Arcane Rising: The Darkland Druids - Book One R Nicole (best fiction books to read .txt) đ
- Author: R Nicole
Book online «Arcane Rising: The Darkland Druids - Book One R Nicole (best fiction books to read .txt) đ». Author R Nicole
âCouldnât resist talking to daddy?â he asked, a smirk pulling at his lips.
âNice to see that knife in your heart didnât change your terrible attitude,â I drawled.
He snatched my beanie, tearing it off my head. My hair fell free, tumbling around my shoulders.
âYour hair has changed since the last time saw you,â he said with a grin. âWhat a beautiful shade of green.â
âQuit it with the arsehole, Owen,â I snarled. âIâm not the same woman you tried to kidnap on top of Calton Hill.â
His gaze raked over me. âI can see that. Been in a fight, have you?â
I ignored his baiting. âI think itâs time you and I have a frank discussion about whatâs really going on here.â
âThey donât know anything about us, do they? You donât even know what kind of Fae you are.â
I narrowed my eyes. âIf you know what kind of Fae I am, then why not just tell me? Let me make up my own mind instead of letting some indecipherable prophecy decide things. Wouldnât it be better for everyone if I came of my own free will?â
âI meant what I said that day in the close,â he told me. âCome with me and I will give you all the answers you deserve.â
âWas killing my father necessary?â
âA child shouldnât be without their father, but,â Owen sighed, âit had to be done. He stole you from us. Justice had to be served.â
I tensed. Everyone thought they were the hero of their own stories. They thought they were doing the right thing, but how much evil was in Owenâs heart? The Fae werenât human or Druidâwho knew what drove their motivations?
âTell me something true, Owen. Give me one good reason why I should side with the Chimera, especially after you took the one person I loved the most away from me.â
âYou want a truth, Elspeth?â He stalked towards me, anger clouding his eyes. âYour mother was supposed to be our queen. That was before your Druid father stole her from us. Then he stole you.â
âA queen?â That was the last thing I expected him to say.
âAnd you can take her place, Elspeth.â
I made a face. âBut Iâm half Druid. My father was the man who stole her from your king. Wouldnât that be an insult?â Just like the reverse is true with the Druids.
âYou carry her blood. You alone, Elspeth. You can choose.â
âChoose?â
âFae or Druid. Itâs more than just picking a side.â
Now I understood why Iâd taken so well to my Colours. Through the influence of my fatherâs love, Iâd chosen himâand his heritageâwithout even knowing it. If what Owen was saying was true, then I could allow my Fae blood to dominate. But something in the way he spoke told me it would probably be a mistake.
âWhatâs so special about my motherâs blood?â I demanded.
He chuckled. âMy, arenât you clever.â
âIâm a grown arse woman, Owen,â I snapped, ânot some weak-willed child ripe for manipulation. Donât you dare patronise me.â
âFinally, some fire underneath all that pathetic Druid passiveness.â
âWhy do you hate the Druids so much? Did my mother hurt your feelings when she decided to choose love?â
âYou have no idea,â he snarled. âI donât care about love. Iâve been trapped here for a thousand years. Donât you think I want to go home?â A thousand years?
âIs that what this is all about?â I asked. âYou want to use my Druid abilities to open a portal to your world so you can bypass the Witches and return me to your king in place of my mother?â It couldnât be that simple. âWhat will you do once youâre there? Who are you fighting?â
âLike I said, come with me and youâll have all the answers you desire.â Owenâs lip curled into a wicked smile and his illusion flickered. For a split-second, I was treated to his natural form, pointed teeth and all.
Rory said the Chimera were Dark Fae. Evil. What would I be unleashing if I allowed them to reunite their forces? Not to mention the prophecy that involved the Druids. There was so much I didnât understand. Not a good place to be negotiating from.
The only thing I did know was that I wasnât going to be a pawn in a war between the Fae, just as I was in the fight between the Chimera and the Druids.
The more I learned, the more I wondered if it was a case of choosing the lesser evil. Honestly, if that was the case, Iâd rather not choose at all.
âAnd what about the Warren?â I asked. âHow many Chimera know of it?â
âNow whoâs patronising,â Owen said with a sneer.
âNot at all,â I drawled. âItâs a straight-forward question. Itâs been twenty-five years and you still havenât captured a Druid. When you finally go home and kneel before your king, heâll probably be looking to put your head on a pike as punishment for your continued failure.â I shrugged, keeping up the pretence of nonchalance. âI thought a Fae as clever as you would have a bargaining chip at his disposal. It would be a pity to put in all that work and be rewarded with death.â
Owenâs eyebrows rose.
âCome now. Isnât this what you want?â I stepped towards him. âMy Fae blood is just below the surface, waiting for me to grasp it.â I opened my palm and allowed a thread of Druidic Colour to pool. âI donât need much more to turn this into a portal.â I smirked and closed my fist around the threads. âThe Druids taught me a lot of things, hoping Iâd side with them, but as you can seeâŠâ I shoved the sleeve of my jacket up, âthey werenât as wise as they made themselves out to be.â
Owenâs gaze fell onto the prism burns and his jaw tensed. He was angry. Truly angry. Curious.
âPerhaps Iâll find a more welcoming home amongst my motherâs people,â I continued. âApparently, I have a king waiting for me.â
âElspeth,â he murmured, swallowing my âconfessionâ hook, line, and sinker, âyou have no idea what your return
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