The Lost Queen (Complete Series)

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The Lost Queen (Complete Series) Page 13

by Angel Lawson


  A fleeting urge to run crossed my mind. I’d gotten the upper hand on Liam using his desire for me. His hunger and base instinct and the bond we shared. Sure, I’d gotten into Grace’s head but I had a feeling seduction wouldn’t work on her.

  Past the fear and concern, Grace had piqued my interest. I wanted to know more about the Queen and why she had gone to so much trouble to try to find me—including sending an army through the portal. Maybe it was time to find out exactly what was going on and not the biased, self-serving version Liam was feeding me.

  I stood, dusting the grime off my hands from the filthy house.

  “Well?” Grace asked, her hands clenched at her sides, unnecessarily ready for a fight.

  “I’m probably a fool, but whatever. Fine, let’s go. Take me to Eleanor.”

  Chapter 25

  Liam

  “Wake up.”

  “Gods, he’s out of it.”

  “What do you think happened?”

  “I think that he was right, Nadya is a force to be reckoned with.”

  The voices broke through the dream I’d been having. The glorious, too real one, with Nadya seductively straddling my hips. She hovered above me in her thin white blouse that barely hung onto her shoulders and I burned for her. I clenched my eyes shut, attempting to reclaim the dream and mumbled into the pillow. “Get out.”

  I tried to catch a glimmer of her again. Her skin. Her hair, the way her breasts looked pressed into my chest. The way she smelled. Fresh, like the earth. Her eyes held mine, fiery and…

  “Liam.”

  “There’s going to be hell to pay when he finds out she’s gone.”

  I stiffened and blinked. Struggling for my voice I asked, “What did you say?”

  “Oh look, he wakes. Finally.”

  I rolled over, my hand bound tightly. I flexed my fingers and looked down. A silver chain had been tied around my fist. Nadya’s necklace with the locator spell. Fury replaced the confusion of my dreams.

  Colleen’s wary eyes weren’t on my face but lower. I looked down and grimaced. The dream felt as real to my body as my brain. I covered myself. “Someone explain now.”

  “Sir, really, we don’t know,” Brayden replied. “Mrs. Graves found you in your office and fed you. Enough to gain consciousness, but you’re still very weak.”

  I rubbed my face, trying to regain my senses. I felt like I’d spent the night at a feast in Otherworld. Drinks and food and women except infinitely weaker. “Where is Nadya?”

  “Gone.” Colleen replied. She looked at the ground. Nadya was her responsibility. And again she failed. This would not end well for her. “She took off some time ago. Left you in quite a state. What do you remember?”

  “Not much—or rather, I’m unsure what was real and what was a dream. Gods, she did something to me.” I clutched my head and in the mirror across the room I saw the marks on my chest had faded. A quick glance down proved the rest were missing, too. “My runes have been removed.”

  “What could do that? Did you eat or drink anything?”

  “No.” Red lips. Red light. Skin pale and smooth. I felt a nudge in my head—something else. “I think maybe she got in my head?”

  “She had a vision or read a memory?”

  “No more. It was intentional. It’s like she pushed herself in my brain and felt around.” That would explain the headache. And the necklace. I flashed to her lips and her body over mine. Hazy or not, that was no dream. “Whatever she found could be dangerous. I had had my memories cloaked, but if she saw bits and pieces, we could have a problem.”

  “What kind of problem?”

  “The kind that ends with Nadya revealing herself to Eleanor. Something that cannot happen. Not yet.” I stood but swayed, losing my footing on the carpet. Colleen lunged forward to help. I shrugged her off.

  “Can you handle this?” she asked. “You really don’t look well.”

  “Get me a feeder.” I rested a hand on the bed post and stood again. “Now.”

  “Thank you, dear,” I said to the woman on the bed. Unlike Nadya, the woman didn’t gain strength from my feeding, but she did feel a drug-like rush. One she enjoyed, from the lazy grin on her face. She’d provided me nourishment and enough energy to get at least some of my memory back. Not only had Nadya unlocked my brain and rummaged around my thoughts but she’d come close to killing me. I had to wonder if that was her true intent.

  I re-marked my body, adding the runes of war, another cloaking spell and another for travel. I had a feeling this wouldn’t end on Earth. Nadya had too much of a head start, extreme power, and a guide more than willing to take her to Otherworld. I changed into battle clothes, strapping my arms with leather guards and lacing my boots. Blades slipped into sheathes next to my calves. Two more hidden up my sleeves. If Eleanor dared touch a hair on her head…

  A knock on the door distracted my thoughts and I shrugged on my coat. “I’m ready,” I said, exiting the room. Mrs. Graves waited in the hallway and handed me my bag.

  “Don’t be too hard on her,” she begged.

  I strode down the hallway, past the spot I’d been with Nadya when she’d begun her seduction. “She tried to kill me.”

  “I don’t think she meant to. To be fair, you’d been keeping a lot of secrets from her.”

  I spared her a glance—worry lines crossed her forehead. “I hardly think it matters if she wanted to or not.” With a heavy sigh I faced her. “We knew there was a chance it would come to this. Her loyalty was never a sure thing.”

  “Maybe if you had told her the truth. People don’t like being in the dark about their lives. She feels confused. Possibly betrayed.”

  “She told you that?”

  Mrs. Graves fixed me with a cold eye. “She didn’t have to. She’s scared, Liam, and you’ve done nothing but give her a taste of her power and frighten her more. She’ll go to the person that she thinks will give her the truth.”

  “She’s not ready.”

  “Ready or not, it’s happening, dear.”

  How did this turn into such a disaster? I had her. I had her in my home, safe and working with me. I trained her. I exposed her to the Sidhe abilities and how to protect herself, and now all that hard work was in the hands of an enemy. “If the Queen gets her, especially now that she’s learned how to rummage through a person’s mind…” I couldn’t complete the thought. Mrs. Graves laid her hand on my arm and squeezed. “Otherworld will continue its decline and Nadya will never claim her destiny.”

  “You’ll get to her first.”

  I leaned down and kissed her on the both cheeks. “Not if I have to deal with Colleen. Her performance has been disappointing.”

  “Let me handle Colleen.”

  “You?”

  She gave a sharp nod. “I think I’m more than capable, don’t you?”

  “Yes,” I agreed. I checked my watch. Time was running out. “Thank you.”

  “Make sure you stop her, Liam.”

  I left through the side door without another word. I wanted to promise that I would, that after all these years we finally had Nadya in our reach. We had a chance to make things right. I couldn’t bring myself to do it. Too many variables and too many of them not in our favor.

  Chapter 26

  Nadya

  Grace maneuvered the car through the Nomad parking lot toward the back hangar like I directed. We had no choice but to use the portal—the trick was doing it without getting caught.

  “How did you enter last time?”

  “Well, you know how your gift relies on the ability to seek the truth from people? How you can read the past?”

  “I guess so.” She didn’t need to know how I was still working it out.

  “I’m skilled in the use of travel magic. The portal is able to monitor most Sidhe coming in and out, but well…” She stood and from her back unfurled a set of beautiful blue wings.

  “Oh my god. You have wings.” I reached forward to touch them but she shied away.

/>   “I’m a fairy,” she said with a shrug. “Some of us actually have wings.”

  I glanced over my shoulder. “Do I?”

  “No.”

  “Huh.” I was unreasonably bummed by this. “So you can just fly through?”

  “With a little spell work, yes.” Without warning, her wings retracted and disappeared. I peered around her shoulder but saw nothing but the smooth lines of her back. “You’re aware that your people monitor the portal, right?”

  “Yes, my mother’s people.”

  “Well, my people—those of us with wings, used to be the ones that assisted transport. In modern times, when the humans became prevalent in this area, we were no longer able to fly freely from one side to the other. Human transportation took over and everything changed.”

  “Like Liam and his plane?” I interrupted.

  “Yes, the Guard over took the system using modern machinery to reach the portal, and we were basically shut out.”

  “That stinks.”

  “It does.” She grabbed a bag from the car and we walked close behind the hangar—out of sight. “But just because times change doesn’t mean I don’t have my ways of beating the system. I just have to be sneakier about it.”

  Trying to process the information, I asked, “So just to be clear, you’re going to fly us out of here. Like, you’re going to carry me.”

  I saw her laugh, but the sound was muffled by the loud buzz of a plane taking off. I shaded my eyes and saw Mr. Johnson’s white and red plane lifting toward the sky. My father would wonder why I wasn’t at work—again. And Liam? Surely he would wake up soon. I absorbed a lot of his juice but he was strong. I had no guarantee on time. “Not exactly. Ever heard of fairy dust? Peter Pan?”

  “You’ve got to be kidding,” I said, with zero trace of humor.

  “Most things come with a speck of truth.”

  Two months ago I would have thought this entire conversation was insane. I’d have been inside that airport reading my horoscope and planning what to make my father for dinner. Nothing new, maybe curious looks at Liam as he came in and grunted a hello. Instead, over the last 48 hours I’d danced and drunk my way through a bar, killed a Sidhe soldier sent to track me down by some crazy queen named Eleanor, and screwed up whatever legitimate relationship I had with Liam by going succubus on his ass. All to travel on my own to Otherworld with a scheming fairy and her pixie dust to confront this Queen Eleanor on my own. What the hell had become of my life and when did I get so stupid?

  “We better get moving,” Grace said, fastening a satchel around her waist. I slung my backpack over my shoulders.

  She moved into the sunlight and held up a small pouch. A sudden burst of nerves flared in my stomach. I grabbed her hand and said, “Wait. What’s going to happen to me over there? What if you’re lying to me?”

  “Don’t be afraid, Nadya. Otherworld is a wonderful place. It’s your home—your mother’s home. But if you want, you can do that brain scanny thing you’re so great at.” She tilted her head forward. “Go ahead.”

  I wanted to believe her. Well, I did believe her, but I also knew my mother lived on this side of the portal. For my father, and they both sacrificed everything for my safety. But what if he was wrong? What if Liam filled his head with lies? “No, I’m just confused. I’m ready.”

  “I need to mark you with cloaking runes,” she said. “Or the workers in the tower will see us enter the portal. Doing so breaks a multitude of rules, on both sides of the portal. We can’t be seen exiting or entering either side without a proper escort.”

  She held up a dagger, one with a sharp tip. Liam had a similar one that he kept strapped to his side. “You make them with that?”

  “Yes, they’re burned temporarily into your skin.”

  “Liam had those markings on his body before I…” I searched for words. “Drained him.”

  She narrowed her eyes. “Did you absorb the power of the markings as well?”

  “I don’t know.” Grace lifted her the blade and took my hand but paused when blue jeweled ring on her finger lit up like a beacon. “What is that?” I asked. “Where did that light come from?”

  “It’s a signal. They’re coming. We must go before the Guard arrives.” I heard the squeal of tires and the familiar roar of Liam’s car as it approached the hangar. The old car, the one with the rumbling muffler.

  “What about the runes?”

  “We have to take our chances that you absorbed them from Liam.” Increasingly wary of this entire situation, I glanced quickly at Grace, whose bright eyes held mine. She looked sure and in return my confidence, some I had stolen from Liam, surged. Again I watched in wonder as her wings unfurled, the tips grazing the pavement. She opened the pouch and poured dark, chalky looking sand in her hand. “Ready?”

  I held out my own hand and replied, “Yes.”

  The car came to a screeching halt and Liam’s head popped out of the open door. “Nadya,” he yelled. I looked over, even though I didn’t want to. He looked better—but not whole. He was missing something, something that brought fear to his eyes, a hesitancy to his step. The confidence that I now possessed.

  I had it. It was mine.

  “Don’t do this,” he said. Brayden and Daniel chased at his heels. “You don’t understand the Otherworld. I’ll take you if you want. Don’t go with her.”

  “You’re all liars. I don’t trust any of you, but I’m going.” I glanced at Grace. “At least she’s giving me the chance.”

  Grace dumped the powder over my head and snatched my hand. A gust of wind knocked me off my feet, but my hand was clutched tightly in hers. Grace’s wings caused a backdraft and looking down I saw Liam’s hair caught in the breeze. Even from the increasing distance, I saw how his blue eyes begged me to stay. Daniel drew back and a flash of silver spun through the air.

  “Grace!” I yelled in warning, but the sound of her wings flapping was too loud. The blade sliced across my wrist and landed in her side. She cried out in pain, and blood sprang from the wound. I looked down and saw Liam turn on Daniel, pushing him to the ground. “Can you make it?”

  “Yes,” she sobbed. “I’m almost there—the portal will do the rest.”

  We were far from the ground. Too far. Grace struggled to push forward, but I was weighing her down. I slipped the straps of my backpack off my shoulder. The bag dropped quickly, crashing to the tarmac, landing mere feet from Liam.

  “Hold on tight,” Grace called. Slippery blood seeped from her side and dripped down my fingers, coating my hand and arm. I strained to keep from slipping to my death.

  “I’m falling,” I said, looking down, but a draft caught my legs and breathed life into Grace’s wings and we flew upward. Something shiny caught my attention. Liam’s plane, which looked like an ant from up here, rolled down the runway. In my heart I knew better than to think he wouldn’t come after me. I turned to the sky, terrified and exhilarated at the same time, and found myself in the middle of the cloud that hovered over the airport. Blues and reds swirled around me like a moving rainbow, and we floated in the air around the portal. I pulled Grace into my arms.

  “We made it,” she said. Her eyes shone, glassy and weak. Blood oozed through her shirt, making a wide, dark stain. He wings beat slowly against the warm air in the portal. We’d made it into the portal but not through, and I had no idea how long we could stay here. “But I don’t know if we’ll make it back down to the Otherside.”

  I brushed back her windblown hair and touched her cheek. She felt clammy and cold. Her skin pale as ash and lips turning blue. On instinct I ran a thumb over the bottom one and watched it blush pink. “Hold still,” I said, as the wind circled around us. I pressed my hand against her side and she gasped, seizing from the pain. I pressed my mouth to hers, lip to lip, and her eyes fluttered shut. Hazy light passed between us, reflecting the colors of the portal. I kissed her, encouraging her to respond, to absorb the energy I was offering. With a little coaxing she returned the kiss. Colo
r spread across her cheeks and I felt her wings flap with strength. Pulling back, I inspected the wound, now nothing more than a fine line.

  I had healed her.

  With renewed energy Grace took both my hands and dove through the air like a bird hunting prey. I shrieked, fear bubbling in my stomach from the dips and turns. She made a beeline toward the horizon, colors zipping past us, and I shut my eyes as we burst through the clouds.

  I opened my eyes and blinked.

  We had arrived. We were in Otherworld.

  Chapter 27

  Nadya

  As reactions to new places went, I had no idea where mine fell on the scale of normalcy. Nothing about this moment could be considered normal. The view of Otherworld as Grace and I burst through the portal had felt like waking in a dream. Acres of green, fertile, rolling hills with small buildings dotted the horizon. The treetops looked like small green cushions while narrow, reddish-brown paths crisscrossed the way our own highways marked the land back home. From this vantage I was able to get an impressive view, including the fact that passages stretched in four distinct directions.

  “Where do those lead?” I asked.

  “Various towns throughout Otherworld,” Grace replied. “There are two major kingdoms in this part of the world and several large towns designated in both. The roads to these cross here, at the entrance to the portal.”

  The wind from Grace’s wings blew my hair into my eyes and I brushed it back, afraid I’d miss something. Too soon, Grace lowered us to the ground in front of a small stone building with ease and precision. The hair on the back of my neck prickled as several people approached us.

  “Who are they?” I asked, eyeing their uniforms. Long sheathed swords hung from leather belts. They wore leather coats and baggy trousers.

 

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