CHAPTER 9
TERREILLE
Cassidy slowly made her way up to her
suite. Her head ached and her stomach burned. Not an unusual
combination these days. All it took was hearing “Oh, la” for
the pain to start.
Shira had a tonic that could soothe the stomach and
medicine that could ease the headache. But she couldn’t go to the
Healer. Not again. The first time, Shira had performed her duties
without comment. The second evening it happened, those dark eyes
held a sharp reminder that Shira was a Black Widow as well as a
Healer, and poisoning a “guest” would be a simple thing to
do.
She had to write her report to Prince Sadi, and she
didn’t know what to say. Didn’t know what she dared to
say.
It was happening again. She had failed.
Again.
Kermilla shone. She dazzled. Just like the last
time. She flattered and flirted, wore a different gown every
evening that had the men’s eyes popping out, and hinted that she
was on the primary guest lists of the most influential aristos in
Dharo.
Which may or may not be true, but there was no way
to call Kermilla on it without sounding churlish.
Maybe she shouldn’t have been surprised, but it had
been a shock to have Theran come up to her suite that first day and
inform her that Kermilla was now his guest, just as
she was his guest, and he expected her to act her age
instead of behaving like a pouting adolescent.
That statement coming from a man whose pants tented
every time he was in the same room as Kermilla might have been
funny in a dark, painful way if the rest of the court hadn’t
started acting just like her old court had done. They looked at
Kermilla and then at her as if they were judging her and finding
fault. Seeing her and Kermilla in the same room . . . The
difference between a draft horse and a thoroughbred, Jhorma had
once said when he had escorted her and Kermilla to a small party.
He’d said it in a tone of voice that was supposed to mean he was
joking, but everyone in the room had known he meant it. And
everyone must have known that he resented riding the draft horse
when he lusted for the thoroughbred.
Everyone but her.
Even when he said things like that—and justified
saying things like that—she hadn’t understood his enthusiasm in her
bed had to do with getting his own relief and nothing to do with a
commitment to take care of his Queen.
Did he enjoy taking care of Kermilla?
She couldn’t think about that. She did her best to
ignore the other Queen by spending time in the garden with Gray and
working with Powell to send out messages to the surviving Queens in
Dena Nehele.
At least one good thing had come from Kermilla’s
visit: Theran was too preoccupied with her to pay attention
to the fact that Cassidy was reaching out to the other Queens in
Dena Nehele.
Ranon stared at the special flower bed Gray had
made for Cassidy—the plants were similar to ones found in Dharo but
were native to Dena Nehele. The common ground, Gray called
it.
He’d been coming out here every night since Theran
had given Lady Kermilla an open-ended invitation to stay at
Grayhaven. Shira was acting peculiar in a way that unnerved him. He
loved the woman with everything in him, but he didn’t forget he was
sleeping with a Black Widow, and there was a reason why that caste
of witch was feared.
“Thought I’d find you here,” Talon said.
He half turned toward the voice, but didn’t speak
for a minute. “Something is draining the heart out of
Cassidy.”
“Oh, I think we’ve all figured out what that
something is,” Talon said. He kept walking, but he lifted his chin
to indicate the stone storage shed where Gray used to live because
he was too frightened to enter the house.
His heart pounding, Ranon glanced at the house
before drifting toward the back of the shed. What did the Master of
the Guard want to say to him that couldn’t be said inside the
house?
“What . . . ?” he began.
Talon raised his left hand. The two missing fingers
were a reminder that this man had not lived a soft life—even after
he became demon-dead.
A minute later, Archerr, Spere, and Shaddo slipped
behind the shed. A minute after that, Bardric and Cayle joined
them.
“Burne, Haele, and Radley are providing a presence
in the parlor this evening,” Talon said. “Archerr, you’ll relay
instructions to Burne and Haele. Cayle, you’ll keep Radley
informed.”
*I’m your second-in-command,* Ranon said, using a
tight spear thread to direct the words only to Talon.
*I know what you are,* Talon replied sharply. *You
have the task of keeping Gray and the Black Widow leashed. And
yourself.*
Shit. *You don’t ask for much.*
*If you don’t have the balls for it, tell me
now.*
Stung by the verbal slap, Ranon didn’t
answer.
“What about Powell?” Archerr asked.
“I’ll keep the Steward informed,” Talon said.
*What did Powell say?* Ranon asked, wondering if
anyone else had noticed a slight hesitation in Talon’s reply.
*Later.* “Our Queen is distressed. The visitors are
the reason. We need to find out why.”
“How does Kermilla know Lady Cassidy?” Spere
asked.
“I can’t see that the two of them have anything in
common except caste,” Shaddo said.
“She reminds me of a carrion eater picking at the
bones,” Bardric said.
Shaddo nodded. “And Dena Nehele is the bones. We’ve
seen bitches like her before.”
“She’s entertaining,” Cayle said. “And she’s false.
You can see it in her eyes. What’s she looking for here?”
Archerr snorted. “Control over the rest of us. What
else?”
“If she did have that control?” Talon asked.
Ice swept through Ranon, but a steely look from
Talon kept him silent.
The other men shifted their feet and looked
uncomfortable. Finally Spere said, “Those escorts aren’t fighters.
Got some training—every escort does—but they’re Warlords, not
Warlord Princes.”
Shaddo nodded. “Take them out fast and hard. Have
someone coming in behind the others who is strong enough to take
out the witch—burst heart and brain with a blast of power that will
break her Jewels and finish the kill.”
Ranon swallowed hard. He thought he’d been the only
one thinking along those lines. Apparently not.
Talon nodded, as if they’d told him what he’d
expected. “Not yet. She’s a Queen from another Territory. Another
Realm. We made the mistake of not looking for social connections to
dark power when Cassidy first came here. Kermilla keeps hinting
that she has powerful friends, so let’s not make that mistake
again. Cayle, Bardric, you two are least likely to be perceived as
a threat, so I want you to spend time with the Warlords who came
with Kermilla. Find out what you can about her court and about her
connection to Cassidy. They’re not friends, so let’s find out
exactly what they are to each other.”
“We could force open the inner barriers of the
lightest Jeweled Warlord and find out everything we want to know,”
Archerr said quietly.
“And become no better than what we fought against
all those years?” Talon shook his head. “You don’t do that to
anyone but an enemy, and we don’t know yet that these men are
enemies.”
“We know their presence is upsetting Cassidy,”
Ranon said.
“Yes, we know that,” Talon agreed.
Ranon heard regret—and maybe a little guilt?—in
Talon’s voice.
“When we find out more, we’ll decide what to do
about it,” Talon continued. “That’s all. Any information you find
out comes to me or Ranon.”
“And we don’t mention any of this to Theran?” Spere
asked.
Even in the dark, Ranon saw the sadness in Talon’s
eyes.
“We don’t mention this to Theran,” Talon said. “I’m
hoping it’s just lust that’s making him stupid, but if he feels the
same pull for Kermilla that we feel for Cassidy, we can’t trust him
to stand for the Queen he promised to serve.”
One by one, the men wrapped themselves in sight
shields and slipped away until Ranon and Talon were alone.
“Powell,” Ranon said quietly. “He said something.
That’s why you’re giving these orders.” He waited. “What did he
say?”
“He said, ‘It’s starting to feel like old times,
isn’t it?’ And may the Darkness have mercy on us, Ranon, I think
he’s right.”
Talon walked away.
Ranon leaned against the shed, feeling sick.
It wouldn’t come to that. It wouldn’t. Not
while Cassidy ruled Dena Nehele.
Theran sat in the parlor, happier than he had ever
been.
Kermilla was wonderful, was everything he dreamed a
Queen should be. The sound of her voice quenched a raging thirst
inside him, and there was a spot on her neck that had a scent that
aroused him and yet gave him peace.
She had been careful not to say anything outright,
but she’d made it clear to him that, having come from an aristo
family, the training that had honed her innate abilities as a Queen
had been far more extensive than Cassidy’s—the kind of training
given to someone destined to be a Territory Queen.
Damn Ranon for stirring everything up so much that
the other men were wary about getting to know her. But they would
come around.
Sooner or later they would recognize the treasure
that had come to Grayhaven.