Read The Etsey Series 1: The Seventh Veil Online

Authors: Heidi Cullinan

Tags: #LGBT Fantasy

The Etsey Series 1: The Seventh Veil (5 page)

BOOK: The Etsey Series 1: The Seventh Veil
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“What have you done?” Charles whispered.
What have I done?

“Nothing more than I told you in our compact,” Smith replied. “You have given me some of your power, and I in turn have taken you back to the Goddess. It’s regrettable that you will no longer find her there when you visit the dream, but that is her doing, not mine. Which reminds me. What did you see, pet, when she changed? What form did she take? I want to have an appropriate reception ready.”

I won’t tell you
! But even as he thought this, Charles felt his burned wrist begin to ache. He shut his eyes as the alchemist’s command forced him to speak. “It wasn’t clear,” he said, his voice dull and monotone. “I saw so many things. Shadows. Monsters. White. Something white and bright and shining. I saw—” A vision flashed clear and sharp against his mind, but when he tried to speak, it vanished and another took its place. “Water. I see moors and forests together in a place they should not be, and I see water. Dark, terrible water. And ancient gray stones.” His head dipped from the weight of the vision. “I see my brother. I see Madeline Elliott. I see Stephen, and a blonde girl.” The images pulled harder and harder, making his head ache. “I see one I do not know. Dark-skinned, but not as dark as Tansia. He is foreign, not of Etsey… I see darkness. A demon. Demons—demons everywhere, hiding, lurking, waiting—”

I see a veil, torn apart.

There are seven. There are seven veils of my Goddess.

In the water, I will find the first.

The vision closed over his head, then pulled back and away. The spell lifted and was gone. Charles sank back, cold and empty, to the floor. The visions he had seen slipped like water from his mind.

Smith clapped his hands. “I knew it! It is the curse of the Houses! It is the legend of the ghosts! And so by her coming, the others will also! I won’t have to do a thing. They will all come of their own accord, drawn by magic more powerful than the earth itself! It is everything I dreamed and more! And it is mine! All of it, all of it mine! Let them laugh at me now, those bastards who kicked me out and called me a fool! Let them laugh, now that I will harness the most potent power in the universe!” He bent down, laughing, and surprised Charles by pressing a kiss against his forehead. “Oh, my precious, precious pet. You have pleased me very much. So much, in fact, that I believe I will give you a special treat. I will show you what sex magic can truly do.” He smacked Charles roughly on the bottom. “Stand and brace yourself against the edge of the table.”

Charles was so weak he didn’t think he could stand, but there was an edge of command in Smith’s words, and he found himself rising even though he did not mean to, complying in a daze. He snapped out of it, though, as he saw Smith approaching him with something long and leaden and frightening in his hand. It was about seven inches long, more than two inches thick, studded with rough-looking bumps, colored black as night. Charles’s mind searched wildly for an alternative purpose for the object, but there was no getting around the fact that it was blatantly phallic. And there was something else about it too—something
wrong.

Magic. It is magic
. He didn’t know how he knew, but suddenly he did, and he was terrified.

Smith seemed pleased. “Impressive, isn’t it? But I promise you’ll find it tame in time.” Charles began to sputter, and Smith held up a hand to silence him. “Sex magic can be painful, yes, pet. But I will teach you to find pleasure in it as well.”

“Please,” Charles whispered. He couldn’t take his eyes off that hideous phallus. “Please—please, don’t!”

Smith gestured to the table. “Brace yourself against the edge there and bend over, legs spread wide.”

Driven by the force of the spell, Charles did as he was told, gripping the edge of the table as he prepared himself for Smith. It felt unreal. It was so mad it shouldn’t be able to be real, and yet it was. How the blazes had this happened? How had he come to this?

Smith brought out a small pot and brush and began painting on Charles’s skin. “You will feel a certain tightness this first time. It will not be like anything you have ever experienced, and at first you may find it somewhat unpleasant. That will, sadly, affect my ability to draw power out of you. But we will bear through it together, and soon it will be heady for the both of us.”

He set the pot of paint aside and spread Charles’s cheeks with his hands, probing him lightly with his finger.

Charles tensed, then froze as he felt a soft brush of air against his face, lingering on his lips.

“Be brave,”
he heard the Goddess whisper in his mind.

“What is happening?”
Charles whispered back, swallowing tears.
“Why did you appear to me? What does this madman want from me?”

“Things he should not be taking,”
she whispered back.
“You will suffer much at his hands for a time. But take heart. I am coming to you soon.”

Charles felt Smith’s hands against the sides of his hips, nudging him wider. He drew in a shaking breath and lifted his head, staring ahead at the wall.
“Why would you come to me?”

The Goddess appeared before him and touched Charles’s cheek, looking at him with tenderness. He knew, somehow, that he alone could see her.

“Beloved, search your heart, and you will know the answer.”

He watched her start to fade, watched the veils fall back into place, and he wanted to sob.
“Don’t go!”
He lifted one hand off the table to reach for her.
“Don’t go! Don’t leave me! Don’t leave me!”

“Don’t leave me!” Charles cried aloud, reaching for the place where she had been, his eyes stinging with tears.

Then Charles felt the cold tip of the phallus nudging the back of him. He tried to reach for the Goddess once more in his mind, but then Smith pushed the phallus roughly inside him, and all Charles could do was scream.

But as the screams took him away, as his mind left his body and found safety in the darkness, he knew quiet.

Six. When the veils came down on the Goddess, there were not seven. There were only six.

And as the alchemist raped his body and his soul, Charles wondered, dizzily, what had happened to the other one.

Chapter Two

 

pari

air

 

Air is the second element of creation.

Air is the power of the wind and of the mind. Air is invisible,

but it can cut like knives.

Air carries, and when it is strong enough, it shapes.

 

On the same night that Charles submitted to the alchemist, in the faraway land of Catal, his brother Jonathan was screaming too.

Gentle hands pressed a stick into his mouth, and someone urged him in a low voice and foreign tongue to stay quiet, to bite down, to remember to breathe, to hold fast and fight. Jonathan didn’t have anything left to fight with, however. He had no idea what exactly he was fighting for at this point. His neck was on fire, and he would swear he was drowning, possibly in his own blood. His left thigh and groin were wet with pus and blood, his nerves were raw, and his muscles were weak from tensing against the pain. In the distance, he heard the monks shouting angrily. If the fever didn’t take him, Jonathan knew the Cloister would.

But through it all, the voice stayed with Jonathan, soothing him.


Daghata, mira
.” A hand closed over Jonathan’s own; he gripped it tightly, using it as his lifeline as he descended once more into the abyss.

He dreamed of demons and darkness, of hot claws that ripped over and over again at his flesh. His father loomed over him, eyes rolling in his head and spittle forming at the edges of his mouth as he laughed.

“Time to finish it, boy.” Drool dripped down Neil Perry’s chin. “Time to come back and finish it once and for all. Come home, boy. Come home.”

“No!” Jonathan tried to shout, but his father stepped on his throat, cutting off his air.
No, I won’t! I won’t
! he screamed inside. His father laughed and placed the sword in Jonathan’s hand, and the demon rose within him, taking over his body, crowding out his mind—

Sweating and shouting with a throat that felt like fire, Jonathan woke from his nightmare and found himself in the small, cramped compartment of a merchant ship. For a moment, he feared he was captured or, worse, lost. But then his equerry appeared beside the hammock and stroked his face, and Jonathan relaxed.

“Hush, mira.” Timothy’s olive brown face was lined with worry as he dipped a cloth in a bowl of water and held it to Jonathan’s lips for him to suck. “You are very ill. Do not try to speak.”

Jonathan tried to draw on the bitter cloth, but in the end Timothy had to tip Jonathan’s head back and squeeze the water directly into his mouth. His throat burned where the knife had cut into it, and when he coughed, he felt blood seep into the bandage wrapped around his neck. His leg throbbed, and in the center of the wound, he felt something cold and dark and hard. Jonathan shivered, for he knew what that something was. When it moved, Jonathan slid back into the darkness, where the nightmares and the fire waited for him.

This has to end
. He crouched tighter into the safe space inside his mind.
I have to find a way to end this.

He drifted into the darkness again, so deeply this time that he did not dream at all, only floated in blissful nothingness.

When he drifted to the surface once more, he was no longer on the ship; he was in a bright, sunny room. It was sparsely furnished, but there was something alarming about the place. It was all wrong, even for an officer’s quarters. It was the wrong wood, to start—it was too hard for Catal and too dark. The ceiling slope was too steep, and the windows were too small, fitted with shutters designed to keep out snow, not desert sun.

Timothy urged Jonathan back against the pillows. “Be still,” he said, speaking this time in Etsian. “We nearly lost you—again. Rest now.”

You can’t lose me, as well you know
. Jonathan wanted to snap at him, but then he saw the maid cross by the foot of the bed. Her hair was dark, but she had pale skin, not the brown complexion of those of the south, and she wore a mobcap and full white apron. No one anywhere on the Continent dressed this way.

Jonathan was beginning to feel ill, and for the first time in a long time, he was not ill from his physical afflictions. “Where am I?” he asked in Catalian.
Tell me we are still at the war. Tell me we are still in Catal, in your war-torn country, Timothy, where I will be safe. Do not tell me I am where I am beginning to fear I am.

Timothy shook his head. “You must lie still.”

Jonathan closed his hand weakly over the front of Timothy’s shirt. “
Where am I
?”

“Etsey. We are at your town apartment in Boone.” When Jonathan swore and tried to rise, then coughed from the effort, Timothy eased him back down onto the pillows again. “I had no choice. When the major general saw you, he discharged you on the spot and ordered you home. I think he assumed you would be coming home in a casket, but I didn’t know how to explain otherwise. They just packed us both on a ship and sent us off. If you hadn’t made me your equerry, I don’t think I’d have been allowed along.”

“Home.”
Etsey
. Jonathan shut his eyes against a wave of nausea.
How long have I been here
? He had no concept, and the thought made him cold. The journey from the southern coast of Catal took seven days under favorable conditions—if they had run into blockades or storms, it could have been weeks. He reached up and touched his neck, but there was no wound, only an angry scar tender to his touch. There weren’t even any stitches left.
More than a month, then
. Had he been on the ship for a month? It was doubtful. Likely he had been here for some time.

How long? How much ground has it already gained?

“I can’t stay,” Jonathan rasped in Etsian. “I cannot stay in Etsey.”

“There is nowhere else to go, mira.” Timothy dabbed at Jonathan’s forehead with a cool cloth. “Rest. We will discuss our next move when you are well again.”

I cannot rest
, Jonathan tried to say, but he couldn’t find the strength to speak.
I cannot stay in Etsey
. But he couldn’t move, let alone rise and leave. He lay helpless in the bed, clammy and cold, desperate to rise but unable even to keep his eyelids open. A wave of nausea swamped him; Jonathan heaved, then heaved again, and as Timothy shouted desperately for the servants, Jonathan slid back into unconsciousness.

This time he dreamed a new dream.

He was walking the moors, his sword at his side, reaching back with his thumb to rub across the golden circle on the pommel. He felt the power rushing inside him as he moved over the ridge and past the great tree, heading to the cottage at the edge of the woods.
She
was inside. He knew because he could feel her. He closed his hand over the medallion on his chest and smiled, his heart light just at the thought of seeing her again. He pushed his way through the roses hanging over the arbor, his gaze fixed on the door as he crossed her garden. But something was wrong. His heart ached for her, but something deeper inside him was rising, something dark. Something terrible. It didn’t ache. It hungered.

“Finish it. Finish it now. Finish her.”

The door opened, and Jonathan smiled and ran to take her in his arms. She smiled back and came out to meet him. But as she fell into his embrace, the darkness took control, pulling his sword from the scabbard and lifting it up high above his head. She saw the shadow fall and looked up, her smile fading. Jonathan leaned forward to kiss her, to tell her it was all right, but the darkness inside him moved faster, and he watched, helpless, as his own hand brought down the sword to cleave her in two—

Jonathan woke drenched in sweat. “Madeline!”

A figure stepped forward from the darkness, the dream still hanging over his mind like a veil over reality. He felt the hard lump in his leg shift; he felt what hid inside it slither across his skin, tightening, sending waves of pain through his body.

BOOK: The Etsey Series 1: The Seventh Veil
9.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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