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The Veiled World

Page 22

by Vanessa Garden


  “Gods and Goddesses,” Noah whispered, his face crinkling up into a smile. I wondered, briefly, if Noah, Reece, and Bruce would remain aged, but that hardly mattered now that several of the soldiers were dismounting and unsheathing their swords.

  Amber unsheathed hers and came to stand in front of me.

  One of the soldiers noticed and came at her with a raised sword.

  I slipped in front of Amber, my dagger raised. I would rather die and never make it to the Land of Resting Souls than let this man harm a hair on Amber’s head.

  He stopped, stared at my dagger, and tapped it with his sword so that it made a ding sound. It spun out of my hands and into the sand.

  He was a couple of inches shorter than me. I could take the man on. He looked too pretty to be able to fight well. I made for my grandfather’s pocket knife, but Amber placed her hand over mine and held it there.

  “Don’t,” she whispered in my ear.

  I did as I was told, hating myself for not disarming the man first.

  “You are hereby at the mercy of the queen. You will be her guests, and her subjects, for as long as she wills it and you will not utter a single word against her wishes.”

  I opened my mouth to protest, but was silenced with the tip of a sword at my throat.

  “Come quietly and there will be no bloodshed.”

  Without warning, Amber tugged me back by my shirt collar and tossed me to the sand beside her. Swords clashed.

  I spun around on my knees to see Amber walking the man back, his heels digging up sand as she pressed the tip of her own sword against his white throat.

  “We will come with you, but only because we have no food or water. We will stay as guests but only as long as we wish to stay. Tell your queen that we will leave when we like. We have travelled too far and faced too many dangers to be told what to do by a bunch of strangers. I don’t care how good-looking you all are.”

  Amber’s chest rose and fell. The man smiled, raised his hands, and dropped his sword.

  “Peace.”

  The others edged closer to Amber, their swords spinning in their expert hands.

  Jacob and I moved in.

  “I said peace!” the man shouted, his voice echoing across the desert.

  His men sheathed their swords and stood back.

  Amber breathed a sigh of relief and withdrew her sword and looked ready to sheath it when she swayed on her feet and collapsed.

  I managed to catch her just before her head hit the ground.

  “Water,” she whispered before her eyes fluttered shut.

  I took my canteen off my neck and opened it, then I teased her lips open with my finger and carefully tipped the water into her mouth. She coughed at first and spat up a little, but then managed to gulp down the last two mouthfuls until the bottle was empty.

  “Thanks,” she whispered, her hand sliding up mine to rest on my arm.

  “We have water and food,” said the man who had held his sword at my throat. He seemed genuinely concerned for Amber’s wellbeing.

  I nodded my head at the others, who had gathered around us. They nodded back, looking old, thirsty, hungry, and tired. My own throat burned and my empty stomach grumbled at the idea of food.

  “We’ll go willingly, like she said. But it will be our own choice when to leave.”

  The man nodded. “I believe my queen will agree.” He smiled, his white teeth dazzling against his tanned skin. “I also believe she will enjoy meeting you all.” He shook his head and stared at Bruce, Noah, and Reece, who happened to be standing near each other. “Even the elderly ones.”

  Claire giggled, seeming delirious from lack of water, and slapped a hand over her mouth. “Sorry, Reece, but you look so old.”

  “Do you have a cure for this?” Noah asked the man. He stared at the other warriors, still on their horses. “You seem to have a lot of smooth skinned people in your kingdom.”

  The man threw his head back and laughed. “My queen certainly will enjoy you all. Come. You will ride with us.”

  A large breasted woman with emerald eyes and pouty lips took Kyle by the hand and led him to her horse. She seized a hold of his waist and he giggled as she hoisted him up onto her steed. Then she swung her long legs over the horse and guided Kyle’s hands around her waist.

  The others accepted invitations from waiting warriors and were hoisted atop the splendid-looking horses.

  Amber, who was sitting up now, got to her feet.

  “You,” said the leader, pointing to Amber. “You will ride with me.”

  “Give me a horse and I’ll ride with her. You join with someone else,” I said, shifting to Amber’s side. I didn’t care for the hungry gleam in the man’s eyes every time he looked at her.

  “It’s okay, Axel,” she said, briefly squeezing my hand before following the man to his horse.

  I hoisted myself onto the back of a blonde woman’s horse. She’d been smiling at me in what I took to be a suggestive fashion so I chose her on purpose, hoping to gain information on who these people were and what they had planned for us once within their castle gates.

  Her perfumed hair and dust fluttered in my face as the horse galloped, along with the others, towards the castle.

  “What will happen once we are at the castle?” I asked.

  She laughed and took one hand off the reins and placed it over mine before sliding my hand, along with her own, up her waist and through the gap between her armour, to rest on her firm breast beneath it.

  Heat scorched my cheeks and, involuntarily, blood stirred below my belt.

  I yanked my hand away and she laughed.

  I refused to ask any more questions after that and kept my fingers tucked around the saddle as opposed to her waist.

  But as we rode, I could not help but relive the feeling of her warm breast in my hand. It was intoxicating. However I wasn’t picturing this woman in my mind. Inside my head I was touching Amber’s warm, naked skin.

  “Here we are,” the woman said, laughing again when I said nothing in response.

  A drawbridge lowered over what appeared to be a mote.

  “A mote. That’s so typical,” said Noah, who’d been riding beside me. “I’m sure we’ll see a jester soon, cracking bad jokes and wearing a jingly hat with bells on it.”

  I smiled, despite not knowing what we were doing here in this strange kingdom.

  I watched Amber being helped down off the horse she’d been riding and at the same time heard guards order for the bridge to be drawn up after the last horses came through.

  “The horses,” said Bruce, leaning towards me, from atop his horse. His rider had dismounted and was waiting for Bruce to do the same. “Only the black clothed soldiers have been allowed in the gates. The white horses have remained outside. They’ve set up camps. Perhaps it was no war we had seen.”

  He dismounted and I decided to do the same.

  My female companion had already done so and had removed her armour. I averted my eyes to her revealing tight black clothing, which emphasised what I had felt earlier. I turned my head and slowly slid off the horse’s back.

  The woman’s hands went to my behind, feeling my buttocks as I came down and I fell back against her.

  “I’ll call on you after the games,” she said in my ear, her voice low and seductive, before walking away, swinging her hips as she did so.

  Amber called for me through the gaps of the crowd, which was now thick with guards, soldiers, and plain clothed people.

  “Amber!” I called out, but I had already lost sight of her.

  Someone wrapped their hand around my arm, tightening their grip.

  “This way.”

  I gripped his hand and peeled his fingers back, until the man cried out.

  “We were promised to be treated like guests. Unhand me. Take me to the others.”

  He nodded. “I have been ordered by the queen to take you to your resting quarters. You are to eat and rest.”

  The idea of food, drink
, and rest was so appealing my head felt faint at the thought of it.

  “Take me to the others.”

  The man bowed slightly and the others around him laughed, their white teeth shining and long lashes fluttering against their tanned skin.

  “Follow me, my master,” he said, his voice thick with sarcasm.

  He led me into the castle, through a side entrance littered with hay. The hairs on the back of my neck pricked as the man led me down a long, dark corridor and down a winding set of stairs. I imagined that guests normally stayed upstairs rather than down.

  Familiar voices echoed from the base of the stairs and I ran ahead of the man.

  “Bruce! Jacob!”

  They were inside a cell, calling at me from behind a wooden door with bars at the window.

  “Axel!” Claire screamed. “We’ve lost Amber. They’ve taken her.”

  The man watched on, his hand on his sword.

  “Where is she?” I asked, grabbing him by the throat and slamming him against the wall.

  Hands seized me from behind and dragged me away from the man, pressing down on my shoulders and forcing me to my knees.

  The man I’d grabbed coughed and felt his throat.

  “Save the aggression for tomorrow, boy. You’ll need it.”

  He laughed and the other guards joined him.

  “Which cell should we put him in?” someone asked.

  “Put him in with her. The other cell is getting a little crammed.”

  “If you say so.”

  “But isn’t that the one with—”

  “Do it!” ordered another guard.

  A lock turned and I was hoisted to my feet and pushed through a darkened doorway.

  27

  Amber

  The door to my cell opened and I saw Axel, on his knees, being raised to his feet before being tossed inside.

  He fell against me and together we stumbled to the floor as the lock on the door clicked.

  “Don’t exhaust yourself tonight,” said a voice outside the door.

  A set of eyes peered in through the bars.

  “One of you needs to be strong for tomorrow.”

  The laughing carried away up the stairs until it died on the floor above us.

  My eyes adjusted to the dimness of the room. Luckily enough light beamed through the small, barred window at the door to allow me to see Axel’s face as he knelt on all fours over me.

  “Sorry, for knocking you over,” he said, staring down at me, his chest rising and falling while he caught his breath. His eyes widened when he saw that my mouth was bound with cloth, so he quickly used his dagger to slash it away.

  I coughed and spluttered and sucked in the damp, mouldy tasting air. Still, it was air.

  Axel’s eyes roved down to my lips and back up to my eyes again. Weirdly enough, he looked like he wanted to kiss me.

  “Amber! Axel!”

  The screams and shouts of the others broke the spell. Axel got up and helped me to my feet.

  “We’re here,” I said. “Is anyone missing? Is everybody okay?”

  “Yes. We’re all here,” said Claire. “They told us we need to choose a champion by morning.”

  Axel swore. “They want us to fight,” he said, his voice low and just for me.

  “I’ll be the champion,” he said, pressing his face against the bars.

  “No!” I shook my head. There’s no way he was going to sacrifice himself for us. Not after he’d been disarmed so easily out in the desert.

  “I want to be the champion,” I cried out. Though I’d made peace with Reece and he no longer blamed me for Axel’s death, a lot of people in my life still blamed me. Most importantly, I still blamed myself. I’d let Sam down. I hadn’t been able to save him. I wasn’t his champion. But maybe I could be the champion tomorrow, for these guys, who I’d grown to really care about.

  Axel swore again. “You don’t know what you’re getting yourself into.”

  I sighed. Frustrated. “Well, who disarmed that man, me or you?”

  “That’s because I was...because my mind had been occupied at the time,” he said, his blue eyes dark in the dim light of the cell.

  Something about staring into the depth of those eyes weakened me.

  He looked at my mouth again, like he wanted to kiss me.

  “With what?” I whispered “What distracted you so much?”

  He exhaled and stepped away from the barred door, towards me, until I was backed up against the wall.

  “Can’t you guess, Amber?”

  I shook my head, unable to speak. Hot blood coursed through my veins at the sound of my name on his lips and at the proximity of his body, so close to mine.

  Axel placed one hand against the wall, beside my face and the other on my waist. I gasped at his touched and his breath caught.

  He stared at my lips again and tilted his face.

  “Can I kiss you, please?” he asked, his voice deep and gravelly, his breath warm against my cheek.

  My head felt light and I looped my arms around his waist to draw him against me, in a big, silent yes.

  He closed his eyes and pressed his mouth to mine, moving his lips slowly and softly at first. But then I moaned and the sound seemed to excite him, because the kiss grew heated, his tongue exploring my mouth hungrily. It was exquisite.

  “Oh, Amber,” he groaned as his lips moved down my jaw and along my neck, back up to my ear where his breath came hot and fast. He slid his hands down my waist, to my butt, and lifted me up, positioning himself between my legs as he held me up against the wall.

  I raked my hands down his back and he threw his head back, his eyes screwing tight, as he swore.

  Only then did I realised what I’d just done.

  “I’m sorry! Your poor back. I’m so sorry.”

  Great. I’d gone and ruined the moment by opening his wounds.

  His eyes opened and he stared at me through hooded lids, his expression a mix of pleasure and pain.

  “I’m so sorry, Axel,” I whispered as he set me on my feet.

  “You can kiss it better,” he said, a soft smile on his lips.

  “I will,” I said, my lower belly fluttering as I started to unbutton his shirt.

  His breath caught as I slid the shirt off his shoulders and pressed my lips to his chest, right where his heart was thudding a furious beat. Then I kissed his shoulder and slowly moved my mouth to his back, where the scabs that had been healing were now raw and angry-looking again. However I was relieved to find no fresh blood.

  Tears came to my eyes as I kissed each and every scar, even the faint old ones. How dare anybody hurt Axel. How dare they scar his beautiful back.

  More tears came when I realised that we hadn’t made it to the Land of Resting Souls yet, and this may be our one moment alone, together, before we met certain death.

  Axel turned and took my face between his hands, his thumbs lightly brushing away my tears.

  “Don’t cry, Amber, please don’t cry. Not tonight.” His eyes glazed over with tears. “Because if you cry, then I’ll cry.” He laughed softly and drew me into his arms. My cheek rested against his shoulder.

  “Tell me what you told Bella,” I said suddenly. Because if we were going to possibly die in the next day or so, then I wanted to know the truth.

  His arms loosened slightly.

  “You’ll hate me,” he whispered into my hair.

  “Amber! Axel!” the others shouted. “Hello!” said Claire. “Where did you guys go?”

  “Ignore them,” I said when I felt Axel pull away.

  He drew back and turned to face the wall, resting his forearms against it and hanging his head.

  “Tell me, Axel. Please.”

  “You’re going to hate me and wish you never kissed me.”

  I smiled and put a hand to the small of his back. “Just tell me.”

  “Do you remember when the king was speaking at the first feast and I earned a salting for interrupting?”

&nbs
p; “Yeah.”

  “Well, I earned a salting because I was trying to warn you all.”

  The hot blood that had been coursing through my veins earlier cooled suddenly.

  “Warn us about what?”

  I leant my head against the wall and stared up at Axel’s face. He was grimacing as though in physical pain.

  “We don’t all get to bring our loved ones back, Amber. Just one of us.”

  “What do you mean?”

  He sniffed and rubbed his eyes against this forearm.

  “Even if we all get there. Leirza, the one who guards them, she only ever grants two souls. One will be the king’s dead wife and the other will be who, Amber? All of us have survived so far. There’s a good possibility that if we survive tomorrow, we’ll all make it to the Land of Resting Souls. How are we going to decide who gets to have their loved one back?”

  I stepped back. No. That couldn’t be true.

  Axel spun around. His eyes were blazing and his face red. He was shaking with rage.

  “How do you know for sure?”

  “Because that is what the two survivors said. That’s why the king is happy to send someone else other than himself. Because he knows that he can send out someone to do it for him.”

  I stayed silent for a while, allowing this information to sink in.

  “We have to tell the others.”

  Axel shook his head. “No, Amber, if we do, there’s no telling what will happen. How it will change things.” His eyes turned dark. “No. We won’t know who to trust if we tell the others. Everyone will turn on each other.”

  I understood, thinking how much Bruce wanted his wife back or Jacob his dad. We all wanted our loved ones alive again and now that we were so close to getting them, it would be dangerous for the others to know that there was a huge chance they wouldn’t be returning home with their loved ones by their sides.

  It was terrible.

  I collapsed onto the floor and rested my head in my hands.

  After a while Axel slid down the wall and sat beside me, draping his arm over my shoulder.

  We must have been dog tired, because after my eyes fluttered shut for what seemed only a few minutes, all of a sudden the door to the room opened up.

  “Breakfast,” said the man who’d had his sword at my throat yesterday in the desert. He wasn’t dressed in armour today, today he wore black, head to toe, and had his hair slicked back.

 

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