Amaskan's Blood Raven Oak (polar express read aloud TXT) đ
- Author: Raven Oak
Book online «Amaskan's Blood Raven Oak (polar express read aloud TXT) đ». Author Raven Oak
âWho told him I was dead?â
âThe friend who suggested ya be sent to the Amaskans in the first place. He came back with the word of your death. Heâs the one who betrayed your father.â Ida shifted in her saddle, and Adeleiâs eyes narrowed.
âHow did the King discover otherwise? Did this traitor confess?â
Ida laughed. âHardly. Since your âdeath,â King Leon has watched the Amaskans. Probably closer than the Boahim Senate, Iâll wager. One of the reasons Amaskans arenât allowed in Alexander. Part of my jobâas His Majestyâs sepierâis to watch the Order. Iâve been in and out of Sadain borders two or three dozen times in the past fifteen years.â
âWhy?â
âTo find those responsible. Almost a year ago, I passed ya on the streets. The moment I saw ya, I knew who ya were.â
âHow?â
âYa truly are twin to your sister.â
Adelei pursed her lips together. âYouâre lying. Youâre not telling me everything, and without Master Bredych here to defend himselfâwell, letâs just say that I doubt he played the role you think he did. Someone else has their fingers in this yarn. Either way, Iâm no princess now. Nor have I any interest in becoming one.â
âOf course not. Your fatherâs no fool, child. He didnât bring ya home as a princess. Do ya see any royal guard or a procession proclaiminâ ya alive? Youâre better off dead.â
âNice to know he cares.â
âBy Echana, must ya act like a child? I just meant that hidinâ in plain sight will make your job easier.â
âHe left me dead until I was needed.â The words left her tongue, which she bit. Deep breaths did little to still the turmoil. She needed control of herself before they reached the capital, lest she set loose her tongue in such a way as to be banished from her own kingdom. My own kingdom. Ha. As if theyâd allow a murderer, an Amaskan, to take the crown. Even my own sisterâs death couldnât bring about that scenario.
A thought popped into her brain so vile, she pushed it away with a mental hand. Bitter she might be, assassin she might be, but killer she was not. Her kills brought justice, not pure vengeance.
Pictures of her last kill flashed before her. A little voice inside her head whispered, but werenât you made of vengeance? Didnât you relish the kill, causing the pain to last as you killed me? It was Magistrate Meserreâs voice that echoed in her skull.
Normal to feel something at the loss of another humanâbut the Order existed to serve justice when others could not. Killing for the Order meant helping people. Or so Adelei had convinced herself. It was a crucial tenet of her belief systemâthe belief system of all Amaskans.
Leaves crackled under her fingers as she dug her nails into the dirt on the forest floor, its rich, earthy smell mixing with the bile in the back of her throat. She knew not when she tumbled from her horse, but moved clumsily through the dirt, stumbling into the brush to lose all traces of her breakfast. Only when dry heaves remained, her body left shaking, did she rise on unsteady feet. Not even the swish of water could rid her mouth of the taste of vomit and death, joy and bitternessâa vile concoction going down, much less coming up.
âIâm sorry ya had to hear this from me. And this way. This canât sit easy in ya.â The kindness in Idaâs voice hit all the harder after the disturbing thoughts that had crossed her mind, and she shook her head before returning to the saddle. Midnight sidestepped at her hurry and bumped shoulders with Idaâs mare.
âWho are you? You know things⊠more than mere research. Who are you? Are you the traitor who named me dead?â
Adeleiâs dagger was in her hands and against Idaâs throat swiftly enough, despite her stomachâs quivering. âAnswer me.â she shouted and leaned closer to the woman. The blade pressed against the horizontal, puffy scar.
âNo. No, Iâm not the traitor who did thatâbut I did betray ya, and for that, Iâm sorry.â
âWho are you? Iâm not going to ask again.â
âIâm the one who kidnapped ya.â
âYour Majesty?â
The words were worlds away, but King Leon nodded. Or at least he thought he did. When the words were repeated and his shoulders shaken, he pried open an eye to a fuzzy world, unfocused and very blue in color.
âStop⊠shaking⊠me.â The words took an armyâs effort as his tongue felt thick in his mouth.
âYour Majesty, do you know where you are?â
His vision sharpened some, and he recognized the tapestry on the wall of the field where he and Catherine had first met, her slender frame walking toward him. Sheâd been a complete stranger. The bravery it must have taken to travel so far, only to marry a complete stranger.
âCatherine?â Leon whispered.
âYour Majesty?â
Leon shook his head and blinked back time. The world snapped into focus. He lay in his bed. The same bed where his father had been murdered. The healer before him sighed and pinched Leonâs arm to check the flush.
âWhat happened?â Leon asked.
âWe found you with Sir Goefrinâs body. You were near death, Your Majesty.â
âDid you find the vial?â
The healer glanced behind him at King Leonâs personal physician, Roland, before nodding. âWe did, Your Majesty. Foul stuff âtwas.â
Roland held the vial between slightly swollen fingers. âHow did Your Majesty come by this?â
âGoefrin. He had it.â Leonâs tongue still felt like a pile of leaves more than a proper tongue, and he tried to roll it around in his mouth. âHe⊠he killed my father⊠w-with it.â
Roland sent the other healers out of the room with a nod. âI suspected as much at the time but couldnât prove it. I didnât want to raise suspicion against such a trusted family friend if I was wrong.â
âI understand. He admitted committing several acts of treason, andââ
âYour Majesty, thereâs something more you must knowââ
Rolandâs concern was touching, and Leon reached up to
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