Queen Mecca

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Queen Mecca Page 21

by Leia Stone


  Kian’s body jerked once when the crystal hit his chest, but then he fell flat again. Shelley sat up slowly, mouth open, eyes wide.

  I took a staggered step closer. “Try again!” I said.

  I’d seen something when the crystal connected — a flicker of mecca had washed over Kian.

  Kade obliged, slamming the staff down a bit longer this time, but not long enough to … infect … his brother with the darkness. I was guessing my mate was using his power to filter pure creative mecca energy through the powerful crystal, but keeping the darkness inside himself — condemning himself to save his brother.

  The next time he hit, more mecca shot into Kian and his whole body jumped up.

  “More!” Shelley shouted at Kade, still desperately clutching Jota.

  Kade slammed the staff down, his arms shaking with the power of holding the energy.

  Suddenly the crow jerked in Shelley’s hands, letting out a loud caw. At the same time, Kian gasped for air. I immediately looked to Kade, and in an almost slow-motion movement, he turned his entire body in my direction, the staff clutched tightly to his chest. I swallowed my cry, trying not to burst into hysterical sobs as our gazes met. His eyes were now completely black, even the part that was supposed to be white. His veins were thick and black, and he looked … evil.

  “So … much … power,” he rumbled, looking at the staff like it was a lover. Like it was precious. I recognized that look, I had seen it directed my way more times than I could count.

  I swallowed hard, hot tears running down my face even though I was trying my best to keep it together. I couldn’t fall apart yet, I had to save Kade first.

  My magic swirled closer to the surface, and as much as I wanted to reach out through our bond, I knew that wasn’t the right way to approach this. Not yet. I needed him to come back a little first, because I wasn’t sure I could fight him.

  “Kade … babe, give me the staff.” I held out my hand. Please, please, please. I was not above begging, hoping and praying he would just hand me the weapon.

  Kade’s nostrils flared but he didn’t say a word, staring at me as if he was trying to remember who I was. Movement to my left drew my attention, and even though I didn’t want to turn away from evil-Kade, I quickly flicked my gaze to Kian. I had temporarily forgotten him, but it was a relief to see his normal handsome face, seemingly devoid of all darkness.

  Thank the gods. Only one crazy shifter to deal with.

  Turning back to my mate, I reached inside my shirt, slowly, and pulled out the ring he’d given me, holding it up on the long chain for him to see. “You gave this to me. You promised me forever, and I know you’re a man of your word.”

  I held his gaze, even though it was physically hurting me to stare into those obsidian eyes. My chest cramped tighter and tighter, making it almost impossible to breathe. But I did not break our eye contact, and I did not lower my hand holding the chain.

  Kade shook his head then, startling me with the sudden movement.

  “Ari … help.” His words were forced out through his clenched jaw, and it looked like he was gripping the staff tighter.

  That was all I needed to hear; he was not completely gone.

  I shot out with mecca — it was a controlled blast, and I was reasonably sure it wouldn’t hurt him too much. Maybe just enough to give me a chance. I knew he was fighting the darkness, but without help, it would win — there was too much inside of him now. My hit knocked him off his feet, shooting him backwards. As he slammed into the ground, the staff was flung from his grip — or maybe he found the strength to drop it. Kade was the strongest man I knew, so that was definitely a possibility.

  Kade and I both scrambled for the staff, but before either of us could get our hands on it, Dante came out of nowhere, scooping it up. I changed course, diving across Kade, straddling him.

  “No!” Kade bellowed, his desperate eyes locked on Dante. I expected my mate to use his strength and throw me across the field, but he didn’t. He just watched as the summer fae pitched the staff straight into the last fiery embers of the lake.

  The moment it touched the surface the ground shook, hard enough to throw me off Kade. Every creature left alive in this godforsaken hellhole screeched. But my eyes were on my mate. His body was frozen, tense, his hands clenched tightly on either side of him. I could see there was a war going on inside of him. A war I was going to help him win.

  I crawled back to his side, reaching out and placing my fingers on each side of his temples.

  Zandu’s voice came from behind me. “Be careful, highborn. It could take you too.”

  “If he’s gone, I’m gone anyway,” I said, my tone dead.

  I closed myself off to the world, and using our bond, fully connected with Kade. I recoiled initially, fighting the urge to run as slimy, oily, insidious energy tried to cling to me and interweave with my power.

  Kade, I whispered along our bond, searching for my mate in the darkness. He had come back to me before, he had given me the chance to destroy the staff. He had to still be in there.

  I grabbed hold of the dark energy, and like a sticky spider web it clung to me. I began to pull it from Kade, allowing it to travel along the mate bond and into me. When it reach my chest I shivered, cocooning it with fae magic and transforming it like I did before. But this time there was too much, too fast. The more I siphoned from Kade, the more I felt like I was drowning in sadness and disease … in a heavy emptiness. The world was pressing in on me and I wanted to die. Anything to escape the absolute darkness of my world.

  I was alone.

  Useless.

  Worthless.

  I did not deserve to live.

  Ari… Kade’s whisper caressed a part of my soul through the bond, bringing with it a sliver of light. It was enough, just that tiny speck of illumination, for me to have something to cling to. It gave me the power to blast the darkness within me, a sense of purpose. And the strength I needed to get to him, to open my eyes and breathe again.

  But the darkness held me tightly, unwilling to give up its victim.

  In my moment of despair, it wasn’t Kade that saved me — Finn’s voice slammed into me, loud and firm. Arianna, of the red house. You are capable of more than you know. You are the queen of mecca. You can control the stones, the energy, the very life force of all people. Do not forget who you are. The winter prince has come for New York and only you can save us.

  Finn’s message was a slap of clarity. I sucked in as much air as I could, filling my lungs until they ached, drawing on my mecca in a way I never had before, all the way through the veil that divided the two worlds. I drew energy from the mecca stones of Earth, and for the first time ever, I also drew from the stones in the Otherworld. Together the two powers intertwined within me and eviscerated the darkness. I released it all with a scream of rage that was loud enough to shatter any remaining icicles of this world.

  When I had no more breath or darkness to expel, I opened my eyes. Clumps of ash were falling from the sky.

  Kade had me in his arms, holding me close to his chest.

  My eyes fluttered as I pressed myself into his arms, allowing a few cleansing breaths to refill my starved lungs. I could have cried — in happiness — when my natural joy for life washed through me. The emptiness was gone.

  I had never been a person who struggled with depression; it was something I was eternally grateful for. But after that moment of darkness, I understood it a little more. I understood why people couldn’t just “get over it” as they were often advised. It was like I had been wearing blinders and could see nothing but darkness ahead and behind. No matter how much light existed around me, I simply couldn’t see it. I couldn’t escape.

  I never wanted to be in that place again.

  It was so clear to me now. The dark stone never brought balance. The mecca was balanced; it could be used for good or evil, depending on the person. That darkness, it was only evil. I was glad to be rid of it, glad to see it destroyed.


  “Ari, baby…” Kade cradled my face in his hands, my body still draped across him.

  Familiar swirling, molten bronze eyes stared down at me. I reached out with our bond to find nothing but his normal mecca powers on the other end.

  I pushed deeper, unwilling to let even an ounce of darkness taint my mate.

  “It’s gone,” he said to me. “Every last sliver. For the first time in a long time, I am free. I couldn’t even see how much I was being affected.”

  I swallowed hard, my voice a rasp when I said, “We underestimated it. The dark energy was clever.”

  He nodded. “I tried to keep it from you. I knew it was bad, but I thought I could handle it. I thought I was strong enough to fight it.”

  I wrapped my arms tightly around him. “You were strong enough. You did fight. But … it isn’t over yet. The winter prince is in New York. We need to get back now.”

  Kade’s whole body flinched. “Our people…” he breathed.

  “I know.” We had to stop the prince from finishing his mother’s job.

  Kade stood, lifting me in his arms. He seemed unwilling to let me go, and I wasn’t complaining. There hadn’t been much time to realize it while trying to fight the darkness, but it was hitting me hard now.

  I had almost lost him.

  He started to walk, his eyes caressing my features. We only stopped staring at each other once we noticed we were now surrounded by our friends. Kian had his arms tightly wrapped around Shelley, Jota on his shoulder. Next to him was Dante and Zandu. I paused when I realized all four of them were staring at me very strangely, like I now had two heads or something.

  “What?” I asked, looking between them all. They didn’t look alarmed, so I wasn’t panicking, but I was curious about that look.

  Zandu crossed his arms, that inquisitive stare not fading. “You ate up the darkness and cleansed the land. I would have said that was an impossible thing to do, but … there is no denying it.”

  It was then that I noticed the lake was no longer burning and the trees were no longer dead stumps. It didn’t look like a green wonderland by any means, but … the heavy veil of dark energy was gone. A grin ripped across my face. The trees looked healthy, tall, with a wash of red and gold leaves hanging from their branches.

  And I saw now that ash was no longer falling from the sky. It was now snow. This land, which had been deprived of earth energy for so long, dying, hurt, was starting to heal.

  We had done it. I almost couldn’t believe it, but the evidence was clear.

  “You can put me down now,” I said to my mate. Kade’s strong arms were like bands of steel, even though they cradled me gently.

  He lowered his face to mine, and we both breathed the other in. “I’m not sure I can, actually,” he murmured.

  Despite those ragged words, he did set me down, his arm remaining across my body.

  When I was standing, Dante gave me a low bow. “Not a dark creature lives, Your Highness. The reign of the Dark Fae Lord is over.”

  I nodded. Still in shock at what I had done, at what I was capable of. It wasn’t over yet, though, there was still New York city and my people to save.

  I connected with Finn. Are you all safe? What about Jen and Kevin? Did they get out okay? Where is Luca? I was mostly worried that the poor shifters standing in for Kade and me had gotten caught in the initial scuffle.

  His reply was immediate, Jen and Kevin are fine. They got out at the last minute. Baladar got most of your people out, but Luca has taken the palace. He also captured some of your guards. A few resisted and were killed.

  My wolf and I howled internally, rage and grief combining. I sent my essence out through the alpha bonds, reassuring and thanking my shifters. Without them I would never have beaten the winter queen. A queen was only as strong as her people. I wasn’t sure I had ever really understood that until becoming queen myself.

  Finn joined me, our bond resonating strongly as we grieved and sent energy to our people. Eventually I let the alpha bonds go, returning to Finn. We are on our way back. Fill me in … how big is his army?

  Only a few hundred fae. I think he assumes you and Kade are dead.

  That was good news. No mass casualties, and he thought he had won simply by having his mother eliminate the monarchy. That had been their freaking plan all along, the reason for their waiting game.

  But hurry. He has some type of magical weapon. It acts as a compulsion device, making anyone under its spell do his bidding. He hasn’t started using it en masse yet, but if he does, you’ll be fighting your own people.

  That was his smoking gun, his secret weapon. It was a pretty good one too. We had wondered how the Winter Court thought they would just get shifters to start following their lead. Shifters who mostly hated fae.

  Apparently, they had a way.

  Prince Caspien had said something about each court having an object of power. This must be the Winter Court’s.

  Get Baladar and Calista to start amassing our strongest fighters, just in case we need to battle the fae. I’m going to do everything I can to avoid that, but I will not let him take my city. See you soon.

  I missed Finn so badly it was like having a constant ache in my chest, but I would see him, and soon. That was what I clung to.

  Snuggling into Kade’s side, needing the closeness, I filled the others in. “Luca has taken over Manhattan. He has access to our mecca stone there. At the moment, he only has a few hundred fae, but Finn said they are using some kind of magical weapon which forces compulsion across shifters. So we have to get back to stop him before he controls all my people.”

  Kade’s chest was rumbling at my side, and I felt the protective king bear in him rear up.

  Dante gave me a head bow. “If you head back to earth now, I will inform King Roland and he will send his army across. Is there a safe place for us to cross?”

  “Wherever Rowan is should be safe,” I told him.

  Kade’s rumbly voice filled the air as he addressed Dante: “Make sure our people are informed, and that they return with the summer fae.”

  I nodded. I wanted Blaine at my side, where I could keep an eye on him. Plus, we would need his skills and knowledge if this turned into a war.

  A thought, which had been hovering at the back of my mind, finally made itself known to me. I had killed the winter queen, destroying a leader, which meant… “Is the Winter Court going to be okay? They just lost their leader.”

  I directed the question to Dante, hoping he would have some idea. The assassin fae regarded me carefully, tilting his head as his brow wrinkled. “Do you feel any sort of surge in your ice energy?” The question blindsided me, and I paused for a beat, allowing my power to swell.

  Blasts of ice shot out of me, narrowly missing the group around me. Whoops. I tucked it back away before that could happen again.

  Dante grinned. “I’ll take that as a yes.”

  “I don’t understand,” I said slowly.

  “In the Otherworld, the power to rule is not decided by a contest, or vote, or challenge. It is hereditary, passed down through family lines. When a monarch dies, their successor will be someone of the same blood. Unless there is no more of that bloodline left … and then it just gets messy.” No doubt it involved a lot of sacrifice and bloodletting.

  “You and Luca are the last of Isalinda’s line, the last able to inherit the crown. The first one to touch the mecca stone of the winter land will be the leader.”

  I felt my mind and body recoil at the thought. “I’m already a queen,” I bit out. “I don’t have time to rule another kingdom. The winter people deserve better than an absent ruler who has no time or energy for them.”

  Dante shrugged. “If you do not touch the stone, you will not be their queen.”

  But that only left Luca, and since I planned on killing him, that would leave them with no one.

  “We can figure this out after we stop him.” Kade’s words lessened some of my worry. “I’m sure the court will be okay
until then.”

  Dante nodded, and I was relieved. “Okay, so we just need a portal home,” I said, staring around, like one would magically appear through words alone.

  Zandu, who’d been quite quiet and observant until now, made a small noise in his throat. It sounded as if he was choking on a laugh.

  I raised one eyebrow at him and he bestowed a rare grin on me. “You’re telling me that you can funnel dark magic, restore entire lands back to harmony, kill powerful queens, be a queen of multiple kingdoms … but you can’t create a portal?”

  I didn’t think that was funny or helpful right now, and I was about to say so, when Kade turned to me. “He’s right. You have proven time and again that you are capable of great things, of things beyond most shifter or fae. Your magic is tied to both sides, to all sides of the mecca … the magic born fae can create portals. You most definitely can create portals, too.”

  I shook my head by instinct. Creating portals was way above my pay grade. “I’ve never done that. I mean, other than in the mecca stone room at the castle. That’s the only place it works for me.”

  Zandu stepped forward, his humor from before fading away into a serious and contemplative expression. “You do not need the mecca stones. From what I have observed, you are a mecca stone. I bid you farewell. My people want a report of what happened. It was an honor to fight beside you. The elven people are in your debt.”

  Dante whistled low at that, as if those words were more powerful than their simple implication. I was guessing elves didn’t owe debts often. A thought struck me then, the way Zandu was looking at the newly-restored land with misty eyes … the way his people guarded the entrance…

  “This was your land, wasn’t it?” I asked softly. “The Dark Fae Lord drove you out, and you’ve been trying to keep him from taking any more land from your people.”

  A shadow crossed Zandu’s face, giving it a drawn and haunted look. “Yes. We were never part of the four courts. We were our own people. The Dark Fae Lord came and slaughtered us, stole much of our power, and relegated us to the edges of our land. We’ve been waiting centuries to reclaim it. We’ve tried before but never succeeded. Only ever losing more of our dwindling numbers.”

 

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