The Immortal Prince (52 page)

Read The Immortal Prince Online

Authors: Jennifer Fallon

Chapter 65

Three days after the King and Queen of Glaeba and their entourage left for their own palace in Herino with Mathu and Kylia in tow, Declan Hawkes formally requested an audience with the Duke of Lebec. Although he remained outwardly calm, Stellan was panic-stricken by the request. There was only one reason Stellan could think of that would attract the attention of the King's Spymaster. Guilt about the lies he'd told, the lies he'd arranged for Tilly to tell…all of it had settled into an uncomfortable lump in the centre of his chest that simply refused to go away.

There was no possibility he could deny the King's Spymaster an audience. Any attempt to delay it, the slightest hint that the Duke of Lebec had something to hide, may be all that was needed to throw suspicion on himself. Declan might have no solid evidence at all of Stellan's guilt. Any attempt to avoid him, however, could easily be the proof the spymaster was looking for to implicate the duke in all manner of treasonous activities, ranging from his affair with Jaxyn right up to lying about the whereabouts of his wife and concealing the fact that she had forged the release papers for a convicted murderer.

Hawkes stepped into his office at the appointed time, looking around at the murals with interest. Stellan indicated he should sit and took his own seat behind his desk, laying his palms flat upon the polished desktop so that Declan wouldn't see them shaking.

“Interesting room, I've always thought,” the young man remarked, making himself comfortable in one of the ivory-legged chairs. “Artwork's quite impressive.”

“My great-grandmother had the murals done long before I was born,” Stellan explained, relieved to be talking about something harmless. “The artist was quite a character, I hear. Used to have tantrums and run screaming through the place claiming he couldn't possibly work under such trying conditions. According to my father, they ended up locking him in here and refusing to let him out until the job was done.”

Declan smiled. “It's a good story. Do you think it's true?”

“I don't know,” he replied. “There's probably a grain of truth there somewhere.”

“Lot of myths are like that.”

“Do you think so?” Stellan asked, not sure of the purpose of the discussion. He wasn't fool enough to believe that Declan was making idle conversation.

“I
know
so,” Declan chuckled, and then he sobered a little. “Dangerous things though.”

“Myths?”

“Aye. They make people forget.”

“I would have thought their purpose quite the opposite,” Stellan disagreed. “Aren't myths the reminder of things we shouldn't forget?”

“You're confusing myths with morality tales,” Declan told him. “They're the parables you want to pass on to your children. You know…it's bad to steal, lying will bring you nothing but trouble, you'll get devoured by hairy spiders if you don't eat all your vegetables…that sort of thing.”

“I remember the hairy spider tale,” Stellan laughed. “When I was a small child, I had a Crasii nanny with a knack for storytelling. First time I refused to eat my vegetables, she had me too scared to sleep.”

“Well, I never had a Crasii nanny, but I grew up quite convinced there was a family of tiny assassins living under the floorboards, ready to scuttle out in the dead of night while I was asleep and do me in if I so much as thought about sneaking out the window of my bedroom.”

“Your
grandfather
told you that?” Stellan asked in surprise. Although he'd never met Shalimar Hawkes, to hear Arkady speak of him, Stellan had always thought the old man a candidate for sainthood.

Declan smiled at Stellan's expression. “I was a bit of a handful, back then. I think Pop decided scaring me into staying put was the most expedient way to get a good night's sleep.”

“I can't imagine you being afraid of anything, Declan.”

“Ask Arkady, if you don't believe me,” he suggested. The spymaster seemed amused. And far more relaxed than Stellan was expecting. “Even now, memories of those tiny assassins will do me in, every time.”

“I'll have to remember that the next time I want to intimidate the King's Spymaster.” The pleasant, nonthreatening nature of their conversation was straining Stellan to breaking point. Declan did nothing without cause. He certainly wasn't the sort to indulge in this kind of idle chatter.

“Now myths are another thing altogether,” Declan mused. “They're the stories we don't believe are true because they seem too fantastic to be real.”

“Did you have a particular myth in mind?”

“The Tide Lords are a good example,” Declan replied, and then he added calmly, “and there's a particularly good one I heard recently about a duchess letting a murderer go free.”

Stellan stared at Declan trying to determine if the man was fishing for information or if he actually knew something. If he suspected anything at all, a lie now might be fatal.

But if the spymaster was only guessing…

Stellan couldn't risk it. He swallowed the lump in his throat and shrugged. “Things are not always what they seem.”

“I couldn't agree more.”

“You want an explanation, I suppose?”

“Let's start with the facts,” Declan suggested. “Arkady isn't upstairs resting as you and Lady Ponting assured the king, is she?”

Fighting to keep an outward air of calm, Stellan hesitated and then decided that for once, he'd be better served by the truth. Or at least part of it. “No, she's not.”

“So she's not pregnant then, either?”

“She may be. I haven't asked her recently.”

“And the prisoner she had released from Lebec Prison with your authorisation? Where is he?”

“If I'm lucky, he's wherever Arkady is, she is still alive and he'll let her go when he no longer feels threatened.”

Declan seemed a little surprised. “You mean you knew about this?”

Stellan raised a brow at Declan. “Did you think I wouldn't?”

“His release was more than a little irregular, your grace.”

“It was a little irregular,” Stellan agreed. “But you know Arkady better than anyone. She was convinced she was close to exposing him. When the king ordered him to be handed over to you, she begged me for one last chance to question him. I saw no harm in it, so I sent her to the prison with a release order and a Crasii escort, so that she could question him on the return journey, before handing the prisoner over to you. They stopped to water the horses at Clyden's Inn and the prisoner escaped, taking Arkady hostage and somehow subverting the escort. As soon as I learned about it, I sent Jaxyn Aranville and another dozen Crasii after them. If you don't believe me, speak to the owner of Clyden's Inn.”

“I already have,” the spymaster admitted.

Almost faint with relief that he'd chosen to tell most of the truth, Stellan shrugged. “What more can I tell you?”

“You can tell me why you lied to the king about Arkady.”

That charge was much harder to dodge, but Stellan hadn't entirely wasted the time since Declan asked to see him just fretting about it. He had his answer at the ready; didn't even hesitate before providing it. “I'm surprised you have to ask,” he said with a smile that spoke much about what he thought of the spymaster's reputation. “You must be aware I have arranged for Mathu to marry my niece. There have been some very delicate negotiations going on between me and the king. I wasn't about to jeopardise them by letting him know I'd done anything as foolish as putting my own wife in the power of a madman. The king gets distracted easily, Declan. You know that. I didn't want anything to get in the way of the betrothal.”

Declan nodded, apparently accepting his explanation as a perfectly legitimate reason, which, for any other noble family in Glaeba, it probably was. Fortunately, only Arkady had any idea Stellan wasn't happy about Kylia's engagement.

“Do you need help finding her?” he offered.

“Thank you, but I'm still hoping Jaxyn will prevail. He's a resourceful lad, knows the area quite well and is very fond of Arkady. I'm sure he won't rest until he's brought her home.”

“And what of Kyle Lakesh?”

“Lord Aranville has orders to take whatever actions are necessary to rescue Arkady. If that includes killing an escaped convict, then so be it.”

“I admire your restraint, your grace,” Declan remarked, watching him closely. “I think—in your place—I'd be climbing the walls with worry.”

“If only I had the luxury,” Stellan replied. “It's considered weakness among the highborn to display emotional extremes, you know. The idea is drummed into us from infancy. Apparently, letting on that we own even the most basic human feelings makes us appear weak in front of the peasants.”

“Then I'm glad I'm a simple peasant,” the spymaster said. “Not sure I've the courage to maintain a stiff upper lip.”

“I'm not sure any of us have,” Stellan agreed. “One just has to learn to fake it.”

“And how much faking are you doing, your grace?” Declan enquired.

The lump in Stellan's chest relocated itself in his throat. “I beg your pardon?”

“You lied to the king about your wife. You've lied about her being pregnant, which means you're going to have to lie to him again when her belly fails to swell. Seems to me, you're pretty good at this game. Makes a man start to wonder where you got the practice.”

“I don't like what you're implying, sir.”

“Any more than I like what I'm seeing here,” the spymaster replied. “In my experience, where there's one lie, there's a whole raft of others beneath it and it's my job to bring such lies to the attention of the king, not to mention the fact you are married to a woman I consider one of my closest friends. If there's something going on here, that jeopardises either one of them…well, I'm sure you can see my dilemma.”

“If you're trying to insinuate that I'm somehow involved in some plot against the king…,” he sputtered with convincing indignation.

Declan held up his hands in a conciliatory gesture. “I'm insinuating nothing of the sort. I'm just concerned, that's all. You're an important man, Duke Stellan, a close friend—and relative—of the king. I find it disturbing to think you might be involved in deceiving him. For whatever reason. A man can lie to his liege for purposes other than treason, you know.”

Stellan felt the blood drain from his face, certain there was no way Declan Hawkes could miss such a blatant sign of his guilt. Did he know everything? About Jaxyn? About the others before him? About the sham of his marriage to Arkady? Had she told him? And if she had, why wait until now before saying anything about it?

“Exactly what are you implying, Master Hawkes?”

The spymaster opened his mouth to speak, but before he got a word out, the door flew open and Arkady stepped into the room. Stellan jumped to his feet in shock, followed by Declan, who rose a little less abruptly from his chair. Looking travel-stained and weary, her normally perfectly coiffed hair in a long, loose braid, her clothes splattered with something that looked disturbingly like dried blood, she didn't even glance at Declan. Instead, she rushed to her husband, threw herself into his arms and kissed him full on the mouth.

“Oh, Stellan!” she cried, after a delivering a kiss most storybook lovers would have been proud of. “I feared I'd never see you again!”

He held her tightly, glancing up to see Jaxyn standing at the door. Stellan smiled at them both, relief warring with surprise, as Jaxyn stepped into the room.

The young man beamed at them, obviously pleased he had been instrumental in facilitating this reunion. He looked upon Stellan and Arkady indulgently and then turned to Declan Hawkes. “I do love a happy ending, don't you, Master Hawkes?”

“Certainly do, Lord Aranville,” the spymaster agreed, obviously a little puzzled. “I'm glad to see you safe and sound, Arkady.”

“It's only thanks to Jaxyn,” she informed him breathily, gushing in a manner anybody who knew her well would know immediately was an act—a fact that worried Stellan a great deal, because Declan
did
know her well. “He tracked us to an abandoned mine in the mountains and was able to free the Crasii and then trap the fugitive in a cave-in. You must reward him, dear, for his heroism. I don't know what that wretch would have done to me if I'd been his prisoner much longer.”

Stellan studied her face, searching for answers Arkady was too smart to give him with Declan Hawkes in the room. “He didn't hurt you then?”

She smiled; a genuine smile, not a fake one. “Truly, Stellan, I'm fine.”

“There's blood on your clothes…”

“Not mine, thankfully. There was…Chelby was killed.”

“I would sacrifice every Crasii I owned if it meant seeing you safe.” He hugged her again, looking over her shoulder at Jaxyn. “Thank you.”

“You're welcome,” Jaxyn replied. “Believe me, nothing gave me more pleasure than settling the score with the madman calling himself the Immortal Prince.”

“And what of the Crasii?” Declan asked.

“What?” Stellan and Jaxyn both asked simultaneously.

“Lady Desean said you freed the Crasii. How did this fugitive wagon builder manage to subvert an entire squad of felines in the first place?”

“He told them he was a Tide Lord,” Arkady replied, while Jaxyn was still trying to come up with a plausible answer. “As I predicted when I was first brought in to interrogate this man, Declan, news that he had survived the noose and was claiming to be the Immortal Prince took very little time to spread to the Crasii. Between that, a commanding tone and a bit of sleight of hand with an axe at the inn, he had them all purring at his feet in a remarkably short time.” She turned to Stellan and added, “I warned you he was dangerous, didn't I, darling?”

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