Master Kenta shrugged. “A respected and revered Prime Psi, or Cardinal Psi as the Guardians called them. The others were wary of you and your powers because they came from your father. Even when they learned you were the wielder of the Nephilim’s most powerful weapon, their attitudes didn’t change. I remember you in tears when your fellow trainees learned you were an empath and didn’t want you near them. They thought you might read them. Another accused you of using air abilities to attack her during sparring when it was obvious you were a superior swordsman. A few times, you left the training room in tears.”
A lump formed in my throat. How could I forgive them? How could anyone on the island forgive them?
“They never trusted you enough to take you to Xenith, either. You didn’t know why, of course. You were not good enough because you are your father’s child.”
I wanted so badly to lead a raid against the Guardians and make them pay.
As though he knew what I was thinking, Master Kenta said, “It’s all in the past now, Lilith. You are home now. One day, you will rule over them, and then you can decide the best punishment for their treachery.”
His words stayed with me, and the idea of me as the future leader of my people started to sink in. I wasn’t sure how Solange would react to that, but I wasn’t going to worry about it. The whole leadership thing depended on my wielding the Kris Dagger, and it still wasn’t responding. My inability to link with it was beginning to eat at me. I tried several times a week.
“Okay, back to training,” Master Kenta said.
I drained my water and then I heard it, the clang of metal hitting metal. I searched for their source. “What’s that?”
“The knights training the guards.”
More metal hitting metal reached my ears. “Where’s it coming from?”
“The practice fields. They must have changed their hours.” He put his bottle of water down. “Let’s start sword—”
“Can we visit them?” I couldn’t explain the urgency zipping through me. All I knew was that I had to see them. “Just for a few minutes.”
Annoyance crossed Master Kenta’s face, but I didn’t care. I was tired of one-on-one sessions with him. “Please. If Father asks, we can tell him it was part of my lessons.”
Master Kenta shook his head.
“Or we can tell him I persuaded you.”
He shot me a disapproving look. “You are forbidden to use your powers on me.”
“I know, but we can say I was angry and it just happened.”
He let out a long-suffering sigh and stood. “Fine. Follow my telegate.”
I knew what a telegate was—the energy disturbance left behind after a teleport—but I’d never followed one. Still, I went with my instinct. Closer to the field, I noticed the energies of the guards. I counted forty of them. I appeared beside Master Kenta, Callum, and Ruby.
“I didn’t know you could slow down your teleport,” Master Kenta said.
How the heck did he think I surprised him whenever we sparred? My attention shifted to the fighters, an anticipation I couldn’t explain pulling at me. This was all too familiar. I must have watched the Guardians practice.
At first, no one noticed us. The instructors yelled instructions and insults at the trainees. “Feint left, man. Block and… You idiot! What in Tartarus was that?”
“Thrust. Move those sluggish feet. Your mother can hit better than that.”
“Incoming! Incinerate it. You call that an energy ball?” The instructor created an energy ball and hurled it. Screams followed.
I winced. These instructors were brutal. To my left, some trainees or guards were using wooden staffs. They were just as bad.
I cringed as I watched one man pummeled another again and again. The pairing was wrong. The man winning was a superior fighter, yet he didn’t give the weaker guy a chance to recover.
“Let’s go,” I whispered.
Master Kenta glanced at me with surprise. “Why? I thought you wanted to observe the fight.”
“Yeah, a fair one. Not someone being beaten to a pulp. This is not sportsmanship. This is… I don’t even know what it is.”
Unfortunately, the trainees at the edge of the crowd noticed us and stopped whatever they were doing in mid-action, causing or receiving some serious injuries. I cringed. Maybe I shouldn’t have come. They bowed, some smiling, others frowning. I gave them a tiny wave.
“Would the princess like to give us the honor of watching our session?” a knight asked. Unlike the trainees, his black shirt had the red raven crest worn by Sir Malax. Some of the trainees had a yellow raven, while others wore plain shirts.
I glanced at Master Kenta, but he was talking to Ruby and Callum. He glanced at me. Your father needs me at the castle. Stay here.
He teleported. I smiled at the knight who’d asked me to stay. “I’ll watch, thank you.”
The trainees split into two groups, the ones with yellow crests on the right and the ones wearing plain T-shirts on the left. The instructor selected a fighter from each group and gave them wooden staffs.
Watching them, I visualized moves and countermoves. Their technique wasn’t bad, just brutal. Once again, the pairing was wrong. Instead of giving the less-experienced trainee a chance to recover, the superior fighter pushed his advantage, leaving nasty bruises on his opponent’s arms and face. The cut on his right cheek was deep and bled profusely. The instructor didn’t stop them. The smirk on the instructor’s face said he was enjoying the beatdown.
“Why isn’t he stopping the fight?” I asked.
“The other man is a minion,” Callum said calmly, but his hazel eyes flashed with anger. “The guards fight them during practice.”
More like use them as target practice, I thought. The man’s face was swelling fast. He had another nasty cut, this one on his left eyebrow. “Why can’t someone heal him?”
“Their healers don’t come to the field,” Callum said. “He’ll visit one after practice, then come back for the same beating tomorrow.”
“And usually they return before they are fully healed,” Ruby added.
How could Father let this happen? The defeated minion dropped to his knees. The superior fighter raised his staff again and arced it toward the poor guy. Thoroughly annoyed by the knight’s inability to mediate the fight, I lifted my hand and froze the stick. The bully tried to lift it but he couldn’t. Confusion flashed across his face.
“What’s happening?” someone asked.
“How did the minion stop it?” another added.
“He doesn’t have that kind of power.”
“But I do,” I said, drawing their attention as I marched to the field. “That is enough. Can’t you see the man is not fighting back?”
I hated bullies—another new discovery. With a flick of my hand, I indicated to the man standing over the injured man to move aside, but I underestimated my powers. He flew backward and took down several trainees from his team with him.
Take that, you bully. I flung the stick aside and hoped it hit him. I glared at the knight. “Did you notice that this poor man was injured?”
“Yes, Princess. But—”
“Then why didn’t you stop the fight?”
“He’s a minion. They are here as sparring partners.”
“Don’t you mean target practice? Why not fill bags with sand or use trees, for that matter, if you want to fight something that can’t fight back? I don’t get this. It’s senseless and unfair, and stupid. When a man is injured during sparring, the fight must be stopped. And you never pit a superior fighter against a trainee unless he’s teaching him. There’s no need to beat your fellow Hermonite into a pulp when it’s obvious he can’t self-heal.”
“I apologize if we’ve offended your sensibilities, Princess.” He sounded like I’d insulted him. “But I’ve trained royal guards, other knights, and regular guards for centuries. This is how we do things here.”
I didn’t care how many people he’d trained. He was a brutish-
looking man with thick limbs, scraggy brown hair sprinkled with gray, and heavy eyebrows. His lips were thin and he had a cruel gleam in his green eyes.
“What’s your name?”
“Sir Kellion, Princess.”
“I think it is time to change things around here, Sir Kellion. For now, this man—”I pointed at the bleeding minion—“needs to be healed.”
He glanced at some of the trainees. “Take him back to the hole and find him a healer.”
“Wait. Hole?” I asked.
“The minions”—he pointed at the trainees in plain T-shirts—“volunteer to train with the guards. Their families are paid handsomely for their, uh, participation.”
I frowned. “And the hole?”
“They don’t live with their families. They stay in special barracks and go home one week every month.”
“I don’t get it. The island has one city. Their families are a teleport away.”
Silence followed.
They don’t want their families to see them like this, Princess, Ruby telepathed.
Tears rushed to my eyes. How could Father let his people be treated like animals? I blinked to stop the tears from falling. The defeated minion watched me with one bloodied eye. The other was swollen shut and I felt every throbbing pulse of his pain. My anger shot up.
I squatted and he cringed. “I’m not going to hurt you. Give me your hand, please.” I offered him mine, but he didn’t take it.
His eyes went to Sir Kellion.
“Your princess gave you an order!” Sir Kellion barked.
It wasn’t an order, I wanted to snap. My eyes stayed on the wounded man. “Can you stand?”
He shook his head. He must have broken a leg. I didn’t recall hearing a snap.
“Will you let me heal you, please?” I asked, keeping my voice calm.
Surprise and then relief poured from him. He nodded.
“Princess Lilith, you shouldn’t,” Sir Kellion said.
I glared at Sir Kellion, wanting to kick his arrogant butt from here to yesterday. “Are you ordering me not to heal this man, Sir Kellion?”
“No, Princess. But minions—”
“…are Hermonites, subjects of my father’s kingdom, and deserve to be treated with the same courtesy as you and me.”
Sir Kellion’s jaw clenched. “Perhaps the princess is unaware of how we run things around here. Minions have their own healers.”
Perhaps the princess is aware but she doesn’t give a damn, I wanted to snap, but I remembered Lady Nemea’s teachings. “My father said it was okay. If you don’t believe me, ask him.”
Anger flashed in Sir Kellion’s eyes. Yeah, he wouldn’t dare ask my father.
“I’m very much aware of how things are done on the island, Sir Kellion. Most methods are great, but a few are outdated. Just because I was born with powers doesn’t make me better than him and others like him. Maybe we who have special abilities should prove ourselves worthy of their trust before we can lead them.”
Silence followed.
I looked around and dared anyone to contradict me. The crowd had gathered around us, and from the emotions pouring from them, they were shocked by what I’d said. Telepathic whispers followed as they repeated my words. I didn’t care.
I focused on the injured minion. It hurt to feel his emotions—gratitude, hope. The same emotions poured from the minions behind him.
I placed a hand on his cheek and another on his arm. Writings appeared on my arms, and then they started to glow. The cut above his eyebrow closed and the swelling on his eyes went down, until only smears of blood were left. A gentle swipe along his cheek, and the smear floated away. I offered him my hand, and this time he accepted it. I pulled him up.
“How come you don’t wear a shirt with my father’s crest?”
“I’m a minion, Princess. Minions are not issued uniforms,” he said hesitantly, his glance going to Sir Kellion.
“Hmm, interesting.” I noticed something else about the ones with the raven crest. They were buff and bigger, while the minions were skinny as though they were malnourished. “Thank you for allowing me to watch, Sir Kellion.”
Sir Kellion bowed and pressed a fisted hand to chest. “Princess.”
“Would the princess want to put her words to the test?” a voice called out as I turned.
I searched faces, trying to locate Green Eyes. “Test?”
“You said that those born with powers—”
“Know your place, minion,” Sir Kellion bellowed and grabbed him by his shirt. Green Eyes didn’t seem scared of the knight. Everything about him confused me. Drove me crazy. He was the last person I wanted to talk to, yet I couldn’t ignore him after defending the other minions.
“No, let him speak,” I said.
Sir Kellion didn’t look happy, especially when Green Eyes yanked his shirt from his grasp and said cockily, “Excuse me, Sir Kellion.”
Green Eyes sauntered to where I stood, my heart pounding with every step he took. For a minion, he was in great shape. I’d tried to ask the castle workers about him, but no one seemed to know him or remember seeing anyone with his description.
“What test?” I asked.
“Prove that you are not better than us,” Green Eyes said.
Gasps and murmurs buzzed around, but my eyes didn’t leave his. Heat crept up my face at the challenge. I wanted to kick him. Why did he insist on complicating my life? On the other hand, I had started this mess by interfering in the way Sir Kellion trained the guards.
“Prove that you are worthy to be our future leader,” Green Eyes added.
Silence followed, and varied emotions pouring from the guards and the minions—shock, amazement, fear, anger. My anger was directed at Green Eyes. Once again, I regretted coming to the training field. I really wanted to smack him.
“What did you have in mind?” I asked calmly, Lady Nemea’s teachings coming to my rescue.
“You should train with us once a week.”
Whispers followed. Unease filled the air. Sir Kellion looked ready to snap off Green Eyes’s head. The challenge was strange, but for some reason, it didn’t bother me. I was open to anything to escape lessons with Master Kenta.
“Deal,” I said.
Chuckles greeted my response, but Sir Kellion was practically foaming at the mouth.
“What is the problem, Sir Kellion?” I asked.
He bowed again. “Pardon me, but maybe the princess is better off training with the women.”
“Where do the women train?” I asked.
“From nine to eleven, when you are in the middle of your session with Master Kenta,” Callum said from behind me. “The men practice from seven to nine. You can join them before your lessons.”
“Look here, Callum. I make decisions that affect the guards,” Sir Kellion bellowed.
“And I make decisions that affect the princess’ education,” Master Kenta said from behind us. I didn’t know he’d come back. “If training with you makes her a better fighter, then she will train with you. If you have a problem with it, take it up with Lord Valafar.”
They glared at each other, Sir Kellion’s eyes changing from brown to red.
What had I started? “Uh, you know what? I can train with the women,” I said.
“No,” Master Kenta snapped, his eyes still locked with Sir Kellion’s. “You will train with the men once a week.”
Sir Kellion looked like he’d swallowed a frog. “We look forward to having you join us, Princess.”
“Thank you.” I searched for Green Eyes, but he was gone. I didn’t understand him. Why did he want me to train with the men? How did he appear and disappear without anyone questioning him?
“Your father will never allow you to train with them,” Master Kenta said when we teleported back to the gazebo.
I wasn’t too sure of that. “Then why did you insist I train with them?”
“I’ve never liked Sir Kellion and his methods of using minions as punching bags. He nee
ds to be stopped.”
For once, he and I agreed on something. “I agree. Leave Father to me.”
-10-
“Of course you can train with the men,” Lord Valafar said.
“But, Father,” Solange protested. We were having dinner in his private dining room again. “You said we can’t train with the men because we distract them.”
Lord Valafar reached out and patted her hand. “You did and several got injured, sweetheart. Lilith won’t.”
“Why? Because she dresses like a twelve-year-old?” Solange retorted.
My face grew hot. The guards and the servants were in the room and could hear everything. “I do not.”
“Do too,” Solange retorted. “Your clothes don’t do anything for you and you don’t wear any makeup.”
I made a face at her. “That’s because I don’t need it, and you obviously do.”
Solange’s jaw dropped. “You didn’t just call me ugly.”
“Girls!” Lord Valafar stared down at Solange. “You did not let me finish. Lilith can practice with the men if Sir Kellion gives his approval.”
Solange shot me a triumphant look. I glared back at her. Sir Kellion already made it clear that he didn’t want me in his field. For the rest of the meal, I plotted ways to change the knight’s mind. Solange probably assumed I’d lost the battle before it began, because she was in high spirits. Gah, she was so petty. I was so happy when she left the table, and thoroughly enjoyed the time I spent alone with Father.
Upstairs, the last person I expected to find in my room was Solange. “Come to gloat?”
“No. Offer a truce.” She glanced up from the magazine she was studying. “Father is obviously overcompensating for the years you were gone by indulging you and giving in to your every wish. He never did that for me. Hope it doesn’t come back and bite him in the ass.”
“He never… How would you know? You memories were wiped, too.”
She glared at me, then looked away. “Nemea told me.”
Why would Lady Nemea tell her that? Was she trying to cause trouble between me and Solange? “Sir Kellion is not going to allow me anywhere near his men. How is that for Father indulging me?”
Forgotten (Guardian Legacy Book 3) Page 14