I was woken from a very much
wanted and needed, deep slumber by a knock on the chamber door. The
first few raps I had decided to ignore. It was most likely because I
was sleeping through breakfast and it was just a servant sent to
check to see if I was needing to be awoken. I felt in such dire need
of actual rest that I did not care if I went a bit hungry or even if
I missed the first bit of time allotted for training, as queen I
could bend, break, or make up my own rules whenever I saw fit.
Typically I was inclined to
follow the regiments and advice of the experts, but it was a choice
on my part and it could be revoked whenever I chose. Ana probably
could use a break anyway, I knew that she was powerful and skilled
enough to likely not be physically exhausted, but I was certain she
had to be emotionally and mentally exhausted after every stunt Feros
had pulled.
After several rounds of
knocks, whomever it was was being quite bold and not getting the hint
and leaving me be and when Mistra began to stir I gave up to go
answer. It hadn’t been long since Mistra had crawled into bed next
to me. She had spent all night studying and needed all the rest she
could get.
“Feros,” I said with a low
growl once I saw his face, “you’re already not one of my favorite
people and now you’re waking me up in the morning too? Haven’t
you done enough recently to think it’s best to stay well clear of
me unless you have something important to talk to me about?”
The fiend nodded with an
irritating smile that told me he knew something that I did not. “I
would never dream of interrupting your beauty sleep if it were not
important, and I assure you that while you might be irritated about
being woken up early now, you would be much more upset if I did not
tell you what I’ve discovered right away.”
With an irritated huff through
my nose, I looked him over, he did seem a tad more fidgety than
normal though it could have been his needing to break in his new
body. He hadn’t been keeping any one body long enough these days to
get used to them, even though they always looked the same to me. I
was mildly curious about where exactly these bodies were coming from,
but I had a sneaking suspicion I would regret finding out. Everything
about Feros turned out to be more complex and disturbing than what
you would expect on first glance.
“Please, may I come in? Time
is of the essence.”
“I would rather not wake
Mistra, she just fell asleep,” I explained.
“Ah I am sorry, but I feel
it would be best if we talk where it’s least likely we’re
overheard and besides, I’m sure she’ll want to know all this
first hand as well,” he pressed.
Giving in, I opened the door
more and beckoned him inside, then took a quick glance down each end
of the hallway. No one appeared to be around and by the very low
level of light coming through the windows it was likely very early in
the morning and no one was likely to have been awake to skulk around
a corner.
“This is perhaps some of the
most exciting news you will receive in a while,” he said. He began
to pace in front of the bed, looking to me with a huge smile.
Closing the door, I turned to
him and inclined my head to indicate for him to continue.
“I’m aware that you’ve
had a bit of trouble with some spies regarding the Church so I’d
thought I’d be helpful and do some digging to try to find some new
contacts.”
“You did what?” asked a
very groggy Mistra. She sat up straight in bed, her ashen hair a halo
of fuzz around her face, she hadn’t slept long, but she had slept
hard. “How did you know that even happened? Mari and I have been
the only ones involved and I know she would never trust you enough to
tell you anything about it. The only person I have told is Toria and
I definitely know she would not trust you with that kind of
information either.”
“Are you implying that I’m
not trustworthy?” he said in fake shock, holding a hand to his
chest.
“You know damn well no one
trusts you, stop trying to avoid answering my question: how did you
know?”
Mistra was a bit cross when
woken before she was ready.
“I have my ways,” the
fiend said slyly. “Let’s just say that some of these walls can
tell tales. That’s a discussion for another day, however, today we
need to discuss what exactly I have uncovered thanks to my selfless
act.”
“You’re hoping that I end
up forgetting this, but I definitely will not,” Mistra muttered.
She bundled the blanket around her and stood up, sleepily shuffling
over to the chair in front of her desk to take a seat where she could
better scowl at the fiend.
“Out with whatever it is
that was so important you had to tell me right now,” I demanded.
“Well, skipping a bit of
juicy gossip to get to the best part, you should know that your
little brother has legally had his rights to kingship… postponed,
for lack of a better term.”
“Postponed” This was an
intriguing bit of information. “How is that possible? I am assuming
he was officially named heir apparent, as soon as I killed our father
he should have ascended the throne. He should have been sitting on
the throne for a couple months by now.”
“Ah, but a sort of deal had
been struck before your father’s untimely passing.” The fiend
grinned from ear to ear like he had just told the joke of a lifetime.
“Apparently he did not anticipate his own impending death and made
a deal that essentially gave the Great Church control of the kingdom
if he were to die with some conditions. It really was a messy deal
that I assume your father would get what we wanted from the bargain
and then he would contest to get annulled, unless he really hated
your little brother.”
“I’m sure that’s not
it,” I said dryly, “being a boy was all that was required to have
him loved and adored. I find it very hard to believe that he just
signed away that usurper’s power so carelessly. He was always
preoccupied with the idea of his male heir and continuing the male
bloodline.”
Anger boiled up from the very
depths of my stomach and I felt the urge to kill the already dead
man. While I had been a bit preoccupied with the threat of the Church
and lost aunts looming, my deep, seething anger had never lifted or
lessened. I still wanted my revenge and my kingdom would be mine or I
would die clawing it back into my possession.
“Perhaps something else was
at play that even I do not know quite yet, but I am very certain that
he signed the agreement. I believe he got the young princess he so
desperately wanted to retrieve from you in the agreement. In fact
that seems to have been the major benefit he was getting out of the
agreement, I suppose it is possible that he was thinking with one
head rather than another.”
I rolled my eyes and let out
an audible sound of disgust. I knew the creature did not exactly
exude tact, but the insinuation was particularly disgusting and he
knew how I felt about that situation having existed in the first
place. My father had been absolutely vile in his attempt to
manipulate his way into taking a nearly child bride. Marrying young
was sometimes done by royals and even nobles, that part I couldn’t
deny, the precedent had been set long ago, but there was something
that turned my stomach at the idea of my father marrying someone
barely out of young childhood whom was on top of it young enough to
have easily been his great grandchild.
If you spot this story on Amazon, know that it has been stolen. Report the violation.
“I don’t say this often,”
Mistra said with a scoff, “but that attempt at a joke was beneath
even you.”
“Well it tickled me,” he
said, smile never dropping. “My point is, the Church immediately
sent out someone to take the reins so to speak and establish control
over the kingdom before your brother could complete coronation. You
see, no one knew outside of your father about the agreement, further
proof in my opinion that he had ever intention of going back on the
deal and if coronation were to happen, then it would have been much
harder for them to swoop in and take back control.”
“So the Church is at the
helm and not my brother? That’s what you wanted to tell me with
such urgency? You must like seeing me in a bad mood, that makes
everything worse for me. Taking on my rightful kingdom’s army is a
lot less daunting than the Church and their resources.”
“I haven’t told you
everything yet, there’s much more drama that’s unfolded. You see,
the Church has caught wind of our little fae problem and they’re
not comfortable at all with the idea of fae essentially being in
their backyard. The Church has spent quite a lot of effort convincing
their followers that everything to do with magic, old gods, myths,
and exotic creatures is all just made up nonsense meant to distract
the pious from their duty to worship their gods as the only in
existence. Every time in the history of your human realm that fae or
something similar pop up en masse, word tends to get around and new
religions and folklore get created. They want to do as much damage
control as quickly as possible to avoid much of that happening. It’s
a dream scenario for me really, I am absolutely delighted at the idea
of them trying to figure out how to deal with them. None of them, not
even the highest of their hierarchy, will be able to hold a candle to
their power. One whiff of someone meddling in fae affairs and they’re
going to get a very rude awakening and it’s been so very long since
the Church has had any direct contact with fae that I’m sure the
dangers have been long forgotten. It’s going to be beautiful
chaos.”
“They’re going to be way
too busy to worry about us then,” Mistra said, her voice had a hint
of excitement in it. “That gives us a lot more time.”
“Why would they care about
us at all then?” The understanding of why this was such important
news dawned on me. “This is absolutely wonderful news, why are you
treating it like we need to sneak around and be private with it? We
should tell everyone and have a feast to celebrate that one of our
greatest worries is abated for now.”
“Well, let me remind you the
part about how your brother had been puppet-ed once more.” Feros
was building to something big, his rate of pacing was increasing and
small giggles of delight were escaping him from time to time. “He
has still not been crowned, the people are now aware that he cannot
be until the Church gives the okay, and the handlers who were sent to
manage him have been called away to deal with the fae threat.
Therefore, your little brother is currently sitting in a castle that
he technically does not control, exposed and vulnerable. It may be
pertinent for you to remember that your place in the line of
succession was not revoked.”
“If he dies, I am next in
line,” I whispered in shock. It all sounded too good to be true,
the events were lining up to be too fortuitous.
“What about the agreement?”
Mistra asked. “Wouldn’t that mean that Toria would just be the
one who had to be cleared by the Church to rule? I can’t see any
scenario where they would allow that.”
“They made an error in the
wording of the official document. It would be a trivial matter to
prove that the agreement would not hold water if the current heir
dies before taking the throne. Toria would have every legal right to
ascend and it would look very poorly for the Church to pursue forcing
the document to hold, they thrive on the idea that the kingdoms see
them as fair and balanced, only acting for the concept of goodness.”
“Too good to be true. I
can’t believe this is all this simple.” There had to be some sort
of catch, there always was with Feros. He was good at knowing what
exactly to dangle in front of you to get the outcome he wanted, like
dangling a carrot before a mule to get it going in the right
direction with the cart.
“It won’t be so
straightforward, that’s true,” he admitted, “but I don’t
believe it will be that hard either. I think it’s worth a shot for
you to go and try, we can leave in secret and probably be there well
before the Church has even begun to figure out how to approach the
fae problem.”
“In secret… again, why are
we working in secrecy? Rafe will be thrilled to know the Church is
distracted, it has been all he’s worried for months and months now.
He would probably send me back in a golden carriage to secure the
kingdom, my gains are also his benefit.”
Feros stopped mid pace and
cast Mistra a serious glance, then let out a deep, rumbling laugh.
“Mistra, have you not fully impressed upon your queen how
untrustworthy your father is? I would think by now you would have sat
her down and really explained how he operates by now.”
Mistra gave the creature a
withering look and stood up, still clutching the blanket to her. “Do
not try that with me.” Her voice dripped with malice. “I know how
you like to drive wedges between people to help distract from things
you don’t want people to find out or think on too long.”
“I meant no harm.” He put
his hands up in front of him and bowed his head slightly in
deference. “Let me rephrase to just say we need to consider what
Rafe may stand to gain from double crossing Toria at this juncture.
Rafe has actually done a much better job adhering to the terms of the
Yser agreement much better than I would ever had guessed, he does
seem to have some respect for the Yser house.”
“Of course he does, my
father was the one who established it. He is obviously going to want
to see it attain glory when he’s the one who set the path to their
glory into motion.”
“I agree,” Feros said with
a nod, then looked to me, “but he also knows that Toria is a woman
with ambition, more ambition that Evonia ever had. Evonia was content
to live in the lap of luxury as things were, she saw no need for
expansion or flexing of her power to saber rattle with the big
kingdoms. You, you are different, an outlier that I don’t think
Rafe anticipated, he probably thought that one of her direct
offspring would ascend the throne, someone she would more directly
influence and make to be a replica of her.”
“He has never been anything
but respectful of me,” I challenged.
“Has he?” Feros questioned
with a twinkle in his eye. “He has never yelled, stomped his feet,
and made thinly veiled threats?”
It was like a switch flipped
in my mind, he had acted that way, but he always had and I had just
accepted it as just how it was. I would never, ever let anyone else,
monarch or not speak to me like that, so why did I let Rafe have a
pass? He held the cards, that’s why, he had leverage over me that I
had never fully processed before and now that I had, I despised it.
“You’re starting trouble,”
Mistra growled, “we’re not in a position right now to fix the
issue, you know that our long term plans involve solving this
particular problem.”
“I’m not trying to start
trouble, Toria knows that acting out against your father right now
would be suicide. I merely am suggesting that we keep him out of this
particular matter and perhaps forge our own path so that Rafe isn’t
tempted to step in and claim the kingdom for himself.”
“You’re sure he doesn’t
know?” I asked, mind whirling as I tried to process this new
perspective. Everything was happening all at once and still being
sleep starved was not helping. I wanted to be double and triple sure
that I was making the right choice, but it felt like I also needed to
make that choice quickly. I didn't know how long this window of
opportunity would stay open and I would be absolutely devastated if I
hesitated and missed using it.
“Not a clue, if we leave it
will take him a good long while to work out what’s going on, if he
does at all before we complete our mission. We can have you on the
throne and ready to command in case Rafe does take rather poorly to
you doing this without him. Which he probably will, I won't lie, but
I think it's an outcome you will be glad you ran for yourself and not
risk being double crossed.”
I looked to Mistra, who looked
back to me with a worried expression, but gave me a nod to indicate
that she was behind me with whatever I decided. It was very, very
telling that she was not speaking up anymore about the things Feros
was saying and insinuating about her father. She obviously was very
much of the idea that he was not the most effective sovereign, but
she still defaulted to defending him out of familial love.
“Okay,” I said slowly and
carefully, weighing my words to make sure this was exactly the path I
wanted to go, “let’s go usurp the usurper.”

