indigo court 05.5 - night shivers (2 page)

BOOK: indigo court 05.5 - night shivers
8.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Check nodded. As usual, I was forced to retreat to the top of the cliff, away from the length of ice that stretched out to form a natural pier. Posts had been frozen into it, with strong ropes to tie down the ships as they eased into the harbor.

As I struggled to see what they were doing, the ship kept its heading: straight at the ice.

My men hesitated at first, then began to back away. Then, as the galleon lurched into port, they turned to run. The ship rammed itself into the edge of the floe. As the two forces met, the scream of wood against ice was excruciating. The ship shrieked, the wood splintering like toothpicks, as the ice—hundreds of meters deep—won the battle, driving like a wedge into the hull of the boat. The destruction echoed around us as the ship shuddered to a halt and then the water began to flow in through the holes in the hull.

My men sprang into action, racing across the ice as the boat began to flounder. Three of them—owl shifters—transformed and flew up to the deck, shifting back as they landed. It was easier and safer than scaling the ropes, which were swinging from the sides of the hull.

I watched, waiting. We had to get the Sidhe who were aboard safely off the ship. Some were Cambyra—the Shifting Fae. Others were the Sidhe of the Old World, but they were
all
our kinsmen. Fretting, I planned out what we would need. Blankets, food, medical care…but until I knew how many reserves we would need, all I could do was wait and hope that we got everyone off. That nobody would be dragged to the bottom as the ship slowly sank.

The great ship moaned and keened, listing to her starboard side. I tried not to hold my breath, tried not to imagine my men in there, trapped as debris flew every which way. Time passed—I didn’t know how long, but finally, the men who went aboard were back at the rails. Another few moments and they took to the air in owl form again, soon landing near us. As they shifted back, one of them—Brazen—stepped forward, bowing low.

“Your Majesty, I regret to inform you that we found no signs of life on board.”

I stared at him. “Everyone is
dead
? But how? The ship just hit the ice—surely that couldn’t have killed everyone.” It didn’t make sense. The jolt could have easily knocked some off their feet to maybe hit their heads or break arms and legs, but otherwise…

But Brazen shook his head. “No, Your Majesty. That’s not what I meant. There are
no signs of life on board
. There’s nobody aboard that ship.” He looked just as confused as I felt.

I craned my neck, staring at the shuddering ship. It was starting to list badly. “Are you sure you looked through every deck?” The thought of people trapped, sucked down into the icy depths of the Crashing Sea, made my blood run slow, made the cold suddenly seem more terrifying. I loved the snow and ice and barren fields—they had become my home, but the waters were deadly, even for those of us who lived in the perpetual twilight.

“Yes, we looked in every room. My men are fast and thorough. We would leave no creature behind, Your Majesty. Truly, there are supposed to be over two hundred people aboard that ship. There’s nary a one. There are signs of their existence—the ship has food and items aboard. I found the captain’s quarters, and one of our men—there he is.” He pointed to the ship, where a man emerged to the light. “He stayed to gather what he could. I will go help him now.”

As Grieve and I watched, Brazen and another member of the guard managed to catch hold of one of the ropes and hold it taut, allowing the guard still aboard to tie a bundle to it and send it sliding to the icy shore. Then he, too, shifted and flew out of the boat.

Brazen brought the sack of goods to us immediately. I noticed he was cradling something in his arm.

“What’s that?”

“It’s a cat, Your Majesty. A snow lynx kit.” He held it out, and I looked at the baby lynx. It let out a loud mew, one that said,
“I’m hungry, feed me”
or, perhaps,
“Where’s my mother?”

“Only one on board?” I met his eyes.

“I don’t know, but Honor might be able to tell us when he gets here.” Brazen took the cat from me, though I lingered over its fur. The guard searched through the bag until he came up with a haunch of meat. He tore off bits and pressed them to the young cat’s mouth, who eagerly gobbled them up.

Honor landed near us, then transformed back, coming to one knee at my side. “Your Majesty. I brought what I could find in the captain’s quarters. The baby lynx was the only creature we found alive on that ship. There was evidence that there were more—at least a litter—but they were nowhere in sight.”

I nodded, thinking the kit must have been part of a litter. It was too young to be on its own. “But the Sidhe? All two hundred people coming to join our realms?”

“No sign of them. Nothing but the possessions they brought aboard the boat. No bodies, no skeletons… Nothing to show anybody was piloting the ship at all.”

A chill raced through me. Something was dreadfully wrong.

At that moment, a terrible screech sounded—the shriek of breaking wood—as the ice forced its way into the boat, fracturing still more of the wounded hull. I turned, watching the boat begin to keel.

Shaking my head, I forced myself to turn away. “Until we know what happened, I want guards watching over this area. Make certain you set a decent-sized force. We don’t want a small scouting party caught unawares. Meanwhile, the lynx…” I looked down at the little kit. Soft, with a snowy coat spotted with black, the cat was beautiful. I leaned down and it gave me a pathetic roar. “I think…you will join His Lordship and me in our chambers. Make certain…” I motioned for Brazen to flip the kit over. I brushed through the fur, then smiled softly. “Make certain this
little girl
is warm and given what she needs and kept calm and happy. If Druise doesn’t have the time to take care of her for me, find someone trustworthy. In the meanwhile, we head back to the Barrow. This does not bode well, not in any sense. We have to send word to the Marburry Barrow that their passengers have vanished, and we must alert the Golden Isle that all aboard appear to have been lost somewhere in the mists.”

And with that, I turned, my back to the water, as the great ship listed even further. I didn’t have the heart to watch it sink.

 

We reached the Barrow before nightfall, running at full speed over the snow. I was almost as fast as the others now—those born full Cambyra Fae. My initiation into the queenship had seen to that. We ran on top of the ice and snow, leaving no tracks, a silent, swift force gliding by as the afternoon lengthened into dusk.

Once I had taken the throne as Queen of the Snow and Ice, I became almost immune to the cold. And those who made their life with me in this realm also remained untouched by the deep chill. But that didn’t mean that a warm hearth wasn’t welcome, even though that warmth was a pale shadow of the fires that I had once known.

This entire first year had been a learning experience, and I was frankly surprised that I had made it through with my sanity. There had been so much to learn—and to unlearn.

Druise, my lady’s maid, was waiting for me, and she bundled me into a bath right away. We ate dinner late as a matter of course, so she had a snack of my favorite cake ready for me and set the plate on a side table as I gratefully sank into the steaming water. Even though the cold didn’t bother me much, the heat from the water seeped into my muscles, easing the knots that had built up during the day. The scent of lilac rose to soothe my senses.

“Where are the new members of the Court, Your Majesty? Did they not come back with you?”

Druise scrubbed my back, careful to avoid wetting my hair so I wouldn’t have to dry it before eating. There were so many protocols and rules for decorum that I could barely remember them all. A number of them still grated on me, but I followed them, accepting their presence for what they were: long-standing traditions that I was expected to keep up.

A few things I had managed to have changed. Even those had been hard fought for.

My dress, for example. I refused to wear the heavy, bulky gowns unless it was an official court function. Instead, I wore jeans, though I gave in and wore a corset top with them. That is, except for days like today, when I had been out on a mission. And in a controversial move, I had banned fish from the Eldburry Barrow. I had a severe allergy, so severe I had to carry EpiPens. Anaphylactic to fish and shellfish, because of the danger of assassination via someone triggering my allergy, I had banned both foods from the barrow. Fish was a staple out here in the realm of Snow and Ice, but too bad. If someone wanted to catch a trout and eat it, that was fine, but they could do it away from my home.

It had taken me some time to accept the very concept that someone might want to assassinate me. My cousin Rhiannon, the Queen of Rivers and Rushes—the Summer Queen—felt the same way. We had never expected our lives to work out the way they had. Hell, I hadn’t even expected to settle down.

Rhiannon and I were born on the same day, on the Summer Solstice. She greeted the world at daybreak before the sun hit its zenith. I made my appearance at midnight, after the sun entered the waning half of the year. We were fire and ice, amber and jet. And we had both discovered that our fathers had been Cambyra Fae—the Shifting Fae. Rhiannon was born into a snakeshifter clan, and I was
Uwilahsidhe
—an owl shifter. Our mothers were of the magic-born. And now, both of our mothers were dead.

We had been born to take the thrones, and take them we did, after a long, desperate battle against Myst, Queen of the Indigo Court. She had led her people—the Vampiric Fae—on a bloody rampage, determined to bring an unrelenting winter to the outer world, and she had almost succeeded, but we had managed to stop her. Our victory came at a great cost, including many lives, but Myst was dead now, and most of her people, also. A few slipped through the cracks and we hunted them down as best as we could, but with luck, the Indigo Court was nearly extinct. Except for Grieve and me. Grieve would always be part Indigo Court—Myst had turned him. And I—I had been her daughter lifetimes back and my soul still bore the imprint. But we controlled our predatory impulses.

I leaned back in the tub, closing my eyes. “No, Druise, they are not coming.”

Druise, a sloe-eyed doe shifter, sounded puzzled. “Is something wrong, Your Majesty?”

I let her brush my hair as I relaxed, the strokes of the brush easing some of the tension that had built up in my scalp. “To be honest, we don’t know what happened. The ship came into port, then hit the edge of the ice floe and began to take on water. Our men went aboard, but…all they found was the lynx.”

“She’s adorable, Your Majesty. I can take care of her for you—and if need be, I know someone very good with animals who can watch her when I can’t.” Druise smiled. “I have her tucked in my own room right now, in a bed with a blanket and her food and water.”

“Good. I was hoping you would like her. There’s something special about her, Druise. You see, she was the only one aboard the ship. There has to be some reason that everybody else vanished but her. We couldn’t even find a single rat. There was
nobody
else there. They all seem to have vanished. We’re trying to figure out what happened but for now, it’s a mystery. Don’t say anything. Not until we find the right way to tell people. There are some here who have relatives who were aboard, and we don’t want them panicking.”

“Of course, Your Majesty.”

When Druise finished bathing me, she toweled me off. While I was waiting for her to bring my dress, I brushed my hand across my stomach. I was inked—and each tattoo had a meaning and a life to it. In a life that seemed so long ago, my mother’s boyfriend Dane had given me my three tattoos before Krystal decided he was trying to fuck around with me, which he wasn’t. But she used every excuse in the world to keep anybody from getting close and that was enough for her to drag us off again, back onto the road. A week later, Dane was dead at the hands of an angry drug pusher.

But his art was brilliant. First, he had given me the belladonna faerie. She peeked out from behind a patch of the flowers on my left breast, shy and yet full of color and joy. The belladonna faerie was connected with another, very short lifetime, I had discovered.

Second, banding both upper arms were matching tattoos of a moon, pierced with a dagger, a stark black work. Owls circled over the moon. That tattoo marked yet another part of my lineage I didn’t learn about till I returned to New Forest, WA, to help my aunt and cousin.

Finally, Dane had inked my wolf. The wolf’s face stared out at the world from right above my bellybutton, vine work in green, with silver roses and purple skulls sprawling behind him. The vines started on my left thigh, working up across my stomach behind the wolf, then coiling toward the right side of my rib cage. The wolf was my link to Grieve and he had watched over me all of my life, staring out through the wolf’s eyes. I lightly pressed my hand against the wolf. Grieve and I were together at last—and that was as it should be.

Druise carried in a formal gown suitable for the evening. Rhiannon and Chatter would be joining us tonight, guests in our frosty realm, and I needed to appear in finery due to the fact that they were the Queen and King of Summer. Cousins we might be, but we were all royalty at this point.

The gown was stunning. Blue as ice, it had an empire waistline, flowing down in layers to kiss the floor. Heavily beaded, the color matched the night sky, the beads shimmering like ice under the soft flicker of the lights.

I glanced up at the lanterns. The Barrow was illuminated by lights containing young Ice Elementals, who gave off a pale blue glow. In the Marburry Barrow, they lit their halls with Fire Elementals. The younglings were not pressed into service, but had volunteered. This gave them time to safely rest and gather strength as they grew into their power.

I slipped on the silver slippers that went with the dress and let Druise sweep my hair back, as she braided a small strand and used it to wrap the rest of my hair into a ponytail. Jet black, my hair was the opposite of Rhiannon’s. My eyes had been green at birth, but during my initiation they had changed and now were frost-covered blue. Rhiannon’s hair was brilliant red. Her eyes had shifted from hazel to gold when she had taken the Summer throne.

Other books

The Gingerbread Bump-Off by Livia J. Washburn
Taxi Delivery by Brooke Williams
Until We Meet Again by Margaret Thornton
On Set by London, Billy
Blest by Blaise Lucey
Through the Veil by Lacey Thorn
The Duke's Bride by Teresa McCarthy
Immaculate Reception by Jerrilyn Farmer
Beautifully Unnatural: A Young Adult Paranormal Boxed Set by Amy Miles, Susan Hatler, Veronica Blade, Ciara Knight
Deadly Little Lessons by Laurie Faria Stolarz