light meal, there was nothing to do.
She remembered one of her early training sessions, when she and a group of young, eager warriors had gone into the Vermont mountains for survival and battle training. Around the campfire at night, their older mentors had regaled them with stories of battles and skirmishes and missions—stories that were exciting in themselves but were also filled with practical advice.
One of their teachers had told a story about his first mission, down in South America. He and his team had been concealed in the jungle, waiting for dawn to descend on a group of nocturnal demons who’d nested there. They had to maintain absolute silence while they waited.
“So you couldn’t talk to each other,” one of the young Fae had said.
“No.”
“So what did you do? Just sit there getting more and more nervous?”
The teacher shrugged. “There wasn’t anything I could do, so I went to sleep.”
That little lesson had stuck in Jessica’s head, as their mentor had no doubt intended. Warriors have a bias towards action, but sometimes the ability to act is circumscribed by factors beyond your control. When that happens, don’t waste energy worrying. And if the only thing you can do is sleep, do it. Sleep, after all, is a good way to prepare for action.
Navril had said there would be clothes, so she looked in the enormous chest at the foot of the bed. She found pants, shirts, tunics and skirts in various sizes, some simple and some elaborate. She selected a plain cotton shirt to sleep in and folded her own clothes, laying them on top of the chest.
Lying in bed as the last of the sunset faded from the sky, Jessica went through the relaxation exercises that same warrior had taught them so long ago. When she was finished, she felt as close to peace as she could under the circumstances. Her body felt light and relaxed; her mind was clear and ready for sleep.
It was only then that she allowed herself to think of Hawk.
It was an incredible relief to let images of him come, as though she’d been holding back floodwaters by the force of her will alone. She’d been trying not to think about him from the moment she’d traveled to this world. But now that she’d done everything she could for Mary, everything she could to prepare for tomorrow, she felt like she’d earned the right to let her thoughts go where they wanted to go.
And they wanted to go to Hawk.
She was in love with him. And if she died tomorrow, she’d never have a chance to tell him. Because she’d run away from him before she’d realized how she felt.
She never used to be the kind of person who ran from her problems, but there was no denying that she’d been doing a lot of that in the past few days.
Maybe it was because her problems lately had been with people: her mother and Hawk.
Jessica twisted restlessly on the bed. This wasn’t helping. Thoughts of her mother were too terrible, and thoughts of Hawk were too wonderful. And none of it was helping her right now.
She forced herself to go through the relaxation exercises again, and this time, she let the calm flowing through her lead her gently into sleep.