In order to save the one she loves, she will have to start a war...
Just when Alexandra was getting used to the fact that she is half-mermaid, her beloved Merrick is captured by ruthless Oceanid Neith.
Neith will stop at nothing to crush Alex to his will and has only one condition of release: She must start a war against humans who are destroying the ocean so that he can become ruler of land and sea. If not, Neith promises to destroy the underwater world Alex has grown to love.
Alex is torn. She cannot fight against humans, but risks bring the fire of hell to her underwater home. Desperate and alone she roams the ocean, until she discovers that other Oceanids are prepared to fight against cruel Neith. Now Alex must become the leader she is fated to be and train an army to fight for their own freedom and that of the entire human race, before it is too late...
Book 2 in The Mermaid Legacy
Also available by Natasha Hardy
Water
FIRE
Natasha Hardy
www.CarinaUK.com
Natasha Hardy began writing stories when the adventure of her life had taken a gloomy twist and she discovered, that through writing she couldescape into the sun.
Her stories, are sparked by the adventures she has had in the wildly beautiful South African bush, seasoned with the adventures of the explorers who make up her ancestry, and woven through with the intrigue, and sometimes sheer madness, of living in Africa.
She now spends most of her time – happily – in a world of words, and the rest trying to keep up with her full-time doctor, part-time rock star husband and their two gorgeously mischievous little boys.
She would very much like to chat to you at natashahardybooks.com.
To Rob, my gift and my hero, without whom this book would not have been written, and to The Light that shines on in the darkness.
A huge thank you to:
My children who inspire me daily.
My family, who continue to love me so completely.
My friends for understanding writing ditsyness and supporting me.
My readers whose insight and enthusiasm has been a surprise and a delight.
Tata Madiba who taught me, through his actions, what one person can inspire millions to do.
Contents
Cover
Blurb
Book List
Title Page
Author Bio
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter 1. Ocean
Chapter 2. Voices
Chapter 3. Enemy
Chapter 4. Ferengren
Chapter 5. Flesh
Chapter 6. Prisoner
Chapter 7. Monster
Chapter 8. Escape
Chapter 9. Transformation
Chapter 10. Abomination
Chapter 11. Haven Journey
Chapter 12. Haven
Chapter 13. Motives
Chapter 14. Strategy
Chapter 15. TrustCouncil
Chapter 16. Unity
Chapter 17. Trust
Chapter 18. Fight
Chapter 19. Rules
Chapter 20. Hunters
Chapter 21. Weapon
Chapter 22. Lines
Chapter 23. Talents
Chapter 24. Stories
Chapter 25. Practice
Chapter 26. Waiting
Chapter 27. Race
Chapter 28. Unexpected
Chapter 29. Crushed
Chapter 30. Saviour
Chapter 31. Lost
Chapter 32. Light
Chapter 33. Aftermath
Chapter 34. Queen
Epilogue
Endpages
Copyright
PROLOGUE
Gazing out of the cracked rock that encased me, I watched, disinterested, as the snow fell in soft silence, covering everything it touched in icy whiteness.
I turned from the brightness of the morning back to the gloom, wincing as a dormant memory sparkled to life as the smell of the fresh clean winter air drifted into my cave.
She had spun around in circles, laughing and dancing, arms raised at her first experience of falling snow. I still remembered how my heart had raced at her beauty –her dark hair swirling around her, flecked with a confetti of snow, her eyes sparkling and her body weaving an unpretentiously sensual dance as she called me to join her.
As much as I fought it, that one innocent memory unleashed an avalanche of others, all of them peppered with the intensity of the emotions that had surrounded her.
The memories stuttered to a close with two final images – the beginning and the end.
The first was the moment I’d first seen her: huddled with the other bedraggled travellers, her eyes betraying the exhaustion her body refused to give in to as she’d scanned the blackness of the cave for the lurking evil she’d felt so close at hand.
In all of my long, long years, I’d never experienced anything as intense as the stab of longing and protectiveness I’d felt for her in that moment. I’d determined she’d be mine in the few seconds it had taken before she’d returned to fretting over the dying child in her friend’s arms.
I shook my head a little in the unnatural and perpetual dusk of the cave, shying away from the second memory. Try as I might, though, it always caught up with me, because as much as I’d determined to have her, it was me, in the end, who’d been trapped. Happily at first, because my love for her was an all-consuming emotion, one I’d rather die than be without. But now, I was paying for it…
My final memory of her spooled in aching slow motion, as I watched from behind closed lids, while the light faded softly from her eyes and her chest collapsed at the end of her last breath.
I drew in a ragged breath, curling in on myself as each agonising squeeze of my heart reminded me of the cruelty of my life. I now lived in the shadow of the happiness and love that had once been mine, the afterglow of the most spectacular time of my life.
I would have ended it all years and years ago had I not promised her that I would remain, that I would fight.
The pain subsided ever so slightly as my foot brushed the still, inky, icy surface of the pool that dominated the cave I was hiding in.
All of the whispers of the water were instantly within my grasp with that light brush. I didn’t like what I heard.
1. Ocean
I don’t know why I assumed breathing in salt water would be easier than breathing in fresh water, but it wasn’t, and my lungs were screaming angry things at me as I pushed my way through the thicker liquid. The surf above me continued to surge in a creamy froth as I fought my instincts, trying to let go of the need to breathe.
Very slowly my lungs eased, each wavelike kick seeming to force a little more oxygen into my system. I focused my panicking mind on what I was here to do.
I had to find him.
I pushed into the seemingly elastic water, forcing my oxygenstarved muscles to move even faster, running through the plan we’d agreed on as I went.
I was due to meet Qinn at the reef. He was an Oceanid I barely knew, but one who had pledged his allegiance to me as we raced to find Merrick and stop the impending war on humanity.
It still felt odd to think of myself as one of them. I’d only found out a few days ago I was the legendary Oceanid Gurrer – an incredible warrior who would lead her people to victory. I guess it was natural to still think of myself as human, having lived as one for seventeen years.
Even having experienced the incredible power I was capable of, my new role was uncomfortable. I knew though that I was out of time for self-doubt. Merrick had told me once, in the few beautiful days when I was falling in love with him, that all the potential o
f his entire species could be kept locked away within me by my refusal to believe in myself.
He had been captured by our enemies – Oceanids that believed I was too weak to influence humans to stop destroying the sea, too weak to clean up the mess of oil and pollution that poisoned their home, too weak to lead the Oceanids in peace. I would need every ounce of power to rescue Merrick from them and avoid being caught myself.
They were formidable in number and talents, and they knew I would come for him.
It was a well-known Oceanid trait that once two Oceanids fell in love they couldn’t tolerate any physical separation. I’d never had a choice really; in this rescue mission I hoped would be successful.
The pain had settled to the very corners of my lungs, and the cramps I’d felt beginning to edge my calf and thigh muscles faded a little as I pushed through the blue.
I was a little disappointed with the ocean so far. All I could see was very fine white sand beneath me, and shimmering pale blue all around. It occurred to me as I swam that it would be infinitely easy to get lost in a great expanse like this. There were no defining features on the sea bed, no sense of direction either.
Of the myriad hurried instructions I’d been given by Sabrina as she’d packed my bag, before we’d left the now ruined cave that had been the Oceanids’ home for decades, a major one had been to always swim in the middle of the blue. Swimming at the surface would leave me vulnerable to human sightings from the top and shark attacks from below. Swimming at the bottom left me accessible to predators that lurked beneath the sand and in the nooks and crannies of the sea floor. Her instructions, although helpful, had left me with no illusions as to where I was now placed in the food-chain.
Oceanids, while similar to humans in appearance and, with training, even in mannerisms, did not rule the sea as humans did the land. They were vulnerable to the larger oceanic predators, now more than ever as the very substance I was swimming through had turned on them, spreading human pollution and poison everywhere and weakening them to the point of extinction.
While I hated Neith and his followers for taking Merrick and hurting him, desperation tainted many of their actions. I had the power to unite their talents into an unstoppable force, one that would annihilate the unsuspecting humans. Many of the Oceanids had been convinced by Neith, the leader of the aggression, that with me the Oceanids would win the war against humanity within weeks.
The problem was that I didn’t believe Neith just wanted to win. He wanted power and he was willing to spill innocent blood to get it. It didn’t matter to him whether that blood poured from human or Oceanid wounds, if it gave him control of the land and the sea and all life in between, he’d kill anything to get it.
A shudder of dread quivered through me.
We had been so trusting, Merrick and I…dutifully and excitedly reporting each new ability I’d discovered. Demonstrating my incredible power to share and unify and even enhance the Oceanids’ talents to the whole pod. It was only much later that we’d discovered the depth of the resentment they held for humans…and for me.
I’d been seen as an outsider, the half of me that was human far outweighing, in their minds, the half of me that was Oceanid. I suppose I couldn’t blame them really. I’d been so weak, so reluctant to believe the incredible heritage that was mine and unwilling to take on the leadership that heritage demanded.
I blew a stream of bubbles impatiently out of my mouth as I pushed my body to swim even faster, regret clouding the hope I felt at eventually being able to find Merrick.
If only I’d been more responsive, if only I’d learnt faster …
Regret was a waste of energy and so I focused on the group of Oceanids who had decided to follow me, my heart squeezing in gratitude for their loyalty. They had withstood the overwhelming bloodlust that had swept through the pod as I took final instructions from Talita, their former queen, in a secluded valley outside of the cave. Neith had not been kind to them. The violence with which he’d disposed of the Oceanids’ refuge was, I feared, a mere foretaste of what was to come.
Horrific images from three days earlier played before my mind’s eye as I raced to my meeting place with Qinn. Shards of the beautiful white crystal that had encased the cave smashed like the broken bodies of those Neith had so carelessly disposed of; the once green-skinned fever tree that had been the epicentre of Oceanid life, a smoking stump strewn with the weary survivors of Neith’s attack.
The worst had been their crushed spirits. They had given up. They had been making plans to hide away in the bowls of the earth, to live a mere shadow of the life they could live. They’d been prepared to abandon Merrick, to abandon the Oceanid children who, due to their physical immaturity, would never be able to leave the ocean before it killed them. They had been prepared to settle for the ruins that Neith had left them…
A fury so intense that I battled to contain it surged through me as I remembered their hopelessness. Once Merrick was safe, Neith would pay!
A flurry of movement and an almost bossy chattering stopped me short in astonishment, as a school of brilliant orange fish appeared suddenly out of the blue and engulfed me. They darted around in a swarm of elegant flicks – some of them busily sifting the fine white sand for food and others chasing each other, seemingly just for the joy of it, and all the time “talking” to each other in know-it-all chirps and trills.
The pain of my burning lungs and the worry that drove me on so fiercely was momentarily forgotten as my eyes drifted in awe over the wonderland that stretched before me.
I hadn’t known that so many colours could exist. The reef blossomed out of the barren white sand in a plethora of colours and shapes and sounds. It shimmered with life, as comically coloured fish darted amidst bizarre, alien-shaped structures.
I drifted for a few moments over them on the gentle current, struggling to take in the detail and delicacy of the reef. A few curious fish swam up to me, their unlidded eyes examining me as they “discussed” me among themselves in their oddly musical language. They were incredible, their colours flowing from a deep poppy red at their heads through brilliant pink, purple, orange and ending in sunshine yellow.
They darted away from me to hide in a pale green conelike coral structure, over which an electric blue starfish slowly meandered.
I watched in fascination as brilliantly coloured clown fish ducked beneath the waving tentacles of their aggressive stinging little homes. Brilliant flashes of white, yellow and electric blue fish to my left led me into the heart of the garden and the meeting place Qinn had described.
Great saucer-shaped corals, some of them measuring over a metre across, formed a landscape of exquisitely coloured platforms in intense shades of green, yellow, purple and pink.
There was something strange about the reef I couldn’t quite put my finger on at first. Then I got it, and my skin prickled in nervous anticipation: for all the incredible colours, the reef was completely lifeless. Not a single fish or crustation could be seen anywhere. Instead a pall of fear hung in the water and only if I listened very carefully could I make out the tiny scratching of life holding minutely still as it waited out whatever had frightened it into the cracks and crevices of the coral.
A terrified, painful sound shivered through the water accompanied by the disturbing waft of something familiar I couldn’t quite put my finger on and a shudder of fear swept through me.
I searched the reef for the source of the sound, growing more worried as the strange flavour that filled my mouth suddenly made sense as a dark stain of blood wound its way sinuously into the water amidst a froth of bubbles.
I swam towards the commotion which was emanating from the hollow between two uneven stacks of plate-like coral.
The sight that greeted me made my skin crawl. There was a flurry of thrashing which was quickly engulfed in a black cloud of menace and hunger, streaked through with ribbons of blood.
I watched in shock for a few precious moments, my horrified eyes struggling to make
sense of the chaos in front of me.
A large shark was whipping something backward and forwards, its body glinting in the shafts of faded sunlight that filtered through the water. It took me those few moments to realise that the object between those powerful jaws was Qinn.
Time seemed to slow as I assessed the situation, several scenarios playing out in my mind. I was terrified by what I was watching, but in those slow-motion seconds the fear merely formed a backdrop to the action I was going to take, and swimming away wasn’t an option.
If I threw an energy ball at it, the chances were good that I’d hurt Qinn even more, although I wasn’t sure I could hurt him any more than he already was.
I ran quickly through my repertoire of talents, selecting speed and strength as the two options least likely to hurt Qinn, then I rushed at the shark, my palms colliding with its rough hide and sending it corkscrewing away from me.
The spiritus that surrounded it immediately turned from aggression to fear as it righted itself and swam quickly away.
“Qinn?” My voice was startlingly clear in the muffling water and was answered by a panicked yelp as I moved into the cloud of blood that surrounded him.
He was entangled in a large piece of netting that had caught on the coral. In his panic he had wound himself tighter and tighter as he’d desperately tried to fight his way free. The net had cut a deep gash in his side and the blood had swirled around him as he fought, mingling with the water around him which was already clouded a sickening greeny yellow in claustrophobic fear.
The shark had shaken him so violently it had broken bones and these created unnatural angles beneath his skin. Yet despite how seriously wounded he was, his face was serene, a faint light still drifting in his eyes.
“Qinn,” I whispered again, my voice cracking. “I’m going to get you out of this net and then I can heal you.”
The corners of his lips twitched.
“Get away from here, Alexandra,” he rasped, pushing uselessly against the net.
Fire (The Mermaid Legacy - Book 2) Page 1