by CK Dawn
“Her mother is Russian trash,” spat a haughty seven-year-old as he approached the baby. The boy was the most promising candidate to be Siren.
“Your half-sister also has the Siren’s blood,” the nanny said.
“She’s an abomination!” the boy shouted.
“Be nice, master,” said the nanny.
The surrounding family members looked surprised that the timid nanny stood up to defend this baby to the candidate. Kian watched the little scene with his usual blank mask. He wouldn’t take sides. He had stayed neutral and turned down all offers to support any of the twelve candidate clans. They wanted his resources, military skills, and influence with the Siren. Kian’s stony expression shifted to relief when he became aware of Jed’s arrival. He moved like an arrow. In mere seconds, he was at the Siren’s side, amid three of his guards.
At sixty-one, the Lams’ leader exuded power and control and could easily pass for forty-five. Some said the Siren’s power preserved him as it had all Sirens before him.
The courtyard quieted, except for the baby’s outraged cries.
“Hey,” Jed stood before the girl and clapped his hands to get his granddaughter’s attention. “You were fed, weren’t you? So what’s the matter, Lucienne?”
Lucienne snapped her attention to the powerful man. Wearing an encouraging smile, Jed opened his arms. She regarded him a moment longer, then brushed his hand aside. She locked her brown eyes on Kian, probing him, and stretched her chubby arms.
The parents of the candidates could barely contain their glee—the girl had ruined her chance to bond with the Siren by openly rejecting him.
Kian felt sorry for the baby, but she wasn’t his responsibility. His shoulders stiffened and he was about to make a quick exit. But the nanny immediately passed the squalling infant to him. As soon as Kian took the girl, she stopped sobbing.
“Why didn’t you take her earlier,” Jed asked, expressing his obvious displeasure toward his surrogate son, “so she would stop screaming like a hellion?”
“How could I know she’d want me?” Kian said.
“Kian believes children fear him,” the nanny said in a small voice. “Most people do.”
“Children are afraid of Kian, or most people are afraid of Kian?” Jed asked.
“Both,” said the nanny.
Jed fixed his hard stare on Kian. “But my only granddaughter chose you!”
“Hello.” Kian ignored Jed and greeted the baby awkwardly. He had never held a baby before and carried her as if she were a bomb. The baby didn’t seem to mind. She was more interested in pushing her little fingers into his mouth, even though Kian repeatedly removed her tiny hands. The baby’s eyes flashed in annoyance, and her fists formed tight balls.
“Don’t you think about it,” Kian warned with a stern look.
The girl relaxed her fists. Smiling now, she leaned toward him. Kian thought she was going to kiss him. Before he could stop her, she was on him. The baby was incredibly fast. Kian felt a sudden, sharp pain in his jaw. She had bitten him! Kian widened his dark sapphire eyes, his hand rubbing the deep teeth mark she left on his chin. Laughter burst from the baby. She clutched Kian’s cheeks in her hands and gazed into his eyes. “Kia!”
Kian felt an incomprehensible power from the baby’s strike; then, like lightning, a deep love for her pierced his heart. For the first time, Kian’s cold eyes swam with warmth. He gently wiped the remnants of tears from the girl’s face.
“That was her first word!” the nanny exclaimed.
Jed studied Kian and the baby darkly. “Since she’s not interested in crying anymore,” he grunted as he walked away, “take her to the Red Mansion.”
No one got invited to the Siren’s house, unless—
Kian’s eyes sharpened in realization: the girl was going to be given a test, a traditional privilege reserved for the Lams’ male babies. The tryout was the first step in finding the heir, the next Siren.
Whispers of astonishment and uneasiness rose in the courtyard. The nanny smiled. The crowd followed Jed and his guards toward the mansion, but Jed was just as gruff with them. “Did I invite the rest of you?”
The group stopped in their tracks. Customarily, the Lams’ Selection Game was an open event. The family members would gather in the Red Mansion’s Antique Room and watch a Lam boy’s first pick. A candidate’s first choice symbolized his future path.
Kian stopped, wondering if he, too, was excluded. Jed called without looking back, “Hurry up, Kian. You’re carrying an infant, not a bowl of soup.”
On a priceless table in the Antique Room, a variety of objects were on display: a piece of candy, a gold coin, a book, a gun, a lipstick tube, a fresh rose, and many more. At the far end of the table rested the most treasured item: an ancient, weather-proof scroll. It was written in encrypted symbols and a lost language and held part of the code of the Eye of Time—the source of all hidden knowledge and power. Three scrolls formed a complete circle with a full code, but the Lams possessed only the first.
Kian set Lucienne down on the table. She scanned the goods before her, focusing on a bottle of milk, before she slid her gaze to a Barbie doll. She soon moved on, sweeping her gaze left and right, until she spotted the scroll.
Kian felt his heart skip a beat.
Lucienne crawled toward it, pushing away an electronic train and a phone in her way. She snatched the scroll and turned to look at Kian. He held back a smile.
Jed’s eyes widened. Kian knew the Siren wouldn’t have taken the scroll out of his secret chamber if his curiosity of what his granddaughter would select hadn’t gotten the better of him, and now the man’s inquiring mind had bit him.
Jed reached for the baby and tried to pry her fingers off the scroll, but Lucienne only tightened her grip. “Bad baby!” Jed said. “Don’t you know what this artifact cost me? Now give it up.”
Lucienne didn’t obey. Jed was forced to unwind the baby’s fingers one by one. Before he succeeded in removing her last finger from the scroll, Lucienne swung her other hand around and grabbed it, looking up at Jed with a smirk.
Jed’s face reddened. “Help me, Kian! Don’t just stand there like you’re enjoying this. I can’t afford to let her damage the scroll.”
“I thought you could handle a baby,” said Kian, amused, taking a slow stride toward Lucienne. He laid his big callused hand on top of her tiny one. “Lucia,” he whispered. “It will be yours one day. Now let it go.”
As soon as Lucienne loosened her grip, Jed took back the scroll with a sigh of relief. He then wheeled around to fix Kian with a steely glare. “What do you mean it will be hers one day?”
“You just found your successor.”
A dark flame flickered in Jed’s eyes. “It was only a game. The Lam tradition never allows a female Siren.”
“She clearly picked the scroll that only the next Siren will inherit. None of your four sons or twelve grandsons so much as looked at it.”
Jed narrowed his eyes at Kian. “Why does it matter to you if she’s the next Siren?”
“I serve the Siren. Lucienne has powers only the true Siren possesses.” He had felt it when she had held his cheeks in her hands, peeking into his eyes.
“How can you know about that?” Jed’s eyes only hardened. “And how can you understand the Siren’s burden?”
Kian knew that Sirens, the descendants of the oldest bloodline on Earth, were entrusted with seeking the Eye of Time. The obligation was imprinted in the DNA of each Siren and the quest consumed them all.
“And the unimaginable curse when we fail?” Jed continued, bitterness lacing his words. “It would be far worse for a female Siren, if that’s possible, and if she survived.”
“She’ll survive,” Kian said.
Jed shot him a warning look. “Tell no one what happened here if you want her to live to see adulthood.” Carefully placing the scroll inside a crystal box, the old man fled the Antique Room as if chased by his demons.
It dawned on Kian w
hy Jed made this trial private. If the Lam clan thought the girl was a threat to the Siren’s throne, they’d take her out before she could even walk.
“Lucia,” Kian whispered, picking her up, “one day, you will be the Siren.”
One
Present
Tibet
“We don’t have all the time in the world. You know that, don’t you, Prince Vladimir?” Lucienne Lam’s voice was rich and sweet.
At five feet eleven inches, there wasn’t the slightest awkwardness about her. Instead, her height and athletic figure gave her a regal air. She was wearing a Tibetan outfit—a close-fitting robe and shirt, with a colorful apron of narrow stripes. From her left ear hung a silver ring decorated with turquoise—a disguised detonator.
“Don’t say my name out loud, Lucia,” the boy whispered back, “if you don’t want those angry monks on our tails. For pirates’ sake, we’re trying to rob the monastery, and I’m the only Blazek who has spent three months with them.” His hands fumbled on the wall of frescoes, looking for a hidden button in the Gonkhang Chapel. “And we do have time. We damaged the Assembly Hall’s corridor yesterday, remember? The monks have sealed off this section.”
Unconvinced, Lucienne glanced at the entrance before sliding her gaze back to Vladimir. Catching a smug expression on his exceptionally good-looking face, she rolled her eyes. “It’s been two years since you studied with the monks. They’ve probably forgotten all about you.”
When he looked back at her, she quickly turned her whiskey-brown eyes to the incense burners. She didn’t want him to catch her studying his fine-boned nose and cheekbones that betrayed his aristocratic breeding.
“They remember me.” Vladimir winked. His gaze was hot on Lucienne’s face. He wasn’t shy about staring at her. “Not many guys have eyes as gorgeous as mine.”
Vladimir Blazek was seventeen. Even at six feet four inches, he lithely navigated the burning lamps and bowls of holy water as he moved along the altar. He wore a Tibetan robe of the left-sleeves style, exposing his broad shoulder. Lucienne insisted that left-sleeve was the current Tibetan fashion, denying that she wanted a peek at his well-structured torso, as Vladimir had claimed.
“The monks don’t care about pretty eyes like we do,” said Lucienne.
“Then you must have noticed,” Vladimir said. “Do you find my eyes irresistible?”
“You’re asking the wrong girl, Blazek! The girls you’re with may tell you your eyes—or any other body parts—are irresistible, but I have standards.”
“Were with.” Vladimir corrected with a sigh. “That was before I met you. How could I know you were occupying a corner patch of the earth?”
“You told me you’d heard a lot about me when we first met in Desert Cymbidium.”
“Well, everyone’s heard about you. The military school was founded by your family, and you’re the first female heir of the Lams. But you have a tough reputation. They say you aren’t a nice girl.”
“Is that why you challenged me?” Her almond eyes sparked in the dim light. She watched him fasten the bottom of his robe to his waist. Under the robe, he wore hunter’s trousers and boots. She let her eyes linger on his long, strong legs as he pulled a scanner from the portable shrine strapped to his shoulder.
“The instructor should have kicked you out for playing dirty like that,” Vladimir said.
“But everyone was delighted to see how I made you eat mud.”
“Unfortunately for me, I can no longer treat you like—”
“Like you treat your other girls?” Lucienne’s voice turned icy. “You treat girls like dirt. You’re a jerk. I should never have let you persuade me to come here.”
“You want this, Lucia. You didn’t need much persuasion,” said Vladimir.
That statement struck home. She wanted this desperately, more than he could ever know. Lucienne sighed. Her enemies, most of them her own family, had formed a secret boys’ club. They wanted her head on a silver platter before her sixteenth birthday—when her reign as Siren would begin. Which was less than a month away.
But if she succeeded and obtained one of the two remaining ancient scrolls, the rest of the family would gain confidence in her, and resistance against having a female Siren would diminish. She’d stop a family war. However, Lucienne wouldn’t confess any of this to the Czech prince. She kept a blank expression as she watched him press the scanner against the wall.
“It’s here.” Vladimir raised his gaze from the device. “Now where is the damn button? I’ve groped every inch of the wall.” He leaped down from the altar, not spilling a drop of the water in the seven bowls that rested on top. His eyes grew anxious as he surveyed the room.
“I won’t blame you if we go home empty-handed, you know,” Lucienne said. “I appreciate any time away from those endless meetings with my grandfather’s cronies.”
“Politics will forever be a part of your life,” Vladimir said, not without sympathy.
“You’re an heir, too. Doesn’t your uncle hold you to family obligations? I heard he’s not easy to fend off.”
“The old man wants me to mate with a girl he picks and breed the next heir immediately.” Vladimir shrugged a shoulder. “He’s quite disappointed in me.”
Lucienne drew a sharp breath. “Are you going to do that?”
“Do what? Disappoint him?”
“Breed!” Lucienne said, her cheeks flaming.
She saw a mischievous light flitting in the prince’s eyes, followed by the flickering of the flashlight along the wall as he continued searching for the hidden gadget. “Of course—at some point. I’m not a real monk. I have a need to reproduce.”
Lucienne’s lips closed in a thin line. “Should we wrap this up so you can go reproduce?”
“Excellent idea,” chortled Vladimir.
“Whatever.” She managed a careless tone.
“Well, just so you’re not too disappointed,” Vladimir whispered. “I—we must find the scroll. That’s my one-way ticket to be with you. If we have it, your grandfather and that bulldog Kian McQuillen can’t object to our—hanging out. That’s been my brilliant plan all along.”
Outside her family, few knew of the existence of the three ancient scrolls. Lucienne wondered how Vladimir had gotten wind of them, but she was more occupied with his confession. He brought her here . . . to gain her. For a moment, all she could hear was the pounding of her own heart. As she calmed down, all the sounds she had blocked out flooded back into the room—the monks’ guttural chanting from the prayer hall and the crowd’s singing amid the drumbeat from the courtyard. Today was the first day of Tibetan Losar.
“Well,” Lucienne said, trying to hide a smile. “I don’t need Jed and Kian’s approval on whom I choose—to hang out with.”
“I’d like to be on good terms with your people.”
“If you insist,” Lucienne said. “But how can you be so sure the scroll’s in Samye?” She knew the former Sirens had checked Drepung, Ganden, and Sera—the three most important monasteries in Tibet—but paid little attention to Samye.
“Samye was the first monastery in Tibet,” Vladimir said. “When it was built in the eighth century, Shantarakshita, the saint, brought a holy item with him and had the Seven Examined Men guard it with their lives. But even the Seven Men weren’t allowed to peek at what they were guarding. Word spread among the high-ranking monks that the holy item was one of the three ancient scrolls. When I overheard their whispers during one of my midnight escapades, I started looking for it.”
“Midnight escapades?”
Vladimir gave her a look. “Anyway, during my nights out, I found where Saint Shantarakshita hid the treasure.”
“Then do you mind showing me? We’ve been here for a good hour. The monks could find us any minute. Maybe we should go back to the Dalai Lama’s old throne room. Some relics inside the barred glass case looked promising. We might find a clue inside Padmasambhava's walking stick or in Shantarakshita’s skull?”
�
��I checked all those last time I was here,” Vladimir said. “And I have absolute confidence in my scanner. You know how much money I spent on it? No, the holy stuff is here. I didn’t go through hell to get the original floor map of this place for nothing. Only Gonkhang chapel has this extra hidden space.”
“Three by two by fourteen feet, you said.”
“And it’s right behind this wall.” Vladimir knocked on the frescoes wall.
“Shush,” Lucienne hushed him, catching a faint flash of light at the fringe of her vision. She turned her head. There was no light. Only the Bön demon’ statue stood tall. She strolled toward it, her eyes sweeping over the human skulls at its feet and up its hideous body to its protruding fangs, settling on its odd eyes.
Vladimir moved behind her like a panther. Lucienne was immediately aware of his warm breath on her neck. His scent was like a wild river rushing under the summer sun, making her blood wild. “Have you noticed his eyes?” She breathed, struggling not to be distracted by his nearness.
“They look mean?”
“Look again.”
Vladimir squinted. “All the statues in the temple have black eyes. Only this deity’s third eye is pale blue.”
“Take me up,” Lucienne said.
Vladimir bent one knee. The minute their hands clasped, Lucienne used the push to leap from his bent knee; her booted feet landed on his shoulders. Vladimir craned his neck to look up, but Lucienne’s ankle tapped the side of his face with a warning. Vladimir leveled his head with a chortle, snuggling his face against her calf like a purring cat. “Lithe grace,” he said.
Forcing herself to focus on her task rather than Vladimir’s touch, Lucienne twisted open one of her bracelets, an archaeology artifact scanner, and placed it in front of the demon’s eyes. “Both eyes are made of onyx.” She moved it toward the statue’s third eye. It read: Artificial human eye. 775 CE.
Technology ahead of its time. Lucienne inhaled. “Flashlight, please.”