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Ever Fire (A Dark Faerie Tale #2)

Page 5

by Purdy, Alexia


  “You’re right, Shade. I deserve nothing. I am still indebted to you. That has not changed. I am sorry for everything.” He bowed his head, breathing in deeply and contemplating his next words. Bringing his eyes back to hers, his face was calmer with his rage extinguished. He smiled and stood up, holding his hand out to her.

  “Can I have a dance at least? Just one. Please Shade?” He implored. Shade studied his face but found no malice at all. She sighed, smiled and nodded while taking his hand and letting him pull her up. He took his stance, embracing her and peered down to her. Soft music floated into the room from some unknown source. Shade listened to the haunting melody and let him sway her around the room. Closing her eyes, she let the music drift into her like a spell. For a moment, she was floating across the room, dancing around and around with Ursad swaying her gently. It was probably the most serene moment she had had in very long time.

  The music came to a stop but he continued to dance her around until they slowed and stilled. They stood in the center of the room and stared at each other. Shade’s heart fluttered just enough to make her panic. She pulled away, still looking at him.

  “What just happened? Did you try the damn charms on me again?”

  Ursad shook his head, his face filled with shock. “No, I didn’t do anything. I have to admit I have a hard time controlling my magic since I returned to my former appearance. It has grown tenfold since I was last able to use it so many years ago. Anything you think might have happened, I swear, I didn’t do it on purpose.” Looking defeated, he sank down into one of the sofas, leaning forward with his head in his hands and sighed.

  “I didn’t want to tell you who I was at first, not in front of them. I’ve tried to appear strong, so sure in my actions and words as a Prince. Yet, inside I am in pieces, and my soul quivers with uncertainty. I’ve been able to reassume the throne of the North, but I had to fight hard for it. Once they saw that I was truly the ruthless Prince I once was, there was no longer any doubt.” He looked up and watched her face for any emotions.

  “I’m not the same person anymore, Shade. I find myself emptier then when I was in exile. It’s made my world stand still. It’s a constraint and a freedom that I don’t know if I want anymore. I stay for my people. I stay to fight this evil called Aveta that tries to metastasize into my lands with her cursed armies. I hold my borders for now, but I need this alliance with Queen Zinara probably as much as she does. I have so much to make up for. I can never repay you or anyone else I’ve hurt in my life.” He sighed but never looked away from her.

  Shade gave him a nod and stood from the sofa. Standing over him, she held her hand out to him.

  “I forgive you. I know we both have much to learn, and the magic of Faerie grows wilder with the upset in forces that are brewing. I promise I’ll help you if you promise to help me too. Deal?” Her hand trembled as she held it out to the Prince. She felt tired and hungry, and she wanted to see what her friends were doing. She counted Ursad as not quite a friend, but they would have to figure that out all in good time.

  He smiled and gripped her hand, nodding in agreement.

  “Come on, don’t you have a nice dinner feast readied for your old pal? I’m starved.” Shade let out a nervous laugh as she waited for his answer.

  Ursad laughed and nodded. He moved to stand right next her, offering out his arm to escort her out. “Let’s get some good food.”

  Chapter Six

  DINNER FLITTED BY quickly, and Shade was thankful for it. She was exhausted. The mind struggle with Ursad had drained her so much, she wondered if his loose magic had anything to do with it. Sary had kept her company, glancing at her with concern, but not wanting to ask her about Ursad. She knew Shade would tell her if she wanted to. In the meantime, Sary’s patience was a godsend.

  Dylan had not said much at all through dinner either. In fact, Shade had a nagging suspicion he was either avoiding her or wanted to give her space. Either way, she was glad not to deal with his moodiness tonight. Soap was the only one who seemed to have a bright outlook. He had attempted to lighten the mood with a constant stream of chatter and jokes. Shade had nodded and smiled when appropriate, but stayed lost in her own thoughts as she ate. She felt bad not engaging with him; especially after he had put his heart on his sleeve that afternoon, but she had just way too much on her mind to tolerate any kind of mind sparring. Retreating to her room after dinner was a relief. She had curled into the soft covers and faded away before she could even turn the lights off.

  Something woke her in the dead of the night. Her head was throbbing even though she had been sleeping hard. She sat up in bed and rubbed her forehead, wondering if she was coming down with something. She hoped not, all she had was the healing potion Braelynn had given to her prior to the journey. Faeries never got ill. It was being human that had its disadvantages.

  The room was dark. Sary had probably turned off the lights when she had entered after Shade was asleep. She fumbled to find the lamp next to her bed in the dim light of the moon. Finally finding the switch, she flicked it on and squeezed her eyes shut as the room flooded with light. She blinked as her eyes focused and looked around. Sary was not in the next bed. It lay smooth and untouched. Shade wondered where she could be. Who had turned the lights off then? She thought to herself.

  She attempted to stand, but the throb filled her head with an intensity that caused her to sit right back down. Groaning, she held her head by the temples and breathed in until the pounding dulled somewhat. She reached for her pack on the floor and willed the potion to come to her. It appeared immediately and she unscrewed the top, then knocked down a sip. She recapped it and stuffed it back into the pack, letting it flop back to the floor. Tossing herself back onto her pillow, she laid her arm across her head. She had been having more frequent headaches lately. No reason but stress seemed to be the culprit.

  Shade.

  She sat up, swearing she had heard a voice whispering her name. She scanned the room, relieved at the same time that the throb in her head was only a small, annoying, pulsating, twinge now. Shade waited in the silence but found nothing amiss. She sighed, I’m hearing things. She waited another moment before lying back down on the bed. She wished Sary was there, but she had probably stayed with Stephen for the night for all Shade knew.

  She pulled the blanket up to her chin and closed her eyes; leaving the light on, just in case. She was finally calming enough to almost fade back out when she heard the whisper again.

  Shade.

  This time she jumped out of bed and grabbed her bag. Her dagger clasped in her hand in no time. She scanned the room and found nothing, again. She checked under the beds, and then checked the bathroom that was adjacent to the room. Still nothing. She decided to check outside her door to be sure no one was around; in case someone was feeling like a prankster tonight.

  She swung her door open and found no one standing in the dim hallway as she scanned both ends. The abandoned halls were strangely silent. Listening for what seemed an eternity, she frowned, unsatisfied and unsure of what to do. She closed and locked the door behind her, she was pretty positive that Sary was not returning to their room tonight.

  Oh well, she can knock, thought Shade.

  She slid back into bed and stuffed the dagger under her pillow. She shut the light off and closed her eyes, letting the darkness engulf her.

  Shade, you must find me. I can help you.

  The slight whisper was gentle and reassuring this time. Shade let its soothing tone wrap around her as she answered, mumbling in her sleepy state before fading into unconsciousness.

  “Okay, I will, tomorrow.”

  *****

  DAWN CRACKED THROUGH the window, smacking into her eyelids with its burning light. Shade turned away groaning and drowsy. Her sleep had been fitful, leaving her exhausted. She yawned and stretched, feeling sleep slip away and wakefulness push at her. She lay there for a moment, wondering about the events of the night and the day prior. So many things had happened,
and they were gnawing at her head like dogs on bones. She sat up slowly and scratched her scalp, rubbed her eyes, and lifted them to the blasted windows that she was beginning to loathe.

  The sky was a deep grey and orange as the sun bled over the forest canopy. Her room overlooked the treetops and onto the distant mountains like a glass watchtower. She wondered if it was just as see-through from the outside. Closing her eyes, she let the rising sun gleam its warmth over her face.

  She swung her legs over the side of the bed and glanced over to Sary’s bed, half hoping to see her figure lumped under a blanket there. The bed remained untouched. She sighed as she was stretching her neck side to side. She remembered the whispers in the night and it sent shivers up her spine. It wasn’t her long lost spirit guides– Elaby, Astrid, and Duende. They rarely visited her in dreams anymore. No, the whisper had awakened her in the night; beckoning her with something she knew not what. Shade strained to remember if it had come from a woman or a man. It had been so ambiguous in its urgent quietness.

  Shaking her head, she decided to think about it later and moved on. She grabbed her clothes and headed for the bathroom to ready herself for the day. She was anxious to get the day moving, not certain what was else was going to surprise her. She wanted to find the twin guards Andraste and Draden again, and ask them the many questions she had that had been left unanswered the last time they met. Especially the ones about her ‘real’ father.

  Shade finished up in the bathroom as fast as she could. She brushed her damp hair back into a tight ponytail and pulled on her backpack before slipping out of the room into the long ornamental hallway. She looked down both sides from her door and chewed on her lip as she realized she had no idea which way to go to find anyone. She had been escorted everywhere the night prior, and was not given any kind of tour. The hall ran a long ways in both directions, and disappeared into turns as far as she could see. She decided to head in the same direction they had led her the night before; towards Prince Ursad’s (Lotinar’s) chambers.

  As she proceeded, her lips slipped into a smile. She couldn’t believe it, of all people or Fey that she had met; Ursad was the Prince here. Prince of the entire Northern Realm of Faerie at that! She thoughtfully licked her lips. He had turned out to be quite some eye candy for sure. Too bad she had one too many interested guys on the bandwagon already. She wasn’t really ready to choose anyone though; there had been too much going on to really worry about boys. She had her magic lessons with Ilarial and Braelynn, fight training with Than and Soap, and now this little negotiation meeting to please the Prince of the Northern Realm. Ursad was cool, but his magic tricks and lies had put him on the naughty list for her. Right now, Soap was probably the only one not getting on her last nerve.

  Shade reached a turn at the end of the hall and followed it through until it opened up to a set of stairs that appeared familiar. She wasn’t sure if they were the same she had used before, but she figured it couldn’t hurt to keep going, so she descended the steps to the bottom floor.

  The castle was eerily deserted. Maybe it was just that she expected more people to be scurrying about in such a large place. Servants, workers or someone else. She turned to her right where she heard some murmurs of voices. She walked along the hall, studying the intricate woodcarvings and random paintings of landscapes, scenes of forests, mountains, streams, and other places she had never seen. They were wondrous, and must have been done by very skilled hands.

  She stopped, admiring one painting of a woman standing at the edge of a forest clearing, clearly watching a raging forest fire far away in the distance. Her face was forlorn and lost. Her honey brown hair flowed down her back and over her shoulders in waves. She wore a Fey Warrior’s leather outfit strung with daggers, a pack on her backside, and a sword fastened in a hilt to her side. One of her hands gripped the trunk of the tree she stood by. Shade felt lost in her face, a feeling of dread and familiarity washed over her.

  She wondered who the woman in the painting was, and what was in the distant fire, deep in the forest that was causing her so much turmoil. Most of all, Shade wondered why she looked so familiar to her. She could be my sister!

  She was still staring at the painting when she felt eyes boring into her back. She whirled around to find Dylan standing silently behind her.

  “Geez, do you have to give me a heart attack? What are you doing standing there like a ghost,” Shade hissed as she rolled her eyes and turned back to the painting, not wanting to let the woman’s face go.

  “Sorry, didn’t mean to ‘give you an attack’ of sorts. Really. I thought you might be wandering the palace when I didn’t find you in your room.” He shuffled up next to her, staring at the painting along with her. “It’s called Ash and Embers.” Shade turned and stared at him. He didn’t turn to her, but continued to study the woman’s painted face.

  “How do you know?” She asked.

  Dylan nodded. “I have seen this Faery’s work many times. It’s called Ash and Embers. It was painted about 300 years ago by the Oracle Niara. She chose to wither, and faded not long after she completed this and a few other paintings. She was definitely a strong Oracle, but tormented by her visions. She painted what she saw in them. This one; she said, was about a woman who watched a loved one die in a molten fire that appeared out of nowhere in the middle of nowhere. The ash spewed into the sky like clouds of night, and the rocks cracked with veins of red, molten, lava pouring out from the earth like a volcano, where before there were none.”

  Shade listened intently, awed by his tale.

  “And the woman in the painting, did Niara ever say who she was?” Shade asked.

  Dylan tilted his head, drinking in the face of the lady and sighing before he spoke.

  “Yes, it was said that Niara called her ‘The Shadow’. Not sure what she meant by that.” Dylan looked over to her and smiled, his brighter mood flowing over to her.

  “Hmm. That’s actually very interesting. Thanks for telling me,” Shade smiled at him.

  He nodded his head towards her. “You’re welcome, Shade.” His shoulder brushed her side and she turned to look at him. His eyes were the dark grey of a storm, and in them she could see they were filled with words unsaid. She felt her heart flutter like it always did when he looked at her like that.

  Her mind flipped back to the garden of the Santiran Fountains where they had kissed. The feel of his lips had been like warm, sweet, honey. She could still feel the heat from his breath skimming her cheeks, and the pounding of his heart beating against her chest as he held her so tight when he had zapped the Lonares soldiers with his power. The bluish fire and lightning electrified them, but had done nothing to her but leave her breathless and tingling all over. She wondered what it had meant, the way he had held her felt like he would never let her go. She totally remembered how she had not wanted him to let go.

  Now he stood here, watching her as her thoughts floated in her mind, waiting for some sort of reaction from her. Shade suddenly felt like she had neglected their relationship greatly. His haunted eyes drew her into the wells of pain and suffering he held deep inside. She wanted to open him up and draw it all out, make him smile and make him continue to feel happiness in the dreariness of life.

  She snapped back into the present and watched Dylan flick his grey eyes away from her and back to the painting. She swallowed and wondered if everything she had felt had meant something to him. She did not have to wait to long for an answer suddenly feeling his warm, soft, fingers lace through her hand, curling and holding it tight. Her hand responded to his grip as she felt the warmth of his hand radiate up her arm and fill her with his tingling magic. She had almost forgotten what it felt like to touch Dylan; it made her body vibrate in response. She missed him, in more ways than one.

  “Well, the lovebirds have arisen.” The deep baritone voice startled Shade. She turned to see who was spying on them, letting go of Dylan’s warm hand. Draden stood in a hard stance at the turn of the hallway. He held a spear in one h
and and a heavy looking sword strapped to his side. His long, blond hair was pulled uncomfortably tight at the nape of his neck, and was tied with a plain leather tie that matched the full warrior gear he wore. The smooth lines of his muscles bulged from under the soft material that fit him like a glove. The hardened lines on his face seemed to have softened since she had saw him at the Santiran Fountains. She had not taken the time to study his face much when he had taken her to Prince Ursad’s chambers, but now she had plenty of time to take in his soldier’s face.

  “Am I interesting to you, little Princess? Moving on to the next one already, huh?” Draden’s eyebrows arched inquisitively, glancing between her and Dylan. His eyes filled with mean laughter as he snickered.

  “What? No, I just, I…” Shade stammered, caught off guard by the husky guard. His laughter roared around them, echoing down the halls, taunting them. Dylan’s face was blank and hard like stone, not betraying any kind of feelings under his mask. Shade could still feel him tense up beside her.

  “Wait a minute, what did you say?” Shade gathered her senses. She was still confused, but now very interested in Draden’s words.

  “Which part? About moving on already? I’m single if you really want to know. You aren’t really my type though. I like ‘em a bit bustier with a spill of red hair, but there is a shortage of Fey women around here, so I’m not really gonna be too darn picky.”

  Shade’s face rushed in a spill of scarlet. She wanted to slap the guard but restrained herself. Her curiosity was too much to bear. “I meant the part where you called me little Princess. Why did you say that?” She waited, her confusion playing around her eyes. She was hoping he wasn’t going to continue to joke around.

 

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