The Child Prince (The Artifactor) (42 page)

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Authors: Honor Raconteur

Tags: #Mystery, #Young Adult, #Magic, #YA, #multiple pov, #Raconteur House, #Artifactor, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Honor Raconteur, #female protagonist

BOOK: The Child Prince (The Artifactor)
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With the morning’s training over with, Bellomi had every intention to spend the rest of the day with Hana. Training with Axelrad was important, he knew that, but he didn’t like leaving Hana alone to do all of the research herself, and he didn’t like being so far from her when she was drawing the wrong sort of attention from the government. If something happened, he wanted to be there to get her clear of trouble.

He did pause long enough to wash off the worst of the stink and sweat, change clothes, and eat a quick bite of breakfast. No sense going to spend the rest of the day in the library on an empty stomach. But after that, he slipped on both swords and headed for the front door.

On the way, he crossed paths with Sevana, who had a very complicated looking device of gears and levers strapped to her head. It looked beyond weird and he had no idea by looking at it what it had been designed to do. In fact, he didn’t even think it safe to ask. She paused long enough to give him a look and say, “And where are you going alone?”

“I’m not,” he assured her, raising his hands in a placating manner. Every person in this mountain had made it very clear to him that he should
not
be venturing out of Big by himself anymore. Especially after the fiasco of almost being caught in the palace with Axelrad. He was too prime a target for the Council, now that he actually looked like a young adult. They could use him as the perfect puppet king. As much as it grated, he saw sense in their warnings, and grudgingly bowed to necessity. “I’m meeting Hana at the library.”

“Hmmm. Well, don’t get caught.”

Apparently she didn’t worry about what would happen if he got to the library and found guards there. But then, with all of the training he’d been undergoing, no mere guard would be able to best him, if it came down to a fight. Shrugging, he kept going, stepping outside into the warm sunshine. He hadn’t made it more than two steps when Morgan came up the hillside at a quick lope, the fastest pace a horse could do on this steep incline.

He reigned to an abrupt stop in front of Bellomi, the horse dancing in place, patches of sweat staining his coat. Wherever Morgan had come from, he’d rode hard to get here, and the worry on the man’s face said it wasn’t good news.

“Bel. It’s happened. This morning the Royal Guard came and arrested Hana.”

Bellomi stared at Morgan, rooted to the spot, absolutely
sure
that he didn’t hear the other man right. “…Say that one more time.”

“Hana’s been captured by the Royal Guard,” Morgan repeated grimly, hands flexing at his sides. “I just saw her dragged off in manacles and they were headed straight for the palace. From what I heard, she’s been accused of ‘treasonous activity and illegal information gathering.’ My guess? Someone in the higher ups noticed that she was asking for some rather sensitive information.”

His eyes closed in fatalistic understanding. He’d known that asking her to research would bring unwanted attention to her, but he’d never thought that the information she found would be so sensitive that it would actually land her in a dungeon! “You said they just dragged her off? As in, how long ago exactly?”

“Hmm, about two hours? It took me that long to get the full story and make it up here.”

“Good. Then I can catch up.” Bellomi patted the stone wall nearest to him and requested, “Big, make a room for Hana. I’m bringing her straight back here. Morgan, where can I get my hands on a fast horse quickly?”

“Take mine,” Morgan offered with a crooked smile, already dismounting.

“Bless you.” Bellomi grasped the man’s shoulder in thanks before stepping past, taking the reins from his hand.

“Shouldn’t someone go with you?” Morgan asked him, glancing back at the front door.

“I’ll be fine!” he responded, not even slowing his pace. He gathered up the reins and quickly swung himself on board. It’d been a while since he’d ridden a horse, and it felt especially odd with this tall body, but he and Morgan were of a similar height now and he didn’t need to get back down and readjust the stirrups, thankfully.

The stallion, sensing his impatience, danced a bit in place as he found his seat. But he barely had the horse turned about when he spotted Baby laying casually across the path. “Baby, move! I have to go.”

Baby cocked an ear, tail twitching, but didn’t flinch.

“Hana’s in trouble, I have to go
now
,” he insisted, mentally cursing Baby’s habit of blocking pathways.

Baby let out a low growl, ears flattening.

He finally calmed himself enough to pay proper attention to the cat’s body language. “Oh. You want to go with me? Well, fine, but let’s go!”

With an easy bound, the cat found his feet and started racing down the trail.

Bellomi spurred the horse into motion, going down the steep trail at a faster pace than he should have. It would take another five minutes to get down from Big, but then he would have to make a choice. There were exactly three routes to get to Lockbright Palace from here. One he could instantly discount, as it would take getting aboard a riverboat and going around by sea to Lavella Harbor. The palace guard only got on a boat if it was a life or death situation. No, they would stay on horseback for this trip. So he had a choice of one of two highways. Either the Chastain Highway that curved around the Sanat Forest and wound its way eastward, or the Florane Highway that actually went through the forest. Which one? Florane was shorter, but tended to take longer because of its winding nature. Chastain was the longer path, but it took almost the same amount of time as Florane and overall was easier to travel.

And why
, he growled to himself in frustration,
didn’t I ask Morgan which path they took before bolting out of there?!

Alright, calm down and think about it
. Anyone in town would know of Hana’s arrest by this point and taken notice of it. So if he stopped by briefly in Milby and asked, someone was bound to know which highway the guard took. Both highways intersected at Milby anyway, so he wouldn’t be losing any ground by doing this.

He half-stood in the stirrups, matching the rocking gate of the horse as they fairly flew across the flat meadow. Baby bounded along at his side, keeping up admirably with his mad sprint. But his plan to go into town fell away when he saw a man standing at the corner of the highway, both arms over his head and waving frantically. Bellomi reined in hard, dragging the horse almost onto his haunches as they skid to a stop over the slick cobblestone of the road.

“Sir!” he exclaimed, beyond surprised to see Hana’s father waiting for him.

“Prince Bellomi,” Conli responded frantically, grabbing onto his leg with an iron grip, expression pleading. “My daughter told me who you are. Please,
please
go after her!”

He set aside the worry of having his identity known roughly aside. There would be time to worry about that later. “I intend to,” he assured him quickly. “But I need to know which road they took.”

“Florane.”

Good. That would be the easier road to ambush them on. “I’ll get her back, I promise you. But I won’t bring her back to Milby, not until this is all over.” He felt it only fair to warn the man.

“Just send word when she’s safe, and where she is.” He managed a strained smile.

“I will,” Bellomi promised. Kneeing the horse’s side, he brought him around and kicked him back into motion. They sped along the highway in a sharp, staccato sound of metal hooves striking hard cobblestone, the cacophony almost deafening in his ears.

Alright, he knew which way and the other party couldn’t have much of a head start on him. He had been going full speed this entire time—they wouldn’t be going at a particularly fast pace. Why should they? No one would be expecting pursuit. It gave him a slight edge, and he needed it.

Axelrad had taught him about situations like this, once. He said that any rescue operation had three parts to it. The first part, obviously, was catching up with the enemy. The second part was safely rescuing the hostage. But the third part was the trickiest unless well planned: getting
away
. Rescuing your hostage from the captors without a good plan on how to escape would just land both of you in trouble.

Bellomi knew he could enact the first stage without trouble. The problem would be part two and three, especially since he didn’t have time to really plan this and was doing everything on the fly. So how could he rescue her safely and get away just as safely without landing them both in even worse trouble? Just diving into their camp, snatching her up, and running off with her seemed…a particularly bad plan.

The highway turned at this point, heading deep into the heart of the Sanat Forest. The trees were so old here, so thick, that it blocked most of the sunlight above and it felt as if he had suddenly plunged into twilight. Sound also echoed here, bouncing between the trees, so that the sound of his pursuit became even louder. Cursing (he didn’t want to alert his prey that someone was following them), he left the paving stones and started riding on the hard packed dirt alongside instead, which muffled the sound considerably. Still anxious about how it sounded, he also slowed his pace to a more sedate gallop instead of a full out run. He probably needed to do that anyway. The horse couldn’t keep up that frantic pace forever, and he needed enough stamina to get them back to Big after this as well.

Think, think, think!
He ordered himself.
What kind of distraction can I arrange quickly that will keep them from following us?

A mountain lion, perhaps? But no, that would put Baby in danger. The cat could handle himself, certainly, but if Sevana heard the details of this mad rescue later, she’d kill Bellomi herself for putting her precious cat at risk. A normal guard squad had six men in it and that would be too much to ask Baby to handle on his own.

Bellomi absolutely could not step in and order them to stand down as Prince of Windamere. That would throw all of his father’s plans into disarray and it would be tantamount to putting a bounty on his own head as well. If the Council learned he was alive, and mostly curse free, they’d send assassins for him. Or they’d do something even worse, and kidnap him to use as a puppet king. No, better not do that either.

What creatures of the forest or aspects of Sanat could he use to his advantage? He’d been reading up on mythical beings ever since Sevana had taken him in, but he didn’t think anything really chose to live in Sanat. The presence of humans was too strong here. The only thing that was known to stop here, during the migratory season, were the fire and water dragons…dragons. Of course. The water dragons were beginning their northward migration. He’d seen them just last night, which meant they were probably still here foraging for food before going onward.

“Baby!” he called to the cat still running at his side. “Is there a spring or stream nearby? Some place that the dragons like to use to hide their eggs while they hunt!”

The cat’s ears went flat against his head.

“I know, I know, I’m not intending to keep it. But if we put it in their camp, wouldn’t it be the perfect distraction?”

Baby’s head cocked slightly as he considered this. Then his lips drew back in an evil smile, baring his fangs. Apparently he approved of the plan. With a hiss, the cat bounded ahead, his stride lengthening as he ran forward, before abruptly diving into the forest.

Bellomi followed him, almost instantly forced to slow his pace as the horse struggled to wind its way through all of the trees and over the enormous roots sticking up out of the ground. He almost lost Baby twice, as the cat maneuvered nimbly through the obstacles, but fortunately it wasn’t much of a distance before his guide abruptly stopped dead.

Reining in, Bellomi dropped from the saddle, tying the reigns to a nearby tree limb before slinking low to join Baby’s side. The cat hunched close to the ground, ears perked and nose lifted into the air.

The smell of a dragon had a distinctness to it that couldn’t be mistaken for anything else. Bellomi had been exposed to it twice, now, and he instantly recognized it. It smelled of smoke, and fire, and leather. A dragon had been here, alright. Recently. But how recently? Bellomi didn’t fancy another encounter with an irate mother. At least, not yet. He peeled his eyes and looked all around.

The little clearing in front of him didn’t look like much. A mound of rocks covered with moss stood to one side, barely tall enough to attract a dragon’s attention, and from its depth a clear stream of water trickled into a small pool below. It looked to be a pretty place, and it would certainly be the perfect place to hide an egg for a short amount of time. In fact, speaking of…yes, that glimmer of dark blue near the edge of the water seemed to be the very thing Bellomi wanted.

Crouching lower he whispered to Baby, “Is the mother anywhere nearby?”

Baby took in another deep breath, testing the air, but apparently deemed it safe enough as he nudged Bellomi forward with his nose. Not losing any time, Bellomi darted forward, plunging his hands into the icy coldness of the water, and pulled the crystal egg sharply free. Then he sprinted back to the horse, barely remembering to untie the reins before slinging himself on board.

The dragon might not be in the immediate vicinity, but that did not guarantee that she would be gone long. And he still hadn’t caught up to the guardsmen yet. He needed to move
quickly
or else he’d have two problems to deal with, one of which blew fire.

A wet egg in the crook of one arm, reins in the other hand, he whirled the horse around and plunged back toward the highway. Alright. He had a good diversion planned. Now all he had to do was catch up, find a way to sneak the egg into their possession, and wait for an irate dragon to show up.

Odd. When he’d first thought of this method, it’d sounded insanely easy. So why did it all of a sudden sound insanely hard? If he missed the right timing on this, he’d have a very angry fire-breathing mother in his lap instead of in
theirs
.

Well, too late now. He had the egg in hand, which rather committed him to the whole venture. He hunkered down more in the saddle, leaning forward, and kept the pace up. Baby kept up easily, but Bellomi worried about him. Cougars were good at short sprints, not long chases like this. He didn’t know how long the cat could keep this pace up.

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