Suddenly, all the Conclave members started talking, spouting out the stories they had heard of her evil prowess. Ava tried to take it all in.
“They say she sacrifices a newborn child at the end of each month to sustain her powers…”
“The darkness in her is so powerful, her eyes have turned red…”
“She no longer has to eat and drink to live, but consumes the souls of those she kills….”
And on and on it went. Ava was overwhelmed. Never had she heard such stories, and she could feel fear radiating off the Conclave members. It was contagious as she was feeling a cold pit in her stomach. Could Ralina be brought down? She didn’t see how at the moment. Ava glanced back at Carrick. His expression was no longer bland. She saw fire in his eyes as he listened to the stories.
“What is our current plan on how to handle this situation?” Ava asked.
Carrick spoke up this time. “We have spent the past four years mustering forces to battle Ralina’s army. Luckily for us, Ralina keeps her army very close to Kestevayne and rarely sends them more than a few miles out. We assume this is because she wants to be protected at all times, or perhaps the secret to her dark magic is at the palace and needs to be protected. Regardless, we strike at her forces as we can, and are trying to whittle their numbers down. But in all honesty, we need to cut the head off the snake or this war will never end.”
Many Conclave members murmured their agreement. Ava leaned back in her chair and pondered her next move. She knew her parents would want her to lead her citizens to take back their homeland. They would expect her to be at the helm. She knew she had to firmly establish control at this point if she was to be effective in the coming weeks and months.
Most importantly, Ava was never going to let Carrick or the Conclave gain an ounce of control over her life…ever again. Ava pushed to slide her chair back from the table and stood up. She placed her hands on the table.
“What you have told me is daunting. But one thing my parents taught me is that nothing is insurmountable. We will take back Kestevayne and put an end to that miserable creature, Ralina Haramish. But to do that, you need me. As the only living heir to the Royal House of Clairmont, I alone hold the seat of power to our magic. It is the best weapon you have at the moment.”
Ava paused for effect and looked down the table. All the Conclave members were nodding in agreement. Carrick was leaning forward in his chair, his arms on the table, and staring at her intently.
Satisfied she held their attention, Ava continued. “I wish at this point to remind you that as the Royal Conclave, you are here to give me advice. But I will make the decisions. I will have every member’s agreement right now, or I will return to The First Dimension immediately.”
Ava was bluffing, of course. No way was she leaving that bitch to continue her tortures upon her people. But one by one, each Conclave member stood up and agreed to her demands. All except Carrick, but then again, he wasn’t a Conclave member. This brought her to the next point she needed to make.
“In order to effectively lead, I need to trust those that are advising me. This Conclave broke my trust by orchestrating my banishment behind my back, no matter how good their intentions were. This I will forgive and let them earn my trust back. However….” and here Ava looked straight down the table.
“Carrick of the House of Dunne. Your breach of my trust was far worse than what the Conclave committed. You and I were betrothed to be married, and if there was one person in this world I should have been able to trust, it was you.” Ava felt her voice quaver slightly with a wave of hurt. But she shook it off. “For this, I am immediately relieving you of your duty as Commandant of the Royal Army and you are no longer welcome to sit at this Conclave table. You should remove yourself from this hall immediately.”
Ava heard gasps from around the table but she never took her gaze from Carrick as she said those words. She found it a bit disconcerting that his expression never changed. Nor did his body position. Ava thought she would get immense satisfaction at the end of her speech but she just wasn’t getting the thrilling rush she expected.
If anything, her decision wasn’t setting so well with her conscience.
Too late to take it back.
She certainly couldn’t be seen as wishy-washy with her Conclave. Besides, she had every justification for relieving Carrick of his duties. There simply was no way she would be able to trust him again.
None of the Conclave members said a word. Several seconds of heavy silence hung in the air. Then Carrick casually pushed his chair back and stood up. He started to walk down the side of the table that bordered the dais steps. Ava assumed to make his exit. But he continued walking down the table toward Ava. When he reached her, he grabbed her arm and said to the Conclave, “I beg everyone’s pardon. If you will excuse me for just a minute, I will be right back.”
And with that, Carrick forcefully dragged Ava from the Conclave hall. Ava was too astonished to even put up a fight as he was pulling her down the aisle toward the door. But about three paces from the exit, Ava’s senses returned and she pulled back against Carrick, digging her feet into the floor. That did nothing but cause her feet to slide across the slick wood.
“What do you think you are doing?” Ava hissed at Carrick.
Carrick didn’t reply but yanked her right out the door. Once they were out of sight of the Conclave, Ava really put up a fight. She started hitting at Carrick and pulling harder away from him. Carrick never missed a step. He spun around on her fast, bent down, and hauled her up over his shoulder. Ava grunted as the air was knocked out of her.
Carrick casually strolled down the street, carrying Ava as if this was the most normal thing in the world. Ava started pounding on his back, yelling for him to let her down.
“You are making a scene, Princess Ava,” Carrick said. The contempt in his voice was no doubt for her title of “Princess”.
“I don’t care you pea-brained, jackass,” Ava gritted out, her voice lowering a few octaves. “Let me down.”
Carrick slapped her hard on her butt and said, “Behave yourself.”
That did nothing but fuel Ava’s anger higher. She renewed her pounding on his back and started flailing her legs, hoping to shake herself loose from Carrick’s grip. She made no progress. He was just too strong and too big for her to battle against.
Ava peeked up and noticed that they had returned to his home. He opened the door with his free hand and entered. Carrick walked straight to the bedroom and threw Ava down on the bed with enough force the air was knocked out of her lungs again.
Trying to regain her breath, Ava watched Carrick with suspicious eyes. She expected him to launch into a tirade but he calmly walked to the corner of the room and sat in one of the chairs. He leaned back casually, stretching his long legs out. He sat still, just watching her for several long seconds.
Finally, Carrick spoke. “You made quite an impression on the Conclave.”
Ava gaped at him. That was all he had to say? She waited, but he didn’t say anything further.
“I don’t know what your game is Carrick, but you are done here. You are finished. You heard me relieve you of your duties and there is no way that I am going to allow you to remain involved. I don’t trust you anymore so you will only be a hindrance to me.”
“Oh bullshit, Ava,” Carrick blasted at her. “You are not doing this for the betterment of your rule, or because you don’t trust me. You are doing this to punish me for sending you away. If you are going to be a ruler, at least learn to be honest in your decrees.”
“You don’t know what you’re talking about,” Ava sputtered but Carrick was hitting close to the truth.
That one small statement seemed to infuriate Carrick. “I don’t know what I’m talking about?”
He jolted up from the chair and charged across the room at Ava, rage burning in his eyes. Ava tried to scramble backward on the bed, but he was on her before she could move two inches. Reaching out, Carrick grabbed Ava by the back of the neck. It didn’t hurt, but he had a good grip on her. He pulled her up off the bed and marched her to the kitchen. He walked her right up to the window over the sink and pointed out.
“Look at that house across the street. Do you see that little boy sitting on the front step?”
Ava looked and she saw a darling young boy, maybe six or seven years old. He had the brightest red hair she had ever seen, and a spray of freckles dusting his nose. He was reading a book. He held it on his lap, face full of concentration. And that’s when Ava noticed that he only had one leg.
She turned to look at Carrick. Rage still filled his eyes. He turned her head back toward the window, his hand still firmly gripping her neck, forcing her to look at the little boy.
“Don’t tell me I don’t know what I’m talking about.” His voice was low but filled with a burning fury that made her hair stand on end. “That is what has been happening the last four years. Every day. Bloodshed and death and maiming. That’s Sam across the street. He lost his leg when one of Ralina’s soldiers cut it off. Do you want to know why, Ava?”
Ava was fairly certain she did not want to know, but Carrick continued.
“The soldier cut his leg off after Sam kicked him. Do you want to know why, Princess Ava, that Sam kicked him?” Carrick was almost taunting with his tone of voice.
Ava shuddered envisioning that poor child getting his leg cut off. The violence in Carrick’s voice chilled her to the bone.
“It was because the soldier had just finished raping Sam’s mother and then slit her throat. I got there just as the soldier raised his sword but I was too late to stop Sam from losing his leg. My only solace was I ran my sword through that soldier so he could never harm another child again.”
Ava made a strangled sound in her throat. Tears welled up in her eyes and she let them flow freely. Oh gods, the pain that poor child went through. But Carrick was not finished with her.
“I have more blood and sweat invested in this war than you will ever have, Princess.” Again, her title was said with the utmost disdain in his voice. “While you were tucked safely away on your little horse farm in Wyoming, completely oblivious to this carnage, I defended our citizens with my very life. I watched my father die to avenge your parents and your honor. You may sit on the throne and rule one day, but for now, the Army follows my command. The Conclave looks to me for strength and encouragement. It’s what the House of Dunne has done for Kestevayne for centuries. For the last four years, I have been leading the fight for your country, not because I wanted to, but because I love these people as much as you do. Now, you can make all of the damn proclamations you want, but I am not stepping down as Commandant, nor am I withdrawing from this fight.”
Carrick finally released his grip on her neck causing her to look at him. He seemed to have run out of steam and she saw the rage recede and then flicker into sadness. Ava turned back to the window and just stood there silently, looking at little Sam reading his book.
“I’m going back to the Conclave hall as we have work to do. I suggest you leave your bitterness toward me out of your decision making and put your energies into helping your people. Trust me, after we win this war, you’ll have plenty of time to hate me.” Carrick turned his back on Ava and walked out of the house.
****
As Carrick walked backed to the Conclave Hall, his fury had simmered down. He even had a rush of pride for Ava making known her displeasure over being sent away, but never would he have thought she would try to relieve him of his duties.
He had too much invested in this to walk away and it certainly wasn’t fair for her to even ask him to do so. He hoped he’d made his point to her. He had seen the sorrow and empathy on her face as she watched little Sam through the window. He felt bad for showing her the harsh realities but she needed to understand that life here was different. It was brutal and the atrocities were relentless. There was no time to dwell on the sadness. Only time to focus on how to end Ralina’s control.
Yes, Ava had been heartbroken over seeing Sam and hearing his story. There had been a time when Carrick would have just pulled her into his arms and soothed away her sorrow. Those days were gone though.
Ava sat on the front step of Carrick’s porch, deep in thought. Bing was beside her, head in her lap. Carrick had left four guards to watch over her, and they were standing post at various places around his cottage. Sam had gone inside his house, called in by a lady about her own age. She assumed she was a relation of his.
Her stomach churned thinking of Sam and his mother. And that was only one example that she knew of. Carrick had seen this day in and day out for the last four years. She was foolish to think that she would know more than him, or the Conclave, as to what this land needed. She was still incredibly angry at Carrick, but he was right. Now was not the time to let that anger cloud her judgment.
“Well, if that isn’t just about the prettiest lady I have seen in a long, long time.” Ava’s head whipped around at that voice and pleasure lit her entire face.
“Quentin!!!”
Ava jumped up from the porch and flew into her cousin’s arms. Quentin Solaire was Ava’s favorite cousin. Well, he was her only cousin, about as close to her as a brother could be. He was her Aunt Cinnie’s only child—Cinnie being her mother’s older sister—and had lived at the palace with Ava for most of her life. He was six years older than her, and he always looked out for her like she was his little sister.
She stepped back from his embrace and looked up at him. He hardly looked different from the last time she had seen him. He stood tall, with shaggy, caramel colored hair that always seemed in need of a haircut. He had the hazel eyes flecked with gold that the Solaire line was known for and had a wide grin on his face.
On the night her parents were murdered, she had been so thankful that Quentin had escaped from the palace, along with Aunt Cinnie. Quentin had been, and she assumed still was, a member of the Royal Army, even though he wasn’t from the Warrior caste. His line was mostly made of Scrinia but his strength, cunning and magical abilities made him perfect for protecting the Royal family.
“And who do we have here,” Quentin asked looking down at Bing and giving him a scratch on the head. Bing gave an excited bark and licked his hand.
“This is Bing, and he’s obviously pleased to meet you.” Ava’s eyes misted. “I am so happy to see you Quentin. It’s nice to be back among my family.”
“I’ve missed you too, twerp.”
Ava chuckled at the nick-name he always called her when she was little. “Is Aunt Cinnie doing well?”
Quentin’s face turned sad. “She died last year. None of our healers could help her, but we didn’t have a lot to choose from.”
Ava grasped both of Quentin’s hands and looked him in the eyes. “I’m so sorry. Maybe if I had been here, I could have done something.” Ava felt herself getting angry again over her removal from Vyronas.
Quentin shook his head. “You can’t think that way. We don’t even know if your magic was powerful enough to help her. You can’t have guilt or regrets. It will tear you apart.”
Ava didn’t say anything but just stepped back into his embrace for a long hug.
After a bit, Ava pulled back. “Come, let’s go inside and have some tea and you can fill me in on everything that has happened since I’ve been gone. It’s been like pulling teeth to get Carrick to tell me anything.” Quentin chuckled at that and followed Ava inside.
While Ava busied herself making the tea, Quentin sat at the kitchen table and asked, “So how was life on the other side?”
“It was fine,” Ava said evasively.
But she knew it was more than fine. She’d had a great life, filled with wonderful memories thanks to whatever mojo had been worked on her. She had been happy there and never once had to deal with the terrible things that were happening back in Kestevayne. After Carrick left a bit ago, she realized that she was feeling more than a little guilt over having been sheltered from the atrocities that had been happening.
“So, can’t get any information from Carrick, huh?”
Ava snorted. “All he does is practically growl at me. We haven’t exactly been on the best of terms since he fetched me back.”
“No, I don’t expect the two of you would have a lot of warm and fuzzies going on once you realized what had happened.”
“Oh Quentin…I’m not sure you could begin to understand the rage and betrayal I felt once I got my memories back.”
“I can imagine, twerp,” he said gently. “If you were feeling anything close to what Carrick has been feeling since you left, I bet you felt like your head was going to explode.”
“What has he been feeling? Because he hasn’t exactly been a fountain of information.”
“Well, you leaving was very hard on Carrick—“, Quentin started.
“Hard on Carrick?” Ava practically screeched. “He got to stay here. What about how hard it was on me?”
“Whoa there!” Quentin held up his arms in submission. “I didn’t mean to strike a nerve.”
The tea was ready and Ava set a pot and two cups on the table. She took a seat across from Quentin. “I’m sorry. I’ve got anger issues that, I swear, I am trying to sort out. I won’t interrupt again.”
“You always were hot tempered, Ava,” Quentin said with a knowing smile. “But to answer your question, the decision to send you away tore Carrick part.”
“From where I’m sitting, it doesn’t appear to have been too hard a decision for him,” Ava said bitterly.
“Aaaahhh… you don’t know the story behind it all, do you?”
“I know that I made my wishes known to both the Conclave and Carrick. I made clear that I did not want to leave. I know Carrick told me I could stay. And most of all, I know Carrick is the one that pushed me through The Veil separating our dimensions. What more is there?”
Quentin shook his head, almost sadly, like he pitied Ava for her side of the story. “There’s a lot more Ava. Carrick was never in favor of sending you away, even up to the moment he pushed you through. But the Conclave was insistent, and well, they have their ways to coerce even the strongest of wills.”
“Coerced how?” Ava asked.
“First, they took Kieran captive and hid him. They threatened to torture Kieran if Carrick didn’t cooperate in sending you away. But that didn’t work. So then they threatened to kill Kieran. But that still didn’t work. Carrick refused. It was only when the Conclave said they would remove you from Vyronas themselves that Carrick finally relented.”
“I don’t understand. Why would that cause him to agree when threats against Kieran wouldn’t?”
“Because the Conclave was going to put you in a magical stasis between dimensions. It was all they were capable of doing considering their magic is not that strong. They were going to banish you there to keep you safe, but you would be suspended in darkness. Alive and floating in nothingness, with only your thoughts to keep you company.”
Ava shuddered at the thought. “That would be hell!”
“Exactly,” Quentin commiserated. “Carrick knew that would be an unbearable torture for you. In fact, I’m betting he thought it would have made you go insane. So, Carrick agreed to do it.”
Ava felt the blood drain from her face and bile rise in her throat.
“You get why Carrick did it, right? His magical forte deals with memory and illusion. He alone had the power to create a new life for you in The First Dimension so that you would remain safe and unknowing of what you had left behind.”
“As always, he was still protecting me,” Ava whispered to herself. She remembered his last words to her,
“Never forget that all I do for you, I do out of love.”
Ava stood up and walked to the sink, looking at the window. “He was willing to sacrifice Kieran for me, wasn’t he?”
“Yes he would have.”
Ava put her face in her hands and groaned. She had been immensely unfair to Carrick. For all of her ranting about trust, she’s never once given him the benefit of the doubt and trusted that he may have been doing the best thing possible for her.
Ava thought about Carrick since they had been reunited. She’d seen many emotions cross his face over the last two days. Rage, anger, sadness, coldness, disinterest. The list could go on, but the happy and carefree Carrick she knew before seemed to be gone.
“Carrick has changed, hasn’t he?”
“A lot of people have Ava. But yes, the Carrick you knew before is gone. His heart was broken when you left. Cracked wide open. Then it’s like he channeled all the terrible things that have happened into the gap, let it close back up and harden. I don’t know the last time I’ve seen him laugh. On the flip side, there is no one that is more determined to bring down Ralina than Carrick. All of his thoughts and energies flow only into one thing...returning Kestevayne to the people and putting you on the throne.”
Quentin stayed for another hour and he spent most of the time updating Ava on what had been happening since she left. It broke her heart to hear of the devastation that Ralina had been causing.
Apparently, the palace had been completely purged of all people loyal to the Clairmont family. And by purge, Quentin meant murdered. For the families who lived in Kestevayne and the surrounding countryside, Ralina demanded they swear allegiance to her with a blood oath. If they refused, she burned their homes to the ground, usually with them trapped inside. From what Quentin had been able to tell her, the immediate area surrounding Kestevayne was nothing but scorched earth.
Ava wondered about the blood oath Ralina was demanding. Was that so she could perform her mind control tricks? She would have to ask the Conclave their thoughts.
Amazingly, business still went on as usual within the city. Most of the shops were still open but only after the owners swore with their blood and agreed to a fifty percent tax increase. Travelers were allowed in and out of the city walls, but again, only after swearing with a drop of blood their loyalty to Ralina.
Perhaps most worrisome, was the fact that the surrounding Royal kingdoms were being forced to choose allegiances. There were a few Royal families still willing to fight beside the Clairmont forces. They realized that their kingdom could be next on Ralina’s hit list.
But other Royals were too afraid to make a stand. These were mostly the smaller domains and felt their best chance at survival was to swear their blood oath to Ralina. Once that was done, she took over that Royal family’s army and added it to her forces in Kestevayne, leaving those smaller domains vulnerable. Lucky for them, the other Royal families had too much on their plate to even consider attacking the smaller domains that chose to side with Ralina.
The good news was that there were four major Royal Houses standing beside the Clairmonts. The D’Amuris, the Groucutts, the Baudins and the Foss. All had quickly pledged their allegiance to returning Ava to the throne. This was expected as these Royal families all enjoyed strong and friendly ties to each other. Each of these families was now living away from their homes, under their own cloaking spells, protected by their own Royal Armies. Once a month, they sent representatives from their Conclaves to meet with the Clairmont Conclave to discuss strategy and exchange information.
There was one more kingdom the Clairmonts were courting to come to their side, and that was the House of Sorin. Not much movement had been made from what she could tell which was strange as the Sorins had always been close to Ava’s family. Ava had a personal history with the Sorin’s Crowned Prince Baynor. Well, apparently he was now King Baynor but maybe she could help there. She would think on that some more.
After Quentin left, Ava fixed herself a simple supper of some bread and cheese. She didn’t think her stomach could tolerate much more than that. One of the guards had kindly brought some ground beef from the butcher for Bing to eat, although Ava cooked it for him first.
Then she had a glass of honey wine and waited for Carrick to come home. She sat on the front porch, and watched the large pink sun fade. She was still there when the swollen rose-colored moon arose, and yet Carrick had not come home. The guards, however, continued their post outside the cottage. She offered them some food and drink, but they politely declined.
Finally, the toll of the day caught up to Ava and she realized she was bone tired. She went inside the cottage and found her backpack. She had packed some sleepwear, the likes of which she was sure no Vyronasian had ever seen. Too tired to take advantage of a hot bath, Ava took her clothes off and performed a cleansing incantation which magically scrubbed her from head to foot, even her teeth.
She slipped on her Victoria’s Secret boy shorts and tank top. The word “Pink” was stamped across her butt and chest and she wondered what Carrick would think of that. She crawled into the large bed and pulled the quilt over her. As tired as she was, she was frustrated half an hour later when sleep still eluded her. Bing, on the other hand, was lying next to her, snoring softly.
Ava tossed and turned, wondering where Carrick was. She kept replaying over in her mind everything she had learned today. The guilt was eating her alive and the only way she knew to make it go away was to start making things right in any way she could. She knew the first would have to be an apology to Carrick.
It was then that Ava heard the front door open, and then quietly close. She had left a few lights burning for him. She heard him go into the kitchen and run some water in the sink. She thought she heard him sigh, then his footsteps started coming toward the bedroom.
Ava sat up in bed and swung her legs over the side. She waved her hand at the lamp on the table next to her and light sprang forth. Ava watched as Carrick stepped into the bedroom. He looked tired. Really, really tired. Her heart hurt for him. Carrick glanced at Ava, surprised to find her up.
“Did I wake you?”
“No. I couldn’t fall asleep. Can I fix you something to eat?”
“I ate earlier.”
Carrick sat on one of the chairs in the corner and started pulling off his boots. He then stood, and took off his shirt and Ava felt her mouth literally water. Oh geez! She had forgotten how perfect his body was. His shoulders were wide and he was sculpted of hard muscle everywhere. She admired his washboard abs and the little trail of golden hair that led down into the waistband of his pants.