Read Ristèard Unwilling Empress Online
Authors: S.E. Smith
Ricki watched as her parents, Ajaska, and a very pale Sadao walked slowly back the way they came. Drawing in a deep breath, she turned when they disappeared down the watery steps. She nodded to Ristéard to let him know that she would be alright. They had six more sections of the maze to negotiate. Six more traps to make it through before they reached the vault. There would be no stopping until they did.
Ristéard held Ricki’s shaking body. A low curse escaped him as he gently helped her to sit down on the uneven floor. He turned and murmured for Martin to get him some water and an energy bar.
“You are doing it again,” he complained teasingly.
Ricki laid her head back against the uneven walls. Here the walls were left in their natural state. Ricki suspected the reason was due to fewer workers being allowed in the sections closer to the vault.
She tiredly looked around the huge chamber. They had just made it through the ninth trap. A shudder ran through her as she thought of it. Rock climbing had never, ever appealed to her. While she was fine going up, it was the coming back down part that paralyzed her.
She blinked when she felt Ristéard warm hand brushing the loose strands of her hair back from her cheek. He held up the flask of water to her lips, holding it for her. Only when she pulled back did he lower it.
“Have I told you how proud I am of you?” He murmured tenderly. “You've tackled these task with the same determination as you did when you climbed that tree to get away from me.”
A dry laugh escaped Ricki as she remembered that night not so long ago. So much had changed, she thought wearily. Gone was her neat, orderly little world. Thinking back on it, her entire life had been turned upside down from the moment they left Earth.
“If you were to ask me a year ago if I thought I would end up living on another planet, I would have laughed at you,” she said with a weak smile. “If you were to ask me if I thought I would end up being mistaken as a prophesized Empress saving a dying world and traversing through a maze filled with deadly traps, I would have pointed you to the nearest mental hospital.”
“And if you were to tell me that I would fall in love with a beautiful alien who takes my breath away with her beauty and courage, I would never have believed it either,” Ristéard said, caressing her flushed cheek with the back of his hand. “It just goes to prove you never know what will happen in the future.”
“Unless you are an fortune-telling Empress from another world,” Ricki chuckled. She looked over where Marvin and Martin were quietly talking. “Where do they come from?”
Ristéard glanced at the brothers and shrugged. “I don’t know,” he admitted. “I don’t think anyone does. The only thing known about the Kor d’lurs are their natural curiosity about the worlds around them. They are a highly advanced species is all I can tell you.”
Ricki shook her head and took a bite of the power bar. “If the people of Earth knew that there were really aliens out in the star systems, they would probably freak out,” she observed. “Especially if they found out that they had actually visited Earth and that there were still some there.”
“Yes, from what I’ve heard, they did not handle it very well,” he agreed.
Ricki slowly turned her head and looked at him with a shrewd, assessing stare. Leaning forward, she touched his arm. A dark frown creased her brow when he tried to avoid her eyes.
“What are you not telling me?” She demanded.
Ristéard shifted uncomfortably before he released a sigh. “You know that Elipdios has recently joined the Alliance council, correct?” He asked.
“I think I’ve heard that mentioned a few times. Ajaska is part of the Alliance Council as well, isn’t he?” She asked.
“Yes,” he replied. “I have only had a few reports, many of them weeks or months old. My priority has been trying to find a solution to the problems on my world, not others. The only reason I joined with the Alliance was in the hopes that additional help and resources could be provided to find a solution to the radiation destroying Elipdios, and for potential places for my people to relocate.”
“Okay, I understand your reasoning to join the Alliance, but what does that have to do with Earth?” Ricki asked in exasperation.
Ristéard looked at Ricki. “Your world has been sending out signals for close to a century. It was decided by the Alliance that they had reached a level of advancement to be contacted,” he said slowly.
Ricki was silent for several long minutes as she thought of what he was telling her. She knew about all the satellites and probes that had been sent out. Still, she honestly didn’t think that anyone really expected an answer. Her troubled eyes rose to his and she saw the truth in them.
“First contact,” she whispered. “How… How did the people of Earth take it?”
Ristéard released a long breath and sighed. “About as well as you would imagine. The Alliance sends in an advance group of warriors known as the Trivators. They will soon have the Earth back under control. They are there to establish calm, but I must admit that I do not envy them their task.”
Ricki nodded, stunned to think of what the Earth must look like now. Something told her that she and the other members of the circus were much better off than if they had been back home. She slowly finished the power bar, even though she was no longer hungry.
*.*.*
It took another hour to finally get to the last section before the vault. She wiped a dirty hand across her cheek. The path had been littered with large sections of fallen crystal. Sadao had been right, the entire mountain was made from the Blood Stones. It seemed the deeper they traveled into the mountain, the denser and brighter the crystal grew.
“I need to rest for a minute,” she admitted, sinking wearily down on a large section of the crystal.
Ristéard handed her the flask of water that he had replenished at an underground stream they had crossed shortly after they started on this last leg of their journey. Sitting down next to her, he nodded to Marvin and Martin when they announced they would like to analyze a section of the crystal that looked slightly different than the rest.
“What is the next trap?” Ristéard asked, taking the flask from her outstretched hand and drinking deeply from it. “It is the last one, correct?”
Ricki knew he wasn’t going to like what she had to say which is why she avoided mentioning it. She nervously tucked a strand of her hair behind her ear. Across a thin bridge of crystal was the huge doors leading to the vault. Her eyes roamed over it, taking in each minute detail.
She opened her mouth to respond when she heard a noise behind her. Turning, she rose in surprise. Her hand instinctively moved to Ristéard in warning.
“What is the next trap?” A familiar voice asked with a crooked grin. “You didn’t write down how to get past it.”
Ristéard turned slowly, his face stiffening and his gaze cooling. He ignored the pain of betrayal as he stared back at the figure standing behind them. His eyes flickered to where Marvin and Martin lay unconscious on the floor of the large chamber. Long darts containing what he suspected was a powerful sedative protruded from their necks.
“Why?” He demanded, looking back at the man he considered his brother. “Why, Andras? Why would you betray me? Why would you betray your world?”
*.*.*
Andras looked coldly back at Ristéard. The why was easy to answer. He wanted enough wealth to leave this miserable, dying world. His family had made a fortune from the Blood Stones before he was born. The problem came from his uncle. Alcolsis had been jealous of the wealth his grandfather and father had amassed over the decades. A falling out between his grandfather and Alcolsis had made him an outcast. Andras hadn’t minded. Even as a boy, he recognized the difference between the way his family lived and that of the others in his village.
What his father hadn’t realized was that Alcolsis would build an even greater wealth, by gathering followers who listened to his lies. His uncle had risen quickly, quietly killing those who resisted him, while building a steady following of those who believed in his empty promises.
Andras had been ten when Alcolsis had returned to the village of his birth. He had gleefully killed his grandfather and cast Andras’ family into the underground city with the others that resisted him. It had taken years for Andras to understand why his uncle just didn’t kill them. Alcolsis knew that breaking the will of the resistance lay in breaking the men, women, and children. You could not do that in death. Death made them a martyr.
“I’ve hated this world my entire life,” Andras said, pointing the weapon in his hand at Ristéard. “It was dying, so why should I care one way or the other how fast?”
Ristéard started to step in front of Ricki, but stopped when Andras shook his head. His eyes flickered to Marvin and Martin, hoping that the Kor d’lurs bodies wouldn’t be affected by whatever drug had been used.
“Do you really expect to get away with this?” Ristéard demanded in a low voice. “Others will know what you have done. I know what you have done. For that alone, I will kill you.”
Andras laughed and shook his head. “I did a little research before I came down here,” he explained. “Those two are practically impossible to kill, but they can be drugged as long as you take them by surprise. By the time they wake, the four of you will be trapped inside this chamber, buried just like the treasure hidden in the vault. The treasure that will be my ticket off this world.”
“Lyna and the others will stop you,” Ricki said angrily.
Andras shook his head again. “I’m afraid that my followers have imprisoned them, along with your parents in the city above. I must remember to thank the Kassian Ambassador for giving me the key to getting to you. Of course, it helped when I threatened to kill your parents.”
“You bastard,” Ricki snarled, trying to break free when Ristéard grabbed her as she stepped forward. “You are a horrible, horrible excuse for a man.”
Andras amused laughter echoed in the large chamber. “I believe I’ve heard you say the same about Ristéard,” he chuckled before growing serious. “I don’t have time for your temper tantrums, Empress. What is the key to getting pass the tenth trap and opening the vault?”
Andras watched as Ricki’s face twisted into a mask of rage. He had been expecting this type of resistance from her, which is why he hadn’t knocked Ristéard out. He figured he would need to use his former ‘friend’ to encourage the human female to do what he wanted her to do.
“Go to hell,” Ricki hissed, clenching her fists at her side.
Andras watched warily as ice coated her fingertips. “I wouldn’t,” he warned, not pausing as he fired a shot into Ristéard’s leg.
Ricki cried out when she felt Ristéard stumbled backwards from the force of the blast. She twisted and caught him as he started to fall. Pain glittered in his eyes and in the tightness of his jaw, but he didn’t make a sound as she helped him to the ground. Blood was pooling at an alarming rate under his upper thigh. A dark, scorched area peeled the cloth of his trousers back.
“Ristéard,” Ricki whispered, frantically trying to stem the Blood flow. Tears of frustration blinded her when she realized that she wasn’t strong enough to tear the material of her shirt. “I need to stop the Blood.”
“Don’t,” he whispered, closing his eyes. “You have to escape.”
“I’m not leaving you,” she whispered, closing her eyes and placing her hand over the wound.
A pulse of ice shot from her palm into the wound. The ice hardened, freezing the Blood. She opened her eyes when she felt Ristéard’s hand wrap around her wrist to stop her.
“Don’t,” he ordered, realizing he was already too late when she swayed. “You haven’t drunk enough water.”
“I’m okay,” she insisted, reaching up to brush her fingers against his cheek. She froze when she felt Andras behind her. “Don’t!” She warned, swiveling to look up at him.
“The next shot will be to his stomach,” Andras informed her coldly. “It can take hours to die from such a wound without medical help.”
Ricki rose to her feet, ignoring her trembling limbs. Her fists clenched again. She was too drained to form any ice. Her body was dehydrated from their journey and her lack of appetite. The little water she had drunk wasn’t enough to replenish her.
“Please,” she begged, glancing back at where Ristéard lay with his eyes closed. “He needs medical attention.”
Andras laughed harshly. “As you can see, that isn’t available. It won’t matter anyway,” he said. “Now, the tenth trap. How do we get past it and open the vault?”
Ricki drew in a deep breath. Her eyes flickered to the narrow, crystal bridge in front of the massive doors to the vault. Drawing in a deep breath, she knew she would have to go along with Andras until she could find a way to stop him.
“The bridge is part of it,” she whispered. There is a line down the center. You have to stay on it.”
Andras nodded, staring at her. “Then, I suggest you lead the way,” he said. “I’ll follow. And, Ricki…” He paused, waiting to make sure she understood exactly what he was about to say. “I learned from Ristéard the best way to take my time killing someone. Once I’m done with him, I’ll start on you.”
He watched as her throat worked up and down. The small nod of acknowledgement was the only other response she gave him. Turning on her heel, she walked toward the bridge.
*.*.*
A lone figure stood in the shadows watching as almost two dozen men held those in the center room locked down. He had followed the group, picking up on the transmission between them. His eyes searched the area for two specific men. A frown creased his brow when he didn’t see them. Instead, he focused on the two small figures that had been brought to the front.