Storm Princess 2: The Princess Must Strike

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Storm Princess 2: The Princess Must Strike Page 1

by Everly Frost




  The Princess Must Strike

  Storm Princess Saga

  Everly Frost

  Jaymin Eve

  The Princess Must Strike

  Storm Princess Saga

  Book Two

  Copyright © 2018 by Everly Frost and Jaymin Eve

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

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

  Frost, Everly

  Eve, Jaymin

  The Princess Must Strike

  For information on reproducing sections of this book or sales of this book, go to

  www.JayminEve.com or www.EverlyFrost.com

  [email protected]

  [email protected]

  ISBN: 9781723718014

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Acknowledgments

  The Princess Must Reign

  Also by:

  To everyone who takes a difficult journey for someone you love. May you conquer every mountain.

  1

  For seven years, I lived my life according to a precise set of rules. At the top of the list: subdue the storm every day, don’t touch anyone, and follow the protocols. I obeyed all of them. Until the rules were swept out from under me like yesterday’s dusty rug.

  Now, there are no rules.

  I set the storm free. I touched Baelen. And the protocols? Actually, it wasn’t me who burned those to the ground; it was the Elven Command when they tried to kill Baelen and take my power. That’s when they made me their enemy.

  The boundaries that once existed around my life are gone. Literally. Now there’s open space and deep stretches of blue sky. And the determination that I will heal Baelen’s wounds and bring him back to me. Whatever it takes.

  The Phoenix soars through the cloud cover that floats over elven country. I lean forward in the moist air, tugging on the back of Jasper’s armor to get his attention. We’re riding on the Phoenix’s broad back while the Storm’s spirit sails along behind us, connected to me just like she promised she’d be. At this moment, she’s floating on her back, riding the slipstream created by the firebird’s wings.

  Baelen’s head rests in my lap and his feet lie alongside Jasper, securely tethered between us by ropes made out of lightning. It’s not exactly the kind of thing I ever imagined, but the Storm bound him safely to the Phoenix and promised me that he wouldn’t fall during our journey. A journey I never thought I’d make. To gargoyle country. The home of our worst enemies.

  Responding to my tug, Jasper maneuvers around so that he’s facing me. It’s safe to talk now that we’ve ascended into cover and left the Elven Command far behind. “Princess?”

  “I need to know what happened while Baelen and I were in the simulation.”

  Immediately, Jasper shakes his head and tries to turn away from me, but I grip his arm. His muscles tense under my sudden touch, his forearm big enough that my fingers don’t make it all the way around. He’s a warrior, trained all his life to be part of the elven military. He could shake me off in an instant. But for a long time, I wasn’t allowed to touch anyone, let alone a male, so the fact that I won’t let him go right now makes him pause.

  “I need to know what really happened.” As I speak, my other palm rests against Baelen’s cheek. His eyes are closed. His skin is warm to touch but his chest doesn’t rise and fall like it would if he were asleep.

  To Jasper I say, “I only know what I saw in the simulation, but that was all a trick.”

  “Are you sure?” Jasper’s serious eyes drill into mine. Always serious. He never smiles. Except once during battle and that was a scary grin that I don’t want to see again. He’s completely loyal to Baelen and for some reason wants to protect me from the things that will hurt me. What’s more, he seems to know what those things are before I do.

  I give him a single nod. I’m more certain about this than I am about anything else right now.

  “Okay, then…” He clears his throat as I let his arm go. He keeps his tone even and unemotional, as if he’s reporting facts that don’t mean anything to either of us. It’s so far from the truth. Everything he says cuts my heart into pieces.

  “As soon as you and Baelen sat in the chairs of truth to enter the simulation, your faces went completely blank. We could tell you weren’t with us anymore. We kept watch over both of you because we were worried the Elven Command might attack your bodies while you were vulnerable.”

  Baelen and I had gone to the arena to carry out the penultimate trial in the fight for my hand—what was supposed to be a simulation in which we would each fight a gargoyle. The trials were part of the marriage protocols that were designed to end in the selection of the strongest male to be my husband.

  Baelen and I had made it through all the other trials involving tests of strength, endurance, and intelligence, leaving us facing each other in the final fight to the death. Leaving me facing the prospect of having to kill him, the only male I’d ever loved, or he would be cursed to kill me instead.

  Jasper says, “At first it seemed like everything was going to be okay, but about an hour after you sat down, the crowd got restless. It was a long time to watch you sit still. One of the Elven Commanders—Elwyn Elder—told everyone to leave and come back later. This bothered me, but I didn’t do anything until…”

  Jasper pauses, breaking my gaze to contemplate his hands. His knuckles are bruised. Welts crisscross the exposed skin on his arms and legs where his armor didn’t protect him. I had done that damage to him while I was in the simulation. I didn’t know what I was doing at the time. I thought I was defending myself.

  I say, “Go on. Please.”

  “When the crowd left, two of the Elven Commanders—Pedr Bounty and Osian Valor—locked the arena doors. Teilo Splendor was the only Commander who didn’t seem to know what was going on.”

  I murmur, “He was the only one who wasn’t part of the curse.” Teilo Splendor’s daughter is a talented healer and his grandson, Sebastian, is one of Baelen’s most trusted friends. The Elven Command is made up of elected members of the five highest Houses: the Houses of Elder, Splendor, Glory, Valor, and Bounty. Technically, Baelen’s House—the House of Rath—is the highest House of all, but the Elven Command did everything they could to keep him out of their business, appointing Baelen as the Commander of the elven army so he couldn’t claim his place with them.

  “Teilo demanded to know what the others were doing,” Jasper says. “But Elwyn Elder knocked him out. Sebastian and I ran over to intervene and that was when Gideon Glory cast his sorcery over the chairs of truth.”

  Jasper
shudders, rubbing his arms as if he’s cold. I know him well enough to know that not much fazes him. He takes everything in his stride with an immovable calm, but the spell that Gideon Glory cast wasn’t anything ordinary… I can still feel its effect, crawling under my skin. The way it had immobilized me after I emerged from the simulation.

  I shake it off as Jasper continues. “You and Baelen were wrenched out of your chairs. They cracked apart as soon as you fell to the floor. That’s when you began to fight each other.”

  He swallows. “You and he… your faces were still blank. It was clear you didn’t know what you were doing. Jordan tried to grab you. I tried to stop Baelen. You shook us off like we were nothing. You were going to kill each other…”

  I stare at my own clenched fists. Inside the simulation, Baelen had appeared to me as a gargoyle—the kind that the elves had pedaled as our enemies for hundreds of years: vicious, unrelenting, horned, with salivating teeth. I met a gargoyle during one of the trials and discovered that they’re nothing like that. Female gargoyles are particularly beautiful. While their male counterparts resemble stone, the females look like humans with gossamer wings. I’d fought Baelen with everything I had, believing him to be my enemy, not knowing I was fighting him in real life.

  Jasper clears his throat. “It turned really bad when you got hold of Baelen’s dagger. You lit up like a lightning storm. That’s when everyone got involved. Your Storm Command and all of Baelen’s soldiers—all of them tried to stop you. Sebastian’s mother saw what was coming and she grabbed me and Sebastian, shouting at us to find shelter.”

  All it takes is a touch of metal and I can harness lightning as a weapon. I close my eyes, trying to banish the memory. The simulation had made my friends appear to me like a swarm of gargoyles. I was desperate to defend myself against them. I’d slammed the dagger’s electrified hilt into the ground, sending a wave of deadly lightning through the very elves who were trying to protect me.

  He sighs. “There wasn’t any shelter. Everyone went down. Even your advisor, Elise. She was trying to counter the simulation with magic but the electrical shock knocked her out cold. Then… something changed. You and Baelen stopped fighting. You talked to each other for the first time.”

  I nod. “We figured it out. Well, Baelen did. He recognized me because of what I did with the lightning. He realized we were actually fighting each other.”

  “You were looking around as if you couldn’t see us. You couldn’t see the Elven Commanders sneaking up on Baelen… I tried to run back to you, but they got to him first.” Jasper swallows and the unemotional tone of his voice fails, disappearing as the intensity of his feelings breaks through. “Gideon Glory strengthened their weapons with sorcery. It’s the only way to pierce Rath armor. All four of them stabbed Baelen at the same time.”

  Like the corners of a square. I can see the four cuts in Baelen’s chest plate as he rests beside me now, each cut several inches long, the edges of the metal burned where the sorcery sliced through.

  Jasper stops speaking, clears his throat, clearly struggling now. My heart wrenches, but I need him to go on. I need to know what I couldn’t see.

  “Their swords went right through and would have impaled you too, but Baelen… he pushed you away so you were safe. You ran back to him. You tried to stop him falling and then… he wrapped you up in his arms like he was protecting you.”

  Inside the simulation, Baelen had cocooned me inside his gargoyle wings, telling me to stay where it was safe, holding me until the simulation ended.

  Jasper takes a deep breath and lets it out again. “I think you know the rest.”

  My cheeks are cold where the wind beats at my tears. But I’m not sad. I’m angry. I’d surfaced from the simulation to discover that I’d been tricked into disabling all the elves who were there to protect us. I’d done exactly what the Elven Commanders wanted me to do and left Baelen vulnerable to attack. They knew they could never get to me as long as he was alive.

  Jasper’s back is straight, tense. The lightning welts across his arms are red and raw. I’d hurt him. I’d hurt all my friends. There aren’t enough apologies to make up for it. “I’m sorry, Jasper. I’m sorry for what I did to you.”

  He nods, accepting my apology, but a question enters his voice. “You said you gave Baelen your storm power.”

  My power to control the storm was the Elven Command’s ultimate prize. I am the first Storm Princess who can use the Storm as a weapon. They believed I could pass that power on to the first male I touched. They were right, but so wrong about the timing.

  “I gave my power to Baelen Rath seven years ago on the night I became the Storm Princess,” I say. “Nobody knew, including me. When the Storm chose me, it poured lightning into my body. Baelen was nearby and I poured lightning into him too. It was through that act that I passed him my power.”

  I shake my head with remembered horror. All the nightmares I’d had after that night. The helplessness I’d felt watching Baelen suffer. “I thought I killed him that night. I didn’t know it meant he had my power.”

  The Storm said she didn’t know how Baelen and I had stayed away from each other. Looking back, I know it was only because of guilt and pain. I blamed myself for what he went through. I blamed myself for the scar running the length of the side of his face. I wanted to keep Baelen as far away from me as possible so I didn’t hurt him again.

  And now… now I trace the line of the scar from his right temple down the side of his face. It splits at his jawline, one side curling behind his ear, the other under his chin. If I listen carefully, I can hear his heartbeat inside my mind, beating out a slow rhythm. I close my eyes, clinging to the repetitive thud-thud while my fingers tingle where they rest against his cheek.

  The sound of his heartbeat is the only thing keeping me sane right now. But it’s not enough. It will never be enough. I can finally touch him without fear that I’ll hurt him. I can touch him because I want to more than anything else in the world. Finally… but he’s not here. Not really.

  After the Elven Commanders attacked him, a moment before he died, Baelen used the power of the thunder to pause everything, including himself, halting the progress of the deadly wounds. He paused his own death. He gave me the chance to save him. But it’s tearing my heart out being so close to him and yet so far away. It’s like having part of me ripped away and thrown into darkness.

  I spiral downward inside my mind, tears dripping down my cheeks from beneath my closed eyelids. I search for the light, the warmth that I always felt when he was close to me, the dangerous response of my lightning to the nearness of his body. I understand it now. It was my storm power trying to connect with his.

  My eyes are still closed, but I sense my fingers grow warmer against his skin and so do my calves where his head rests. I drop my forehead to his, spiraling further and further down while a glow appears inside my mind like a single, red flame; a single strike of lightning as red as blood.

  I stop breathing because… I can hear him.

  His gravelly voice is laced with concern. Marbella, baby, you can’t be here with me.

  Baelen? I choke. Gasp. I need you. You have to come back to me.

  His voice is warm like my whole body right now. I will come back to you. You have to trust me. You have to trust yourself.

  All my worries bubble upward. But what if I can’t get you to the springs in Mount Erador? What if the gargoyles stop me? What if the springs don’t work—

  Marbella Mercy, he growls. My stubborn, beautiful love. You stayed away from me for seven years because you were determined to keep me safe. You will find a way to the springs, because you’re determined to do that too.

  Nothing will stop me, I whisper.

  You have to go now, he says. Before I lose my will to remain in this place. And… before we hurt someone.

  Hurt someone?

  Far, far away, I’m aware that someone is shouting my name. “Marbella! Princess!”

  I miss you, Baelen.


  I don’t want to go. I don’t want to swim upward, away from Baelen’s voice, away from this connection. He doesn’t respond. Instead a force pushes me upward, back through the lightning and the flames, back to myself. The sky is bright as I open my eyes, much brighter than it was before.

  “Princess!” Jasper balances on his feet opposite me, half-crouched, fingers splayed out toward me, alarm etched in every line of his face.

  Lightning streaks upward in front of my eyes, but it’s not inside my mind now; it’s rising between Baelen and me, glowing between us and forming droplets that shimmer upward like raindrops in reverse. Shock burns through me. It’s not just my lightning. It’s Baelen’s, too.

  It’s warm and safe, but only to me. To everyone else… it’s deadly.

  I’m suddenly aware of a disturbance in the air on my right hand side. The Storm soars up beside me, her chocolate eyes filled with urgent concern and a surprising amount of fury. “Marbella Mercy! Stop connecting to Baelen Rath. Right now!”

  “I—”

  “Now! Or you will kill your friend.”

  I jolt back to Jasper. The droplets are quickly following the line of Baelen’s body, rising like a cascade toward Jasper. I immediately unclasp my fingers from around Baelen’s face, disconnecting and pulling backward.

  The result is instant. The light fades between us. The burning raindrops fall back to Baelen’s chest and neck, dispersing and vaporizing.

  The rain is gone. Gone like Baelen’s voice and his nearness. I want to cry with the pain of loss, the pain of being wrenched back to the rest of the world.

 

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