Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Fiction, #Adult, #General
Tribunalist said. "We only have your word that he has caused you trouble."
"Isn’t my word good enough?" He was amazed they would dare question his honor. The Prince
Regent’s honor.
"Unless you have specific charges that can be corroborated by an impartial witness, it is your word
against the Arch-Prelate’s. Are there specific charges, Majesty?" The Tribunalist’s thin mouth stretched
into a fine line of sneering contempt.
Conar had gone to the Judiciary Committee of the Tribunal to have Kaileel Tohre censured. He knew he
couldn’t give the Tribunal any hold over him by mentioning the Domination’s attempt to possess him.
They would have reported it directly to his father and that was something he couldn’t permit. It would
have been tantamount to having himself declared an outcast, disowned by his kin if anyone found out he
had allowed himself to be touched by the Domination. What he had wanted to do was have them order
Kaileel Tohre to stay away from him, and even in that he had been thwarted by Tolkan’s arrival at the
hearing.
Tolkan’s leering eyes had impaled Conar with a warning. He smiled at the seven-member panel. "Kaileel
Tohre is under my supervision, Your Worships. I would know if he bore any animosity toward our young
prince. If anything, Sirs, Tohre loves the boy dearly."
Conar jerked as though he had been slapped. The warning was clear…Say one more word and the
Tribunal will know how well Tohre loves you!
"I asked if there were specific charges against Cardinal Tohre," the Tribunalist said.
To keep from screaming his anger, Conar had to clench his teeth. "No, Your Worship, I have no
specific charges."
"Then why are you bothering us with this?" one of the other Tribunalists asked. "If you have a personal
grievance with Cardinal Tohre, take it up with him. We do not get involved in personality clashes, Prince
Conar."
Conar looked at the little man and saw his defeat in the hard expression. Tolkan’s friends, he thought
with fury. If they weren’t brethren of the Domination, they should have been. He bowed his head in
impotent rage, his fists clenched at his sides. "My apologies to you, Your Worships," he mumbled. "I will
handle it as you suggest."
"May I also suggest you not come to the Tribunal again unless there is something worthy of these
gentlemen’s attention, Conar," Tolkan told him with reprimand.
Conar stared at the old man. "I won’t," he whispered and could feel the sweat dripping down his sides
and breastbone. He couldn’t get out of the Tribunal Hall fast enough to suit him. Once outside, he took a
steadying breath and wondered again why the place terrified him so.
"What were you doing in there?" his father asked from the walkway leading to the Temple.
Conar jumped, his heart slamming painfully in his chest with fear that his father might suspect something.
"Nothing."
King Gerren raised one thick brow in disbelief. "Nothing? To my knowledge, you have never stepped
foot inside those doors and yet you tell me you now went inside for
nothing
?" He fixed his son with a
hard stare. "No man goes to the Tribunal for
nothing
. I ask you again—what were you doing in there?
Were you trying to undermine my authority by asking leniency for Galen’s perfidy? His punishment has
already been decided!"
"Galen is being punished far more than you know."
"Surely you did not ask for further punishment for him." He flung out a negating hand. "Having his
stewardship of the Southern Zone revoked and banishment from this court for two years is sufficient, I
would think, for what he did. He is still second in line to the throne, although that was not my wish, but
the Tribunal’s. I would have disowned the treacherous little snot, but the Tribunal merely wanted him
reprimanded."
Conar ground his teeth. "I believe that is a fitting judgment, Your Grace. I would not have presumed to
interfere with their authority." He looked at his father. "Or yours."
"Then why the hell were you in there?"
If he could have stopped himself, held his tongue, kept down the boiling temper inside him, he would
have. But he spoke before he thought, before he knew he had done so, and he caught a glimpse of his
father’s astonishment. "It’s none of your gods-be-damned business why I was in there!"
Gerren’s mouth dropped open. Never had his son spoken to him in such a way; and to make matters
worse, the ill-mannered ass simply trounced away, turning his back on his father, his
king
, as though
Gerren was of no consequence. Adding insult to the injury, when the King called after him, the little
bastard ignored him.
"Conar! Come back here! This instant!" His face turned beet-red as Conar continued on.
Gerren spun around, caught the arm of a passing servant. "Fetch that fool back here to me!" It didn’t
take long for the servant to come back with word that Conar would not come. "I’ll geld him!" Gerren
bellowed and stormed after his son, but search though he did, Gerren could not find Conar anywhere in
the keep. Grabbing the first Elite he saw, the King ordered him to find Legion.
"He’s outside, Highness," Storm Jale said.
"I want him to talk with that shitty brother of his!" Gerren shouted before storming off.
Storm didn’t need to ask which brother. "About what, Highness?" Storm called after him.
"Everything! Anything!" Gerren screamed, banging shut the library door behind him.
* * *
arguing. As soon as his father had gone in the main doors to the palace, Conar had come out a side door
and headed for the medical wing. His brother had stopped him and they had immediately begun arguing.
Conar laughed as A’Lex threw his hands into the air, stomped across the courtyard, and stormed his way
to the stables.
Kaileel kept his eyes on the young prince until he knew Conar had noticed him. He lowered his head in
greeting and grinned as Conar hurried to the medical wing and slammed the door to the infirmary behind
him.
"Not in a very good mood, is he, Your Eminence?" asked Tohre’s young postulant-valet, Robert
MacCorkingdale.
"I would say not." Kaileel patted the boy’s shoulder. "I would imagine he is going to see the Healer for
something to calm his nerves, wouldn’t you?"
"It would appear so, Eminence."
"Too bad," Kaileel sighed, tugging on the sleeve of his long robe. "Healer Cayn’s potions are not good
for him. Perhaps I should give him something to make him feel better, eh?"
"I would be most happy to see he receives any medications you wish him to take, Eminence."
Tohre put his arm around the boy’s shoulders. "You’re a good boy. A good boy, indeed."
* * *
mead that was to be taken to Prince Conar. "Ain’t nothing to harm him, is it?"
"Not at all, Granny." Robert smiled, patting her cheek. He handed the old woman the vial of tyrian fluid
Kaileel had concocted. "Just see he gets a teaspoon of it in everything he drinks, except milk. The Master
says he’s not to ever have this mixed in milk."
The old woman’s eyes grew hard with speculation. "Would that kill him, Robbie?"
The boy shrugged. "That’s just what the Master said."
"So long as it don’t kill him," she sniffed and dropped the vial of liquid into her vast apron pocket. "He
ain’t to die just yet."
"Why don’t you like him, Granny?"
Sadie studied him for a long time. "Maybe it’s time I told you. I think you’re old enough."
* * *
picked up a dark amber vial, uncorked the purple-colored drug, and sniffed. It smelled of wild cherries,
but was not detectable when mixed in a strong beverage such as ale or mead or brandy. When mixed
with water, it turned a milky-green and could cure the mightiest of hangovers. If mixed with wine, the
cherry flavor deadened the tongue, and caused a buzzing, ringing sensation in the ears that brought about
confusion and mind-numbing obedience. It was most effective when mixed with plum brandy, and that
was the young prince’s favorite libation.
A strong soporific when given entirely by itself, as he had given it to Conar at the Abbey, tenerse was
the drug of choice for most of what magic Kaileel had used against Conar through the years. Secretly, the
High Priest had administered the drug, or had one of his henchmen add the potion, to Conar’s wine and
brandy on many occasions. The brandy-tenerse mixture instigated anger and stubbornness. Never before
had he given the drug to the young man on a daily basis and he was most anxious to see the results as
Conar’s system absorbed the drug over a long period of time.
He had cautioned Robert to tell his grandmother that the drug was never to be given in milk. Should that
dangerous mixture enter the prince’s system, it could cause serious complications. In the Brotherhood’s
pharmacopoeia, tenerse was most often used as a philter, a powerful love potion, that, when mixed with
the secretions of any female animal’s mammary glands, could cause instant and violent sexual arousal.
The Hasdu had used it for centuries before attacking neighboring camps; the brutal rape of the
womenfolk of the captured encampments was the result.
Recorking the vial, Kaileel put it on the shelf and smiled. With each increased dosage, with each
residual-building intake, Conar McGregor’s behavior would start to alter drastically from the normal. The
boy would think himself going mad, for he would not be able to overcome and control the powerful anger
that would begin ripping through his system, an anger caused primarily by the effect of the tenerse. As the
drug permeated his body, that anger would build to furious proportions until Conar would no longer be
able to keep in check the evil side of his nature.
Power or no power, Conar McGregor
could
be controlled!
"I don’t give a damn what you used to do!" Conar yelled at Thom Loure.
"I don’t want it done that
way now
!" He turned a frosty stare to Marsh Edan and Storm Jale. "Get the hell back to the barracks
and stay there!
I don’t need bodyguards in my own home
!" He started to walk away and then spun
around to point a finger at the three men. "And stay the hell out of my fucking way!"
Thom stared at his Overlord’s retreating back. A huge scowl was on his usually cheerful face as he
watched Conar shout at Lin Dixon, another Elite Guard. He’d already been chewed out by Legion
earlier; he didn’t need both brothers shouting at him. "What the hell did I do?" Thom asked.
Marsh shook his head. "I don’t know what’s got into him lately, but no one seems immune from his foul
temper. I heard him and Teal going at it earlier. Du Mer moved out, bag and baggage. Went back to
Downsgate."
"He works us like we’re dogs," Storm snapped. He looked at the ugly bruise on his left forearm where
Conar had slammed a pike across the flesh. "And he’s going out of his way to hurt the recruits whenever
he goes to workout with Hern. He broke Patrick’s nose yesterday."
"Hern told me this morning he was going to have a talk with him." Thom nodded to the Master-at-Arms,
who had fallen in behind the prince as Conar stalked toward the guard stables.
"He tried to send Heil to his farm, but the lady wouldn’t hear of it," Storm mumbled. "She had Sentian’s
missus move into the servants quarters with him. Now,
that
was a brawl when Conar heard about his
lady countermanding one of his orders. You should have heard the shouting!"
Marsh rolled his eyes. "I heard her tell him to take a flying leap."
"I heard him tell her not to interfere in royal business, too," Storm reported.
"Aye, but the lady gave as good as she got. I thought he’d blow his top when she stamped her foot and
told him to grow up." Marsh hooted with laughter.
"It’s not funny," Thom grunted. "He’s worse than he was when she used to disappear."
"Used to be just us he’d yell at. Now it’s her, too." Storm shook his head. "And the lady don’t like it
one bit."
Thom watched Hern follow the prince inside the stable. He was glad he wasn’t going to be on the
receiving end of that vicious scowl covering the old warrior’s face.
* * *
planks and stared morosely at the tack stored along the far wall. He shivered from head to toe, his heart
raced, and he felt as though he would, indeed, explode. His head throbbed with blinding pain and sweat
drenched him although it was deep into December and there was at least eight inches of snow on the
ground, the wind-chill lowering the temperature to well below freezing. He held his hand up to his face
and marveled at its unsteadiness. He stared at the trembling fingers and snarled. Wrapping his arms
around himself, he tried to still the shivering, to calm his fraying nerves.
"What’s wrong with you?" he mumbled.
He had never felt this way before. He felt alien. He felt unnatural. His outbursts over the months since
coming home from the Abbey had grown increasingly more destructive. He fought with everyone who
came in contact with him.
"Are you going mad?" he asked.