Thursday, October 24, 2013

Chapter 101 - Shattering a Winter Wonderland

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Chapter One-Hundred-One

Shattering a Winter Wonderland

that is

A Short Tale of a Piece of Nuada and Bres' History, the Statue in the Fountain, the Northern Lights, Cheating at the Pond, the Other Gift, and an Unexpected and Unwelcome Darkness

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Bres and I killed them

Nuada wondered briefly if revealing that small piece of his history with the Fomorian crown prince had been a mistake, then decided not. Dylan needed to know why it had been so difficult for him to believe his former friend to be the monster he was. He and Bres had been through a great deal: they'd gone to war together more than once, been friends since boyhood, saved each other's lives multiple times. And it had been Nuada—as well as Zhenjin, Princess Kamaria of Nyame, Prince Dastan of Shahbaz, Prince Günther of Álfheim, and King Anterion of Mytikas, at least when he'd only been a lowly prince—who had secretly helped defend Bres from the murderous attempts of his many siblings.

That was tradition in Cíocal, after all. The eldest born was not the heir; the last surviving scion of the royal house was the one who inherited the kingdom, unless they were ineligible for some reason. All this Nuada explained silently to Dylan as the next banquet course was brought by the palace servants.

So they tried to kill him? Dylan asked silently as she took a spoonful of colcannon. I've got to get the recipe for this, she added absently to herself. The only reason Nuada heard it was because of their linked hands. I love this stuff. Anyway, Bres's own siblings tried to kill him? You mean all of them? No wonder he's so twisted. Jeez.

I believe he has one sister he considers an ally. His eldest sister, the only other survivor. The two of them formed an alliance when Bres was young, to protect each other, on the condition that when Bres had enough political pull, he arrange a good marriage for her to get her out of the kingdom. She never wanted to rule. Elatha Redtongue has little use for daughters, and Sadb knew that.

Why do they call him Elatha Redtongue?

Nuada hesitated. That is not appropriate discussion for the dinner table. I will tell you later.

He would have said more, but at that moment Francesca opened her mouth again. "Oh, my gosh, this stuff is amazing. What is it?"

Nuala peered around Bres to smile at Dylan's sisters. "Colcannon." The Irish princess went on to explain that colcannon was a sort of stew-dish, made of boiled potatoes, salted cream, and shredded kale leaves. Because it was for the king's table, there were also bits of well-seasoned, roasted venison and slivers of golden hazelnut. It was, Nuala added with a smile for her soon-to-be-sister, one of Dylan's favorite dishes.

Francesca gave her sister a mock-glare. "Have you been eating like this since you moved here, Dylan? You lucky duck. This stuff is so good." She took another bite, swallowed. The Tuathan prince could only be grateful she didn’t talk with her mouth full, as A'du'la'di was sometimes wont to do. "You gotta teach me how to make this stuff, Sis."

"What makes you think she knows the recipe…my lady?" Bres asked, his voice smooth as chocolate cream. Nuada hadn’t missed the slight delay before the prince had tacked on a title. Nuada shot him a look, but Bres didn’t see it.

"I can find out from Caspar," Dylan said with strained politeness. "I'm sure he wouldn’t object to telling me the recipe."

Nuala touched Bres's arm with light fingertips, smiling still. "Caspar is very fond of Lady Dylan. She is the only one welcome in Caspar's kitchens at any time of day or night."

Bres arched an eyebrow. Wondering if she ought to feel defensive, Dylan said, "During my first visit to Findias, I got bored while Nuada was doing princely things, so I helped out in the kitchens. Latter-Day Saints are encouraged to make ourselves useful when we find ourselves with idle hands. And I enjoy washing dishes. It's one of those simple pleasures."

Prince Bres shot Nuada an incredulous look. Nuada bared his teeth in a smile. Bres looked ready to say something, but was interrupted by Nuala, who said, "You know, Dylan, I wondered about that for the longest time, but then Ledi Polunochnaya pointed out that I find the same pleasure in embroidery, and A'ge'lv Na'ko'ma so enjoys working in the gardens. I believe it is much the same as you washing dishes. But surely you enjoy other things as well. My brother says you love music."

For the first time, Bres looked nonplussed. "You like music?"

Warily, Dylan replied, "Yes. I can't sing, but I play the piano. I'm not great at it, but I'm all right."

Nuada knew his lady didn’t want to talk to Bres. She emphatically did not want to talk to him. But they both knew she couldn’t not talk to him if he spoke to her in public. He was the crown prince of his nation. She was both Nuada's betrothed and a noblewoman. She had to be polite. Nuada lightly and casually brushed her wrist with his fingers, a silent apology.

"What do you mean, you're not great at it?" Victoria broke in. "You're wonderful."

Dylan rolled her eyes. "Hardly. I'm not like Renee, for example. She can play Beethoven's 'Moonlight Sonata' from memory."

Unable to help himself—he had heard her play her piano at her cottage, and though she was no master of music, he enjoyed hearing her—Nuada said, "Do not be so modest, mo mhuire. You play beautifully." Her cheeks flushed pink.

"Perhaps I am prejudiced," Bres said with a polite smile, "but no music can compare to Her Highness's voice when she sings." He turned that smile on Nuala, and it deepened, reflecting sincerity. The sapphire eyes softened to the blue of a summer sky. "If I may, Princess, your singing voice is the envy of every woman in both my kingdom and yours."

Faint amber color crept across Nuala's cheeks and she ducked her head. "I thank you for the gift of such compliments, my prince."

"It was no gift, merely the truth," Bres murmured, locking eyes with the Bethmooran princess.

Nuada felt a twinge. Bres was a monster. He did not—could not—doubt that, after what had happened between the Fomorian and Dylan, after what the Spirit had warned the mortal of. But even monsters could find love. Nuada himself was one such beast. He loved Dylan more than he'd ever loved anyone or anything. What if Bres truly did love Nuala? What then? Could he break his sister's heart so? For he could feel the first embers of love already catching fire in his twin's heart. She was falling for Bres. How could he, Nuada, take that from her? And what if Nuala could mend the darkness in Bres, as Dylan had helped to mend some of Nuada's own shadows?

But Bres was Dylan's enemy. He despised the mortal woman with everything in him. He had no soul, the same as those craven beasts that had imprisoned Dylan in the institution all those years ago. And his continued presence in Bethmoora put Dylan at risk. So Nuada had to choose—his sister's heart or his truelove's safety…which was no choice at all. So the blue-eyed prince's next words set Nuada's teeth on edge.

"Lady Dylan," Bres said with all civility, "if Silverlance is so fond of your playing—and he is truly a connoisseur of music—I would very much like to hear you play the pianoforte at some point before I return to Cíocal."

His lady shot him a mild look that managed to convey her panic. Beneath the table, Nuada brushed his fingers across Dylan's palm. She asked, How do I say no without looking like a shrew?

You cannot, Nuada groused, glancing to his right at Balor. The king merely raised his brows in subtle question. If we are not courteous, it will look bad for our argument that Bres is a scoundrel and a monster, since he is being so polite to you. Stars curse it anyway.

Did someone tip him off that we were trying to break the engagement?

Impossible. Only you and I and my father know, and my father would not do that. No, he is simply being his usual wily self. You must agree
, mo duinne. I am sorry. But he and I will have words about this tomorrow. He is up to something.

The silent conversation had taken perhaps ten or fifteen seconds all told; a side-benefit of communicating telepathically. Aloud, Dylan forced herself to smile and said to Bres, "If Your Highness has the time, of course I would be glad to play a song or two."

Bres's smile could have drawn blood from a stone. "If I do not have the time, I will certainly make time, Lady Dylan."

Dylan managed another smile before going back to eating. Nuada wondered if she'd fooled Bres. She'd certainly fooled everyone else…except the ancient fae king seated beside Balor. Moundshroud cast one sloe-black eye on the mortal who could count herself one of his fortunate favorites, before looking at Bres. The Fomorian prince didn’t notice. Then the eldritch king pinned Nuada with a look that sent ice frosting down the prince's spine and crystallizing in his blood. The look was a question, and a warning. Somehow Nuada managed a small nod. Moundshroud released Nuada from his gaze. The Elf found he could breathe again.

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Perhaps an hour or two later, banquet had ended. Because it was the day after Christmas, there was no dancing or festivities in the king's hall. Instead, the courtiers and nobles retreated to spend the evening with their families. Nuada walked arm-in-arm with Dylan through the royal gardens. A gift that had come with the beautiful new gown had been a lovely new cloak of royal blue velvet lined with gray and white fur. Dylan nuzzled her cheek against the exquisite fur and wondered if she had the courage to ask what it was.

As if he'd read her mind, Nuada murmured, "Did you know that certain wolf-shifters actually leave behind a pelt every time they shapeshift?" Dylan looked up at him, wide-eyed. The prince nodded. "Many of them make a living selling such. It provides a luxury, but leaves actual wolves safe from being hunted just for their fur."

"Wow," Dylan said. "That's cool. So, uh…where are we going?"

"To show you my surprise, mo crídh. The one my sister should have refrained from speaking of before your elevation." Nuada made a face and Dylan had to laugh. He looked so disgruntled. "I wasn’t certain I would be able to manage it all, to be honest. It is somewhat…different from what I am used to."

She nudged him lightly in the ribs. "You're killing me. What is it?"

He grinned. "You will see." Nuada glanced over his shoulder as Dylan's guard, Uaithne, made a sound. The prince held up a warning finger. "Not a word, Uaithne."

Dylan twisted around to stare at her guard. Uaithne quickly averted his gaze. Dylan's mouth popped open. Nuada had gotten Uaithne involved in this surprise, whatever it was? Now that she was looking at them, she realized that her four other guards—Fionnlagh had been excused to take care of her brother Loén—refused to meet her eyes.

They all knew something! But before she could ask them about it, they all came upon a door of heavy faerie metal etched with delicate filigreed snowflakes, stylized winds, and a crescent moon in the center. Tiny white flowers, hung upon the surrounding wall, somehow bloomed in the light of the waning moon overhead despite the bitter cold, catching and reflecting the silver moonglow. Nuada stopped and looked at his lady. Dylan raised an eyebrow, trying not to fidget like a little kid at Christmas. Her prince grinned again.

"Close your eyes," he murmured.

She made a face. "Seriously? What's the big surprise? I wanna know!"

Nuada smiled and cradled her face between his hands. The leather of his black gloves was remarkably warm against her skin. Leaning in, he whispered, "Trust me, my love. Close your eyes." And he brushed a fleeting kiss across her lips that had her melting. He didn’t even seem to care about the guards.

"Okay," she mumbled, closing her eyes. Nuada immediately moved behind her, gently covering her eyes with his hands. The warmth of his breath shushed against the side of her neck as he leaned close.

"Oscailte," he said in Gaelic. There was a rustle, a creaking sound, and then only the soft whispers of falling snowflakes. "Take six very slow steps." Dylan obeyed, sensing the closeness of the arched doorway as she passed through it, then feeling the gentle brush of the very tips of fir branches against her cheeks and shoulders. Nuada kept his hands over her eyes as they moved through the firs. When open air touched her face again, Nuada whispered a command, and the heavy metal door closed behind them. He said softly, "Open your eyes, my love, and look." He took his hands away. Dylan opened her eyes and gasped.

Beneath her feet spread a smooth blanket of pure white snow. Moonlight caught on the whiteness and on the softly falling snowflakes, turning it all to diamonds. Fir trees rose in a wide ring around what seemed to be a snowy meadow, but the night didn’t darken these firs. Instead, thousands upon thousands of fairy lights glowing like tiny white, blue, gold, and silver stars glittered amidst the dark green branches. It was as if Nuada had caught stars in a net of gossamer and then brought them to rest against the trees.

Slender icicles hung from the tips of the fir branches, glistening with frost, catching the light from both the moon and the glowing magical sparks. Twining around the trunks of the trees, slender diamond-like threads, studded with what might have been jewels, gleamed in the muted rainbow glow. When Dylan peered closer, she realized they were vines made of ice, with delicate rosebuds, also of ice and glistening like jewels because of a coating of frost, curving around the fir trunks. Everything dazzled and danced with the silver and gold ambiance from the fairy lights and the moon. The air smelled crisp, cold, and faintly spiced with the wintry smell of evergreen trees.

Covering her mouth with her hands, Dylan didn’t even want to suppress the awe making her heart skip the occasional beat. It was so beautiful. Like living in a world of crystals and diamonds. But Nuada wasn’t finished. He took her hand in his, leading her further across the snow. She couldn’t help twisting and turning this way and that in an attempt to watch the rainbow prisms dancing across the snow. But then she noticed a fountain near the tree-line.

A beautiful woman in a simple leine, carved of white marble veined in silver and pale gold, stood in the middle of the fountain. A long braid draped over her shoulder nearly to her waist. Dark sea-opals made up her serene eyes, two stones shimmering with blues, indigoes, and silvery mists. She held a large vessel from which water should have poured. A massive hound stood beside the woman, also carved of the same white marble. Though its hackles stood on end and its teeth were bared in warning, the hound pressed close to the woman, seeming to nuzzle her hip lovingly even as it snarled. The woman's free hand rested lightly on the back of the hound's neck, holding it leashed with a loving touch. Dylan realized those fearsome teeth were bared at approaching danger, not at the woman. The hound was protecting her. Its eyes, two warm golden onyxes, almost seemed to glow with some inner fire.

No one had shut the fountain off, but it was so cold that the water had frozen into a tumbling jet of ice, hundreds of slender icicles hanging suspended over the wide bowl of the fountain, which had been carved with bas-reliefs of a hound and a woman: traveling a long and winding road, defending against different beasts such as boars and stags, sleeping curled together in caves, walking beneath the boughs of towering forests, even bowing to a herd of unicorns. Spurting jets should have shot bursts of water into the air in a wall behind the fountain, but the water had frozen there as well, leaving it a curtain of thick ice nearly ten feet wide and several feet taller than Dylan. The air tingled with the after-effects of magic.

A small plaque of Elven silver had been carved with a constellation, a crescent moon, and the words: Cù Chulainn, the Hound of Ulster, and the Lady Moon. Surrounding the plaque was a sheet of multicolored crystal almost as thick as the marble fountain-wall it had been set into. Dylan remembered what Nuada had told her once when they'd been in the royal forest waiting for the unicorns, not about Cù Chulainn from myth, but about the constellation…

"That is Cù Chulainn, the Hound of Ulster." Nuada cupped her hand and guided her in tracing the bright pinpoints of silver-white light in the sky. His touch was warm against her skin as his palm slid smoothly against the back of her hand. His fingers curled around her hand, cradling it with gentle strength. "He guards the fair Lady Moon when she rises and journeys through the heavens. He is always at her side, loyal and watchful. He is one of the few fixed constellations; no matter the season, he always remains on guard, protecting her…"

Even then, Dylan had thought there was something more to those words than just talk of Elven astronomy. And now that she looked at this gorgeous fountain, at the statue of the woman with eyes that looked more than a little like Dylan's own, and the statue of the white hound with its honey-gold eyes, Dylan knew she'd been right. She turned to Nuada with her heart in her gaze.

"This is beautiful. All of it. The fountain, the trees, the lights…it's wonderful."

He smiled and cupped her cheek. "Neither of us have had much time to relax and simply enjoy the beauty of the season," he murmured. "And I had been preparing this place for you for a few weeks. I thought tonight would be a good time to show it to you in all its wonder."

Her mouth dropped open. "You had this made for me?"

Nuada nodded. "Do you like it?"

"I love it," she murmured. "Is this like…like my garden or something?"

"If you wish it," he replied. "There is more beyond the fir trees—the wonder of Faerie, that this garden is bigger on the inside than it appears from the outside, and it is bespelled like my mother's garden, that only you or I or my father may enter unescorted—but you can make of it what you will. Here, let me show you the trick of this fountain." He knelt and touched the block of crystal set in the side of the fountain's bowl. Murmured something in Gaelic too low for Dylan to catch. A small star, pure white light, burst into being within the crystal block.

Dancing light in a thousand rainbow hues splashed the statues at the fountain's center as well as the thick wall of ice behind them. Crimson and emerald and amber mingled with cobalt and violet and cerulean. Jade shimmers twined with spots of luminous pearl like tiny white moons. Amethyst stars twinkled, sapphire and ruby flowers burst into bloom.

Dylan gasped. "That looks just like—"

"The northern lights," Nuada supplied, sliding his arms around her and holding her close. She leaned against him and sighed happily. "We are too far south to see the aurora for true, but I thought this might suffice. Miyax, from the Royal Kennels, taught me this trick when I was a boy. I thought it would please you."

"You were absolutely right. Oh, Nuada, this is wonderful."

They stayed and watched the miniature aurora for several minutes, simply basking in each other's closeness, in the warmth of each other, in companionable solitude while in the wintry wonderland without guards or fear. This was a place of beauty and peace that Nuada had made just for her. Dylan sighed again, relaxing further. Nuada kissed her temple. Gave her an affectionate squeeze.

"The spell will remain in place until I end it," he said. "But there is more for us to do here than simply admire the beauty of the winter light. Come with me, mo duinne." Grasping her hand again, he led her away from the fountain and the small aurora, toward something that glowed with the same cerulean fire as parts of the northern lights several yards away. When they drew close, Dylan realized it was a pond. The water had frozen into ice the deep aqua of a tropical lagoon. Golden lights danced far below the surface. It took her a moment to understand that the ice was at least three or four feet thick, and that the amber lights like large fireflies beneath the ice were some sort of fae. They wove in slow circles and ribbon-like patterns deep beneath the ice, lighting it up to such brilliance that Dylan thought she could probably read a book by that glow without trouble.

"Wow!" She cried, kneeling down to peer at the edge of the pond. An aurulent spark suddenly zipped toward her, twirled in a tight spiral, then shot down into the darkness far below. "Oh, wow! What are those things?"

Nuada smiled. "They are starlings from Annwn."

She frowned, baffled. "Starlings?" Last she'd checked, starlings were really noisy birds. But then, this was Faerie. Things were rarely the same as in the mortal world. Dylan looked back at the beautiful lights flashing and spinning beneath the ice. A thought flitted through her brain. She whipped around to stare at Nuada. "You don't mean they're—"

"Little stars," he murmured, grinning when her mouth dropped open yet again. "From the city of Stormhold on the border of Annwn and Eathesbury. They come to Faerie around the time of the solstices to play amongst us common land-bound folk before returning to the sky. Would you like to touch one?"

She gaped. "Can I?"

Her prince knelt beside her, placing his gloved hands against the ice. Leaning down, gaze intent, he pursed his lips and gave a low, coaxing little whistle. A handful of the starlings flickering below suddenly froze. Sudden awareness, like feeling eyes against her back, made the hair at the nape of Dylan's neck prickle. Nuada whistled again, a sweet little tune like a robin's song in early spring. One of the starlings detached from the group below and hesitantly approached. Keeping very still, the Elven prince continued to whistle. After a hundred heartbeats of waiting, the starling emerged slowly from the ice.

Dylan studied the tiny fae creature as Nuada continued to mesmerize it with his whistling. It looked a bit like a demi-fey, but it had no wings—just a tiny, slender, genderless body as tall as one of Dylan's fingers, a body that seemed to be made of malleable glass lit from within by a brilliant white light. Surprisingly, it didn’t hurt to look at the starling. She didn’t even have to squint. She just looked at it in awe, and it looked back, with tiny eyes the fierce blue f new stars.

Suddenly Nuada stopped whistling. He whispered, "Very slowly, Dylan…hold out your hand." Holding her breath, she obeyed. Her hand lay on the ice, palm up, only her glove keeping her skin from freezing at the contact with the frozen pond. Nuada added, "Hum something. It doesn't matter if you are in tune. Just hum something. Softly, now."

It took her a moment to think, but suddenly the melody for her favorite song—"Death Shall Not Destroy My Comfort"—popped into her head. Praying she didn’t go obscenely sharp or flat and scare the poor thing, Dylan began to hum.

The starling crept closer to her fingers. Closer…and closer. The tiny creature gave off a gentle warmth that cut through the chill of the winter night easily. Then it was stepping gingerly onto the pads of her index and middle fingers. Its small feet tickled Dylan's skin. It crept even closer until it stood in the center of Dylan's palm. Those star-blue eyes stayed fixed on her face as she continued to hum. Then, all of a sudden, the starling began humming too, mimicking the mortal's tune. Dylan's eyes widened.

When the song was over, the starling gave a little bounce, chirruped at her, and zipped back into the ice. Dylan looked at Nuada, who watched her with just a little uncertainty in his eyes. She grinned. "That," she said, "was—so—freaking—cool!" The uncertainty in her prince's eyes melted away. He canted his head.

"I do try," he murmured. He helped her to her feet. "Now, I remember you told me once that you used to love ice skating."

She remembered that. The night they'd nearly kissed at the faerie metal playground, they'd first goofed off in the snow for a while. She'd shown him what a snow angel was. They'd had a snowball fight, and Nuada had absolutely kicked her butt (though she'd used feminine wiles to bean him in the face at point blank range). He'd asked what humans did when it snowed, and she'd talked about building snow forts and snowball wars and sledding. And she had said, Well, there's ice skating, though I don't do that anymore. It's too hard on my leg.

"I can't ice skate," she reminded him. "My knee—"

He held up a hand and she fell silent. "I know you cannot, mo crídh. I have an alternative. Here, sit down." He gestured to a nearby bench carved of the same silver-and-gold-veined marble. Ice blue silk cushions embroidered with pearlescent blossoms had been set upon the bench. When Dylan touched one, she was shocked to find it was warm.

"Whoa…what is this?"

"Jatai silk," Nuada said. "Made by jatai serpents from Onibi."

"What's a jatai serpent? My area of faerie expertise is mostly European stuff, so…"

Dark lips curved in a small smile. "Are you sure you want to know? You might not believe me." But Dylan just looked at him, so he said, "A jatai is a kimono sash that over time transforms into a snake, and then a snake-shifter. They weave some of the best silk in Onibi. It holds magic quite well. Because they are from the Kingdom of the Phoenix, they are warm-blooded instead of cold-blooded, like most serpents. Similar to dragons, actually."

She grinned. "Wow. Oh, it's so warm," she added with a delighted groan as she sank onto the bench. "Wow, and the stone isn't cold, either. How is it not cold? Wait, wait. Don't tell me—magic, right?" He nodded and she laughed. "Of course. So why am I sitting down?"

Nuada knelt before her and grasped her left ankle. "There is a spell that is quite common in Saami. One that will allow you to skate…after a fashion." He lifted her foot. His fingertips touched the toes of her boot, sliding down over the leather sole, coming to rest at her heel. The bottom of her shoe heated quickly, then suddenly cooled. Nuada took hold of Dylan's other foot and did the same thing before doing it again to his own dark boots. Then he stood up. Held out his hands. "On your feet, Dylan."

Rising, she took a step. The icy crust covering the snow crackled under her boots. Her foot felt…strange. Solidly anchored, like cleats on a soccer field. She glanced at Nuada, who offered his arm. When she took it, he led her carefully out onto the ice.

She didn’t slip.

Instead of feet scrabbling for a solid hold on the slick ice, her boots remained firmly where she put them. It was no different than walking on the snow, or the ground. Dylan stared down at her boots, dark against the glowing cerulean ice, then looked up at Nuada. He smiled and slowly released her hands. She didn't wobble. Didn’t lose her balance. Her feet stayed right where she put them. Seeing her relax, Nuada pushed off the ice with one foot, as if he wore skates. He glided backward across the frozen surface of the pond. Dylan's mouth opened in a silent gasp of delight as she realized what her prince had done.

They could ice skate now. The constant struggle for balance on the thin skate-blades was what made it so difficult on her bad knee, but flat-footed, she was fine, at least for a little while. Excitement humming under her skin, she pushed off the ice and skated a few feet across the pond in a moderately straight line. Nuada skated up to her. Held out his hand. Dylan bit her lip. Suddenly she felt shy, like a girl on her first date. Unable to keep the smile off her face, she took the Elven prince's hand.

It was like dancing, except it was almost effortless. Nuada held her against him, one arm carefully curved around her waist with his hand spanning the small of her back. His other hand cradled hers as they spun slowly across the pond as if they were waltzing. Dylan laughed—she couldn’t help it. The bracingly cold wind whispered across her face as they danced together.

"I love you," she said, grinning. "I love you."

Nuada's eyes were soft as he leaned down to touch his forehead to hers. "I adore you, mo crídh, my heart. How did you ever come to mean so very much to me?"

Dylan's grin took on an edge of mischief. "It's because I'm lots of fun, and you're no fun at all. I complete you."

One silvery blond brow quirked in challenge. "No fun, is it?" Suddenly he let go of her waist, grabbing her hand with both of his, and took off running. Dylan's ensorcelled boots slid across the ice without resistance. She shrieked, laughing as Nuada made a graceful turn, spinning her out in a wide arc across the pond. He spun them in circles, the wind whipping past. Dylan was nearly breathless with laughing as exhilaration thrummed through her.

Still laughing, Dylan cried, "Hey, I'll race you! Across the pond!"

Nuada scoffed. "You will lose. I am an Elf, darling."

She shot him a haughty look. "I will most certainly not lose. Although, for the sake of fairness, you should give me a ten-second head start." Nuada raised both eyebrows, but when his truelove gave him a sweet, innocent look that surely bespoke trouble, he sighed and acquiesced. "Okay, ready—set—go!"

It made her bad knee twinge just a little, pushing off from the edge of the pond and bursting into swift motion. It was easier than running, though. With running, the shock of impact as her foot hit pavement or earth often sent subtle pain through her leg. With this new form of skating, she didn’t have to lift her feet at all, just slide them across the ice.

She was perhaps twenty-five, thirty feet away when she heard Nuada drawl lazily, "Ready or not, mo duinne—here I come." She glanced over her shoulder.

He moved like the wind. She'd seen that before, at the faerie metal playground during their snowball fight. He'd managed to get her in the thigh, the shoulder, the chest, even gently in the back of the head—recompense for the snowball she'd thrown at the back of his head to initiate the wintry battle in the first place—and she hadn’t been able to move quickly enough to retaliate. Now Nuada's long, almost predatory stride ate up the yards of ice between her and him. She knew if she didn’t do something, come up with some strategy, he would absolutely kick her butt.

As Nuada drew abreast of her, Dylan stumbled just a little. He immediately swiveled, turning to face her, eyes wide and worried. "Dylan?" He started to skate toward her, but she held up a hand, managing to keep going. She wasn’t hurt; she'd just lost her balance momentarily. Nuada paced at her side for a few yards, watching her to make certain she really was okay. She shot him a smile. Her little stumble had bought her the perfect amount of distance to shore required by her sneak attack.

"Hey, is that Francesca?" Dylan asked, widening her eyes. "What is she wearing? It's like, ten degrees out!" Nuada blanched and turned quickly to where she'd been looking, already bracing to deal with the other mortal woman…while Dylan put on an extra burst of speed, rushing across the ice toward the shoreline of the pond.

"Treacherous woman!"

"Sucker!" Turning to skate backwards as she approached the snowdrifts lining the shore, she let herself fall back against the snow when her heels hit the edge of the ice. "I win!" She cried, laughing as Nuada skated toward her. She looked up to see him looking down at her, arms folded across his chest, cool and remote in the wintry moonlight.

"You cheated."

"All's fair in love and war," she replied, beaming. "How else is a puny human going to outdo someone like you?"

Raising a brow in inquiry, he dropped to the snow beside her, stretching out as if they were on summer grass. The cold didn’t seem to affect him at all. Dylan attributed it to some sort of personal magic. Or maybe the magic coat. Nuada said, "Someone like me. What does that mean?"

Dylan smiled softly. Tugging off her glove, she let her fingers alight on the collar of Nuada's leather greatcoat. Despite the chilly air, the leather was as warm as his skin—another magical trait of the coat made by an Onibi spider fae of Dylan's acquaintance.

"You know," Dylan murmured. Her breath misted on the air between them, mingling with the silvery fog coming from Nuada's own lips. "Someone as strong," her fingers brushed his throat, and his pulse jumped. "As swift," she added, her fingertips caressing the edge of his jaw. He swallowed. "As impressive as you," she concluded, whispering her fingertips over his bottom lip. "Don’t you think?"

It took him a moment to answer. When he did, his voice emerged a little hoarse. "I…am a man…of honor."

Small frown lines wrinkled between her brows. "Okay?"

He cleared his throat. Swallowed. "I am trying very hard to remember that."

She grinned. "Having some trouble?"

Her grin slipped away when he cupped her cheek, the leather of his glove warm and smooth. "Yes," he whispered, and kissed her. His lips were warm, gentle on hers, but she knew he wasn’t lying when he claimed he was struggling to remember his honor. Tension sent the smallest tremor through his body. Dylan touched his cheek. Nuada broke the kiss, leaning close to gently nuzzle her temple. Soft strands of his long blond hair tickled her face and she giggled. "The Frost Moon cannot come soon enough," Nuada muttered against her skin.

The Frost Moon. The full moon which fell on the seventh of February. The night they would finally get married. She couldn’t wait for it either. For one thing, it would be one less thing to worry about—wedding details. For another, she'd have two whole months of having Nuada to herself if she wanted, for their honeymoon. After their wedding night, where would they spend their honeymoon? Dylan suddenly realized the entirety of Faerie, or at least two-thirds of Faerie-Ireland, were now open to her. She and Nuada could go anywhere they wanted, really. They could just go wherever, and be together, and be in love. And if things went the way they hoped, she would be immortal by the time they got married. The thought made her heart do a funny little somersault.

"I'm glad I could say yes," she murmured, cuddling close. She noticed Nuada was careful to keep almost a foot of space between most of their bodies. Only their shoulders and upper arms and heads touched. Gratitude welled up for that small consideration. Like him, she was having a hard time remembering the rules these days. "I'm so glad we can get married, Nuada. I never thought I'd get married, you know? Not really. I thought I'd be alone my whole life."

He stared at her, sympathy in his eyes. "Why did you think so? You have such a beautiful heart, Dylan. How could any man—any real man—not love you?"

A small, casual half-shrug. "I'm in a pretty small demographic. A Sight-blessed mortal older than twenty. There aren't many of us, and most of us are already taken, madly in love with some hot fae person. Like me," she added with a grin. "No one could compare to you." She flopped back onto the snow and stared up at the thousands of crystal stars. "Nobody."

"I have loved before," he murmured. "At least twice ere now, I thought I had found the one, but…but Fate had other ideas. Humans had other ideas." A shadow of pain darkened his eyes for a moment. He added, "And even then, it was not as it is with you. This…this burning deep within, like embers smoldering beneath every part of me. As if I am more alive now than I have ever been." Dylan shifted so she could look up at him where he lay looking down at her. "It is as if my soul has caught fire, but instead of turning to smoke and ash, I have become…more. As if I have been tempered, transformed by that fire, by love. I am new-made, and stronger for it, Dylan, because you have made me thus. Never have I felt that before."

Dylan reached up and danced her fingers along his jaw. "I love the way you talk to me," she murmured. "You're so romantic. I love you."

Leaning down, he brushed his lips across hers, light as snowfall. He didn’t say he loved her, too. He didn’t have to this time. She could feel it in the way he kissed her, feel it in the way his hands cradled her face. She could see it in his eyes. She didn’t need the words. He'd shown her with this gift, this wonderful place, this wonderful night. Nuada loved her. She couldn’t have asked for a better Christmas gift.

.

But he gave her one. If not better, it was just as wonderful, in a wholly different way. After they'd gone back and enjoyed the miniature aurora again, Nuada told her that there was a part of the garden, near a second door, that she should most definitely see. A little tired but still game, she agreed. He led her through the thick ring of lit fir trees, the air redolent with their evergreen spice.

A wall of dark green rose up before them on the other side. Dylan saw more of the glittering diamond-like roses of ice nestled amongst the green. She touched one. It was cool, but not cold, and decorated with a sparkling sheen of frost.

"What are these?" Dylan asked softly. "They're beautiful."

"Winter roses," Nuada replied. "One of our two Master Ghillies, Collin Mistlethwaite, has been cultivating these for many centuries now. Have I introduced you to Collin?" Dylan shook her head. "Hmmm. I shall have to rectify that at some point. You will like him. He's a puck, from Eathesbury, but not a malevolent sort. He is what mortals call landed gentry—not a lord, but just beneath it."

Her eyes widened. "If he's landed gentry, what's he doing working for you? And what's a ghillie? I thought they were forest sprites."

He nodded. "A ghillie dhu is a forest sprite, yes, native to Bethmoora and Eìrc, as well as Eathesbury. But a ghillie is a groundskeeper. We have Collin, Master of the Gardens, and Dickon, his cousin, who is our Master Woodsman. I must introduce you to Dickon. You will absolutely love him. He's young, too, perhaps Tsu's'di's age, at least physically."

"And he's the Master Woodsman? Wow."

Nuada nodded again. "Mmm. He is…he has a way about him. The way you are with young children? That is Dickon with beasts, tame or wild. He taught me much when I was a lad. Pucks age differently than Elves. Once they reach their youth, they never get much older in appearance. As for Colin, he works for us because he chooses to. He…" Nuada trailed off, a shadow passing over his face. "He was a very dear friend of my mother's when she was young. When she asked him to help her set up her garden here after her marriage to my father, he came…and never left. His elder cousin Mariah is the one who inherited their family estate, so he is free to remain here. Ah, here we are."

The prince reached out and touched a single blooming rose, this one with soft petals and real leaves instead of winter glass. A small spark, green as summer sunlight through leaves, flickered to life at the heart of the blossom. The light illuminated the deep crimson petals. The boughs rustled, both living branch and icy vine, before drawing back like an emerald curtain, revealing a dark tunnel. Dylan couldn’t see the end of it, but somehow, she wasn’t frightened.

At her feet, on either side of the tunnel, two rosebuds suddenly swelled into life on the vine, flushing with vibrant color. Light danced at their hearts, as if tiny stars waited to escape the confines of the tightly furled petals. Even as Dylan watched, the crimson blooms unfolded. Verdant sparks illuminated a few feet of the dark tunnel. At the edge of the pool of green glow, two more roses burst into bloom, and two more green lights flickered into being. Nuada offered his lady his arm. Dylan took it, cuddling close, as they walked through the rose-tunnel. As they walked, more of the rose-lights appeared to light the way. At the end of the tunnel, Nuada touched another scarlet rose in full flower, and the greenery blocking the exit drew back. Dylan gasped, giving a little bounce of happiness as sights and sounds reached her from the unveiled garden.

A small snowy meadow surrounded by stone walls lay before the pair. Seemingly carved from blocks of well-packed snow, two elaborate white castles almost as big as a two-story house loomed on either side of the meadow. And scampering around the snow-castles, flinging white missiles at each other, was Dylan's family. Not all of them, no, but quite a few of them. Many of her friends were there as well.

Francesca, Tori, Renee, and Dylan's aunt Niamh had teamed up with 'Sa'ti and A'du, Lorelei, young Lord Bean and his mother, Kaye and her sister Kate, and Rórdán Hob, and were busy flinging snowballs at John, Tsu's'di, Wink, Nuada's charming dökkálfr friend Erik, and Dylan's uncle. It seemed to be guys against girls and kids. On John's team, Pipkin also fought bravely. Moundshroud, too dignified to be bothered with such shenanigans, watched from an out-of-the-way bench near the wall, occasionally calling out sardonic comments to his heir. Mr. Magorium came to Tsu's'di's rescue as A'du, teamed up—to Dylan's surprise—with Princess Abigail, the young Prince Siegfried of Álfheim, Princess Shāuddo of Onibi, and Prince Llŷr of Annwn, launched an attack on the federal agent. Dylan turned to Nuada.


"Why are Siegfried and Llŷr here? And Abigail and Shāuddo?"
Not that she didn’t want them there. She adored sweet-tempered Prince Llŷr and vivacious little Abigail, and Siegfried seemed like a nice young man. Dylan remembered that Siegfried and Llŷr, as well as Shāuddo, had jumped to 'Sa'ti's defense during the corridor brawl when young Lord Hamish mac Galen of Óic Bethrá had attacked the cougar girl, stealing the doll Nuada had given her for Midwinter and kicking her in the face. Llŷr had been the once to knock Lord Hamish flat on his arrogant little butt with one punch.


Nuada grimaced. "When I told A'du and 'Sa'ti of this plan, they insisted you would prefer it if I involve those four children in particular, seeing as how their families are allied with mine, they are friends with your pageboy and handmaiden, and they seem to like you. And I happen to know that all four of those children are also very lonely."

Dylan frowned. "But they're so friendly. So sweet. Why are they lonely?"

The prince sighed. "Shāuddo's brother, Crown Prince Emīru, has encouraged her to play more with servant children than with other royals or nobles, but many of the servant children in Findias are uncomfortable with her and avoid her company. Abigail, as you
know, has a human mother. That stigma affects how many of the children here treat her. Llŷr is often picked on for being more a scholar than a warrior; this I know, because he confides in me as he confides in his brothers. And Siegfried misses his friends in Álfheim, and like Shāuddo, finds it easier to make friends with servants. Unfortunately, like Shāuddo, the servant children tend to avoid him because he is royal, and most commoners here aren't used to associating freely with royals."


"Why are he and Shāuddo more comfortable with servants than other royal children?"

"For Shāuddo, it is because until Emīru took his place as the crown prince, she was constantly worried about trying to dance around the alliances her siblings had made with the elder sibli
ngs and parents of those noble children she tried to play with. Traditionally, Onibi is much like Cíocal. The surviving child takes the throne. This generation is a bit different, in that Emīru is the only one of his siblings currently eligible for the throne who wants it, thus avoiding a great deal of bloodshed now that his brother Prince Zeburan and his sister is in exile." Nuada lowered his voice, as if trying to keep the frolicking children from overhearing. "It was one of Shāuddo's elder sisters who stole Shāuddo and Emīru's power for a time."


Dylan's eyes snapped wide. She and Nuada had talked briefly about whether it was possible for two fae to combine their magic, giving them enough power to match the power of an heir or monarch. As far as Nuada knew, only one person had ever been able to even steal someone's power successfully. She and Nuada actually had an appointment to speak to Crown Prince Emīru the next day about it, in case what had been done to him had any bearing on the assassination attempt at Midwinter. They needed to figure out how the assassins had managed to glamour themselves not just from Nuada and Zhenjin, who was even stronger magically than the Bethmooran prince, but from Balor and the other monarchs.

"As for Siegfried, I believe Llŷr said that it isn't royals so much as many of the royals currently visiting for the Midwinter holidays. They're too soft, according to the young ljósálfr. But he can romp quite happily with A'du'la'di, young Bean, and Lady Kate. Even Shāuddo is willing to play rough with him if he asks nicely enough. They are betrothed, you know."

She started in surprise. "Shāuddo and Siegfried? But they're just kids."


Her prince smiled indulgently. "The first time I was betrothed to someone, I was in my eighth century."

She stared at him. "Who were you engaged to?"

"Princess Dinarzadi, of Shahbaz," he replied. "My friend Dastan's twin sister. She is a few centuries younger than me, but…" He shook his head, grinning ruefully. "Oh, she was a hellcat when we were children. She and Nuala adored each other. They would get into such trouble, and of course I had to go along. To protect them."

Dylan grinned. "To protect them. Of course."

"You remember my stallion, Lòman? The arion?"

Dylan nodded, thinking of the powerful black arion stallion, with the silky midnight green mane and tail, that possessed the power of human speech. She had gotten a ride from Nuada on Lòman only a few weeks ago, two days after that first painful marriage proposal. It was thanks to Lòman whisking the two of them away from guards and other prying eyes that she and Nuada had managed to start mending the breach between them. Lòman had also saved Nuada from one of the Téngshé assassins that had attacked them that day.

"I received Lòman as a yearling, a betrothal gift from Dinarzadi. I sent her one of my hound pups. Like me with Lòman, she still has the hound. And we are still good friends."

"Why aren't you engaged to her anymore?"

Nuada sighed. "Her father died. He was the one pushing for the betrothal, because our kingdom was a strategic point during the wars against the humans for Europe, and he wanted his eldest son to eventually have access to our armies and our navy. Shahbaz's navy is…" He grimaced. "Rather pitiful. Sultana Tamina wanted peace with the humans. When the sultan died, there was no reason to maintain the betrothal anymore. My parents wanted a more advantageous match for me, anyway."

"So they set you up with Princess Eilonwy," Dylan said, smiling. Nuada had explained a couple weeks ago about how Arawn had petitioned him as husband to his only daughter, who was about ten centuries Nuada's junior, but who adored the prince who was her father and brothers' friend. Both had been happy about the betrothal until Eilonwy had fallen in love with the crown prince of Gevaudan, the fae equivalent to France. Now she and Prince Henri were engaged.

But Nuada shook his head. "No, that was after Kamaria and Mïng Xiân."

She shot him a disbelieving look. "Kamaria? African warrior princess Kamaria? With the braids and the muscles and the missing eye and the scary brother?"

He nodded. "Yes, that Kamaria. She lost that eye to an asanbosam. An African vampire with iron teeth, in simple terms," he explained, seeing her look. "Anyway, she went to her mother when I was perhaps…in my sixteenth century—she was thirteen centuries at the time, I believe—and demanded she be allowed to wed me."

"Not that you're not the hottest thing since ever, but why?"

He heaved a longsuffering sigh and gave her a look that just begged for pity. "If I tell you, you will mock me."

"I won't. I promise."

He eyed her suspiciously before muttering, "Very well. She had come for a visit, and during one of my training sessions with a spear, insisted on joining me. After our lesson, impressed by what she saw, she challenged me to a fight. I of course refused; she was younger, much smaller than I, and a girl. She called me a coward. I called her a brat. She…insulted my masculinity, shall we say. We attacked each other with wooden practice spears, got in a few good whacks at each other, then tossed them aside and brawled in the mud." He met Dylan's baffled stare with a mild look. "It was a draw."

"And that's why she wanted to marry you? Because you beat the crud out of each other?"

"And I gave her a black eye. She knocked out of one my teeth. Not a milk-tooth, either." Dylan stared at him, stunned. He opened his mouth and tilted his head back a little to show a bit of a gap between his canine and the molar behind it. "Right there. My father was furious until Queen Nyota told him what Kamaria wanted."

Dylan shook her head in amazement. "Wow. Were you scared?"

He shot her a look. She just waited, a patient smile on her face. Finally, he huffed and muttered, "I was barely a youth."

"You were scared of her."

"Terrified. She stopped wanting me, though. I was too pale for her."

"Are you serious?"

He nodded. "She said I looked like a dead fish." Dylan's mouth fell open in outrage, but Nuada grinned. "I said only a fool dared to bed a black widow spider. We dueled again to settle the insult, ended up in the mud again, cleaned up and went drinking in Anansi, Nyame's capital city. She and I, both very drunk, still managed to win quite a bit of money playing cards."

She frowned. "You gamble?"

"It isn't gambling if you know you will win," he replied with smug, male satisfaction. "In Nyame, they have a card game called jackals-and-hares, which requires almost as much skill as chess, and depends only on the merest shred of luck. I used to be very good at it. Kamaria taught me herself. But that was in my youth." Some of the mirth left his eyes. "I have more adult pursuits to fill my time now. Many of them such things as I would give anything to give up." He focused on her. Smiled with warmth and no little happiness. "But then, there is also you, my love. I would not give up my little healer, my lady, my evening star, for all the riches of this world."

Dylan took his hand, lacing her fingers with his. She cuddled close, grinning, and said, "John and them look a little outnumbered. Would it be unfair if we teamed up with them and gave them a hand?"

"Go to the aid of the whelp?" Nuada muttered. Dylan just grinned wider, knowing her prince would rather take a snowball in the face than admit he was starting to grow fond of her brother. The Elven warrior sighed. "He did aid us with the human assassin."

"Mmm-hmmm."

"I suppose I…owe him a debt."

"Mmm-hmmm."

"I suppose honor demands we go to his aid."

It was getting harder and harder to keep a straight face. He sounded like someone had just run over his puppy. "Mmm-hmmm."

Nuada sighed again. "Very well. We will help the feckless buffoon you call a brother."

"Buffoon is such a harsh word."

He gave her an indecipherable look, then suddenly grinned. "You are absolutely right. Very well. Come, my fairest lady. Let us go lend our aid to our…what is that human word? Ah, yes. Our chum."

She burst out laughing. "Our chum? Really?" She narrowed her eyes in sudden suspicion. "Wait. Do you mean 'chum' as in 'friend,' or 'chum' as in 'shark bait?'"

Nuada smiled.



.

Dylan was happily exhausted as she and Nuada walked back toward the palace late that night. Sleepy children, tired out after the fierce snowball war, had already gone to bed, with promises that there could be more epic winter battles on the morrow. Now, surrounded by their guards, Nuada and Dylan strolled through the public gardens, savoring the last part of the night before they would have to retire.

"So, my lady of Fionntrá, Éas Ruaíd, Inber Scéne, Macha Chroí, and Luácha Hanráhan," Nuada murmured, his cheek against her hair, "do you feel any different?"

"I feel happy," she murmured back. "I didn’t think I would. I thought I'd be stressed. But right now, I'm not. I'm just so happy. Though I can't believe you used my brother as shark bait. For shame, Your Highness."

He snorted. "The only thing shameful about that battle was the measly defense our compatriots put up against the children."

She grinned sleepily. "Llŷr has good aim. He beaned you in the face, what? Seven times?"

A mock-scowl twisted dark lips. "Siegfried is a bad influence on him. And on A'du'la'di. And did you see how 'Sa'ti looked at him? As if he hung the moon." Nuada shook his head. "The girl's besotted with him. Ah, well. He'll be gone in a week or so. He can go terrorize his mother in Álfheim."

Dylan laughed. "You know you like him."

"Of course I like him. That does not mean he isn't an unholy terror. He's from Álfheim." Nuada raised her hand to his lips, kissed it despite the presence of her glove. "Tomorrow, if it pleases you, I must take you to the stables. There is someone there I wish you to meet." She suddenly remembered that Nuada had bought her a horse a few days ago for the trip to the northern villages. A gentle, steady mare, he'd promised, who would look after her. Her eyes lit up, and he grinned. "I see it does please you. We might look in on Shang, as well."

"Oh, yes! Let's do that. We can go after church." Suddenly she wrapped him in a squeezing hug. "Oh, Nuada! I'm so happy!"

He kissed her temple. "I am glad of that." He hesitated, then added, "You know, I was surprised at first that my father would gift you with five provinces. I was even angry, because such a bestowing of wealth could make you a target…but then I realized it also gave you power. You are now one of the wealthiest people in the kingdom, second only to the royal family, and on equal footing with Lady Jocasta of Reedus and a few others, including Lord Galen of Óic Bethrá. Because of our betrothal, you outrank even them. It is a big step toward ensuring your safety and power among the court."

"Won't your father miss the income and whatnot, though?"

Nuada shrugged. "He'll get the land back—technically—when we wed in less than two months, as you will then be part of the royal family. And though Bethmoora is described as one-third of faerie Ireland, our kingdom alone is much larger than the mortal Ireland you know."

She nodded, processing that. "How big is Bethmoora?"

Her prince considered the question for a long moment before answering. "I believe if you combine the country known as the United Kingdom, Ireland, all the surrounding islands, and a large chunk of the European mainland, you would have it just about right."

"That is huge."

"Faerie is a good deal larger than the Mortal Realm. I…Dylan? What is it?"

His voice was sharp, and with good reason. The mortal woman had frozen in her tracks, eyes suddenly wide and darting this way and that, her hand going to the place where her dirk was concealed beneath her cloak. Nuada's hand fell to the pommel of his sword. Their guards tensed, ready and waiting for whatever the human woman sensed. Eimh and Sétanta sniffed at the cold winter air, searching for the danger. Dylan continued to scan the night.

"I—have—a—bad—feeling." She enunciated each word softly. Icy sweat trickled down the back of her neck, catching on the fur lining of her cloak before it could freeze to her skin. She drew her dirk when a sharp spear of frigid warning bit deep into her chest. Nuada instantly drew his sword. "Really bad."

Suddenly the wind shifted. The scents of snow and ice and evergreens faded. In its place was the stench of rot, garbage, death. An oddly flat sort of burbling, slurping noise carried on the wind. Dylan and Nuada locked eyes. They recognized that stink, that sound.

"Shoggoth," Nuada hissed. She nodded, breath coming in shallow gasps. Nuada turned to the dogs. "Eimh, Sétanta. Go to the palace, find Zhenjin, and tell him another shoggoth has come to Findias. Tell him Lady Dylan and I have need of him and the emperor. Perhaps even Prince Emīru. If you see the shoggoth, do not attack it. Do you understand?"


Both hounds whuffed. *Yes, Master. We go now.* They leapt forth across the snow, a streak of moonlight and a streak of midnight running side by side against the blue-tinged snow. As they raced away, the Butchers drew their blades. Nuada and Dylan knew, however, that cold iron would do little good against a shoggoth. The only way to kill the monstrous things was to magically set them on fire and make certain they burned away to absolutely nothing.

The slurping, sludge-like sound drew closer. Dylan gasped as the black, blob-like, rolling mass squelched around the corner of one of the garden walls. Thick, ropy tentacles waved in the air, visible as black fronds against the starry, moonlit night. At the sound of Dylan's muffled gasp, a single glistening circle appeared against the mound of flabby, tenebrous flesh. An eye. She had to fight not to be sick as the shoggoth focused its Cyclopean gaze on her. It slowly crept closer. The entire group of them began to back up. Shoggoths moved slowly, but they were impossible to stop.

Movement from the corner of Dylan's eye had her whipping her head around. Her eyes widened until she thought they might pop out of her head, and her heart leapt into her throat, threatening to strangle her as her mind processed the horrific image her eyes were seeing.

"Nuada!" She yelped, her voice thin with panic. "There are more! A lot more!"

Her prince whipped around to stare at the four dark masses converging on them, two oozing up the wide pathway and two more slowly rolling their way over one of the walls of a private garden. Nuada's mouth actually fell open as he stared at the creatures, all tentacles and black bulk and hungry, shining eyes. He looked at Dylan, then at the shoggoths, then back at Dylan. Something shifted in his gaze, as if he'd come to some decision. His expression hardened.

"Uaithne! Mahon!" He barked the name of the leaders of both her retinue of guards and his. They turned to him. "Mahon, I ask a favor of you—that you and your people join with Uaithne and his company. Take Dylan and get her out of this place."

She immediately balked. "No! No, I'm not leaving you here. I'm not leaving you! You can't fight five shoggoths by yourself!" What she didn’t say, but what they both knew, was that even the mighty Silverlance couldn’t fight even one lone shoggoth by himself and live. The only thing that could burn the monsters completely away was fae fire—something the prince did not possess.

He gripped her arm, growled, "You will go. You must go. I can draw their attention, give you a chance to escape. Once you are safe, I can get away."

"No! That's crazy and you know it! I'm not going without you!"

Nuada grabbed her and hauled her against him. He stared into her eyes, and his gaze turned soft and sorrowful. "I love you. I cannot lose you. I need you safe. I can hold my own against these until Zhenjin comes, but not if I must concern myself with protecting you. Please, my love, you must go." And he kissed her, swift and hard, and she tasted his desperation, his love. It was a kiss too much like the one he'd given her before his duel with Zhenjin back in November, when he hadn’t known whether he would live or die. Suddenly Dylan was more scared than she'd ever been since that day. Pulling back, Nuada said, "Go, Dylan."

Tears stinging her eyes, she whispered, "Please be careful. Please don't die, Nuada. I love you."

"I will be all right. I promise you." The shoggoths gurgled and oozed closer, inch by inexorable inch. He glanced at them. A muscle flexed in his jaw before he turned back to her. "Now go, Dylan!"

Swallowing hard, she moved to Uaithne, who grabbed her and tried to hustle her past the shoggoths. While she and her guards moved along a westward garden path, Nuada moved eastward, swiping a long gouge in one of the beasts' flesh and drawing thick, phosphorescent ichor. The eldritch creature squealed and shrieked, drawing the attention of its brothers. Nuada stepped back, sword at the ready, before glancing once at Dylan. She bit her lip as she looked back at him. His gaze urged her to run. Her heart urged her to turn back, to try and help him. But she would only get in the way.

What if the shoggoths got him on the ground? Shoggoths could sprout eyes, fanged mouths, and tentacles all over their bodies at will. And they ate anything that could help add to their mass. If Nuada lost his footing, they could have him pinned in seconds. Once they pinned him, the flesh-eating monsters would…

Suddenly Uaithne swore. Dylan jerked back around in time to see three more shoggoths surged forward. Where were they coming from? One of them swept a tentacle as thick as a tree trunk across the path, smacking into four of Dylan's guards and smashing them with bone-crunching force into the wall. Their armor clanged against the stone before they thudded to the ground. Uaithne and Ailbho stepped in front of her, swords raised. The rest of the guards—only five, if she didn’t count Uaithne and Ailbho—stepped between her and the writhing masses of gelatinous, carnivorous darkness.

"Back, my lady!" Uaithne snapped as he and the others braced for the monsters' onslaught. "Get back!"

But then the shoggoths converged on the two Butcher leaders and their subordinates, and Dylan was pressed back against the wall, panic choking her, trying to figure out some way to fight back, some way to help her friends, her prince. The stench of rotting filth and decaying flesh nearly made her gag. An eerie whistling sound began piping on the air; she knew it was the shoggoths. Where was Nuada? Was he alright? Was he hurt?

Tentacles tipped in lipless mouths filled with razor-sharp teeth shot out, slicing across the Butchers' unprotected arms and necks, drawing black blood that shone like obsidian in the moonlight. Dylan winced. A shoggoth's bite was highly poisonous. Her guards hacked and slashed at the encroaching tentacles, but nothing repelled the creatures for long. They crept close, closer. When Onóra tried to sink her heavy iron claymore into one of the beasts, the ebony slime sucked the iron blade right out of her hands. The sword disappeared within the creature's heaving mass. Onóra cursed and drew two long-knives as she backed up inch by inch. The approaching shoggoth slashed a wound across her leg.

Blades flashed as Mahon and his young partner, Lorcc, threw small throwing-knives into the creatures. The small, thin blades winked as they spun through the air, embedding in the black flesh, before being slurped up like Onóra's claymore. Slowly the Butchers were driven back. Even more slowly, so slowly that at first they didn’t realize what was happening, they were being driven away from Dylan.

When the mortal realized what the monsters were doing, her heart kicked into a gallop. Shoggoths couldn’t organize like that, couldn't plan, couldn’t be controlled by anything except…and nothing that could control a shoggoth would want to hurt her. Yet they were obviously intent on isolating her. Once they got her alone, separated from her guards, she had nothing to defend herself with except her three knives. That wouldn’t be enough.

They were going to eat her.

When a tentacle flicked out toward her face, she swiped at it instinctively, slicing off the tip with her dirk. It plopped to the snow, the noxious blood glowing and steaming. The shoggoth squealed. A second, thicker tentacle shot out, dodging between two of her guards to head straight toward her. Moonlight glinted off poisonous teeth.

Dylan screamed. She tried to slice at it, tried to dodge. Knew she would never alter the course of that savage, serpentine thing.

A shadow darted between her and the shoggoth tentacle. There was a sick sound, like a thousand blades being driven into flesh. A grunt of pain. The stench of burnt flesh filled the air. Moonlight flashed on a naked sword blade as an unfamiliar Elven sword jerked up, slashed downward. The massive rope of shoggoth blubber fell to the snow, twitching. Dylan's savior dropped to one knee, a hand pressed to his chest. Gleaming blood seeped between his fingers to drip onto the snow. That blood acted like a siren call to the shoggoths, urging them forward. The shadow bowed his head as he struggled against the poison and the pain. The light glinted on his golden blond hair. Dylan froze.

When her protector lifted his head and met her gaze with a cool sapphire stare, Dylan found herself staring into the pain-lined face of Crown Prince Bres of Cíocal. She had no time to think, no time to wonder. The shoggoth was getting ready to attack again. Dylan opened her mouth to scream a warning—monster or not, he was trying to protect her, and she couldn’t let him get eaten alive by the things—but Bres was already whirling into action. His blade flashed again, slicing and searing as the Fomorian shouted in Gaelic.

She didn’t know what he was saying. Didn’t know why he was there. But for whatever reason, the Fomorian prince was risking his life to save hers. He actually seemed to be holding his own, too…until another shoggoth, twice as big as the others, grabbed both Bres and Nuada in its tentacles and slammed the two princes into each other with bone-crunching force. Then it slammed them into the ground, where both lay, unmoving.

The shoggoths converged on Dylan.

3 comments:

  1. everything...

    How am I gonna do this again? I'm probably missing stuff, like grammer, but I can't

    redo everything...

    "Cheating at the Pond" eh?
    wonder what this is about???

    You need to add in Dylan's reaction, because you don't actually have one written

    "as well as Zhenjin, Princess Kamaria of Nyame, Prince Dastan of Shahbaz, Prince

    Günther of Álfheim, and King Anterion of Mytikas, at least when he'd only been a

    lowly prince"
    if the last part is about the king, then you need to have semicolons instead of commas

    for the list

    Colcannon sounds yummy. And kale is like, SUPER healthy for you, so that makes it's

    even better!

    You don't have Renee talk in this scene...I'd have her say something like, "You're still

    really good."

    "Perhaps I am prejudiced," Bres said with a polite smile, "but no music can compare to

    Her Highness's voice when she sings."
    Insert disgusted, dramatic eyeroll here

    Since I'm reading this again, me response to this ("It was no gift, merely the truth," Bres

    murmured, locking eyes with the Bethmooran princess.) is another eyeroll, complete

    with headshake.
    What is it that Lucivar says to Daemon? "Silky court-trained liar"?

    "He did not—could not—doubt that, after what had happened between the Fomorian

    and Dylan, after what the Spirit had warned the mortal of."
    Did we discuss in the truck that Nuada doesn't know what her "sixth sense" is?

    "How do I say no without looking like a shrew?
    You cannot"
    Again, BOO!!!

    "Did someone tip him off that we were trying to break the engagement?"
    No, he guessed it. Slimy, smart, JERK! WORSE than a jerk! But I'm trying not to

    cuss, and I already was potty-mouthed when I lost this the first time! so BOO ON

    YOU!!!

    "If Your Highness has the time, of course I would be glad to play a song or two."
    BOO! Stupid Bres and stupid politics!!!

    "If I do not have the time, I will certainly make time, Lady Dylan."
    *shudders*
    ew. Just, EW!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wonder what Moundshroud's look meant...

    OKAY!
    Onto the scene that I absolutely love, and I'd almost completely read when the stupid

    fracking this deleted everything! STUPID COMPUTER!
    *insert death glare at the comp here*
    I'd smack you, but that'd only make things worse, not better...

    OH!
    There is a major problem with the scene. Well, not the scene itself (so far), but with the

    timing. Her and her family would actually gather to be together, so this scene with

    Nuada has to be much later in the evening, or her family should be waiting for her. I'd

    have a short scene with her scolding Francesca for being rude, then promising to see

    them later. Or, again, you can place this much later. Because everyone in her family

    couldn't even really talk to her, so they'd be dying to chill together, especially since

    some of them didn't get any chance to talk with her at all.
    It would be like Brandon ditching everyone who came to his farewell before his

    mission. Same kinda thing here...
    So...yeah. FIX IT!

    "Instead, the courtiers and nobles retreated to spend the evening with their families."
    Which is why Dylan not being with them doesn't make much sense...

    Okay, that being said, I'm so in love with her gift and the starlings....OMG, You better

    not change this scene!!!

    "Did you know that certain wolf-shifters actually leave behind a pelt every time they

    shapeshift? Many of them make a living selling such. It provides a luxury, but leaves

    actual wolves safe from being hunted just for their fur."
    THAT is *cool*! Love!

    I love the trees. And the fountain. And the STARLINGS!!! OMG, I love the

    starlings!!!!

    Seriously, LOVE the starlings!!! I'm in awe of how amazing they are!

    I was listening to Sanctuary and White Hart (the first part before it gets scary) from

    Snow White & The Huntsman, but a stupid McDonald's ad interruppted my flow!!!

    ReplyDelete
  3. "She just looked at it in awe, and it looked back, with tiny eyes the fierce blue f new

    stars."
    OF new stars.

    AND I'm where I was when my review disappeared

    "A jatai is a kimono sash that over time transforms into a snake, and then a snake-

    shifter."
    That is SO Japanese! I just read in Rise of the Nura Clan about how if an item is over

    100 years old, it can turn into yokai, or in this, fae!

    "Dylan's mouth opened in a silent gasp of delight as she realized what her prince had

    done.
    They could ice skate now."
    And so did mine!
    SO COOL!
    Oh, I love this scene! Just add in what's with her family, and we're good, because I'm

    loving everything about this!

    "It's because I'm lots of fun, and you're no fun at all. I complete you."
    LOL!
    Totally got that!

    ""Hey, is that Francesca?" Dylan asked, widening her eyes. "What is she wearing? It's

    like, ten degrees out!" Nuada blanched and turned quickly to where she'd been

    looking, already bracing to deal with the other mortal woman…while Dylan put on an

    extra burst of speed, rushing across the ice toward the shoreline of the pond."
    LOL!
    ooh, this is FUN!

    I really wanna meet Collin...

    Okay, so they did hang out, but you need to transition from the feast to this scene, at

    least a little!!!

    "with the elder sibli
    ngs and parents"
    I did not do that...

    "She said I looked like a dead fish." Dylan's mouth fell open in outrage, but Nuada

    grinned. "I said only a fool dared to bed a black widow spider. We dueled again to

    settle the insult, ended up in the mud again, cleaned up and went drinking in Anansi,

    Nyame's capital city. She and I, both very drunk, still managed to win quite a bit of

    money playing cards."
    LOL! That is SUCH an awesome story!!!

    You are absolutely right. Very well. Come, my fairest lady. Let us go lend our aid to

    our…what is that human word? Ah, yes. Our chum."
    She burst out laughing. "Our chum? Really?"
    LOL! My response exactly! ^^

    It's over? EVIL!!!

    EEEEEEEEEEEVIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIILLLLL!!!

    <3

    ReplyDelete