Read i 0e57392105b539eb Online
Authors: Unknown
attended cut off, and the display trembled when he ducked to avoid a
flying saucepan.
“I said get the fuck out!” Ivy screamed in the background. “No, don’t
touch it!”
“Please, sir,” Lorcan pleaded, his dark hair tousled and his blue eyes
comically wide, “just come to the kitchens.” Then the vidscreen
disappeared.
“Your mate?” His father asked, not bothering to hide his amusement.
Resting his hands on his hips, Kai stared down at the floor and shook
his head. “My mate.”
“Relax, son,” his father advised, chuckling under his breath. “She
isn’t the first queen to erupt in this citadel, and I’m sure she won’t be the
last. Your mother is rather famous for some of her more…colorful
outbursts, mostly concerning you.”
He remembered a few of them. Once, he’d been injured during a
training session, just a small cut over his eyebrow, but he’d never seen
his mother so furious. He’d been only sixteen at the time, so very, very
long ago, but even now, his old trainer conveniently disappeared when
Avalindra Blackthorn visited the citadel.
“Until our next meeting.”
“I’ll accompany you,” his father insisted, still grinning. “I wouldn’t
want to miss this.”
Wishing to save time, instead of walking to the lower levels, Kai
simply closed his eyes and transported himself to the kitchens. Arriving
in the middle of the frenzied setting, he had just enough time to gather
his wits before an airborne spoon forced him to duck behind a counter.
Smashed fruits stained the walls, flour had been scattered from one
end of the room to the next, and all manner of cookware laid dented and
discarded on the floor. Even more perplexing was the two dozen or so
bekshin
huddled around Ivy’s feet, their high-pitched squeaks competing
in volume with his mate’s shouted threats.
“Stay back!” In one hand, she held a medium-sized frying pan, and
in the other, she cuddled one of the
bekshin
to her bosom. “I swear to the
stars that if you touch one of them, I’m going to go super nova on all of
your asses.”
“Nice of you to drop by.” Sion slipped behind the counter, greeting
Kai with a sardonic grin. His reddish hair stuck to his head, dripping wet
with what smelled like gravy. “She’s gone completely postal about those
damn piglets. She won’t listen to anyone.”
“The
bekshin
are a delicacy,” Elor interjected, appearing at Sion’s side
and startling him so badly it pulled a strangled curse from the shifter.
“The meat is quite unique, wonderfully flavorful.”
Sion shook his head. “Don’t let her hear you say that. She’s about two
seconds away from declaring the lot of them a protected species.”
While he didn’t understand why she cared so much, if it calmed his
mate and made her happy, Kai would pass the law himself. Raising his
hands in a peaceable gesture, he shuffled cautiously around the marbled
counter. He paused briefly when Ivy swung toward him, pointing the
pan at his face, but he didn’t retreat.
“Ivy, dove, it’s okay. Let me have the frying pan.”
“They’re going to eat them.”
“No, I won’t let that happen. No one will eat them.” He took another
step toward her, his hands still raised. “We’ll release them in the gardens
to chase the willowhips.”
“They’ll need somewhere to sleep.” Lowering the pan just an inch,
Ivy tilted her head to the side, rubbing her cheek against the runt in her
other hand. “And they’ll have to be fed.”
“Whatever you want, dove.”
She finally dropped the frying pan to the floor with a loud clang, and
her voice softened as she cooed to the little
bekshin
. “I don’t even know
what they eat.”
“Mostly hollygrass and insects. They’ll be happy in the gardens.”
Ivy watched him for a long time, searching his face, before she finally
nodded. “Would you like that, Hamlet?” she cooed to the piglet.
“Oh, great fuck,” Sion blurted, “you did not name that thing.”
“He is not a
thing
,” Ivy shot back, “and yes I did.” She stuck her
tongue out and returned to tickling the animal’s belly. “I’m keeping
him.”
Kai closed his eyes and counted to ten before opening them. “Ivy,
no.”
“Yes.”
“He can stay in the garden with the others.”
“I’m keeping him,” she insisted.
“No, absolutely not.”
He would do anything to make her happy, anything except keep their
former dinner in his bedroom.
Hamlet romped around the bedroom the next morning, squeaking
happily as he explored every nook and cranny, including the inside of
Kai’s boot. Ivy had made him a nest of blankets on the table beside the
bed, but when he’d crawled onto the mattress to curl up next to her, she
hadn’t been able to resist snuggling him until they’d both fallen asleep.
She wasn’t the only one enamored with the piglet, either. The
moment Cami had seen him, she’d insisted she be taken to the gardens
to choose one for herself. Like Kai, Tariq had flat out refused to have a
pig in his bedroom, but of course, Cami had won the argument. She’d
selected a female, and she’d already tied little pink bows to the ends of
Olive’s tails.
Even Tira had cracked a smile and given Hamlet a scratch behind the
ears. Much to everyone’s surprise, Elder Elor Blackthorn had taken one
of the
bekshin
home as a surprise gift for Kai’s mother when she returned
from the Eastern Isle. Hamlet had pretty much won over everyone.
Except Kai.
“Could you at least keep the beast out of my things?” Lifting his boot
by the heel, he turned it upside down, dumping Hamlet out into his
waiting palm. “He is a menace.”
“He’s sweet,” Ivy disagreed, taking the
bekshin
from her mate. “Oh,
come on, you don’t think he’s even the least bit cute?”
“No,” her mate answered flatly.
“Well, I’m sorry you feel that way, because he needs a babysitter.”
“No,” Kai repeated, dropping onto the mattress to pull on his boots.
“Ask Cami.”
“Cami is busy, working on Xenthian translations to update the
language converter software.”
“Language converter?”
Ivy tapped the gold-plated bar on her earlobe. “It’s our version of a
linguistic translator. They’re implanted when—”
“Implanted?” Kai whipped around on the bed to face her, his eyes
wide and horrified. “That’s barbaric.”
“It’s not like they cut us open or anything. It’s just a little shot.”
Springing up from the mattress, Kai grabbed her by the shoulders,
looking her up and down with a crazed expression. “They shot you?”
“They…” The darkness in his eyes said he’d wage war against all of
Earth if they’d hurt her in any way. So, for once, Ivy didn’t laugh at him.
“They didn’t shoot me.” Shifting Hamlet to the crook of her arm, she
reached up with her unoccupied hand to touch her mate’s cheek. “It’s an
injection, that’s all. I barley felt it.”
Cradling the back of her hand, he pressed into her palm and sighed.
“It’s still barbaric.”
“I’ll be sure to pass on your complaint.” She stretched up on her toes
and brushed their lips together. “Hamlet still needs a babysitter.”
“There is an entire staff at your disposal, dove.”
“He doesn’t know them. I can’t leave him with a stranger.” Besides,
the staff had wanted to cook and eat him. “Please?” She batted her lashes
playfully. “It won’t be for long. I just have to meet this new sentry the
elders sent.”
“Take the beast with you.”
Fighting back a grin, she tucked Hamlet into Kai’s arms. “It’ll be good
for you. I have to find Sion.” Then she kissed them both and sashayed
out of the room, leaving Kai growling behind her. “You two have fun,”
she called before closing the door behind her and bursting into peals of
laughter.
“I know that look.” Sion leaned against the opposite wall of the
corridor with what appeared to be half a loaf of bread in his hand. “What
have you done now?”
“Do you ever stop eating?”
The shifter shrugged as he took a bite off the end of the loaf.
“Whatever,” he mumbled around the mouthful. “Let’s get this over
with.”
They walked in companionable silence through the citadel, Sion
leading the way to the training hall. Ivy had expected to find sparring
mats, punching bags, maybe a few speed bags in the room, but naturally,
nothing on Xenthian was what she expected. Instead, the room consisted
of a dirt floor—the same purple sand from the beach—and rows and
rows of swords, daggers, spears, and bows with quivers of arrows
hanging from hooks on the walls.
A raised, circular platform sat in one corner of the room, illuminated
by an eerie blue light. As Ivy watched, the air around the platform
shimmered, and a sentry with long, bronze hair emerged from seemingly
nowhere.
“It’s like a holo-room,” Sion explained, leading her toward a row of
stone benches carved into the wall. “Basically, it’s a training sim.”
“Huh,” was all Ivy said, but she itched to get inside and give it a go.
It had been too long since she’d sparred—virtually or otherwise. “Is that
him?” she asked, pointing to a sentry standing rigidly near the benches.
He wore the standard uniform of the royal guard, the silver threads
so new and shiny they practically glowed against the black cloth of his
tunic. His raven hair had been pulled back from his face, secured at his
nape with a strip of brown leather, and even from the distance, the burnt
orange of his irises stood out like twin flames.
“He looks like an asshole,” Sion noted dismissively. “So, yeah,
probably.”
The young sentry met them at the edge of the fighting pit, fisting his
hands at his sides and lowering his head. “My lady. It is my honor to
protect you.”
“Uh, thanks.” She looked up at Sion with a raised eyebrow, but the
shifter only shrugged. “So,” she continued, addressing her new guard,
“I’m Ivy Dalton, and this is Sion Jabari.”
“It is a pleasure to meet you, Ivy Dalton. I am Wynlathilrith
Nightstar.”
She asked him to pronounce his first name twice more before giving
up on trying to say it correctly. “Right, I’m just going to call you Wyn.”
“As you wish, my lady.”
Ivy rested her hands on her hips and sighed. “Okay, let’s lay down
some ground rules. First, you can call me Ivy, Dalton, Commander, or
any combination of the three. None of this ‘my lady’ stuff.” She didn’t
mind when Kai said it, but coming from him, it sounded more like an
endearment. From everyone else, it just made her feel weird. “Secondly,
don’t annoy me.”
Wyn nodded once. “Will there be anything else, Ivy Dalton?”
She thought it over for a minute and lifted one shoulder in a half
shrug. “No. I think ‘don’t annoy me’ pretty much covers everything.”
“Okay,” Sion said, speaking for the first time since Wyn had
introduced himself, “what’s on the itinerary for today?”
“Nothing until this afternoon.” Her gaze drifted to the sim platform
in the corner of the training hall, then to the cache of weapons on the
wall. “I think I know how we can pass the time, though.” Linking her
fingers together, she stretched her arms out in front of her, cracking the
knuckles. “Who wants to get their ass kicked?”
* * * *
protest from the workout, and her backside hurt like the ten shades of
hell from the number of times she’d fallen on it. Worse, her cheek
throbbed where Sion had clipped her with a well-placed right hook, and
the flesh had already begun to bruise.
The pain would fade soon, and the bruise would be gone in a few
days, but she knew Kai was going lose his fucking mind when he saw
her. Hence, the reason she’d sent Sion into the Valley with clear
instructions not to return until sundown. Hopefully, she could calm her
mate enough by then to prevent the shifter’s murder.
Arriving at the library, she gave Wyn a solemn look and shook her
head. “You should wait out here.”
With his agreement, she took several calming breaths and pressed her
palm against the pressure pad. The glass doors slid open, permitting her
entrance, and she hesitated for only a heartbeat before crossing the
threshold. She couldn’t hide forever, or even long enough for the bruise
to disappear. She’d just have to trust that, as a warrior himself, Kai would
understand.
Somehow, she doubted it would be that easy.
The library was quiet except for the plink of rain against the
windows. Apparently, it was the “wet season” in Sommervail, and she’d
been told to expect many dreary days in the coming weeks. Ivy actually
enjoyed the rain. The persistent, depressing gloom that bathed the city—
not so much.
When she didn’t find Kai in his usual place at the desk, she almost
left, thinking perhaps he’d returned to their quarters, but a happy squeak