The Eden Chronicles Boxset

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The Eden Chronicles Boxset Page 52

by S. K Munt


  ‘Is that why you came forward today?’ I asked. ‘Hoping that her case would correlate with yours and convince father of your innocence?’

  ‘Yes,’ she said sadly. ‘But I couldn’t save her any better than I could save myself, and it won’t until he is found and proven to be a predator!’

  ‘I still don’t see how this makes any sense!’ I cried, shifting closer and hearing Kohl call out my name in warning. ‘This man would surely have to be a dark Nephilim to lower himself to such behaviour or shape shift or whatever, but I truly have no powers to back that claim!’

  ‘Well, if he is a Nephilim, then he must be a weak one or he’d easily get over that fence to snare you and others like you instead of harassing his conquests into handing you all over.’ She bit her lip. ‘And weak Nephilim find it harder to conceive a child with a divine gift. Perhaps that’s why he’s fathering so many- hoping and hoping that one day, he’ll get one that he can use!’

  ‘Well it’s not me!’ I whispered. ‘Tell father that, tell him to come see that I am powerless and maybe that will buy you more of his belief. And… tell him he will always be my father to me, and that I miss him.’

  My mother shifted closer. ‘I’m sorry Larkin, but it’s no use. He does not love us anymore… and in coming here today, I’ve only made it worse. Now that we’ve all described this man so perfectly to the court, and if he is seen by your side after… everyone will suspect that I am an adulteress. And if they catch him and test your blood, they will know it, even without power, and I will be banished.’ Her face crumpled. ‘And your father will let them take me away! And why? Because once again I did the right thing- the honest thing to help someone else, and now I am in more trouble than before, and caused you grief when I only wanted to shield you from such things!’ She inched closer, looking desperate. ‘Do you have any idea of how much it scares me, to think that I could not only lose all of his affection, but his protection? After how I stood by him?!’

  Tears spilled down my cheeks as I thought of how desperate I would feel without Kohén’s loyalty. ‘I do.’ I clutched at the grass near the gate and heard the electricity hum, and this time; it was Kelia who cried out. ‘Oh, mother… I wish I were a Nephilim- a healer! I’d come home, I’d touch his heart…’

  ‘Are you sure that you’re not?’ my mother asked, perking up. ‘You could do so much for me, if you were! Maybe you just haven’t found your power yet! They say it usually takes a severe emotional prolapse to-’

  ‘There’s nothing there!’ I cried, pressing my hands to my sweaty, heaving chest. ‘I’ve know every kind of emotion there is- I have been at my lowest, and my happiest, and I have been incredibly angry but all I can do in that state is yell, whereas Kohén only has to feel a flicker of emotion and- boom-the power surges!’

  ‘But he was so certain of you!’ my mother whispered, eyes bright with hope. ‘He was certain that you could touch that fence! He didn’t want you dead when he asked you to do that- don’t you see? He wanted to prove to himself that you were the one worth fighting for!’

  But I shook my head. ‘No, Kohén zaps me all the time and it can hurt a lot!’

  ‘But it doesn’t kill you?’

  ‘No,’ I said, wiping at my own tears. ‘But he wouldn’t dare touch me if there was a risk that he might!’

  ‘Are you sure?’ my mother breathed, and held out her hand. ‘Try and see! Maybe you are stronger! Touch the fence Larkin! Right now! Or take my hand and we’ll touch it together!’

  ‘What?!’ I demanded, alarmed. ‘No! It will kill me or us both!’

  ‘No it won’t!’ she wept. ‘And even if it does kill you, at least they won’t bother testing your blood, and I won’t be found out! Or it will spare you and kill me and I will get out of this life before the truth of your origin can damn me in your father’s eyes!’

  It felt like I’d been hit with a truck. A shiver started in my scalp and travelled right through me. ‘You WANT me to die?!’ I shrieked, unable to comprehend that our intimate interaction had taken such a downswing. ‘For your own protection?’

  ‘Larkin!’ I heard Kohl bellow. ‘Get AWAY from her!’

  ‘You should!’ my mother bit out, her eyes wild and unfocused. ‘I am old and frail! I will not survive long if your father turns me in!’

  I brought my hand up to my mouth to hold in a sob and that was when my mother struck out, reaching for me. She got a fistful of my hair and pulled and I screamed as I began to pitch forward.

  ‘Stop! Don’t!’ I shrieked, certain I would drop dead from fear if the fence spared me.

  ‘Devil child!’ she hissed. ‘Whore! I rid myself of you years ago and yet you still yank at my heartstrings and judge me in my dreams! I won’t see Satan get me in her need to get to you!’

  My heart jumped into my mouth as I caught myself on the ground with my nose only an inch away from the fence. I wanted to brace myself against her but the brick was too far away and the grass ripped out in fistfuls when I grasped at it. The hum was a scream in my ears but then a hand was around my waist and I was flying backwards.

  ‘Larkin!’ Kohl’s voice was in my ear. ‘Are you all right?’

  ‘Oh my God!’ Kelia took my hand and tried to pull me off him. ‘Oh my God! Mrs Whittaker you are an evil, monstrous-’ she screamed again and I felt something grab my foot and drag me back towards the fence. I craned my neck and saw that my mother was gripping my sandal, biting down on her tongue and smiling with grim triumph. I kicked out but Kohl hooked my knee and dragged it up, bellowing:

  ‘No!’ And tugging my mother into the charged bars. Her eyes widened with horror, but she managed to halt her fall on the grass with one hand.

  ‘Whore!’ she screamed again. ‘Be a good girl for mummy, and just fucking DIE! God wants you gone!’

  ‘God wants her love and none of yours!’ Kohl hollered, throwing me clear of him and to the side, and a blinding light flashed as thunder cracked. Kelia jumped and I caught her and pulled her back into my arms, feeling her shake violently. Rain started to fall hard on us, and when my mother saw the sky open above us, she screamed and flinched then to my complete horror- grasped the fence with both hands to steady herself.

  No! God please no!

  More light flashed and just like that, her hands were on fire. I watched screaming soundlessly as she shook and jerked with thousands of volts before being thrown clear. Her body landed hard, like a dropped rag doll, and though smoke and flames had already begun to waft from her hair and clothing, the rain pelting down on us put it out and made the air fill with acrid smells and evil hissing; the rain that Kohl had called forth, to save me, just as he’d shocked her with that crack of thunder, and forced her to grab onto whatever she could! I wrenched my eyes away from my mother’s corpse and looked at Kohl, who looked thunderstruck himself.

  ‘I didn’t mean to…’ he whispered, and his face crumpled. ‘I just- I just killed-’

  ‘No,’ I dropped my head onto his chest and held him, trembling. ‘You just saved me, and put the fire out!’

  ‘She grabbed the fence,’ Kelia whispered, coming to his other side and taking one of each of our hands. Tears were streaming down her cheeks. ‘She took her own life when she failed to take Larkin’s hand. We all saw it! Kohl, that was so brave!’

  My mother is dead because of me, oh God, forgive me! Take her soul please! I know that she loved you!

  But Kohl lowered his head and sobbed. ‘I’m not supposed to lie. I’m not supposed to do murder! I am a Barachiel- even those accused of murder deserve a hearing before they are-’

  ‘I heard her,’ I whispered, sobbing into his neck. ‘She was guilty, and so she took her own life.’ I lifted his face and stared into his neon eyes. ‘I saw it, Kohl. She said it. My father didn’t love her anymore, and she wanted to die if he could not forgive her for having me for him to lose. You just stopped her from taking me with her.’

  Kohl bit his lip, looking anguished. ‘Really?’

  ‘Y
ou are a hero,’ I whispered, ‘not a murderer.’

  Kohl stared hard at me, and I back at him and then suddenly, his eyes softened and the rain stopped leaving him glowing, glorious and with his white deep-necked shirt plastered to his muscular frame. A scintilla of lust burned inside my lower abdomen.

  Satan help me… he is truly divine!

  ‘I will go get help!’ Kelia sniffled, getting to her feet. ‘Karol and Kohén are on their way, let Larkin explain Kohl. Larkin…’

  I looked up at her and away from Kohl’s heaving, muscled chest. ‘Yes?’

  She shook with her tears. ‘If I ever see you within two feet of that fence again, I will kill you myself.’ She swallowed. ‘I am NOT going into that harem without you!’

  I tried to laugh, but only more tears came out. She smiled a friendly, relieved smile and trotted away, intercepting Karol and Kohén and speaking heatedly. Kohén looked so shaken that I knew he’d not leave my side once he’d arrived at it, so I turned back to Kohl and grasped his hands.

  ‘Kohl… we’re going to be surrounded by people in a moment so before they come, there’s something I need you to know.’

  He stared at me, his expression still anguished. ‘Yes?’

  I leaned in and hugged him, pressing my lips to his skin, just beside his mouth. ‘You may be a Nephilim to some people, the prince’s twin to others, and a third-born to your parents… but to me, you’re my guardian angel, who I am afraid I will fall in love with, if you do not leave soon...’ I kissed the side of his mouth and he moaned softly and turned his face to mine, trying to kiss me properly. My heart skipped and I inhaled sharply, widening my eyes because I could see Kohén racing over from behind us, and thankfully Kohl seemed to remember himself and the laws, grasped my jaw instead.

  ‘I am already in love with you,’ he whispered, looking at my lips with so much longing that I ached for the touch of his. ‘And I am going to become King of Pacifica, just so I have the power to make my own laws, and twist those laws so that we can be married.’ His eyes burned into mine. ‘Not joined- but married.’

  My heart skipped again, this time because I was as moved as I was terrified of what Kohl’s devotion to me would mean for Kohén’s dreams. But before I could respond, I glanced over at my mother’s body and screamed when I saw that she was not there alone because standing behind her, and grinning at me through the thick, spiny bracken, was the golden man.

  My father.

  I screamed, and then the world went black.

  7.

  Chaos reigned in the castle following my mother’s death, and from what I was told, there were a lot of very scared and confused people waiting anxiously for me to wake up and explain my side of what had happened.

  Only I did not wake up for days- three whole days and when I did, it was to a changed world. No one knew why I had been unconscious for so long, and though they put every healer in the castle to the task of waking me up, it wasn’t until Kohén came in to wait at my side that I was roused by his familiar scent. I blinked until he came into focus, and stared when I saw tears on his cheeks. This concerned me at first as I wondered what else had happened to make him cry (Clearly he couldn’t be weeping over my mother! Even I wasn’t sure if I could do that now!) But then, after holding me so tightly that I thought my head would pop off, Kohén explained that I’d been out for days, not seconds or minutes as I’d thought, and to him it was a miracle because he’d been starting to fret that I never would come to.

  ‘I love you,’ he whispered, and I remembered my moment with Kohl instantly and felt a pang. ‘And I’m so sorry for the way I’ve acted because of those feelings. On your birthday, I thought I would die if you did not open your door for me but when I thought you were dead, I wanted to die for having wasted our time together, or for having led you to believe that I objectified you the way that she did!’ He rubbed my hands between his, and his eyes were neon again. ‘I will never treat you that way again Larkin. I can see how my lust for you scares you, and I don’t want you to be scared. We are friends, and I won’t give you cause to worry that that has changed until you are free. I promise you that!’

  ‘Thank you,’ I whispered, though my coma had done nothing to chip away at my anger toward him. ‘That means the world to me.’

  Kohén didn’t want to leave my side, but a lot of people wanted to see me so he grudgingly went and had a shower (he hadn’t left my room for those three days) and when Kohl walked in alone next and shut the door behind him, I shrank into myself a little. What was I going to say to him?

  ‘They let me in next for being your hero and all,’ he said, smiling gently but stopping at the foot of my bed before I could become lost in my thick pillows.

  ‘Three times over,’ I said dazedly.

  ‘I suppose… but…’ he swallowed. ‘I’m going to make this quick. I meant what I said the other day, and I can tell that I don’t mean enough to you to say anything so… final… back.’ I winced but he held up his hand and went on. ‘And even if you could, I don’t think it’s safe for me to hear it because, well, we’re alone, and you just scared the hell out of me so I’d probably kiss you enough for a lifetime if you did.’ He smiled and I flushed. ‘But Larkin…’ he wrapped his hand around the white leather bedpost with equally white knuckles. ‘I am yours, and I am going to wait for you to be free.’

  ‘You shouldn’t say that,’ I said sadly. ‘You’re right when I say I cannot say it back. Regardless of how you make me feel… I have signed a contract that states that I am his property. You cannot kiss me or make advances on me, I cannot encourage you to win the Pacifica crown when he is championing my dreams, and I cannot promise my future to you because for all intents and purposes, it is in his hands.’

  ‘But you’d consider it otherwise?’ Kohl whispered, stepping closer.

  ‘If I wasn’t Given?’ I repeated, and felt safe in answering: ‘Yes, of course. Kohl… you’re wonderful!’ My throat tightened. ‘But I can’t give you children-’

  ‘I don’t need children, as a third-born son, no offspring of mine will be entitled to anything that a commoner couldn’t earn for himself anyway, so my parents won’t fuss as much over my life choices as they will over Kohén’s own.’ Kohl smiled and I sobbed. ‘And so, I will wait, and pray that you’re not so fussy either.’

  ‘Kohl-’

  He held up his pendant and kissed it. ‘He has vowed not to touch you for the sake of your friendship, so I won’t make advances on you for the sake of your freedom.’ He began to back towards the door, giving me the chance to admire his deep dimples as he reversed. ‘But I am yours, Larkin, and you will be my wife.’ I went to protest but he put his hand on the doorknob, silencing me. ‘I would love to convince you further, but I have to let Kelia in before she beats down the door- she has been almost inconsolable.’ He winced. ‘And barely tolerable.’

  ‘Really?’ I asked, surprised as I sat up.

  ‘Yes her voice gets very high-pitched-’

  ‘I meant is she really that upset about me?’ I asked, smiling all the same.

  He nodded and grinned. ‘Funny how it takes almost dying to find out how loved you are, hmm?’

  Kelia came in next and Kohl was right- she was a bundle of frazzled nerves and refused to leave my side as she chattered on and on about how scared she had been and how sorry she was for being jealous and what a hateful person my mother had been and that she never would have been so cold toward me if she’d understand where I’d come from. I assured her that my mother had never been like THAT, but she didn’t believe me and I was still too mad at Sapphire to argue much.

  Then Kelia told me all of the news- Karol hadn’t wanted to leave until I was awake but he had commitments to uphold quickly (Lindy’s gestation, no doubt) and so he’d gone and I’d missed my chance to farewell my friends. I cried a little over that later, but some of those tears were happy ones- for all Karol knew, I could have been dead, but he’d upheld his end of the bargain and Lindy might just be safe
because of it.

  Then, Kelia went on to explain that the entire kingdom was scandalized and confused over what had happened, and apparently my father had already moved out of our family home and out with Finch instead of into a retirement home. The official story was that losing me had drawn a wedge between my parents, and so she’d been falling apart since, and that she’d attempted to grab me at the last minute to take me with her into heaven to save us both. Everyone believed that because it wasn’t uncommon for the departure of a third-born to destroy families, which was why the family unit was so guarded in the first place. My depressed mother had gone to extremes, but people understood and came to her funeral to farewell the woman that she had been in her early life, and not the wild woman she’d become in the hours before her death, and I was grateful for that.

  Beyond that, however, I couldn’t find much of a way to mourn the loss of someone who’d lost me intentionally.

  But what had happened to me was the biggest mystery and when I explained to King Elijah that I had seen the golden man and fainted from shock, he’d become even more confused. Fainting for three days did not make sense, and when he took me back to the place where flowers had been lain for my mother and asked me to show him where the man had been standing, I honestly couldn’t see a place where he could have crawled, let alone stood. In my memory, he’d been behind the trees but when I looked again, I saw that there was no ‘behind’ the trees. The gnarled branches twisted closely together and were spiked with spiny thorns that overlapped. Those woods would have ripped a small child to shreds in there- so there was no way a grown man could have fit, even if the vision of him was still clear in my mind.

  After he saw my befuddled expression, King Elijah said that I must have suffered a hallucination or repressed memory in the shock of seeing my mother die, and once I saw the security surveillance which confirmed that yes, the woods had been empty, I ended up conceding so that no one would wonder if I had inherited some sort of mental disorder from my mother. But my curiosity had been stirred up too much for me to let it rest, and I knew I’d end up spending a lot of time in the gardens alone from then on, in the hope of seeing him again and getting answers. Having the wrong father I could deal with- but not knowing what he was and what that meant for me would slowly drive me insane.

 

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