Destiny's Kingdom: Legend of the Chosen (40 page)

Read Destiny's Kingdom: Legend of the Chosen Online

Authors: Daniel Huber,Jennifer Selzer

BOOK: Destiny's Kingdom: Legend of the Chosen
8.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"Father!"

Aazrio stood in front of Trina, protecting her from the direction where the light had come. The crowd had started to move toward the balcony, confused and bewildered, desperate to see what had happened. In Quade's shock he noticed that Aazrio still bent over the Keystone's body on the balcony. And Aazrio also stood with Trina. And in a sight like Quade had never seen before, Aazrio stepped out of himself and split a third time, his rage filled eyes looking directly at where Quade stood. Quade looked to the balcony, to Trina, to the guard who now ran toward the bastion. Aazrio had somehow split himself into three.

Perhaps ten seconds had now passed, and the lararium still hovered in the air, was beginning to actually rise. Quade reached up and grabbed it, and then began to run.
 

Aazrio had reached the door of the closest tower, pulled at the handle but found it would not open. Enraged, he attempted to dislodge it with his magic, completely ignoring the panic that was starting to spread through the massive crowd. Trina was protected by his other self, that much he knew. But his magic was now being divided into three separate places and his powers were compromised, so he could not use it to break down the door. He looked up to see the young man running, nearly at the end of the wall walk now and in fury and determination to catch him, the guard began scaling the wall. Spider-like, he climbed up it with little effort, no fear of falling, no lack of faith in his minuscule grips for support. He scaled the curtain wall like it was ladder, and before anyone could even realize what he'd done, he was running along the allure after his quarry.

Quade hit the bottom of the tower stairs and burst through the heavy door, throwing the lock shut behind him, and ran with all his strength away from the crowd. They saw him running between them, pushing his way through them, but were too confused to know what had happened to think to make him stop. And Quade had no mind of where he was going, was simply running as fast as his legs would move, running away from the thing he knew was behind him, was faster than him, could endure longer than him. Before he realized how quickly he'd gotten there he was near the bank of the plateau, was headed toward the fields that stretched toward the woods below. And to his amazement, to his thankful relief, he saw Shadduk, trotting fearfully through the crowd. Quade whistled louder than he ever knew he could whistle

"Shadduk!" The horse stopped in his tracks and turned his head. "Shadduk!"

Quade ran toward the frightened stallion, and in a swift jump landed atop his back and pulled his reins around his fists, hastily kicking the horse's sides.
 

"Shadduk, run! Go!"

And in a flash, they tore through the crowd, Quade holding on for his very life.

"Father!"

Trina ran toward the castle doors, which were fast getting blocked by concerned onlookers, those who were anxious to see what had gone wrong, to see if there was anything they could do to help. Anxious murmuring washed through the people, worried and frightened voices of the kingdom making a din of fear and distress.

Aazrio cloaked the two of them in a barrier of protective magic, moved the Daughter Keystone away from the front of the castle and around to the side where there were less people and less things to obstruct them from getting inside.
 

"Aazrio what happened?" Trina was nearly hysterical. "What happened!"

"I don't know, Kitrina." The guard spoke through his angrily clenched teeth. "I will find out."

"And what was that? What did you do back there? You split apart from yourself! What is going on?" Trina screamed her words, began to shake uncontrollably under the guard's tight grip as he guided her through the side port door of the castle.

"No time to explain my magic now, Kitrina. We must now tend to your father."

"You left him for me?" She screamed in horror. "You left him alone to come and get me?"

"No, Daughter Keystone! I am also with your father, as surely as I am here with you."

Trina didn't stop to try and figure this out, let her completely perplexed and terrified face say all that she felt. Once inside the door Trina bolted down the long hallway, up the grand staircase that led to her father's study, running so fast that she easily left the guard behind.

CHAPTER 31

M
oonlight dappled across the horse's sleek haircoat as they galloped through the forest, the hazy filtered beams of white cutting a pattern in time with the thick clopping of hooves on soil. Amid the light that flickered across his eyes in the otherwise darkened wood, Quade rode on, the only sound that of his breath and Shadduk's hooves, the horse's breath, his own panicked gasps. Darkness enveloped them in a sudden wave as they entered a grove. Branches of the forest grew low here, grew in a tangled mass of leaves and sticks along the low tunneling of this dense thicket, and Quade flattened along the sturdy neck of his steed, pressed his cheek against the hot flesh of the horse to keep from being injured by the low hanging branches, and clutched the reins to keep his balance. He dare not look up, had to trust that the horse would know the course he meant to follow through this thick patch of timber and out on the other side of the wood, over the hills and perhaps find some way to salvation. The galloping sound was now louder in his ears, so close to the source, so close to what created this rhythm of escape. In the dim light he watched the ground as it kicked up behind the thundering hooves, the mulch and the leaves, the soil and the moss. The slightest hesitation in Shadduk's gait, and Quade risked a look up to see the end of the thicket, the bright light of the moons shining full through the strong pillars of the forest, flickering like a pattern, his heartbeat, the horse's hooves, his labored breath, the breath of the horse that ran beneath him.

They rode into a clearing in the density of the trees where the path widened, and Quade slowed the stallion to a stop so he could take a look around. They'd been running for a long stretch and Shadduk needed a rest so Quade took a moment to think about what was going on. What had happened to the Keystone? He felt the lararium that hummed against his chest, reached into his pocket and held it in his hand. Within the crystal orb a battle seemed to rage, the churning darkness of the SanFear teeming amid a glowing light, a light so pure and so powerful that Quade hesitated to guess at what it might be. What had this thing done? Had it killed Aushlin? Extracted the SanFear, yes; that much Quade could see. But extracted… what else? He had to get back to P'cadia, find out what the Avè could do to help him. Quade tucked the orb back into his pocket and tried to judge where he was. He didn't know this area of the woods, had never any reason to travel so deeply in the forest, and he didn't know exactly what he should do or how he should go about getting to his ship. The unfamiliar paths in the woods combined with the darkness had made him lose his way, and he wasn't even sure which way led to Sigh City at this point. He felt a stirring on the air, felt the danger of being hunted. Aazrio was still in pursuit. He wasn't close, but he was close enough to track Quade's path so he turned the horse toward what he thought was south and off they galloped again.

When he hurdled over a dry rock bed and came to land on the other side, Shadduk let out a painful cry as he landed and stumbled ahead, guarding one leg. He whinnied again as he struggled, then reared up, nearly losing his footing as his right front hoof hit the soil. Quade barely kept from being thrown off as he looked down to see an angry upshoot of thorny bush just behind them, and realized that the horse must've injured himself on one of the long, razor sharp barbs. He spoke sternly and reassuringly to the horse and it limped toward softer terrain, and Quade jumped from his back, patting the neck of the nervous animal as his wild eyes roved in the dim shadows of the filtered moonlight. He bent down to inspect the leg that Shadduk was holding up, refusing to stand on it, and saw a deep gash that ran along the swelling foreleg. Quade closed his eyes and sighed helplessly, guiltily, then again patted the horse on the neck.

"I'm sorry," he whispered, looking deeply into the horse's frightened eyes. "Oh, Shadduk, I'm sorry that I did this to you." Quade pulled off the ribbon that held back his hair and bent to wrap it around the bleeding wound, though it didn't do much to help and Shadduk was protesting in discomfort. The presence of Aazrio was still on the air, distant but still not lost. Quade lifted the reins over the horse's head, tied them to a nearby tree. "I have to go now, but don't worry… Aazrio will be along at any moment, I'm sure." He ran his hands along the horse's ears and mane, and when he went to walk away Shadduk tried to follow him, but whinnied from the pain. Quade looked over his shoulder, put up one hand and covered his lips with the other, and then began to run.

Trina held her father's head cradled in the crook of her arm and glanced up in time to see the Aazrio that had led her back into the castle merge with the one that had been standing guard over her father when she'd ran into the room. She turned away from that phenomenon; her mind could only process so much at a time, and it was all she could do to keep from losing her mind from fear and confusion at what she'd just seen.

"What happened, Aazrio?" She stared at her father's peaceful face, reached to twine the fingers of his hand with hers. He was warm, felt alive. But somehow, she felt that something was missing. "This was no act of nature or the gods. What caused this?"

"I don't know Kitrina. I'm searching for an answer this very moment as I also stand here with you."

"Do something, Aazrio." Her voice began to tremble. "Use your powers, whatever needs to be done!"

"I cannot, Daughter Keystone."

"You cannot? Why?"

"It is beyond my power, what has happened. I laid my hands upon the Keystone and sensed nothing that could be healed."

"What do you mean?"

"I mean that whatever happened has done damage beyond my scope of healing, Kitrina. Were there a broken bone or a wound to the flesh I could restore it. But what seems to have occurred… is a thing I've never before known."

"Call the clerics." Trina looked up to see her maiden, Juliette, and several of the other castle staff standing in the doorway anxiously. "Call the best healers in the kingdom. Call them all! And Juliette, bring in pots of jasmine." Trina looked up to Aazrio, her eyes glistening as she stroked her father's hair. "The scent of its blooms have medicinal properties."

There was silence for a moment as Trina leaned down to her father's ear, whispered words of love and devotion to him that were meant to be heard by no one else. When she raised her head again and looked to the guard her face was streaked with tears and her voice was no more than a weak murmur.

"He breathes, Aazrio," Trina reached toward Aazrio and he offered his hand, which she pulled toward the Keystone's chest. "I can feel his heart beating, his chest rising with life and with breath. But something is wrong…so wrong."

Aazrio pulled his hand away from the Keystone and rested it on Trina's shoulder. "I've put the entire planet on lockdown, Kitrina. If a person in the kingdom is responsible for this, they will not leave the planet, nor will anyone be allowed on. All travel is completely at a halt."

Other books

Sex and the City by Candace Bushnell
The Baby Track by Barbara Boswell
Pariah by J. R. Roberts
Arranged by Catherine McKenzie
The Hawk by Peter Smalley
The Trouble with Demons by Lisa Shearin