Authors: Elysa Hendricks
Tags: #Kidnapping, #Fantasy Fiction, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Life on Other Planets, #Revenge, #General, #Love Stories
home. She would tell Kyne of the child growing within her and
trust him to keep them safe. With her decision came a sense of
peace.
Next to her Zoa stirred and poked her head from under the
cloak. “Who is singing?”
“It is just the wind.” Sianna crawled beneath the cloak and
tucked it securely around them. Meager warmth crept over
her. “Now, go to sleep.”
“They sound like angels.” Zoa’s voice trailed away into
slumber.
Beneath the wail of the wind, voices filled the air with a
beguiling song. Sianna strained to decipher the words, but though
the sound was clear, the meaning was not. Purity rang in those
sweet voices, wrapping her in a sense of peace and comfort.
Surely the singers would help Zoa and her. Cold and fear
forgotten, she stood and followed the sound into the darkness.
***
“Saddle Hakan!” Fear lent strength to Kyne’s roar.
His cloak flying like the wings of some great bird of prey
preparing to pounce, he stormed across the great hall. People
scattered. He pushed past a woman serving last meal. Her
tray tipped. Plates clattered to the floor. Food splattered. Etam
darted out to do Kyne’s bidding.
Katya chased him into the courtyard and grabbed his arm.
“Where are you going?”
He whirled around. “Sianna’s run off. I found Warda in my
chamber. Drugged. I’m after her.”
“In this weather? Alone?” Katya matched his long strides
toward the stables. “By the moons! She must have heard us
talking. Where would she go?”
Feet dancing over the snow-covered cobblestones, Hakan
emerged from the spangles of white filling the air. He snorted
and shook his head, throwing a shower of snow from his already
dusted hide. At his side, Etam struggled to hold the beast.
“To her death.” Kyne leapt into the saddle. He sawed the
reins, forcing Hakan’s head around, and prepared to kick him
into a gallop.
Katya snatched Hakan’s bridle. “Kyne, wait!”
“Let loose.” The thick mantle of falling snow muffled his
shout.
“Which way will you search? It’s near dark. You can’t
chance the trail. The snow will have erased her tracks. Why
not wait until morning?”
“There’s no time.”
“Then I’ll go with you. Etam, saddle Deju.”
“No.” Katya’s rational words calmed his first rush of panic,
but nothing could ease the fear eating away at his heart. Because
of his rash words, Sianna wandered the mountainside, frightened
and alone, easy prey to predators and elements.
Why would she flee? Not for fear of marriage to Prince
Timon. By her own admission she was resigned to her father’s
plans for her. Only a babe growing in her womb could send her
fleeing into the night. With her knowledge of healing she could
easily rid herself of a babe. Instead, to protect that babe—his
babe—she had dashed headlong into danger.
He pulled Hakan’s head free of Katya’s grip. “Come first
light organize a rescue party and search the downward trails.
Rouse Warda if you can. He can track her. Tonight I’ll head
upward as far as a woman afoot could travel in a day. If I don’t
find her, I’ll turn back and meet you along the trails.”
Common sense suggested Sianna would head down the
mountain. Few people ventured higher into the Azul Mountains,
and even fewer returned. Danger lurked around each bend for
the careless or unwary. Death hid in the sharp claws of a hungry
sardak, a fall of loose rock, a misstep over a steep cliff. With
each thought, he whispered a prayer for Sianna’s safety. Still,
something urged him toward the craggy peaks. He remembered
well her fascination with his stories of the mythical Andacor.
Katya nodded and stepped back. “Take care. And find her.”
Calling on childhood memories of his mother’s tales and
his own adventuresome nature, Kyne guided Hakan up the little
used path. As though he knew what was at stake should he
hesitate, Hakan sprang forward.
Hours passed, and the storm intensified. The wind howled
around Kyne, turning the gentle fall of snow into a swirling
gale. He squinted against the sting of icy pellets and watched
the trail for sign of Sianna’s passage. The higher he climbed
the thicker the downfall. Drifts soon slowed them to a walk.
The steep trail exposed them to the raging elements. Eyes
slitted, Kyne hunched forward over Hakan’s neck. Moisture
froze on his cheeks. His fingers grew numb. The quinar’s rear
hooves slid off the ice-crusted trail. For a moment he floundered
on the edge of oblivion, then with a mighty surge he staggered
forward. Sides heaving, Hakan lowered his head and stood
trembling.
His own heart racing, after a moment Kyne nudged the
beast into the leeward side of a large boulder. Until the storm
broke they could travel no further. He could only pray that
Sianna too had sought shelter.
As he dismounted, the faint scent of wood smoke teased
his nose. His foot disturbed the remains of a fire. He knelt.
Smothered by snow, green wood still smoldered, but cast no
heat or light. Sianna had been here. Where was she now? Kyne
looked up.
A few feet away, huddled against the boulder was a small,
snow-covered mound. Heart pounding, he reached out and
brushed away the white blanket. In the snow lit darkness, he
could just make out the brown of a travel cloak. Frightened by
what he might find below, he lifted the edge.
Dark, sleepy eyes blinked up at him.
“Zoa?” In a glance he took in the child, wrapped in Sianna’s
his cloak. But where was Sianna?
“Father. You came. I told Sianna you’d come.” Zoa’s thin
arms reached out for him.
Kyne shook the snow off the cloak and rewrapped her in
it. “Where is Sianna?” Fear tightened his vocal cords.
Zoa yawned and snuggled into his embrace. “We heard
voices. Singing. She followed them. I’m hungry. Can we go
home now?”
“How long ago? Zoa? How long?”
Her small head flopped against his shoulder, and her eyes
fell shut. Asleep, she didn’t answer.
He eased the child back into the shelter of the boulder and
stood. Hours or minutes, it didn’t matter. He couldn’t track her.
No footprints marred the smooth expanse of snow. Even his
and Hakan’s footprints were filling rapidly.
Wind whistling through the rocks could resemble muted
voices singing in the distance. Befuddled by cold, dressed in
naught but her tunic, did she search for a chimera of sound?
He turned in circles. Which way had she gone? He had to
find her? But how? And what of Zoa? He couldn’t leave her
alone. Nor could he drag her further into the storm.
“Sianna! Where are you? Come back!” The wind snatched
his words and whirled them back at him, but gave no answer.
Like twin beasts of prey, guilt and grief clawed his heart.
Because of him Sianna would die on this mountain. He lifted
his head and howled his anguish.
Seventeen
While the storm continued to rage, Zoa slept, curled warm
and lax in Kyne’s lap. He found no such escape. Sorrow
haunted his dreams. Guilt devoured his heart.
Sianna was out there somewhere. Alive? Dead? Either
way, he vowed to find her, but duty demanded he first see Zoa
safely returned to the castle.
The storm cleared, and the sun inched up into a placid blue
sky to glint off a blanket of white. Sparkling like silver crystal in
the early morning light, rivulets of melting snow streamed down
the trail. The tinkle of water coursing over rock provided a
soothing sound that didn’t touch Kyne’s pain.
He eased Zoa from his lap and stood, preparing to return
her to the castle then continue his search for Sianna. The child
slept on.
A few steps away, a mound of white gave a mighty heave
upward and shook. Snow flew. Through the storm, the quinar’s
bulk had provided a living barricade against the cutting wind.
Now he snorted and stamped his feet. Clumps of snow clung
to his furry hide.
The deep baying howl of a hound pierced the tranquility.
Warda! Kyne recognized the beast’s voice.
“Rauk!” Hakan rasped in answer.
Kyne stepped out onto the trail as the clatter of hooves
against rock echoed in the quiet. Led by Warda, two riders
approached. Katya and Graham. The quinars’ sweat-lathered
coats steamed in the cold.
“Rul Cathor!”
“Kyne!”
Graham and Katya shouted together.
Graham sat his quinar awkwardly, his splinted legs sticking
straight down and slightly outward. Deep lines of pain bracketed
his mouth and, despite the crisp mountain air, sweat beaded his
pale skin. Katya rode just behind, her gaze darting from Graham
to Kyne then back.
Warda raced ahead. He halted at Kyne’s side, snuffed at
Zoa, then head down, he crisscrossed the ground around the
boulder. Catching a scent, he gave an anxious whine and dashed
away, only to pause head up, as if waiting for Kyne to follow.
Hope flickered in Kyne. Would Warda respond so if he
smelled death? Kyne wasted no time. As Graham and Katya
rode up, he leapt into Hakan’s saddle. “Katya, take Zoa home.
And this crazy man as well.” He turned toward Graham. “Sianna
will tear a strip from your hide for your foolishness.” If she
survived her own.
“I’m fine.” Graham gripped his saddle with white-knuckled
fingers and looked around. “Where is she?”
“She wandered off in the storm before I arrived.”
Katya’s gasp of dismay reflected Kyne’s own fears. She
slid from Deju’s back and picked up Zoa. He chafed against
this small delay.
“Want Sianna.” Zoa muttered a sleepy protest.
Sianna’s name came out sounding like mama. Kyne’s heart
lurched at the thought of a babe, his babe, in Sianna’s arms.
Had his quest for vengeance driven her to her death?
Katya handed Zoa to Graham and strode over to Kyne.
“What of Prince Timon’s command? Clearly Sianna carries
Aubin’s child. Why else would she flee into the night?” Katya’s
tone and look conveyed her contempt for his actions and its
consequences. “She cannot marry the prince. Nor is it safe for
her to return to Castle Vareck. The prince’s messenger leaked
word of Sianna’s parentage. Though she has friends who rise
to her defense, tempers run hot over her deception. What will
you do?”
“I will find her.” A sudden surety came over him. With
every breath he took, he felt Sianna’s living presence, her heart
beating in time with his.
“And then?” Graham asked. “You have nine days until
DiSanti carries out his threat to kill the queen and princess.
Dramon hovers on the brink of civil war. DiSanti will push the
country into chaos with his madness.”
“Let him,” Katya shouted. “You can’t sacrifice Sianna or
Aubin’s child to his lust for power.”
“But....”
Kyne stopped Graham’s objection. “Katya is right. Sianna’s
pregnancy changes everything. Her death on the spike would
throw the country into turmoil as surely as the deaths of the
queen and princess. There’s naught we can do to prevent war.
Go back to Castle Vareck and send messages to the rebel
leaders to prepare. When I find Sianna, I will return and join
the battle.”
“What do we tell Prince Timon?”
Graham’s quiet question nearly shattered Kyne’s resolve.
He knew well the pain of losing one’s family. How could he
stand by and do nothing to save Timon’s? His own queen and
princess? Yet what could he do?
Kyne met Graham’s gaze. “I hope you are better than you
look, my friend. I need your help.”
Graham’s back straightened. “I am well enough to ride. I
can do whatever you require.”
“And I, what he cannot,” Katya added.
“Good. Take a small troop of men and infiltrate DiSanti’s
siege. Seek out his weaknesses. Find where he holds the queen
and princess.” With growing impatience to be off, Kyne relayed
the rest of his hasty plan. “Go. I’ll see you in nine days.”
He turned Hakan and started up the trail. Warda trotted
alongside. For an hour they pushed upward through melting
drifts of snow. Then he saw her.
Like warmed wine, relief flowed through Kyne’s frozen
veins. Body poised, arms outstretched as if to embrace an
approaching lover, Sianna stood at the edge of a cliff, her slender
body outlined against the sky. Snow dusted her dark hair and
dampened her tunic until it clung like a second skin, but she
was oblivious to the cold, her gaze focused inward. One step,
and she would tumble into a vast chasm.
“Sianna.” She gave no indication she heard him.
Warda started toward her.
“Warda. No.” The hound stopped and gave a reluctant
whine. Kyne dismounted. Beneath his feet the snow-covered
ground groaned. Hakan snorted in fear. Kyne dropped the reins,
and the quinar shuffled backward. Step by cautious step, Kyne
crept closer until an arm’s length separated them. “Sianna?”
She turned her head to him and smiled, her gaze still