But Alex raised his hands, and they stopped.
“Prince Alexander, what are you doing here?” A vampire dressed in a uniform of red and black with bars of gleaming silver on his chest approached Alex.“I know you’ve never supported your mother’s stance on Xandra, but after that massacre last night, the public demands we invade.”
Alex lowered his voice as he continued to talk to the vampire, who must be a general. He was so tall and broad that he looked as if he could knock Alex off his feet with the flick of a wrist.
Suddenly, Lucette felt a whoosh of air and spun to see the vampire queen had landed beside her.
“Lucette,” Queen Natasha said, smiling. “So nice to see you on Sanguinian soil. Welcome.”
Lucette fought the urge to run. “Do you always bring your army to greet visitors?”
The vampire queen bent toward her ear. “We can stop this, you and I.”
Lucette pulled her head away, but she decided to stand her ground. What was the point of running? Any vampire could outrun her, and her aunt, it seemed, could practically fly.
She braced herself and stood up to the vampire queen. “Alex and I are doing just fine stopping this ourselves,” Lucette told her. “And don’t pretend that you want to end it. You’re trying to provoke it. This is all your fault.”
The queen shook her mane of red hair. “No, darling. It’s your fault.”
A shiver traced through Lucette, but she stayed strong. “It is not my fault.”
“Oh, but it is. If you’d never been born, if you hadn’t pricked your finger, if you’d been more obedient, none of this would have happened.”
This was exactly what Lucette thought, but hearing the words coming from the evil queen’s mouth, she realized the line of reasoning was ridiculous. She couldn’t control other people’s actions, even if their battles involved her.
“Lucette,” the vampire queen hissed, “I admire your courage and strength.” She ran a hand down the girl’s arm. “You’re like the daughter I never had, and together we can put a stop to all this. My son is weak, but with you at his side, he’ll turn into a strong king someday.”
She raised her hand to the stone hanging around her neck. “If you convert, as I did, you’ll have unimaginable power and this can be yours someday.” She tapped the Stone of Supremacy. “In fact, if you convert, I’ll share my power with you.”
Lucette wanted to scream “No!” but she kept quiet. Seeing an opportunity, she pretended to consider the queen’s offer. “How does the stone work?” she asked.
“Infused by magic, its holder has great powers,” the queen answered, still fingering the stone. “And as a vampire, my powers are already superior to those I had as a human.”
Lucette nodded, trying to infuse her eyes with awe. “It must feel wonderful.”
“You have no idea.” The queen’s lips drew into a wide smile, baring her sharp white fangs.
Hiding her fear, Lucette instead did her best to convey adoration. “You’re very beautiful.” Lucette hoped she sounded sincere. Lying had never been her strong suit. “Your skin is so smooth and pale and your very presence exudes power.” She reached forward, but dropped her arm before touching her aunt’s bare forearm. She wanted the queen to think she was curious, but also shy and respectful.
“Why, thank you, dear.” The queen traced her long-nailed fingers down Lucette’s cheek, leaving an icy trail in their wake. She gripped Lucette’s chin between her fingers. “You’re quite beautiful, too. You’re very lucky to take after your father, but you’ll be even more ravishing after you convert.” She released her and stepped back. “Your skin will become luminescent, your hair will shine more brightly, and your teeth . . .” She smiled, again flashing her fangs to emphasize her point.
“It’s so tempting.” Lucette looked the queen directly in the eyes. “And after I convert, you’ll let me share your power?”
The queen’s excitement was obvious, it showed in her eyes and she answered, “Yes, I promise.”
Lucette didn’t trust her evil aunt’s promise at all, but hoped the vampire was falling for her act. “Can I”—she broke off purposefully and smiled—“can I hold the stone? Just for a second? I want to feel the power for myself before I decide.”
The queen looked over her shoulder to where Alex was still talking to the general.
“Alex doesn’t understand,” Lucette said.“He doesn’t see how lucky he is to be a vampire, to be your son. And he certainly doesn’t understand that it’s natural for vampires to rule over lesser creatures, like humans.” She laid the lies on thick, and her aunt turned back, smiling.
“You’re so right.” She reached behind her head to unclasp the chain that held the stone, and Lucette nearly burst with anticipation, every muscle in her body ready to battle the queen. Once that stone was removed, the queen would still be strong, but just a vampire, and Lucette had taken on her share of vampires.
To hide how eager she was to snatch the stone, Lucette clasped her hands behind her back, and said, “Since your visit to my bedroom, converting is all I can think of.” She pretended to shiver with excitement. “I’m sorry if I was rude that night. It was a shock to see you, but I realized later how what you said made sense.”
“You’re really willing to convert?” Her aunt asked.
Lucette nodded eagerly. “My mom will be upset once it’s done, but I’m sixteen and old enough to make my own decisions. Plus, I don’t care what my mom thinks. It’s her fault we had a rift in our family in the first place, and I never had the chance to know you until now.”
A huge smile spread on the vampire queen’s face, and she lifted the Stone of Supremacy off her neck and held it forward. “Here, my lovely niece. I choose you, instead of my deceitful son, to be my heir. Touch the stone to see what awaits you.”
Lucette carefully took the stone from her aunt’s hands, and an instant later, she spun and delivered a twisting kick straight to her aunt’s stomach. Then, while Natasha was distracted, Lucette slipped the stone into her pocket, sensing its power was too dangerous to harness.
“You horrid little girl.” Her aunt sprang forward, mouth open and fangs bared, but Lucette dodged her and planted a side-kick into the evil vampire’s ribs.
Her aunt stumbled and then roared with anger. “You tricked me! No one tricks me!”
Lucette pulled out a stake and thrust it toward her aunt, but the vampire was too quick and leaped away.
“Give me my stone!” the queen screamed. “I killed to get that stone once, and I’ll do it again! Hand it over now, before I change my mind. Join with me and we’ll rule the entire world.”
Lucette realized that her aunt’s screams had attracted the attention of the soldiers on the road.
“Never,” Lucette said. “You’re petty and jealous and vengeful. You murdered your husband, ordered your son’s murder. You’re despicable, and I will never join forces with you.”
The queen’s face filled with rage, and Lucette braced herself, fearing that the words she’d just uttered were her last.
Her aunt charged forward, but Lucette was ready. She ducked under the attack, then quickly turned and jabbed the sharp stake into the vampire queen’s back, purposefully missing her heart. Better she stand trial for her crimes, thought Lucette.
Suddenly, the entire vampire army moved toward them as one force. Alex rushed over, scooped Lucette into his arms, and ran, moving more quickly than the wind.
When they were far enough away, he set her down and they looked back. The army had easily overpowered the vampire queen, now that she lacked her magic stone. They bound her and then raised her above them. She struggled, but was unable to get away.
The general broke out of the pack and ran toward them. He bowed in front of Alex.“Prince Alexander, your mother has been removed from the throne and will be tried for her crimes. You are her rightful heir.”
Lucette’s heart pounded and she felt so happy, but also nervous, for her cousin. Imagine being a
king when he was barely seventeen.
“Alex,” she said as she pulled the Stone of Supremacy from her pocket, “as the future king of Sanguinia, this is rightfully yours.”
Alex stared at the Stone of Supremacy. “No. That thing should be locked away in the royal treasury, or given back to the fairies. No single vampire, no single creature of any kind, should ever hold all the control and power it allows.” He took the stone, but instead of putting it on, he wrapped it in a handkerchief and handed it over to the general.
The general smiled, patted Alex on the back, and said, “So wise, even at your young age. I will be proud to serve under you, King Alexander.”
Alex balked. “I’m not king yet.”
The general clapped Alex on the shoulder. “Merely a technicality.”
Lucette hugged her cousin. “Congratulations, Alex! This is so great, really, but is it okay if I don’t stick around to celebrate? I’ve got to get home.” She couldn’t wait to tell everyone the good news.
Lucette and Tristan stepped out of the Sanguinian palace into the fresh night air, and he draped his arm around her shoulders.
“He’ll make a good king,” Tristan said. “And now that his mother is locked up in prison, and drinking human blood is illegal again, lasting peace between all the kingdoms seems assured.”
Lucette’s heart swelled with so much love and pride. “Alex is so young to be ruling, I can’t imagine . . .”
Tristan squeezed her shoulders. “Oh, come on now. If you were suddenly thrust upon the throne of Xandra, you’d do just fine.”
She looked into his eyes and smiled. “Maybe, if I had you at my side.”
“Nothing would make me happier,” Tristan said, and then bent to kiss her.
They walked through the crowd of vampires and dignitaries from other kingdoms who’d assembled for King Alexander’s coronation, until they found a quiet place under a tree, near the edge of the stone-paved courtyard.
“Lucette”—Tristan took her hands—“there’s something we need to discuss.”
She nodded. “What is it?”
“I need to return to Judra.”
Her heart seized. “What? No. Really?” She couldn’t think, couldn’t breathe. The idea of being separated from Tristan, even for a day, tore at her heart like she’d been staked. “Why?”
“As a member of the royal family—”
“What?” Her breath caught in her chest. “You’re a prince?”
He nodded. “I didn’t tell you before, because I worried it was just another complication in your life, and not really that important.”
“Not important?” Fear surged inside her. “Do you need to live in Judra? Are you going to be king one day? Because I think I need to stay here, and my parents are just starting to get along again, and—” How could she possibly choose between their two kingdoms?
“Lucette.” He leaned forward and kissed her. “Slow down. I didn’t say any of that.” He smiled broadly. “I have four older brothers, so it’s unlikely I’ll ever be king, and I want to live in Xandra, with you. I know you need time with your family, but I do need to go home for my father’s birthday. I was hoping you’d come.”
“Oh.” Air filled her lungs again and she felt as if she were floating.
Tristan cupped Lucette’s face tenderly with his palms. “Do you think you could come to Judra for a visit? I’d love for you to meet my family, and even if we’re both too young to get married right now, my greatest hope is that someday you’ll be my wife and, well, I want you to see my homeland.”
“Yes,” she said, breathlessly.
“Yes, to what?” he asked.
“All of it. I’d love to go to your dad’s birthday party, and someday, yes, I would love to be your wife.”
“Lucette? Tristan?” her father’s voice called out from across the courtyard, and she turned to see both her parents approaching—holding hands.
Lucette beckoned for them to join her and Tristan. Joy filled her heart. Her family was together, she’d found true love, she was no longer cursed, and—she turned to look into Tristan’s handsome eyes—she had truly found her happily ever after.
Answers
There are eight possible routes
through this book: 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 9
1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 9
1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9
1, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9
1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 9
1, 2, 5, 6, 8, 9
1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9
1, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9
Become enchanted again with
another title in the
Twisted Tales series!
Will Cinderella ever escape her
stepmother’s spells and become
the warrior she was meant to be?
A thrilling twist on a classic!
sneak preview
CINDERELLA NINJA WARRIOR
Cinderella’s shoulders quivered with fatigue as she tipped the twenty-seventh wooden bucket of fresh water into her stepmother’s bath. The water, laced with sweet-smelling oils, sloshed up the tub’s sides, threatening to spill over the edges and onto the pristine floor that she’d have to mop again if the hot water escaped.
She brushed stray blonde hairs off her lightly freckled face, and then crouched to stoke the fire, which crackled as it heated the tub. Stretching her aching fingers toward the warmth, she rubbed the calluses on her palms and fingers. Along with her many other chores, the countless trips from the cellar to the upstairs bathrooms to fill three tubs twice a day had taken their toll on her body.
Cinderella had just turned eighteen, but her hands looked much older. Her real mother, one of the most powerful wizards in the kingdom, had died at her birth, and five years later her father died too, only days after he remarried. Her stepmother, also a wizard, treated Cinderella more like a servant than a daughter.
Cinderella often wished she were a ninja warrior—no, make that a ninja and a wizard. A wizard could break her stepmother’s entrapment spells, and a ninja, well, a ninja could give her stepmother what she deserved.
But hard work and determination carried more power than if-onlys and wishes. Her stepmother’s magic was powerful, and it seemed as if she’d thought of everything to keep Cinderella trapped. That was no excuse for Cinderella to sit back and do nothing, though. It was better to practice the few innate magic skills she had inherited from her mother, and to develop her self-taught ninja training. Sometimes the best offense was a good defense.
Enough of this whining, thought Cinderella. There would be no time for training if she lazed about staring at the fire and daydreaming. If captured, real ninja warriors didn’t sit around thinking about escaping—they took action. She sprang to her feet and grabbed the empty buckets, ready to make the much easier trip down the three long flights of stairs to her cellar room. Her stepmother had used black magic to cast entrapment spells that kept her confined to the cellar, except to do chores during the day and to garden at night.
Twisting sideways, she squeezed through the tiny entrance at the top of the servants’ stairs that were dark and narrow in places.
On reaching the bottom, she gripped her buckets and moved into a crane stance to prepare for a side kick. “Ha-ya!” she shouted, and then her bare foot struck cleanly against the heavy wooden door.
The door swung open, hitting the stone wall with a bang, to reveal the cold room that doubled as a bedroom for her and storage space for everyone else in the house. She’d moved into the cellar at age five, right after her father died. The damp, chilly room no longer scared Cinderella; she had much scarier things to face every day—like her evil stepmother.
Turning to the cupboard on the wall opposite the fireplace, Cinderella reached a hand toward her pewter goblet on the top shelf, above the beautiful crystal and bone china dishes that were reserved for the rest of her family.
Concentrating, she focused on connecting her hand to the goblet. Come to me, goblet.
Her fingers tingled and the goblet wobbled, b
ut it didn’t move off the shelf. She dropped her arm in defeat.
Who was she kidding? Her magic wasn’t that strong. To do something that purposeful, she needed a wand and instructions.
She carried her stool from the side of the planked table to the cupboard and, after tucking the bottom hem of her torn skirt into the waistband of her pantaloons, climbed onto the stool’s scratched seat. Balancing barefoot on the wobbly stool, she stretched up to reach her goblet.
She snagged it, the stool tipped, and she shot one leg and her arms to the sides to catch her balance. Still on one leg, she let the stool tip to one side, then the other, as her body stretched out in all directions.
Striving to keep her balance, she found her center, brought her limbs in, leaped high into the air, tucked her knees into her chest, and executed a perfect somersault, landing on her toes without a sound.
Holding the goblet in front of her, Cinderella bent her legs to lower herself into a crouch, and then spun and leaped, kicking and chopping at an imaginary foe as she crossed the room to reach the pump. Once there, she pushed down on the handle until fresh water flowed from its spout, and then eagerly set her goblet under the stream to catch the crisp, ice-cold water from deep in the well, her reward for the past twelve hours of grueling work.
Not seeing her stepmother or her stepsisters for four hours had been a fine reward, too. It was unusual for them to leave her alone for so long. She glanced at the single window of thick glass that she’d long ago given up trying to break. The pane was too thick and probably enchanted to give it extra strength. Given the angle of the shadows on this long spring evening, she figured there was less than two hours before darkness set in, the back door opened, and the wolves came out.
But what if something had happened to her stepmother? She had been gone a long time. Would the entrapment spells be broken if her stepmother was killed? Maybe one of the doors out of the house would open before nighttime arrived.
Sleeping Beauty Page 26