Infinity
( The Chronicles of Nerissette - 3 )
Andria Buchanan
Although she’s still stuck in the magical world of Nerissette, Queen Allie is finally ready to build a relationship with the half hottie, half dragon next door, Winston. But all isn’t really fair in love and war. Unrest is quickly forming at the borders and soon Allie realizes that the Fate Maker wasn’t the only one who wanted her crown. When her trusted aunt Bavasama sends her troops into Nerissette on a campaign of murder and mass destruction, Allie has a tough decision to make. She can’t take the chance of letting more people die or letting those she’s lost disappear from memory, but there is more at stake than even she knows. Still, Allie has to do something. And in the process she’ll discover what she’s truly made of when faced with a series of options…each more horrible than the last.
Infinity
The Chronicles of Nerissette - 3
by
Andria Buchanan
To Ainsley:
May your world always be the stuff of really great fairy tales
Prologue
I was sitting in front of the mirror at my dressing table in the Queen’s Tower. That’s how I knew it was a dream. My tower had been burned during the Fate Maker’s last attack against the palace, but right now, in my dream, it was still standing. It looked the same as it did the first time I’d ever set foot inside it.
“The End is coming,” my reflection announced, and my eyes widened as I stared back at the girl in the mirror.
“What?”
“The End is coming,” my reflection said again. “The Last Rose is on her throne, the relics have been found, and the land is free of the Fate Maker. The time of the Prophesies has come.”
“Wait. What? No.” I shook my head, and the girl in the mirror arched an eyebrow at me. “No, that’s not true. I don’t have all the relics. The Mirror of Nerissette has been destroyed, the Dragon’s Tear is hidden, and we’re searching for the last one, the First Leaf, but I haven’t found it yet. We haven’t found it yet.”
“You have found it,” the girl in the mirror argued. “The First Leaf was never lost. It’s always been with you. Because of it life flows through you. The ability to keep this world—and its people—alive lives inside you.”
“I don’t—”
“The Last Great Rose is on her throne with the relics. The dead will rise, the lost will be found, and our world will be free again. The Prophesies command it.”
The girl in the mirror in front of me dissolved, and when I looked into the glass again, nothing stared back at me. The room behind me was reflected as if I weren’t even there. “Wait!”
“She’s right,” Esmeralda said, suddenly appearing. I gaped at the sorceress, still trapped inside the body of a small black-and-white housecat, sitting on the reflection of my bed in the mirror. I glanced over my shoulder and saw that she wasn’t actually there; even in my dream, she was just an illusion. “The time of the Prophesies has come.”
“But the Prophesies are made up. Make-believe. You should know—you’re the one who made them up.”
“The things I wrote, I never meant for them to come true. But now they have. Fate, or whatever it is that truly guides us, has made the nightmares I wrote about come true, and you’re the only one who can save us. Save our world, Allie. Save us. Before it’s too late.”
“Save you from what? The Fate Maker is trapped in the Bleak, and I’m signing a peace treaty with Bavasama in the morning. Our world is safe.”
“Death is coming, my queen. A world of death and nightmares, and if you’re not prepared, they will destroy us all. The nightmares I unleashed upon this world will destroy us all,” Esmeralda said.
“I don’t know how,” I said. “I don’t know what to do. Tell me what to do.”
“When the time comes, you’ll know,” Esmeralda said, bringing her brilliant green eyes up to meet mine in the mirror.
“No, I won’t.”
“There’s only one thing that can defeat nightmares,” Esmeralda said. “Only one thing stronger than fear.”
“What?” I asked.
Instead of answering the cat in the mirror began to fade away.
“No!” I slapped my hand against the mirror. “No, don’t leave. You have to tell me what I need to do to keep us safe. What I’m keeping us safe from. You can’t leave me.”
The cat disappeared, her eyes the last thing to go, as I stood there, watching her. “Don’t leave me,” I whispered. “Please don’t leave me. I can’t do this alone.”
Chapter One
“Are you ready?” my boyfriend, Winston, asked in my ear as he came to stand beside my throne later that morning. I felt my heart flutter. We hadn’t had the chance to spend much time together in the past year because of the war we had been fighting, but the boy who could turn into a black dragon still made my knees weak. “All you have to do is sign your name and it’s all over. We’ll finally be at peace.”
I swallowed as the rest of the nobles started to filter into the room, all of them quiet, their faces drawn. It couldn’t be this easy to arrange a truce with the empress of Bathune. Aunt or not, she had tried to kill me. My people were all waiting for the other shoe to drop, and I didn’t blame them. I was sort of waiting for the exact same thing.
After all, waiting for the next disaster was how I’d spent all my time here in Nerissette. Biding my time until the next attack. The next person to die. For the past year I’d been stuck, waiting to hear that it was Winston who had been killed. Or my best friend Mercedes. People I cared about. People trapped here because they’d had the bad luck to be with me the day I was pulled through the Mirror of Nerissette between the World That Is and the World of Dreams.
“Allie?” I glanced up at my boyfriend and saw that he was staring down at me. “It’s almost over.”
“Over…” Somehow I knew better than to believe that. We’d been in Nerissette for a year, and every single moment of it had been spent fighting. Or preparing to fight. Or cleaning up after a fight. An entire year of war. Which, if you asked my former history teacher, wasn’t much of a war, but I was pretty sure he’d never actually been in one, so he wasn’t an expert. Not that anyone back in the World That Is could have been an expert in a war like this one. No one there had ever fought on dragonback or had to deal with angry, fireball-throwing wizards for that matter.
“It’s never going to be over,” I whispered.
Winston looked down at me. “What?”
“My aunt and I will sign this treaty, and then we’ll all pretend that we’re friends, but that’s what it will be. Pretend. We can’t trust her, and we all know it.”
“I know.” He swallowed. “But we don’t have a choice. We laid siege to the border for nine months. We spent a winter burning the coal from our own mines and everything in reserves. We don’t have enough coal to keep all the homes in Nerissette heated if we cut off trade for another winter. People will freeze to death.”
“I know. We need trade with Bathune, we do. But that doesn’t change the fact that her army killed Timbago and Brigitte—that maid who came from Sorcastia because she wanted a glamorous life in the palace—and so many others. My aunt helped the Fate Maker try to take my throne.”
“She says—” Winston started.
“I don’t care what she says!” I snapped. Everyone in the ballroom fell silent, staring at us.
“My queen?” Rhys Sullivan, one of our best friends and the lord general of my army, hurried forward.
“I’m fine.” I sat back on my throne and glared first at my boyfriend and then at Rhys. “Perfectly fine.”
“Good.” Rhys nodded, his eyes understanding. “We’ve had a messenger. Your aunt has left the fort at Neri
s, and she’s on her way toward the palace. She should be here within the hour.”
“How many people are with her?” I asked as the rest of the nobles went back to chatting, all of them glancing from me to the door from time to time, waiting for the next volley to begin in a war that was meant be over.
“Just the former ambassador, Eriste,” Rhys said. “He’s coming to offer you a formal apology, in front of the entire court, for his role in the Fate Maker’s uprising against you. Otherwise, she’s coming alone, as you requested.”
“And the rest of the wizards she tried to bring with her?” I asked, thinking about the fifty men she had originally rode across the White Mountains with.
“Still under guard at your father’s estates in the Leavenwald,” Rhys said. “Enjoying the hospitality of the Woodsmen.”
My father. I’d almost forgotten about him. Not that it was hard. I only found out who he was ten months ago, and he hadn’t been around much since. First he’d volunteered to help lay siege on the border with Bathune and then hosted the peace talks inside the Leavenwald. We’d only seen each other a few times since the day I’d banished the Fate Maker into the Bleak, trapping him in the space between worlds, a gray nothingness where monsters stalked the landscape and there was no escape.
My mother had been in a coma since a car accident on my thirteenth birthday, and I’d thought finding my father would give me a chance to have a parent again. A family. Stupid me. Turns out my father was happier keeping his distance. And if that was how he wanted it, then fine, I’d been on my own long enough—I didn’t need him anyway.
“And what about John of Leavenwald?” I asked quietly anyway. “Is he coming to the treaty signing?”
“He showed up this morning,” Winston said. “He went to rest and clean himself up.”
“And you just happened to see him when he got here?” I asked.
“No.” Winston swallowed, looking guilty.
“He met with me and your Prince Consort here”—Rhys pointed a thumb at Winston—“at the aerie. He wanted to discuss the palace’s security plans before the Empress Bavasama arrived.”
“Her Ladyship Bavasama,” I corrected. We’d all specifically agreed not to refer to my aunt by her royal title while she was here. She had lost the war against us, and that meant while she was here she was just another noblewoman. Second in line for my throne. The would-be queen of Nerissette.
“Right,” Rhys agreed. “Sir John wanted to make sure that all of our security was in place, in case the Lady Bavasama decided to try something. Like murdering you and then climbing over your body to take the Rose Throne for herself.”
“I’d like to see her try,” I said, looking pointedly around the room at the soldiers in their red coats, positioned shoulder to shoulder around the ballroom.
“I’d rather not,” Winston said. I looked up to see him staring down at me grimly. “If she moves fast enough, she could kill you before any of those soldiers get to you. They’ll kill her, but you’d still be dead so we’ve won the battle but lost the war. Lost you.”
“Not going to happen. We’ve already won the battle, and I’m still here. That’s why my aunt is being forced to ride in the back of a hay wagon all the way to my palace so she can apologize for invading us.”
“And the people of Neris have all turned out to scream at her,” Rhys added. “We had to put a guard around her for her own safety.”
“Really?” I asked.
“People are still angry,” Rhys said. “The army she and the Fate Maker built burned the city of Neris, left the residents without homes. Not to mention all the people they killed trying to overthrow you. The people of Neris want to see her hurt—or dead.”
“I don’t blame them,” I said as I thought about all the people we’d lost, all the people who had been injured, both physically and otherwise, because of my aunt’s greed.
“They were throwing rotting fruit,” Rhys said. “One wrong move and it would have turned into a riot. They’d have killed her before she ever made it here to sign the peace treaty.”
“I’m not sure that would’ve been a bad thing,” I said. “If she died, I’m next in line for her throne, and I wouldn’t need to sign a peace treaty with myself.”
“No,” Winston said. “We’d just have to fight a hundred wizards to win you that throne, and if this falls apart, there’s no way we’ll be able to fight them into a truce. You’ll have to burn Bathune to the ground to conquer it.”
“You make that sound like a bad thing, too,” I muttered.
“Because those of us who actually have to set things on fire for you do think it’s a bad thing,” Winston snapped.
“And that’s why we’re signing a peace treaty. Because some people have lost the will to fight,” I argued bitterly. I’d agreed to the peace treaty because we didn’t have the resources to keep the siege going, but I knew that my aunt wouldn’t honor it and then more people would get hurt, more people would die, and it would be because I hadn’t kept them safe. Again.
“Anyway,” Rhys tried to cut in.
“I’m not—” Winston started.
There was a sharp rap on the floor, and everyone around us fell silent as we turned to stare at Kilvari, the goblin who had taken over as butler and head of the palace household after Timbago had died during battle with the Fate Maker.
Kilvari brought his heavy staff down again, the crack of its wood hitting the marble floor echoing through the quiet ballroom. “Your Majesty,” the tiny goblin announced, his long, green nose quivering and the rings in his trembling beagle ears clinking together like tiny bells. “Sir John, Head Woodsmen of the Leavenwald.”
I clenched my fingers against the arms of my throne as my heart started to pound. The father who had told me we had sixteen years to make up for and then had taken off on me. Sure, he’d been securing my position as queen and then hammering out the peace agreement that would keep me on the throne, but you’d think he could manage to come for at least one father-daughter visit in ten months. Even if it was just for one day.
Kilvari stepped aside, and I watched John step into the doorway. He was tall and lanky, his shoulders ramrod straight, and his chin lifted as he stepped into the ballroom and started toward the throne. He looked straight at me the entire time, not even glancing at the other nobles who filled the ballroom.
“Your Majesty,” he said. He reached the stairs that led to the dais my throne was on and knelt down on one knee, his hands on his sword.
What was I supposed to call him? Sir John? That seemed a bit too formal considering I was talking to my dad. Then again, we barely knew each other, and I wasn’t even ready to call him dad. I didn’t think he was ready to hear it, either.
“John.” I nodded as he stood and came forward, taking my hand and pressing a kiss across the back of it.
“Allie.” He smiled up at me. “You look tired.”
“Yeah,” I said bitterly. “It’s been a rough year. I’m sure you know that, though.”
He swallowed and didn’t meet my eyes. “Thankfully, all that will be over soon. Once this treaty has been signed, we’ll finally be at peace. All of this behind us.”
“And then what?” I asked.
“Your Majesty?” He looked at me, confused.
“Will you be going back to the Leavenwald once the treaty has been signed?” Will you be leaving me again? was what I really wanted to ask. Bailing out again. Just like he had my whole life.
“I was going to stay at the palace, actually,” John whispered. “If that pleases you, Your Majesty… So we could get to know each other better.”
“Sure,” I said quietly. “I’d like that.”
Sad as it was, it was the truth. The man hadn’t been there my entire life, and then in one day I’d found out that I had a father and a half brother, and then seen that same brother double-cross me and get himself killed. John had taken off the next day to mourn, and I’d barely spent any time with him since. But even with all that, I
still wanted to get to know him. To have him in my life.
“I’ve also brought you a gift,” John added softly. He reached inside his coat and then pulled out a small, dark-green package. “To celebrate your birthday.”
“Thank you.” I took the gift from him and put it in my lap, staring at it for a moment before I pulled its brown ribbon free and slowly unwrapped it. Inside lay two small, wooden hair combs with delicate butterflies carved into each of them. “They’re beautiful.”
John smiled at me as I ran my finger over the carving on one of the combs. The wood began to sing. “They belonged to your grandmother. My mother. The last Grand Lady of the Leavenwald. They aren’t the Great Relics of Nerissette,” he said. “But they do have a quiet magic all their own.”
“I—” I went to hand them back, unsure if I had the right to such a family heirloom.
“She would be so proud of the young woman you’ve become,” John said as he brought his hand up to close my fingers around the combs. “So proud of the queen you’ve become. Just like I am.”
“Thank you,” I said quietly as he squeezed my fingers.
Kilvari banged his staff on the floor again, and we both quit staring at each other and turned to look at the goblin. “The Lady Bavasama and Ambassador Eriste have arrived.”
John moved aside to stand on my right as Rhys moved to stand beside Winston on my left. The rest of the ballroom fell silent. I started to stand, but John put a hand on my shoulder, keeping me seated.
“Make her come to you,” he said out of the side of his mouth.
Kilvari stepped to the side again, and I stared at my aunt as she stepped into the doorway, her ambassador behind her. Her red hair was escaping from its elaborate bun, and her face was pale. The emerald-green dress she was wearing was smeared with splotches of dark brown mud, and I could see more than one splatter of red. Even from across the ballroom I could smell the lingering stench of rotting fruit that seemed to cling to her.
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