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Kingdom of Honor (Kingdom Journals Book 3)

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by Tricia Copeland




  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Kingdom of War Preview

  More books from Tricia

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Kingdom of War Preview

  More books from Tricia

  KINGDOM of HONOR

  Kingdom Journals Volume 3 - Jude's Story

  by Tricia Copeland

  Copyright © 2017 True Bird Publishing LLC

  All rights reserved

  License Notes:

  This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. It may not be copied or re-distributed in any way. Author holds all copyright.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Edited by Tia Silverthorne Bach

  Proofread by Jennifer Oberth

  Interior Formatting by Jo Michaels

  all of Indie Books Gone Wild

  Cover by Alivia Anders of White Rabbit Book Design

  Published by True Bird Publishing LLC, Superior, CO

  The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of a copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by fines and federal imprisonment.

  “Let fame, that all hunt after in their lives,

  Live regist'red upon our brazen tombs

  And then grace us in the disgrace of death;

  When, spite of cormorant devouring Time,

  Th' endeavor of this present breath may buy

  That honor which shall bate his scythe's keen edge

  And make us heirs of all eternity.”

  —William Shakespeare

  “Camille.” I tugged at her arm. “We should find our dads now.”

  She spun to face me. “You really came for me. You aren’t one of them.”

  “Of course not. Did you think I was lying to you?” Sliding my hand down her arm, I grasped her hand. “You’ve seen the sword. Let’s go.”

  Her eyes bore into mine. “I’m sorry.” She looked into the amphitheater. “I need to stay here.”

  “What?” I squeezed her hand and pulled her away from the opening. “They’re going to see you. Now is our chance to get away.”

  “Stick with the plan. Go get our dads and meet me back here.”

  “I’m not leaving you.”

  “Be smart. It doesn’t help if we don’t know what we’re up against.”

  Setting my hands on each of her shoulders, I forced her to look at me. “Camille, you’re not thinking clearly.”

  She ran her hands down my arms and gripped my hands. Her gaze met mine. “Jude, be fast. Go get them. It’ll give me enough time to figure out what they’re doing down there. Then we can escape together.” Seemingly transfixed by the dagger, her eyes darted back to the front of the arena where the sword lay on the table.

  It made sense. Having as much information as possible would be useful. “Do not leave this spot, and do not get caught.” I squeezed her hands, and kissed her hard.

  “I love you,” she whispered as our lips parted.

  I sucked in a breath. She loved me. “Don’t get caught.” I turned and jogged away wondering if leaving her was the biggest mistake of my life.

  Jude. Jude. Come back. I heard Camille’s voice in my mind and sped back to her. “What is it?”

  “Look.” She pointed to people seated near the front.

  My dad sat beside Miguel. I balled my fists. What had he done? “Well, I only have one person to free now.”

  “I’m sorry,” she whispered.

  “He made his choice.” I spun and dashed through the passageway.

  At the main hall, I summoned a cloaking spell and jumped into the air, using the wind to speed my progress. The corridors were deserted, and I had to wait for someone to enter the code for the elevator. Three guards ran in my direction, and I held my breath as they reached me.

  Breathing hard, the guard on the left turned to the middle one. “What’s going on?”

  “There’s been a breach in level B5,” the middle guard replied between jagged gasps for air.

  “That’s where the princess is held?” My ears pricked at hearing them call her princess. She was not their princess, she was not their anything. Camille belonged with me and the trinity.

  “Correct.” The head guard nodded.

  “Shouldn’t we alert—”

  “You want to interrupt the ritual?”

  “No, I guess not.”

  The doors opened, and I slipped inside the elevator ahead of the men. Hoping the chaos would help me get Camille’s dad out, I took even breaths. When we stopped on level B5, I tiptoed behind the guards, stopping at Grady’s room. The guards proceeded to the end of the hall to Camille’s empty cell. There would be no escaping through the stairwell beyond them, which would have gotten us closer to the amphitheater.

  Laying my hand on the knob, I melted the metal as I had for Camille’s. Inside, Camille’s dad lay on the mat sleeping.

  “Grady.” I jostled his shoulder and dropped my cloak.

  His eyes opened. “Who are you?”

  “A friend of Camille’s. Let’s get you out of here.”

  “I don’t have much energy.”

  “I’ll have to have enough for both of us.”

  Sliding my hand under one arm, I lifted it over my shoulders. At the door, I evoked an invisibility spell and slipped into the hall. I helped him hobble to the elevator. Within a few seconds, it opened, and a slew of guards ran out and jogged to the end of the hall.

  Inside, I pushed the button for the main level, letting the cloaking spell subside.

  “Where is she?” Grady asked, his hoarse voice barely a whisper.

  “Watching some ritual. Here, drink this.” I handed him a bottle of energy tea I’d blended.

  “Who is with her?”

  “No one.”

  “You left her alone?”

  “It’s not far.”

  The elevator stopped, and I lifted Grady’s torso, supporting his weight, as we exited. Lumbering down the hall, I grew more anxious by the second. As soon as we entered the stone tunnel, I rested Grady on the rock floor. Holding my breath, I listened for Camille. I shot into the air, flying to the opening where I’d left her.

  It was empty. She was gone. Witches packed around the exits of the cavern and Theron, Sonia, and the dagger were nowhere to be seen. My heart pounded in my chest, and I slammed my fist into the rock. The mass exodus could only mean one thing: Camille had been discovered. Cursing myself for listening to her, I rushed back to Grady.

  He lifted his head, looking both ways down the narrow hall. “Where is she?”

  “I don’t know. Gone.”

  “Where? Why did you leave her alone?”

  “That
’s what she told me to do.” I spun away and back to face him. “She wanted to see what they were doing with the sword.”

  “The sword draws them. As herald, it’s your job to protect the bearers, not the sword.”

  My foot launched a rock at the wall. “How do you know I’m a herald? Like you protected her all her life. What kind of father leaves their half-witch, savior of the witches, daughter unguarded?” I pressed my palms to the cold stone, which shook as I poured energy into the rock.

  “Hey, you’re not doing her any good wasting your strength.”

  “We’ve got to find her.”

  Circling the space, I realized I couldn’t leave Grady. Camille was smart. She’d head to an exit. We’d find her outside. With one of his arms laid across my shoulders, I carried him back to the main hall. I cloaked us when guards approached. They seemed to be heading to the center of the complex. Maybe Camille had run that way thinking to get out using the courtyard.

  At the next darkened room, I slipped inside and lowered Grady to the floor. I had to think. I needed to get Camille. But reaching her might be impossible, and we could get caught trying.

  “What are we doing?” Grady asked.

  “I’m thinking.”

  “Getting caught won’t help her. I say we get out and come back for her.”

  Logically I knew he was right. But I hated the thought of leaving her. She would get outside, I told myself. She could meet us there.

  Cloaking us once again, I supported Grady’s weight as we made our way to the main exit and waited for an opportunity. In half a minute, the door opened and we slipped past the oncoming guards. Grady leaned on me as we trudged across the field. I kept us invisible until I could no longer see the building. Halfway to the first security wall, I stopped behind a tree.

  “This should give us some cover while we wait.” I lifted Grady’s arm from my shoulders.

  He reclined against the trunk. “My head is getting clearer.”

  “Here, put this on.” I pulled a jacket and shoes from my backpack.

  “Do you have one for Camille?”

  “Yes, I brought three sets.”

  “Who was the other for?” Grady sat down and pulled on the shoes.

  “My dad.”

  “They had him too?”

  “I don’t want to talk about it.” I knelt on the grass as a search light panned the area.

  “We can’t stay here long.”

  “We’ve got to give her time to get out.” Craning my neck, I scanned the darkness for any signs of movement.

  “Once they have her, they’ll start looking for—”

  A shrill siren cut off his words. Spotlights illuminated the ground between us and the castle.

  “That’s our cue.” Grady tossed the backpack at me. “We’ve got to get out of here.”

  Arm around his back, we loped toward the wall as fast as his legs would go. I prayed Grady had enough strength or magic to get over the walls. I couldn’t believe we were leaving Camille. I was leaving Camille. My chest grew tight as we reached the stone structure.

  “You got any more of that energy drink?” Grady peered up the embankment.

  Hearing barking, I dug my hand into my pack. “Here, hurry.”

  “You a full witch? Can you help me over?” Grady asked.

  “Yeah, as of this morning I belong to Michael’s coven.”

  “No way. How’d you get out?”

  “Let’s jump, then talk.”

  I fit my bag over my shoulders and my arms around Grady’s chest. Holding him tight, I called to the wind and jumped. My shoes scraped the glass shards cemented to the top of the wall, and I poured my strength into the spell, propelling us a good fifty feet past the barricade.

  Landing, I let go of Grady.

  “You’re strong.” He wiped grass from his pants.

  “Thanks, maybe we can climb a tree and wait there.” I pointed to the copse of trees not ten feet from us.

  Hearing an engine, I looked back to the compound. One, two, three sets of headlights exited from the gate along with at least twenty men carrying flashlights.

  “Not an option.” Grady took off in a slow jog towards the trees.

  Catching up with him in two strides, I fit my arm under his and we ran, limping at times, through the grass. The fog seemed to suck up every bit of light as the orbs from the flashlights grew smaller and smaller. We tripped on a limb or rock every other step, and I thought we’d never make it to the outer wall. I kept my eyes trained on our pursuers and let Grady guide us.

  “Wall!” Grady yelled as I slammed into the cold, hard stone. “I’ve got enough juice now to get over.”

  “Let’s do it then. On three, one, two—”

  I called to the wind, heading straight up over the twenty-foot barricade. Then, I shot forward a hundred feet. Hoping Grady had followed, I lowered myself to the ground behind a group of trees. Panting, I reclined against a trunk.

  “Let’s wait for her here.”

  Grady sat beside me. “They locked her up after she got into my cell?”

  “Yes. I only got her out because everyone was distracted by the ritual.”

  “Do you know what happened to your dad?”

  “He joined the coven.”

  “They gave me that option too—”

  Not wanting to hear more about the choice my dad made, I stretched my palm out to him. “We haven’t met officially, I’m Jude.”

  He shook my hand. “So, herald Jude, what’s the plan?”

  “Stop calling me that. And how did you know anyway? We wait here till Camille meets up with us.”

  “I’m good with people.” He shrugged and turned to face the road. “How will she know where to find us? You got provisions?”

  “I can call to her. We have three days’ worth of food for four people.”

  “I’ll give you one day. If she’s not here, then we need to get off this island, make sure our families are safe, and get that brand off you. What skills do you have?”

  “Telepathy, but only with certain people—”

  He cut me off. “That’s how you can call to her? You got any other tricks up your sleeve?”

  “Yes, and before we came here, she had us drink each other’s blood.”

  “Smart kid. Where’d she learn that?”

  “These dreams she had.” I wanted to keep my vampirism to myself. “We weren’t sure if it would work, though.”

  “The hallucinations? Of the other children of light?”

  “They were visions, more like watching a reality TV show. She saw what they were doing in real time.”

  “I had a ticket, was on my way to Iceland when Michael’s coven took me.” Grady tugged another jacket from the backpack “You mind taking first watch? I need to rest.”

  “Nope, I don’t plan on sleeping.”

  “Well, you’d better. You’re going to need your strength.” He reclined on the grass tucking his elbow under his head.

  Three hours passed and nothing changed. I guessed they’d given up looking for us. I wondered if they already had Camille but forced the thought away. I called out to her in my mind over and over.

  As the eastern sky grew pink, Grady tried to convince me we should move before it got too light.

  “You said you’d give me one day. We wait till tonight.”

  We stayed in the tree all day. I reached out again and again for Camille, but heard nothing. By nightfall, Grady had recouped and was ready to leave.

  “You gave me a day. We leave at midnight.”

  “You’re so stubborn. She’s not coming.”

  “How can you just give up like that?”

  “I’m being smart. You obviously can’t think clearly about this. We need backup, an army to get her out of there. We need to find someone to help us. But first, I’m making sure Tyler and Janine are okay. Plus, we must get that brand off your arm. No one will ever trust you with that thing.”

  Turning my back on Grady, I tried to digest
his words. “Fine”—I raked my hand through my hair—“you take watch, I think I’m finally exhausted enough to sleep.”

  I woke to Grady poking my bicep. “It’s ten. We should head out.”

  “Fine.” I slung my pack onto one shoulder and dropped to the ground.

  We stayed parallel with the road, snaking through brush and trees. When we’d been walking about an hour, lights shining through the windows of a home came into view, and we made our way to them.

  “My powers are limited right now. What else you got?” Grady asked.

  “Telekinesis, mind control—”

  “That’ll do. Why don’t you suggest to whoever is home that they need to give us a ride to the ferry?”

  “What if they’re witches?”

  “If they’re of Michael’s coven, we’re in trouble.”

  Approaching from the side, I cloaked both of us again, and we huddled under the window. We listened for an hour with no sign of magic being practiced before deciding the occupants were a safe bet. I supported Grady as we walked up the steps to the front door. A hard rap produced an elderly gentleman. Fortunately, Grady spoke Italian. He relayed our plight while I urged acceptance and a desire to help to the gentleman’s mind. After a few exchanges, he nodded his head and closed the door on us.

  “What was that? I thought he was going to help?”

  “He is. He’s getting his coat and keys.”

  Within a minute or so, the man appeared again with a hat and coat on. We followed him to the car. It wasn’t till we got in and he turned the heat on that I realized Grady was shivering uncontrollably.

  “You weren’t cold out there?” He rubbed his hands together.

  “Must be the adrenaline.”

  The drive took fifteen minutes. I thanked the gentleman in English as he stopped in front of the ferry building. He nodded and smiled, and Grady exchanged a couple of lines with the man.

  “He says the next boat is at five in the morning.” Grady waved at the gentleman as he drove off.

  “That’s not going to do. We’re sitting ducks here.”

  “We could steal a boat.”

  “With the dark and the fog? We’d be lost at sea.”

  “Well, maybe there’s a phone inside, and we can coax the ferry driver into work early.”

 

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