Kiss of the Royal

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Kiss of the Royal Page 1

by Lindsey Duga




  Praise for Lindsey Duga’s

  Kiss of the Royal

  “A heart-warming and charming debut. In Kiss of the Royal, Lindsey Duga carves out a delightful fantasy adventure wrapped up in finding first love.”

  —Sara Wolf, NYT bestselling author of

  Bring Me Their Hearts

  “A timeless tale with a marvelous twist!”

  —Wendy Higgins, NYT bestselling author

  “An action-packed fantasy filled with richly-drawn characters, page-turning twists, and a steamy romance, Kiss of the Royal will capture your heart like a magical kiss.”

  —Brenda Drake, NYT bestselling author of

  the Library Jumpers series

  “Full of swoony romance intertwined with non-stop adventure, Kiss of the Royal was a delight from start to finish. Lindsey Duga has created a world with fairytale charm and shivers that readers are sure to enjoy.”

  —Mindee Arnett, critically acclaimed author of Avalon and Onyx & Ivory

  “Brimming with detailed world building and characters you can’t help but fall in love with, Kiss of the Royal left me breathless until the very last page, just as any good kiss should!”

  —Amber Mitchell, author of Garden of Thorns

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  PART ONE

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  PART TWO

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  More from Entangled Bring Me Their Hearts

  Zombie Abbey

  Risen

  Assassin of Truths

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2018 by Lindsey Duga. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.

  Entangled Publishing, LLC

  2614 South Timberline Road

  Suite 105, PMB 159

  Fort Collins, CO 80525

  [email protected]

  Entangled Teen is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.

  Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.

  Edited by Lydia Sharp

  Cover design by Liz Pelletier and Heather Howland

  Photography credit: Getty/RomanOkopny

  Getty/koosen

  Interior design by Toni Kerr

  ISBN 978-1-64063-183-0

  Ebook ISBN 978-1-64063-184-7

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  First Edition July 2018

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  To Mim and Pap

  PART ONE

  The Princess

  and the Heretic

  And so, with Myriana’s sacred Kiss,

  the birth of a new race of mortals began.

  It is with her power and her sister’s—Saevalla’s—passed down generation after generation, that we possess the

  sole weapon on earth to vanquish the might

  of the Forces of Darkness.

  Excerpt text from The Royal Legion Archival History

  It is with logic and reason that we lead the

  kingdoms into an ordered reign.

  Perish emotions and vanquish doubts,

  for they are tools of heretics and cracks in our armor.

  Stay strong, Royals, for we are the Legion,

  and we will conquer the Darkness

  and see the Wicked Queen put to rest at last.

  Excerpt text from Queen Gardenia Myriana

  Chapter

  One

  Return of the Patrol

  By the seventh day of constant agony, I wished I hadn’t already killed the dwarf who cast this locking curse on me. I wanted the opportunity to kill him again. Slower this time.

  Sitting up in bed, I gave my calves a testing flex, and pain shot through them. Holy Queen. I clenched the sheets until the ache subsided, then loosened my hold. They still bloody hurt. But smiling through the pain meant I could escape the bed I’d been chained to for the past week.

  Unfortunately, Ulfia had been my recovery nurse long enough to see through the facade. She narrowed her eyes and folded her arms across her ample bosom, towering over me. “You don’t think I know when you’re faking it?” she chided.

  “And you know I can handle it. I’ve had a week for the healing process. That’s more than enough time.”

  Ulfia scowled but didn’t argue my point. I’d been through much worse than a locking curse before, and keeping me in bed a day longer wasn’t going to make a difference. I needed to get up, to move, to practice, to get out of this blasted bed and be useful.

  “I will be the one to say whether you are healed or not, princess.”

  As Ulfia attempted to guide me back onto the pillows, I placed my hands over hers and pushed them off my shoulders.

  “I’m in perfect condition, I swear. I could run laps with the recruits until dusk.”

  “Oh very good, princess, wheeze yourself to death, that’ll help us win the war.” Ulfia bent over my legs, her soft gray curls falling in curtains over her round face, and started massaging my right calf to find any lasting remnants of the locking curse.

  I stared at a spot on the wall, where mineral deposits in the stones had created an interesting pattern that resembled fairy wings, and gritted my teeth while Ulfia probed mercilessly into my muscles. I’d just shifted to watching the dust motes float about lazily in the sunlight when she hit one particular spot that made me hiss out a swear through my teeth.

  I truly hated dwarves. And their sneaky curses.

  Ulfia looked up, raising an eyebrow, giving me her signature I-told-you-so look. If it were up to her, no Royal would ever see battle again after so much as a bruise.

  “The patrol will be at the castle any moment,” I said. “I need a report from Kellian before I hit the training fields.” It was bad enough I had to miss out on patrol with my partner because the healing Kiss was taking over a week to do its job, but this particular patrol was critical to new intelligence on the enemy. After the eastern kingdom of Raed had reported a horde of goblins casting new curses, the Council sent out an emergency patrol to gather any information about how they could be defeated.

  Ulfia gave my calf a small swat. A needling sensation pricked my skin, and I flexed involuntarily, forcing a violent shudder through me. “You’ll do no training today,” she said. “Did yo
u not hear a word I said, Ivy Myriana? You. Are. Not. Healed. Yet.” She tapped my foot with every word.

  I opened my mouth to protest again, when a familiar-looking page burst through the door as if he had a witch on his heels.

  “Princess Ivy! Your Kiss is needed—the patrol—at the palace gates!”

  I stood at once, which was a mistake, because I wobbled and almost fell on Ulfia. Luckily she was a strong old bird and caught me easily by the waist, clucking her tongue in disapproval.

  Although she had a tight hold on me, I tried to free myself. “I’m on my way.”

  “On your way, my fanny,” Ulfia snapped. “Come here, boy.” She gestured for him to take her place. “The princess is still getting over a locking curse. Be sure you walk with her.”

  Under Ulfia’s glare, the page scurried over to me and tentatively took my waist as I leaned on his shoulder. His face went from white to a ferocious red.

  Blue sunlight streamed through stained glass as we made our way down the corridor to the servants’ halls, where we’d emerge close to the gates, avoiding the Hall of Ancestors, the grand staircase, and the one-hundred-pound double doors.

  I glanced at the page’s face again, noting the freckles across his cheeks, not unlike my own, and his name came to me. I’d heard my own page, Bromley, use this boy’s name before. “Desren, did they say anything to you? Who needs my Kiss?”

  The boy flushed deeper, probably shocked I knew his name. He pushed open the servants’ door and helped me through. “I’m afraid I don’t know many details, princess. Only that the curse is a bad one. Princess Tulia’s Kiss did not work.”

  At this, I stumbled, and Desren had to tighten his grip to keep me from going down. “What? But Tulia is a pure-blood Royal.”

  His jaw tightened, but he said nothing.

  So. I was their last hope. Tulia may be pure, but she wasn’t a direct descendant like me.

  Nerves rose in me like a thousand bubbles pressing against the cork of a spirit bottle after shaking. Oh Heavenly Queen, had they been taken by the same curse we’d gone to investigate? Just how powerful was it?

  We emerged into the bright sunlight reflecting off the white-and-caramel-colored stones decorating the pathway to the intricately woven iron gates. Beyond those gates, the beautiful Crown City of Myria sprawled out for miles, with shops, homes, and steeples, creating a rolling expanse of stone and thatched roofs—some structures as old as the castle, some as new as the dwarf attack from last week.

  The sky was a brilliant blue, with a few wispy clouds slowly moving from east to west, following the wind’s journey. The only thing that marred such beauty was a swirl of dark specks in the distance. For a moment, I considered them to be nothing more than a flock of crows chased off by some farmer, but the specks fluttered about, hovering, rather than scattering away in fear.

  “Desren, what does that look like to you?” I pointed to the dark specks.

  “You mean the crows, princess?”

  “No, they’re not—” I stopped, swallowing. They were sparrow harpies—birdlike blood scavengers the size of fairies, with dark, leathery wings. Living shadows. They were never seen in the daylight or without some kind of monster horde to follow and feast on the trail of bodies.

  “Milady—the patrol.” Desren tugged me gently forward, heading for the gates.

  I tore my eyes away from the sparrow harpies, making a mental note to mention them to a Master Mage later. Their strange behavior should be investigated.

  Just past the gates, the patrol was coming up the slight slope of the castle road. Even from here I could make out the blood and slime that coated my comrades’ battle armor. As they approached, scratches and bruises came into view. Their exhausted faces and weary eyes evidence of their journey through the night back to Myria. Back home.

  My gaze jumped from prince to princess, searching for my partner’s face. Ridding myself of Desren’s shoulder, I limped toward them as they passed through the gates.

  Tulia and Minnow, pure-blood princesses in the Myrian Royal Legion, saw me and dismounted from their horses. Their partners, Edric and Roland, followed suit.

  “Ivy,” Tulia started, reaching for my arm, but her fingertips only brushed my sleeve as I pushed into the patrol’s scattered, battle-weary ranks. Struggling past the tired horses, road dust caught in my throat and the iron scent of blood stung my nose. My stiff legs screamed at me to slow down. Claws seemed to tear at my muscles, but at this point I wasn’t sure if it was the remains of the locking curse or the cold, painful fear of the horrid truth.

  I couldn’t see him.

  No, not another one.

  Not another prince. Not another partner.

  At last I found Kellian’s steed. But his rider was not astride. Instead, the brown stallion pulled a cart carrying a body lying across fresh hay and covered with a dark gray cloak. A legionnaire cloak. Kellian’s cloak.

  Suppressing a moan, my weak legs gave out, and just before the cobbled road came up to meet me, Roland’s arms wrapped around my waist and hauled me up.

  After my initial shock, a little relief inched into my shoulders. Kellian was alive, at least. Cursed, yes, but alive. Even if it might take him months to recover, I could still save him. I would not move on to my sixth partner in four years.

  “If you’re not healed yet,” Roland began, his five-day stubble brushing my ear, “you shouldn’t try the Kiss.”

  I understood Roland’s warning but would not heed it. I’d performed dozens of Kisses while drained and exhausted, and not one had been weaker for it. The magic within my Kiss was impossibly strong, despite the traces of some stupid curse.

  My hand tightened around his arm. His leather guards were coated in dirt. “I’m healed enough.” I gently pushed his arm away and faced the immobile figure on the cart. With a quick prayer, I pulled the cloak from Kellian’s face. His brown hair was caked with dried blood, but his face had been cleaned—probably by Tulia or Minnow—showcasing his high cheekbones and sun-kissed skin. He was only two years younger than me, but lying there, seemingly asleep, he had the look of a child. At just fifteen, he was the purest prince in Myria, the only one with enough Royal Magic to match my own.

  “How did it happen?” I asked, straightening and waving my hand over his face. Cold radiated from his skin. Definitely a curse of extreme magnitude.

  “We were ambushed by the horde of goblins. It was just like the scouts from Raed had said—they came at us with magic we’d never seen before.” Minnow’s voice, usually so light, much like her soft, petite appearance, was low and trembling. “We barely had time to administer battle Kisses to any of the princes.”

  “Is that why—”

  “No,” Minnow said quickly. “I gave one to both Kellian and Roland. Your prince was protected, although…my magic is not as strong as yours.”

  Because I knew I’d have to miss patrol thanks to the Kiss’s healing time for the locking curse, I’d asked Minnow to stay by my partner. If I couldn’t be there, a pure-blood princess was the best the Legion could offer. Minnow was strong and capable, but if I’d been there, if Kellian had used my Kiss instead, he’d be exhausted now, but awake. Not only because Kisses by one’s ordained partner were stronger by the Holy Queen’s blessing, but because my Kisses were the best. But due to our dwindling numbers, every able Royal was needed on patrol, regardless of having their partner with them. As King Randalph had reminded me when I’d requested Kellian be removed from patrol while I was out, there were other princesses perfectly able to bestow a Kiss—and any Royal’s Kiss was better than no Kiss.

  Not this time, King Randalph.

  “So…” I glanced at Minnow and Roland. “It was this new curse? What was it like?”

  “I can show you.” Minnow held out two fingers and extended them toward my forehead.

  I almost backed away. I didn’t want Minnow’s memories to become my own and join the rest of my nightmares in which my partners fell with lifeless eyes and blood trickli
ng from their lips. But I had to see this mysterious new curse. I had to find out what my Kiss was up against.

  I nodded and closed my eyes. Minnow touched her fingers to my forehead and whispered the words of shared memories. “Don’na illye min’na.”

  My mind fogged, and a forest shimmered into existence, shapes and blurs all hazy in the edges of Minnow’s memories. But the thing she meant for me to see was mind-numbingly clear: Kellian, his body glowing with the cobalt flames of battle magic, engaged in a fight with a goblin. Kellian swung his sword, slashing the goblin’s face and tearing through its eye, leaving a crude, bloody gash. With a shriek and garbled words, the goblin began to cast a curse. Just as he let the curse fly—vibrant emerald lightning crackling through the goblin’s long spindly fingers—Kellian stabbed the goblin in the chest. The goblin dissolved into smoke, the ground alight with green flames. Its curse clung to Kellian’s sword and crawled over the metal, reaching the hilt. The green lightning danced over his hands and up his arms, then took over his entire body, shaking him like a puppet. The blue battle magic that had encased Kellian flickered and died as he crashed to the ground.

  I reeled back from Minnow’s fingertips. Such power…a curse that existed even after a monster’s death? I leaned over my prince, feeling the cold roll off him in waves. Time was running out.

  I was his only hope. The blood of the great Queen Myriana was his only hope. Blood that ran through my veins. My only hope. I will not lose another partner to the Forces of Darkness. I cannot endure that shame again. That pain…

  I bent closer, my lips hovering over his.

  I’ll save you, my friend.

  With a quick prayer to my ancestor, the living goddess, the first Queen—O Holy Queen, lend me your strength—I prepared the strongest spell words in my arsenal for this revival Kiss.

  Illye donia.

  The words reverberated in my mind as I pressed my lips to his. Even in his comatose state, the Royal magic within Kellian surged forward and reacted with my own. Like flint striking steel, the two sparks created a flame that fed into the spell words. Magic drained out of me, into Kellian, and I nearly collapsed. Lightheaded, I held myself up on the cart long enough to watch silver dust wash over Kellian…then disappear like mist after a hard rain.

 

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