The Pearl Savage

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The Pearl Savage Page 14

by Tamara Rose Blodgett


  “So frail,” Matthew said, bending down close to her still form he picked up her hand, the full size of it taking up only his palm, his fingers free of it.

  “Don’t touch her,” Bracus spoke to Matthew in a low, clear voice.

  Matthew looked at him, carefully putting Clara’s hand down where it had been, his eyebrows raising as he straightened to his full height.

  “Why, Captain?”

  Bracus realized his mistake too late. He did not want any male touching her. “I do not wish her to awaken and find your ugly mug above her.”

  The Band laughed at the joke and the tenseness left like water through netting.

  Philip clapped Matthew on the back. “Come, let us find food. It has been a long day, and I, for one, wish to end it with a full belly and the stars above me.”

  Bracus chose Joseph to watch over Clara, instructing him to give the alert if she awoke. He nodded solemnly. He understood better than the others because he wished for Anna to love him. In turn, he may be more careful with this new female.

  Bracus walked away, the need to stay by the Princess’ side and unbearable pull that no amount of shaking off would loosen.

  CHAPTER 23

  Clara opened her eyes slowly, the cold waking her. She did not know at first where she lay. A damp, lightweight blanket covered her from foot to chin and she discovered one lay under her head as well. She cautiously turned her head to the left and the huge savage lay beside her, then at her right was the other savage. The one that made her heart race with trepidation.

  Her mind flooded with memories of the last moments before she fainted: Charles struck down, the guards killed, Prince Frederic on the floor, unconscious. That they had not killed her was a mystery. They probably wanted details of the kingdom; they would not have it.

  It was the least she could do.

  Clara removed her crown, laying it behind her head, symbolic of her dislike of being a Princess, it could stay where it lay. She sat up quietly and looked at the sky, the stars glittered above her like diamonds in black velvet. Taking a deep breath she was assaulted by the dryness of the air, cool on her lungs, she stifled an urge to cough. The air was so strange Outside. The Record Keeper had been mistaken, for she lived.

  She breathed, and she lived.

  Her people did not need to be confined to the sphere.

  Clara looked at the savage who lay beside her, his chest rising and falling with each breath, her eyes traveled to his gills and they fascinated her. They flowed apart and together with synchronicity.

  She shook her misgivings away, she need not dally. Now was the time for escape. She spied her knapsack at the base of her bed and quietly crawled to the end of the bedding, careful not to rustle or make noise. She looped the knapsack over her shoulder as she stood, then round the other and backed away.

  As she was turning she noted that there were five males, all the biggest she had ever seen in her life. She knew that they were humanoid, but not entirely. With the gills and the hugely muscled physique, she was not absolutely certain of it.

  She moved away slowly, gaining distance, placing her feet in areas where the brush was least and she could traverse it silently. She looked above her, noting the moon was full, so bright outside the sphere it hurt her eyes to look upon it.

  She traveled, wishing all the while that she could stop and appreciate finally having escaped to the Outside. As she walked she made her way to the forest border, seeing the sphere beneath her and thought of Charles. What would be his fate? Again, it was more her fault than she liked to admit.

  Tears burned unshed in her eyes, could she do nothing for anyone? She was by herself, having escaped Prince Frederic and the Queen’s abuse. But what of food, shelter and clothing? She sighed, moving forward.

  Feeling thirsty, she disentangled her knapsack. Lowering it as she squatted and searched for the water bottle she remembered Charles had filled before the guards and Frederic had come upon them. She shuddered, remembering. He would have raped her had it not been for the savages’ timely interruption. A momentary pang of guilt seized her, but she would not let it overwhelm her. She needed to escape them as well. Charles’ sacrifice would not be for nothing.

  She gulped the cool water down, relishing its sweetness, placing her palm on the rough bark of the tree, feeling the texture of it for the first time. So many new tactile experiences.

  It was at that moment Clara became aware of a noise behind her and immediately thought of an animal or some such. The Record Keeper told tales of large animals in the wilderness of the Outside.

  Clara whirled around, her skirt swirling around her legs and before her stood the savage. Clara’s heart stopped in her throat, a look of rage stood on his face. Clara did not hesitate, she turned and ran.

  She could hear his pursuit and realized it might be futile but she would not just stand there, prey to be taken.

  Branches grabbed and tore at her clothing as she ran, her shoes a hindrance, the corset binding her lungs.

  Crashing behind her, the savage came.

  When she felt she could run no more and the breath burned in her throat his strong arms clasped her from behind and he lifted her off her feet. She kicked and flailed about, trying futilely for release but his arms were bands of brass, unyielding and hard.

  “Be still! I mean you no harm!” he spoke by her ear urgently.

  Clara stilled. It was no use, she could not escape the Prince and his guard, she could not escape the savages. Her fate was sealed, she was not her own mistress but the mistress of others.

  ****

  Bracus looked down at the Princess as she struggled, good Lord, was she a fighter! For such a small female, how she thrashed about. Bracus worked to subdue her without hurting her, harder than it seemed. Finally wrapping his arms over the top of hers from behind and folding her against his frame where her head touched his chest. She slowed her struggles when he told her but he did not trust that she would cooperate. He cautiously released her and she turned on him, furious…those beautiful eyes flashing, one still bruised and swollen.

  Clara turned on the savage, angry at him for capturing her, angry at the circumstance, angry about everything.

  “Let me go,” she hissed, her bravado slipping before such a huge male.

  “I cannot,” he answered, spreading his arms wide.

  Somehow, this is not how Bracus envisioned their first meeting to be.

  “I have escaped the sphere and wish to be free. I do not want to be forced anymore,” she looked around her and became aware that the remaining savages had subtly appeared in the holes between the trees and her anxiety grew. She felt claustrophobic, their presence a reminder that possibly, a new prison awaited.

  “We mean you no harm. We wish to establish a peace between our peoples…”

  “So… you kidnap me,” Clara raised a brow, looking at each savage before her, their eyes glittering back in the shattered light cast by the moon. “You rip a hole in the sphere…”

  “How else were we to establish communication?” Bracus asked logically.

  Clara crossed her arms, narrowing her eyes, feigning bravery she did not feel. “Peaceably?”

  Bracus was silent. This was not going as expected, her exterior did not match the fire within. “I am Bracus.”

  “I am Clara,” she said, looking at each savage amongst the trees. If they meant to kill her, they would have done so already. Her eyes rested on the savage who had been outside her sphere the one time. She was not sure what role he played but she felt least confident about him.

  “We need you to accompany us. Our President has a proposal…”

  “Your president?” What was that? thought Clara.

  “Our leader,” Philip said stepping forward and Clara automatically stepped back, which made Bracus itch to touch her, his hands clenching by his sides to halt the action.

  They had no King she asked herself?

  Bracus saw her expression and interpreting it correctly answered,
“We have a different hierarchy, Princess,” he said.

  “You don’t seem like savages…” except for the clothes, or lack thereof, she thought. But she wisely kept that to herself.

  Bracus was offended. “We are not savages. We are the Clan of Ohio. And these men and myself… we are the Band, the protectors of our clan.”

  Clara covered her mouth, the what? She looked up at him, willing herself not to laugh but they all wore serious expressions.

  The savage that frightened her came forward and she cringed back. Bracus, seeing her expression looked that way and saw nothing but the Band. What frightened her so?

  He opened his mouth to inquire when she spoke, “What do you mean to do with me?”

  “Just a meeting with our President for a possible negotiation. Then you may return.”

  She never wanted to return. Not as long as the queen ruled or Frederic held her captive under the sham of a marriage for alliance.

  “But first, I must ask: who has laid their hands upon you?”

  She had no idea what he was talking about.

  He touched his own face, indicating her injuries and she was reminded of the beating.

  Automatically she replied, “I fell, in the Royal Manse, two days past.”

  He stepped closer and she fought not to move away, her knees weak.

  “I know the abuse of a hand and the difference between that and clumsiness. You did not fall,” he stated with surety.

  Clara said nothing. By sheer habit and force of will she held her tongue. She was ashamed by her face, by not being able to defend herself. At least she would not admit it all to this stranger. Bracus, her mind supplied.

  Bracus wished to run his hand over her injured face, erasing it from her; why would she not admit the truth? There was much here he needed to understand. There would be time for it. Somehow, in some way he could not explain, she reminded him of Anna, but not near so timid. She had a fire inside her that burned bright. He smiled at her upturned face.

  She smiled tentatively back, her anger beginning to leak away. She did not feel harm from him. Clara felt she was near expert in determining if someone meant it.

  He turned, making his way ahead of her and she followed. Her future lay uncertain before her and she must follow it where it led, even if the outcome was a mystery. He held his hand out, and she lay hers within it as he clasped it around her, the size swallowing it whole. He made her feel safe, she was not sure why. She turned to look behind her. The savage that she did not trust was at her heel, dark intent shadowing his face and she shuddered, walking on.

  The guard was biding his time. The Princess, Clara, he corrected, holding the hand of his Captain. She was so close he could have reached out and moved his palm through her hair, which had come undone from its tether during all the transit. But he knew that time was his friend… and soon enough, he would have his chance to have her all to himself. Protecting his clan from the dangerous females of the sphere.

  ****

  They traveled back the way they had come, Clara and the Band. The horses came into view, Briar Rose appearing silver in the moonlight, a spattering of a darker color appearing along her back and sides. She shone like a faded star and Clara was drawn to her as a moth to flame.

  Bracus released her hand reluctantly as she approached the horse, and he warned her, “Not from behind, Princess, a horse likes to see a person’s approach.”

  “Clara,” she corrected absently.

  Changing the direction she had been moving, coming right up underneath the animal’s nose, she turned to Bracus. “May I pet it?”

  “Her,” he corrected. “Briar Rose.”

  “From the fairy tale?”

  He looked surprised. “I have heard such.”

  “Mayhap we have some of the same literature.”

  “Much of what we had was lost,” Bracus said.

  Philip added, “In the Time when Ash Covered the Earth we lost many things of importance.”

  Stephen interrupted harshly, “It is not important. Survival is important. That is all that matters now.”

  Matthew shrugged and Joseph said, “It is a hard thing, survival. But, if happiness and purpose could be obtained as well, I would be keen for that.”

  The group of men nodded and Clara felt that their two peoples were not as divergent as she had presumed.

  Reaching out, she touched the great horse’s nose and it was crushed velvet beneath her hand. She had never known another texture like it, so shocking.

  She drew her hand away and looked at Bracus. “She is so soft.”

  As if on cue, Briar Rose neighed softly, shaking her mane and bumping Clara’s hand, an invitation for more petting that made her laugh.

  Bracus could not get enough of looking at her. Here she was, kidnapped from the only home she had known, with five strange men and a new animal she’d never laid eyes on, beaten and yet she could enjoy a stolen moment with the horse.

  Matthew broke the silent rapport, “Let us be about breaking down camp. We have much to accomplish and the clan does not need our lengthy absence.”

  Matthew was practical and in this area especially, he was vigilant. They did not need the fragment to come lurking about while they were gone. Normally, five males would be too much to take, but Bracus had felt confident that it was required. Now that the acquisition of the Princess, (Clara, he corrected) was accomplished, he knew he had made the right choice.

  CHAPTER 24

  Charles groaned and looked about him, his eyes gradually adjusting, he became aware of pandemonium all around him. Guards and civilians alike were milling about, speaking in all volumes while Charles sat up, trying to get his bearings.

  Clara, Charles thought wildly. Looking all around him, finally, his gaze rested on the tear in the sphere side, now but a hazy scar of its former breadth.

  She was gone, taken by the savages.

  A great pain began in Charles’ breastbone and spread like an icy fissure, cracking and infinite, he felt the breath stop in his body.

  He had not protected her after all.

  She was most assuredly Outside, as was their plan, but not with him… but with savages of unknown intent.

  He did not care if he lived, the thought of Clara being in the hands of those creatures. He shook his head to clear it.

  Wallowing about in grief at her disappearance would not get her back to him. He stood on shaky legs, his head feeling like a vise of copper had been about it. He looked down the tunnel, through the throng of people and caught sight of Sarah and Clarence and his heart lightened. Between the three of them, mayhap her rescue would be a possibility.

  Sarah and Clarence quickened their strides, coming before him, their sides heaving.

  “I ran almost the entire length of the tunnel,” Sarah yelled to be heard over the din.

  “I have not much time,” Clarence said, looking decidedly ill, “the twilight drug that you administered has made me vomit up my internal organs.”

  Charles smiled, “You will live another day, my friend.”

  Clarence glowered but held his stomach gingerly.

  “Where is she? And why, for the love-of-the-Guardian, are you not Outside and with her?”

  Charles looked about him surreptitiously and noticed the Prince’s guards were hovering around him like flies to a fresh carcass.

  Charles pulled his two friends away to the only available space there was and explained everything: the Prince’s forced sexual advance against Clara, the savages breaking in and taking her… everything.

  “He tried to rape the Princess?” Clarence asked, a look of dull horror on his face.

  Charles nodded.

  Sarah looked not as surprised, “And the savages? They struck you but took her? Did they mean her harm?”

  Charles hung his head, it was his primary intent to find out.

  “I do not know,” he answered.

  They looked at the healing tear of the tunnel wall.

  “It appears sca
rred, Charles,” Clarence said, as there was no going near it, the Queen’s guards crawled all around it like ants scurrying on their mound.

  “So the rumors are true? It is the salt that tears the fabric of the sphere?”

  Charles nodded, “Yes, and the savages were aware of that fact.”

  Sarah’s hand trembled as she pushed her hair behind her ear. “What is there to do now?”

  “I must escape of my own accord, quickly. They cannot have too great a lead.” But Charles had misgivings as he had seen how they moved and acted, spoke, competent travelers and fighters.

  “But what of Prince Frederic?” Clarence asked. He spared a glance at the Prince, who was batting away his guard’s offers of help, grabbing his nether regions as if they would come off without his hold.

  “Why does he hold himself thus?” Sarah inquired.

  “I am not sure, but it would seem that he may have suffered injury.” Charles said.

  “The savages?” Clarence asked.

  “Mayhap. He was not able to finish what he started with Clara and did not harm her in my presence.”

  “Yet, you were not conscious for her departure,” Sarah said, emphasizing the last word.

  Charles shook his head.

  The Prince noticed the three standing apart and walked toward them. Wincing as he walked, he gave up and limped toward them. Charles mastered his expression to not alert the Prince just how much it pleased him he was injured there.

  “Mr. Pierce!” Prince Frederic shouted, his voice easily swallowed in the tight space of the tunnel with so many people packed together.

  “I must speak with you.”

  Sarah instinctively stepped behind Clarence. She wished for none of his notice.

  Charles was having an elaborate fantasy where the Prince fell clumsily on one of his guards’ swords where they hovered as he drew near.

  Damn, here he was, right before him. Charles’ head ached and his hand was itching to draw upon the dirk that lay buried in one of the dead guard’s necks.

 

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