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The Shadow Queen

What wasn’t said was that only a handful of those men wore an Opal that was considered a dark Jewel. He and Talon, wearing Green and Sapphire, were the strongest males in the Territory. Everyone else wore lighter Jewels.


They formed a semicircle around him and Talon, the lighter Jewels leaving spaces so the darker-Jeweled males could stand in the front.


Except for one Opal-Jeweled Warlord Prince who stood apart from the others—a Prince whose golden brown skin marked him as having a Shalador bloodline. Maybe even being pure Shalador.


Lord Jared’s coloring. Lord Jared’s race.


Theran resisted the urge to look at his own hand and see the similarities.


“Would you care to join us, Prince Ranon?” Talon said.


“I can hear from where I’m standing,” was the chilly reply.


Talon nodded as if the less-than-courteous response made no difference.


Prince Archerr, another who wore Opal Jewels, stepped forward. “You called us here, and we answered. But none of us can afford to be gone long. The landens have to be held on a tight leash, and some of us are the only trained warrior left in our piece of Dena Nehele.”


Theran nodded. “Then I’ll come to the point. We need a Queen.”


A moment of disbelieving silence before several men made derisive sounds.


“Tell us something we don’t know,” Spere said.


“We’ve got Queens, more or less,” Archerr said.


“Would you serve any of them?” Theran asked.


“When the sun shines in Hell.”


Mutters with an undercurrent of anger.


“We have Queens,” Theran said. “Women who, even in their prime, weren’t considered strong enough to be a concern to the Queens who whored for Dorothea SaDiablo. And we have Queens who are still little girls, barely old enough to begin training in basic Craft. And we have a handful who are adolescents.”


“One being a fifteen-year-old who’s turning into such a ripe bitch she may not live long enough to be sixteen,” Archerr said bitterly.


“We need a Queen who knows how to be a Queen,” Theran said. “We need a Queen who could rule Dena Nehele in the same tradition as the Gray Lady.”


“You won’t find one of those within our own borders,” Spere said. “Don’t you think we’ve all been looking? And if you look beyond our borders to find a Queen mature enough to rule, the males in that Territory aren’t going to give up anyone good. And since I live in a village along the western border, I can tell you the Territories west of us aren’t doing any better.”


“I know,” Theran replied.


“Then where are we supposed to find a Queen?” Archerr asked.


“In Kaeleer.”


Silence. Not even embarrassed coughs or shuffling feet.


“There’s no way into Kaeleer except through the service fairs,” Shaddo said. “At least, no other way to get into the Shadow Realm and stay alive long enough to state your business.”


“Yes, there is,” Theran said, grateful that he and Talon had considered this possibility. “Someone goes to the Black Mountain.”


Ninety-eight men stared at him.


“And does what?” Archerr asked quietly.


Theran glanced at Talon, who nodded. “There’s a Warlord Prince who owes my family a favor.” That wasn’t exactly the way Talon had phrased it. More like, For Jared’s sake and memory, he might be willing to do the family a favor. “If I can find him . . .”


“You think this Prince can get us a Queen from Kaeleer?” Shaddo asked. “Who has that kind of influence and power?”


Theran took a deep breath. “Daemon Sadi.”


Ninety-eight Warlord Princes shivered.


“The Sadist owes your family a favor?” Archerr asked.


Theran nodded.


A dozen voices muttered,“Hell’s fire, Mother Night, and may the Darkness be merciful.”


“Talon and I talked it over and figured asking at the Keep is the simplest way of finding out if anyone knows where Sadi is.”

“He could be dead,” Spere said, sounding a little hopeful. “His brother disappeared years ago, didn’t he? Maybe Sadi got caught in that storm like the rest of the Blood.”


“Maybe,” Talon said. “And maybe he’s no longer among the living. But even if he’s demon-dead, he still might be able to help. And if he’s among the demon-dead who went to the Dark Realm, going to the Keep is still our best chance of finding him.”


“What happens if we do get a Queen from Kaeleer?” Shaddo asked.


“Then at least twelve males have to be willing to serve her and form her First Circle,” Theran said. “We’ll have to form a court. Some of us will have to serve.” The next words stuck in his throat, but on this too, he and Talon had agreed. “And Grayhaven will be offered as her place of residence.”


“You say we’ll have to form a court,” Ranon said, still sounding cold. “Will Shalador be asked to serve? Will Shalador be allowed to serve? Or will the blood that also flows through your veins, Prince Theran, be held to the reserves, ignored unless we’re needed for fodder?”


Before anyone could draw a line and start a fight that would end with someone dying, Talon raised his hand, commanding their attention.


“That will be up to the Queen, Ranon,” he said quietly. “We’re all going to hone the blade and offer her our throats.”


“Hoping we won’t end up with someone who will crush what is left of us?” Ranon asked.


“Hoping exactly that,” Talon replied.


A long silence. Ranon took a step back, then hesitated. “If a Kaeleer Queen comes to Dena Nehele, some of the Shalador people will offer themselves for her pleasure.”


Talon looked thoughtful as they all watched Ranon walk back to the gate. Nothing was said until the Shalador Warlord Prince caught one of the Winds and vanished.


“If you can get a Queen from Kaeleer . . .” Archerr didn’t finish the sentence.


“I’ll send a message,” Theran said.


The Warlord Princes retreated to the gate. No breaking into groups, no talking among themselves. Some looked back at him and Talon.


“Looks like you’re going to the Keep,” Talon said.


Theran nodded as he watched the last man vanish. “Which do you think worries them more? That I won’t be able to find Sadi—or that I will?”


CHAPTER 2


KAELEER


Cassidy sat back on her heels and brushed her chin with the tail of her long red braid.


“So,” she said as she considered the ground in front of her. “Does the rock stay or does the rock go?”


Since the question had been offered to the air and the patch of garden in front of her, she didn’t expect an answer. Besides, it wasn’t really her decision. She’d volunteered to clear the weeds out of this bed as a way to have something to do—and a way to work with a little piece of land. But this was her mother’s garden, and whether the rock was an unwanted obstacle or a desired, important part of the whole depended on how one looked at it.


Which was true of so many things.


“It’s done and can’t be undone,” she muttered. “So enjoy your visit here, do what you can, and let the rest go.”


Let the rest go. How long would it take before her heart let go of the humiliation?


“Well, at least I found out before I put in all the spring work on those g-gardens.” Her voice wobbled and tears blurred her vision.


Swallowing the hurt that wanted to spill out every moment she didn’t keep her feelings chained, she reviewed the containers of seeds she had collected last year from the Queen’s garden in Bhak. That garden wasn’t hers anymore, so her mother would benefit by having a few new plants this year.


“Your mother said I’d find you here.”


The voice, always rough because the vocal cords had been damaged in a boyhood accident, made her smile as she looked over her shoulder at the burly man walking toward her.


Burly in body, Burle by name. A simple man. A handyman. Twice each month he would stay at a landen village for three days and take jobs to fix whatever needed fixing. Most Blood thought it was beneath a Warlord’s dignity to work for landens—even if the Warlord wore a Jewel as light as Tiger Eye. He’d always said,“Work is work, and the marks they pay me with are as good as any that come from some snot-nosed aristo family.”


That attitude didn’t get him work in houses owned by Blood aristos here in Weavers Field, their home village, or in other nearby Blood villages, but the rest of the Blood didn’t care what Burle said about aristos, and the landens liked having that little bit extra that came from a man who could use some Craft along with a hammer and didn’t talk down to them. The fact that Lord Burle always gave them that little bit extra—and more—meant he had as much work as he wanted.


Her heart warmed to see him—and a moment later began hammering with alarm. “Why are you home? Is something wrong?”


Burle made a show of looking at the sky before focusing on his daughter. “Well, Kitten, it’s midday. Food’s on the table. You’re still out here. Your mother has that look. You know that look?”


Oh, yes. She knew that look.


“So,” Burle continued, “I was sent out to fetch you.”


Not likely. Sent out, maybe. But not to fetch her. She loved her mother, Devra, but there were some things she could say only to her father. She just wasn’t ready to say them.


“All right, Father. What are you up to?” She put enough emphasis on the word “Father” to tell him she knew he was up to something. When the only response she got was his frowning at her under those bushy eyebrows her mother subtly kept subdued with grooming Craft, she tried not to sigh as she said,“Poppi.”


He nodded, satisfied that he’d made his point. “Your mother said you came out here right after breakfast. Seemed like a long time to be digging up weeds, so I thought I’d give you a hand. But it looks like you’ve got that bed in good order.” He frowned at the gloves lying on the ground beside her.

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