Sworn To Secrecy: Courtlight #4 (31 page)

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Authors: Terah Edun

Tags: #coming of age, #fantasy, #magic, #Kingdoms, #dragons

BOOK: Sworn To Secrecy: Courtlight #4
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Sebastian stood there. Silent and guarded.

He wore his armor like a shield and his face was closed down. But what caught her eye was what was in his hands. In his left hand he held a sword of average length but exquisite workmanship. In his right hand he gripped a glaive.

“Before we left the lord chamberlain’s home, I requested that his manservant procure for you a weapon,” he said reluctantly. “I knew that you would prefer a glaive from your previous work with them, and I meant to give it to you before we left the manor home. Instead, you arrived so late I had it packed away for delivery later on with the wagon supplies.”

She stood still. Unsure of what to say.

Finally, “Thank you,” emerged from her mouth.

He thrust the glaive forward with a stiff hand. “Here.”

She took it in both of her own. He turned and walked away. She watched his back retreat silently into the dim light. Heart heavy but mind singing with joy at holding a weapon she knew, she tested the balance in her hands. With a staff carved of trim ebony hardwood and a metal blade with a wickedly sharp end, she hadn’t seen a more beautiful piece of artisanship. Even the blade had carvings into its surface—swirls and lines in intricate detail. But more than its beauty, it was functional and deadly.

Quickly she moved into formation to practice. With quick footsteps, she whirled around with the glaive at chest height to test its weight and balance. Easing back after a few more moves she acknowledged that it was perfect. Perfect for her.

Much like the young man she had let down.

She shook her head to dispel those feelings; Ciardis knew she didn’t have time for trivial concerns such as those that clouded her heart. They had to face one of the most powerful men in the empire soon, on his turf, and not bring the emperor’s wrath down on them while they did it.

A sharp whistle penetrated her thoughts. She looked up to see someone beckoning her over from the campfire in the distance.

Vana said from the front of the pack, “We need to get in to the duke’s residence, get out, and not attract attention.”

Sebastian nodded grimly.

“Therefore only a few of us will be making this journey,” said Lord Meres. “We can’t risk the duke of Carne knowing we’re coming or pontificating in court that we brought an army down on his head.”

“Like he did?” said Terris dryly.

“No,” said Sebastian grimly. “By court standards he was well within his rights. He hired assassins legally to kill us all. He didn’t raise an army or send his private militia. It was neat and it was a small force.”

“You and I have different expectations of legal. Though I suppose you mean like those four men that tried to kill you in the aether realm a year ago?” Ciardis said.

Sebastian cut his eyes to her and then quickly away. “Exactly. There are rules of engagement and we must follow them to the letter.”

“Fine then,” Ciardis said, looking at Vana. “Whom do you suggest? And what’s the plan?”

“We get in, we find out what he knows about the princess heir, and we offer a peace deal,” said Vana.

Protests erupted all round, mostly centered on her last point.

“Stephanie died because of him,” said Christian fiercely with white-hot anger in his eyes.

“I know that,” said Vana.

“Then why would you want to make peace with him?” demanded Ciardis.

“Because mother ordered it,” said Caemon.

Ciardis rounded on him. “What? When?” 

“A few days past, when I went with Vana to the magistrate’s court,” he said.

Sebastian sighed and said, “She was right. Lillian is one of the finest political minds I have known. And what she told us I agree with. Already we have drawn the hate of one of the wealthiest and most influential dukes in all of Algardis, but if we kill him, we will have blood debt with his family. And you do not want to mess with the Carnes. For every one that dies, there are five more to take their place.”

“That family is like a hydra,” Vana said bluntly. “Vicious, powerful, and ever fruitful. We need them on our side.”

Grumbles continued.

“Enough,” said Sebastian, “We have to have allies to fight a god. We can’t do that if our second greatest militia in all the land is a foe, as well. I hate what the duke of Carne has done and I know the lord chamberlain is furious as well, but he has agreed, the matriarch of the Weathervane family has agreed, and I agree: We must make peace.”

“And what about what I agree to?” Ciardis asked tautly.

The Prince Heir turned to her resolutely. “Well what do
you
want to do, Ciardis? This was your plan, your idea. Come to court and beg the emperor’s forgiveness, gather the political allies to our side. Isn’t this part of that plan?”

“Sometimes plans change.”

“Do they, now?” he asked quietly. 

She wasn’t sure if they were still talking about political alliances.

But she backed down anyway. “But I can’t say I can think of anything better.”

Caemon sighed and abruptly said, “They’re right. We need this. It’s like a game of hard pins. With the duke of Carne allied with us, the emperor will heed our call to action and then the dragons will stand with us. Without one we don’t have the other.”

“It sounds like we’re sacrificing our battle against the emperor for a temporary alliance,” Ciardis said.

“No, we need the duke on our side. But not his wife. If we can get him to see reason about Leah and the imposter emperor, then we have one of the most powerful men in the empire allied with us,” said Vana.

“Why, then, are we invading the Duke of Carne’s home in the middle of the night?” said Christian.

They all looked to Vana. “He’s not exactly going to welcome us over for tea. A small group steals in in the dead of the night and we talk things over. Alliance formed in less than an hour.”

“Whom do you want, Vana?” asked Caemon.

“Thanar, Sebastian, and Ciardis,” she responded.

“Perhaps a few of my men and myself,” Lord Meres said firmly.

Vana shook her head. “We need to move in and out over the rooftops quickly. Four is enough. The rest of you will guard our citadel. Because if it falls, we will have nowhere to turn to.”

Meres nodded and then turned to bow shortly to Sebastian. “My lord, with your permission, I will go and disperse troops for fortifications. We need men on the spy holes as well as the entrances. I’ll keep some in reserve to be stationed up and down the city streets above to warn of attacks.”

Sebastian nodded.

As he left, the chosen four for Vana’s plan looked at each other with two noticeably avoiding the eyes of one another.

Everyone else dispersed. Before Sebastian and Ciardis turned away, Vana said, “I picked the two of you because I knew you could work together. The power you can manifest as a team is beyond anything I’ve ever seen. But if you don’t get your heads out of your asses and get it together before we leave this cavern, I’ll knock you unconscious and take Caemon and Christian instead.”

They stared at her as she stalked off muttering about idiots and children.

The silence stretched while Ciardis stared somewhere along the lines of Sebastian’s breastplate, and she got the feeling he was looking up at the stalactites on the ceiling.

Finally, when she couldn’t stand it anymore, she said, “I don’t want Christian to go. He’s not well.”

She looked up at Sebastian to see him staring at her with fire in his eyes. “Is that all you have to say?”

She threw up her hands in frustration, and quickly scrambled to grab the glaive which fell towards the floor. Staring back up at him, she glared.

“Well, what do you want me to say? You want me to apologize? Well, I’m sorry
.
I’m sorry I let him kiss me while we were in a middle of a battle for our lives and I had no idea what was happening, let alone why he thought that it was an appropriate time. Ironic, huh? That I didn’t see it coming. And I’m sorry that he kissed me again on the rooftop. Though, honestly, I could have maybe seen that one coming. But I did push him off and let him know it wasn’t acceptable. But no, you wouldn’t let me explain that, would you? You questioned and you judged and you didn’t listen.”

Sebastian crossed his arms. “Did you enjoy it?”

“Really?” She whirled, turning away because she was seriously considering putting the blade end of her glaive into his smug, princely neck.

Then she heard him move behind her.

“No, wait, Ciardis. I’m sorry.”

She kept walking. He grabbed her elbow and let go in quite a hurry when she whirled around with the glaive still clutched in her hands and a murderous expression on her face.

“Just admit it,” she snarled. “You don’t trust me. You never have. Not with General Barnaren. Not with the daemoni prince. I’ve never done anything to earn that mistrust. And I never would. But I can’t and I won’t deal with your jealousy. Not now. Not when I trying to save my family, my friends, and this empire. Which, might I remind you, is sort of your job.”

With that parting twist she stomped away.

She knew Sebastian still watched her as she distanced herself. She could even feel his confusion in the back of her mind, as he had forgotten to put up his mental shields. All she could think was,
Good, let him stew.
Through his mind’s eye she watched as he turned around and saw Terris, Christian, and Vana standing together, blatantly staring.

“Aren’t you supposed to be working?” Ciardis heard him snap as he stomped off.

A few minutes passed and Ciardis came back. Not to speak with Sebastian, but to look for Vana. When she saw her she walked straight up and said, “I may be more powerful with Sebastian, but I am just as powerful without him. I won’t get in your way and I won’t get in his. We can be a team. A team of individuals with individual strengths and individual weakness.”

Vana finished coiling rope and stuffed it into her backpack. “Are you done?”

Uncertain, Ciardis looked at her. “Yes.”

“Fine,” Vana said.

“Fine?”

“It’s fine,” she responded. “But know this. When the day comes that you’re fighting a demi-god, you’ll wish you’d had every extra bit of power you possessed, and you’ll wonder what could have been if you had just buried this hatchet with Sebastian.”

“He’s infuriating!”

“Did I say I wanted to hear more about problems in your love life?” Vana said. “No, I didn’t. We’re moving out in five minutes. Be ready.”

And that was that.

An hour later Lady Vana, Prince Heir Sebastian, the Daemoni prince, and Companion Trainee Weathervane were awkwardly perched on a roof within shouting distance of the walls that guarded the Duke of Carne’s villa. Awkward because of their crouches on the peak of the roof, and awkward because Ciardis laid an even distance between Thanar and Sebastian. She could feel anger radiating from them both. She had no idea what Thanar’s problem was, and she didn’t really want to know.

Vana put down a spyglass and whispered, “In two minutes, at midnight, the guard changes over. We’ll sneak over the wall in between shifts.”

“And how do you propose we do that?” Sebastian asked.

“It’ll be easy for Thanar,” concluded Vana, “He’ll fly over with Ciardis and take out any guards waiting on the top. You and I will go by vine.”

“Vine?” said Sebastian.

“Let’s go,” said Vana as she quickly scrambled down the roof. For a few precious minutes, heavy clouds covered the moon. It was as dark as it was going to get. Sebastian scrambled behind her.

As she watched the two of them reach the base of the building and sprint across the open street, Ciardis grimaced in worry.

Then she heard Thanar say, “You heard the woman. Let’s go.”

“No kisses this time,” she grumbled. She held her glaive out horizontally so they could fly unencumbered.

He didn’t bother commenting, and soon they were gliding down from the peaked roof and over onto to the duke’s buttress overlooking the street. As Thanar stood guard warily, she jumped up on the stone wall in order to see over the ledge. Sometimes being small and short had its downsides. This was one of them.

At first she couldn’t make out anything in the darkness and mist at the base of the twenty-foot wall.

Then she saw Vana and Sebastian’s still forms looking up at her from where they had plastered their bodies against the side of the stone wall in an effort to hide themselves from view. She watched and waited. Wondering what their plan could possibly be. ‘Vines’ didn’t explain anything, and she was pretty sure Vana hadn’t packed any grappling hooks, although one never knew with her.

Then she felt Sebastian’s power surge. It was sharp but quiet, as if he was trying the restrain the connection and not alert another soul that he had called on the land. Then she watched as Vana planted something at his feet. Maybe seeds? They could have been acorns or coins, for all she knew. But what happened next was fascinating. The objects in the ground sprouted. And the plants that grew from those seeds didn’t stop growing at a normal height. They became as tall as the two humans standing in front of their stalks. Then as tall as halfway up the base of the wall, until finally they grew so tall and thick that they reached just above where Ciardis was hanging over the ledge.

From behind her she heard Thanar say with satisfaction, “A land sacrifice.”

“Sacrifice?” she said, too curious about the occurrence to ignore his presence as she was tempted to.

“The imperial family is well known for their connection to the land,” he said. “When they request something from it like this, it’s known as a sacrifice. Because what was given was taken. Somewhere else a portion of land died to build these plant stalks so strong and fertile. It’s not taken lightly.”

Ciardis watched as Vana and Sebastian climbed up the stalks until they could jump from the plant to the top of the ledge where Ciardis and Thanar stood.

Exchanging wary glances with them, Vana quickly headed off toward the east with everyone following silently behind.

It was surprisingly easy getting to the Duke of Carne’s personal chambers. If you considered sneaking down halls, hiding in staircases, barely dodging late working servants and guard patrols easy. They hadn’t had to kill anyone, so Ciardis did consider it fairly easy.

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