Shadowlander (Shadow Sisters)
Page 9
Cate pulled away from him, her green eyes mutinous and her face stormy. “You promised. I will not be your means of destroying my world.”
“We will not destroy your world; merely bring it back under our rule. Our caste sees value in the work of humans, but their judgment has proven destructive. It’s time for us to reverse that. I’m sorry, Cate.”
The hurt look in her eyes speared him to the core. “I thought you cared about me. You lied to me.”
He grasped her upper arms in his large hands, rubbing her shoulders slightly. “I didn’t lie and I do care.”
“Then help me get home.”
He looked at her with regret, his eyes full of pain. “I cannot.”
§
Cate whirled away from him, the potent lust of a few minutes before now replaced by blinding rage—not at him, but at herself. What had she been thinking? How stupid could she have been to trust the promises of a fae? Their rules were different here. Where the hell were her rusted nails? “And what about your promise? I thought fae couldn’t break them.”
“Cate, I have kept my word. I only promised to help you free your friend. I never promised to return you home.”
She glanced at the pile of discarded dirty riding clothes as if she could see the nails in the pocket of her suede split skirt through the pool of fabric.
She glanced over her shoulder at him. “Where are the clothes I’m supposed to wear?” she snapped.
He gestured to the golden filmy gown, with a smooth sheath beneath it. The low-cut bodice sparkled with small bits of diamond and topaz, and the skirt flared out from an empire waist. Beside it was a pair of sheer silk hose and golden silk flats also studded with gems.
“Do you want help dressing?” he asked absently, as if he assumed her answer would be no, but he were trying to be a gentleman of his word regardless.
Cate needed to find a way to hide the nails in that dress, which would be best done if he didn’t help her. “I can handle it. Thank you.”
He flinched. She said it on purpose as an insult this time and they both knew it.
“There is food if you are hungry.” He gestured to the silver-domed trays neatly arranged on a cart beside the dresser.
“I seem to have lost my appetite.” Her words were polite, though her tone was anything but.
He bowed his head. “Very well. I’ll wait for you outside the door.”
He walked stiffly across his apartment suite and out the black doors. Cate collapsed to the bed, her legs too wobbly to stand any longer. She hadn’t lied about losing her appetite—her stomach swished with a sick, oily feeling. She’d been stupid and rash to abandon her family to get Maya. She knew that. She just hadn’t realized the consequences could be far higher—like losing her heart.
What was she going to do? It wasn’t midnight yet. Surely she could still get home if she could just find a portal. But then what could she do about Rook? After this he’d probably never come to see her again. She couldn’t very well part the veil herself and come to him until the next Midsummer’s Eve. Perhaps that soul-mate connection she thought she’d felt between them was just good sex. Phenomenally world-rocking sex. But sex had never affected her like this before. Never made her twist up inside at the thought of losing the person who made her complete, if only for a brief moment of time.
“Catherine Mary Rowan O’Connell, you are the stupidest stubborn cow on Earth,” she muttered to herself. “Only you’re not on Earth, are you, you twit? You’re stuck in the fae realm with no chance of getting home.”
Her eyes began to burn, threatening tears, which pissed her off all the more. The last thing she needed was to waltz into the Shadow Court with her eyes swollen and puffy from crying. “Get a hold of yourself. You’re not going to cry. Be resourceful. You can get out of this; you just need to think.”
Cate took in a few extra deep breaths, looked up at the ceiling, and blinked rapidly until the burning sensation in her eyes faded and her nose began to run slightly. She sniffed, then went over to her discarded clothing and crouched down as she felt around for the nails. Her hand encountered a flat, smooth disk as well. Rook’s key coin! In all the craziness of the past few hours, she’d forgotten all about it. Now she was glad she’d stolen it from him.
She snatched it out of the pocket and looked at it. She wasn’t dependent on Rook. This was her and Maya’s ticket home! Now all she had to do was find Maya and a way to escape the Shadow Court.
Undetected.
§
Rook waited outside the doors, pacing as the clock ticked away the minutes. A half hour later he was still waiting. How could it possibly take that long for her to put on a simple gown, two shoes, and sheer hose on those long legs? Behind him the door snicked open, and Rook turned on his heel.
Cate looked stunning.
Her hair had dried to a riot of ebony curls that complemented the delicate pink color of her cheeks, the creamy expanse of her bare throat and shoulders, and the emerald color of her eyes.
The vision of her hit him with the impact of a war hammer against his chest, and he lost the ability to breathe. He quickly recovered himself and bowed. “My lady, may I escort you to court?” He offered her his arm, and his heart bumped double time when she wrapped her hand around his bicep.
“Do you still think they are keeping Maya in the dungeons?” she asked as they walked toward the golden grille of the rider.
“Yes, I do.”
Her gaze connected with his and he saw determination there. “Where are the dungeons?”
“They are below the castle itself. But they are well guarded. The only way you could make it was if you were taken there yourself.”
A brilliant gleam lit her face. “That sounds like a plan,” she said as the grate slid aside and they stepped into the rider.
Rook pushed the button for the main entrance hall and the rider began its fast descent. “It’s foolish.”
“Sometimes you have to take a risk when there’s something you want,” she shot back.
Rook’s esteem for her rose another several notches. Even if she were a Seer, Catherine O’Connell had the heart of a warrior.
“I will do what I can to see you there safely, but I cannot guarantee what will happen after that.”
“A chance is all I need to get Maya out.”
“Do you still have my key coin?” he asked casually.
Cate stared at him How could he tell what she had been planning? Was she that freakin’ obvious? “How did you—”
“I saw it was missing from my pack.” He gave her a soft smile, then turned back to face the front of the elevator. “I was planning on giving it to you, regardless of my promises, once you saved your friend, especially if the Shadow Court had ordered you to become my father’s consort. I couldn’t stand the thought of you not being mine alone.”
Her heart thumped harder, seeming to swell until it filled her throat, but it couldn’t fill the empty hole that grew in her chest at the thought of leaving him. “You love me, don’t you?”
His gaze connected with hers and Cate could see the longing etched into the planes of his face. “Yes, I do.” He caressed her cheek with his hand, brushing his thumb over her bottom lip as if trying to memorize her face by touch. “And I will never love another.”
A loud buzzing started in her head as her heart pounded. Rook was the only man she’d ever met who could accept who and what she was. The only one who appreciated her strange abilities.
But she could not leave Maya to her fate. And Cate knew her family would move Heaven and Earth to find her, to no avail.
The buzz of a hundred voices grew louder as the elevator came to a stop. The grille slid open and they stepped into the entrance hall, which was now full of elegantly dressed people. Over the heads of the crowd, Cate noticed that the tapestries hung higher on the walls were now merely landscapes devoid of people.
“Stay close to me,” he warned.
She slid her hand into his. As soon as the peo
ple in the crowd saw him, they parted like fans on either side of the red carpet once a movie star arrived. There were bobblehead fae, many who looked like Rook’s caste, and even some with long flowing veils who wore golden circlets around their heads.
Cate tried to keep her steps slow and measured, when she really wanted to dash across the room and get the whole testing thing over with as quickly as possible so she could go find Maya before it was too late.
They passed through the enormous doors into the throne room. Everything was black, from the glossy marble floors to the glittering, smoked crystal walls. Even the gilt-framed mirrors that lined the room were made of black glass like scrying mirrors. How depressing, Cate thought. No wonder Rook spent so much time topside with humans.
They were walking straight for a group of golden chairs clustered on a raised dais. In the center chair, with two on either side of him, sat a man who looked like a much-older version of Rook. Silver threaded through the temples of an otherwise jet shock of hair. His eyes were brooding and brown just like his son’s, and they both shared the same powerful physique. But while Rook looked like he enjoyed laughing once in a while, there was no humor in the Shadow King’s face. His demeanor was as colorless and bleak as his castle, and his chin was dark with a thick black beard.
Cate repressed a shiver.
Rook came to a stop before the dais and bowed deeply. “My lords of the Shadow Court, greetings. May it please you, I present Catherine O’Connell, Seer, as my conquest for Midsummer’s Eve.”
Gasps of awe and whispering rippled through the crowd. “Welcome to the court, Crown Prince of Shadows,” the king said, his voice booming across the throne room, silencing the tittering and murmured conversations.
Cate stood, her hands clasped before her, unsure of what to do next. Surely someone would tell her.
The king turned his piercing brown gaze on her. “And welcome to you, Uplander.”
Cate tilted her head down in acknowledgment, but inside was a seething mixture of anger at this man for wanting to take over her home, uncertainty at what would happen to her, and a despicable sense of her own helplessness. She glanced at Rook, who covered her hand in the crook of his arm with his own, securing it there. He gave her a slight squeeze of reassurance.
“As is tradition, you will be tested to see if you are indeed a Seer, as my son claims.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.” Cate managed to keep her voice even and calm, though her stomach felt as if it were full of butterflies.
A guard, in the familiar blue and black uniform, brought a wooden case to the king and opened it. Inside, nestled in a bed of black velvet, were golden needles several inches long.
Cate’s eyes widened, her stomach shriveling to the size of a gilly seed. No one had said anything about needles!
Rook took a step forward, but Cate’s feet remained rooted to the floor. “Step up, Cate. This won’t hurt you,” he urged.
“Have you seen the size of those needles?”
Rook’s lips tilted up at the corners. “Don’t be afraid of the size. You and I both know you are a Seer. It won’t impact you at all.”
Cate hesitated another moment, then reluctantly let Rook lead her up onto the dais.
The king held out his hand and Rook placed hers in his father’s. Cate began to shake.
The king pulled one long golden pin from the velvet-lined box and held it over Cate’s wrist. She closed her eyes, waiting for the sting of the needle against her skin, but it never came. She opened her eyes to find the six-inch-long needle impaled through her wrist. She gasped in astonishment. “How is that even possible?” she whispered. As she watched, the king pulled out the needle. Cate never felt a thing.
The king stared hard at her, then placed the needle back into the black velvet of the box.
“She has passed the first test,” the king proclaimed. That set off another round of whispering in the crowd.
A second guard brought forth an ornate silver pitcher and goblet on a tray. The king poured a liquid the color of red wine from the pitcher into the goblet and offered it to her.
“Drink,” he ordered. A hush descended over the room.
Cate glanced at Rook. “What’s this supposed to prove?”
“It’s Amora. Only those of the fae realm or blessed with fae sight can drink it. Otherwise it burns through them.”
“Okay, when you say burn, do you mean hot that make your eyes water, or acid eating out your insides?”
“Acid,” he replied. He locked gazes with her, his brown eyes solid and reassuring. He believed in her.
This was crazy. It was beyond crazy. Why did she even care if she was an acknowledged Seer? Because it was the only chance she had to maybe get Maya out. Maybe to protect her world so there was something to go back to. “Isn’t that a little barbaric? Kill them if they aren’t a Seer?”
Rook grimaced. “Declaring to be a Seer is a very serious thing.”
Cate sighed and brought the goblet to her lips. She took a sip and found the liquor to be searing, strong and sweet with the flavor of blackberry brandy. Cate licked her lips. “This is made from gilly fruit, isn’t it?”
Rook smiled at her, then caught the gaze of the king. “Very good. You remember the flavor.”
“The Uplander has passed the second test,” the king announced. The whispering grew to a crescendo of voices all talking at once.
“Silence!” the Shadow King bellowed. Cate thought not even a cricket would dare chirp in the quiet that followed.
Another guard stepped up to the dais and brought forth a book. It looked similar to one she’d seen Gran reading when Cate was small. The dark green leather was tooled with ivy leaves that laced around some strange symbols in golden runes.
About halfway through the thick book was a gold bookmark. The king took the book from his guard and flipped it open to the marked page. “Read aloud for us,” he ordered.
Cate glanced up at him. His eyes looked curious, but kinder than they had when she’d entered the throne room.
The strange runes on the page looked like gibberish to Cate, but when she blinked and stared harder, they began to rearrange themselves on the page into text she could easily read. She started with the first paragraph that seemed legible.
“And so one of the gods, Mithra, took a sliver of the sun and she touched the eyes of the children of Earth, allowing them the sight of the gods. And to them was given the task to act as messengers between the gods and the children of Earth.” Cate glanced up. The king was smiling.
He slid the book from her hands and closed it. “We have a Seer within our court!” he proclaimed.
A loud cheer rose up from the crowd and a guard brought forth a golden circlet on a black velvet pillow. The king took the circlet and stood, lifting it over Cate’s head. “As the Shadow King, I proclaim you a member of the Makcay, the most honored among us. Welcome to the Shadow Court, Seer Catherine O’Connell.” He slid the thin gold circlet over her head and Cate gasped as it shrunk to fit. She lightly touched it with her fingers and found the gold warm.
The king’s face broke into a smile that made Cate’s heart clutch hard in her chest because it reminded her so vividly of Rook. She glanced at him, unsure of what to do next. Rook took the step beside her, his face stoic but his eyes troubled.
The king held out a hand, palm up, to her.
“Seer, will you do me the honor of becoming my consort?”
Beside her, Rook tensed. She could feel the anger pulsating off of him.
He inhaled deeply. “She cannot, sire.” He said it loud enough that Cate was sure even the people in the courtyard beyond the great room could hear. “She has already given herself to me.”
“She has been coerced!” came a voice from the crowd. Cate stared over her shoulder as Kallus came thumping up the steps to stand on the opposite side of her. Now she was bracketed on three sides by enormous men.
The king frowned. “Why do you say this, Thayer?” The way the king leaned in to
listen to Kallus, it was obvious to Cate the king favored him.
“This is the same Uplander he has been smitten with for many years, sneaking out of our realm to spy on her, Your Majesty.”
The king glared at his son. “Is this so, Rook?”
“Yes, Your Majesty. But I did not know until recently that she was a Seer.”
“And yet you claimed her power as your own?”
Rook nodded, putting his hands behind his back and standing tall. “She gave it to me willingly, sire.”
Cate didn’t like being in the middle of their argument. She was beginning to feel less like an honored person among them and more like a bone being scrapped over by wild dogs. The king turned his fierce gaze on her. “Did you do this willingly?”
Cate took a step back at the vehemence of his gaze. “Isn’t that question a little personal?” She wanted to hide behind Rook, but with a whole group of fae watching, she was stuck being the center of attention. And now everyone knew just how intimate she and Rook had been. Cate couldn’t imagine a more mortifying moment.
The Shadow King sat back on his throne and stroked his dark beard. “Very well. Take her away until we have determined what to do with her.” Cate’s stomach dropped to her golden slippers.
“What? Didn’t you just give me this halo-circle thingy? Isn’t that supposed to be like a Get Out of Jail Free card or something?” Rook and the king didn’t answer her, because they were too busy staring daggers at each other.
Two of the royal guards walked up on the dais, grasped her firmly by the arms, and began to walk her down the steps.
Rook looked like he was barely maintaining his composure as he watched the royal guard escorted her out of the throne room, his eyes burning with anger and vengeance. The heavy ornate doors closed behind Cate with a thundering boom, but she could hear the raised voices of Rook, Kallus, and the king as they argued with one another.
The guards guided her down a series of increasingly smaller hallways until they came to a metal door with a batch of locks along the righthand side and a turning wheel lock in the center.
The heavy door swung open, and Cate could see the cell wasn’t much bigger than her office at the advertising agency. But this was made from solid stone, and the walls were streaked with black and green slime where moisture trickled down.