The
wench sat arrogantly in the seat she had stolen. A heavily jeweled gown
that should have made movement impossible hindered her not at all as
she languidly gestured across the room. Arrayed around her were her
minions, lounging as if they too belonged in that hallowed place,
predator eyes watching, watching. The court was absolutely silent. The
reason for this lay on the floor. Bleeding and broken, the body of the
king lay silent on the floor. None were allowed near it, and all
dreaded what might happen next.
Would happen next.
For she was the Queen of the wolves, and they had certain… rites to
observe. Even as people began to stir, to make their quiet ways to the
exits, the wolves shed their human skins and began to feed. The only
sounds were the ripping and wet tearing of flesh. Under it all, muffled
by the sounds of eating, were the weak screams of the still-alive king.
The Reign of Wolves had begun.
Those in the hall were
finally allowed to escape, making for the doors with speed proportional
to their valor. A few lagged behind, gazing at the wolves and their
queen with hatred or speculation or a mingling of both. The queen of
the wolves was seeking a suitor for her new throne, and while the king
had been much loved by his inner circle, he was most irrevocably gone.
Now the wise were contemplating their new ruler, already plotting what
position they would hold in the new court and the downfall of any who
might be in the way. Already, the court was failing. It was only a
matter of time, Ander supposed, before they too became the wolves that
She was accustomed to ruling. Only a matter of time. He steepled his
fingers in front of his chest, waiting, outwardly patient as the crowd
filed out. He had a clear view of the king as he waited for the last of
them to leave.
He kept his eyes carefully schooled,
betraying none of his anger. His posture and gaze were only as
respectful as was required, not a bit more as he stared at the remains
of his king and beloved friend. He waited until the last of the
ambitious had filed out before turning on his heel and making his slow
way to the exit. It was his only show of anger that he did not bow.
"Wait." The queen's voice was smooth, but not in an oily way.
Seductive. His back turned to her, Ander smiled. He continued walking.
"I command you to wait!" Her voice climbed lightly up the scale, ending
on a sharp note that made Ander wince. A wolf should know better.
He stopped, turning slowly enough that he could feel the slow scrape of
dirt through his thin-soled shoes, slowly enough that he was able to
steady his expression to new heights of the bored indifference he most
certainly did not feel.
He looked up at the queen with
bland eyes. The hall was small enough that even a the back of it he
could see that one fine drop of blood still perched on her pale cheek.
One of her wolves gazed adoringly at that cheek. "What is it that you
need?" He sighed internally as the queen somehow managed to take
offense. This was why humans were the ones to rule them all; Wolves
were too impulsive, just as dragons were too long-sighted. This rein
boded poorly for them all. A human ruler was a stabilizer for all of
the different factors moving in the Court of Nirron. Even now he could
feel the unease pricking across his skin, ruffling hard-won control.
The queen stared down at him, and it was her impatience, her… lust the
throne spread like a blanket across the castle. Even now her influence
was throwing the precious balance off.
She leaned closer,
dress creaking with the effort. The top of it dug sharply into her
barely-contained chest. She meant it to be attractive. Ander found it
only discomforting. "I wish to speak with you. No, I command it," she
corrected. "You will come sit at my feet and speak with me." She
smiled.
"Court is over. The time of orders has passed. You
may not command me outside it. Even you cannot change that much in one
day, Hrodwulf Iole."
She snarled at his use of her
old title, but when she spoke again her voice remained warm, seductive.
"I could force you. I prevented you from stepping in to save the weak
one, held you immobile in your weak human form. I can force you to come
to me, to do my bidding. But I would have you willingly." She smiled,
and it was not a nice smile.
"I don't believe you did,
Iole. I believe you may have some powerful artifact on your side, but
that does not make you powerful, nor any more fit to rule the Court of
Nirron. I will notify you when Redan stirs from her rest. Until then—"
He gave a curt bow and left the room. He could feel her pale violet
eyes boring into his back, and knew he had perhaps made the wrong enemy
this time. Once in the hall, he was surrounded by those who cared
enough to think he might be dead. He smiled at them all, but it held
none of its usual warmth.
"Iole will bring disaster to a
court that has lasted for a thousand years. We must remove her." Ander
looked sharply at the speaker, one of the fey from the far north. Her
fine, pale blue fur was bristling, appearing out of place on her
otherwise human form.
"On any other day, Livia, such words
would be disastrous for you and all who heard you. We would all be
dishonored or killed for even listening to such a thing without
striking you down." He glared at her, trying to make her understand
with the sheer weight of his gaze. But she and everyone else were
waiting to hear the rest of his words. "But, indeed, Hrodwulf
Iole must not be allowed to hold the Throne of Balance. Even now her
influence spreads across the court like an ill wind. Without a human to
steady it, the Court will fall apart." Everyone was quiet, in their own
way contemplating regicide and the alternative—war unending, as had
always been before. Ander would have preferred that people react, do
something, but it was the result of his own unique heritage.
If he could find any human suitable it would simply be a matter of
investing them with the powers of that which he carried. Most believed
that it was the throne itself that held the power over court, and
indeed it was a powerful tool. But it was Ander himself who bore the
Investiture, the power to control all who put themselves under the
throne. "I must leave court," he said, beginning to move down the hall
and away from the body of his friend—later, when I am clear of this place, I will grieve later—and
toward the courtyard. There would be no time to gather his things, not
even the most precious of them, but the thought did not cripple him as
it may have a dragon. He was a wyrm, and treasures were luxury, not
necessity.
The crowd stayed behind, not wanting to go with
him, suddenly not wanting to be anywhere near the Investiture Wyrm.
They probably believed that he was going to his rest, returning to
wherever he slept while his sister woke and advised the next ruler.
They took turns, sleeping and waking, and each time they woke their
lives from before were a distant dream. Thus they had survived the long
ages for the thousand years of the court's life—perhaps longer. Neither
he nor his sister truly knew how old they were.
If things had happened as they should, Ander would
be on his way to his rest. His sister Redan would be waking, feeling
the call of some new soul destined to rule. But Ander did not feel the
weight of sleep that meant his time was done. Redan did not stir from
her little death. Something had gone horribly wrong. The proper order
of things had been disturbed, and Ander didn't know how to set it right
again. All he could do was take himself far away from this place so
that Iole could not be sealed to the throne. He could no more stand
against this than fly. It was not only Iole who had staged this coup;
there were those in every race who grew impatient with human rulers,
feeling that their own race would do better. One of them must be
providing the power to do this.
The courtyard loomed ahead.
The gates were sealed, but Ander had expected that. He had not expected
the array of draconic guards waiting in the courtyard, metallic claws
marring the earth. The lead hissed, her red scales dull in the
half-light. Ander sighed, wanting nothing more than to thrash Shonan
for her arrogance. But Shonan was Ryu. For better or worse,
where she led, the Bright dragons followed. He could not fight all the
dragons here. Reaching for his true form, finding it still sealed, he
wasn't entirely certain he could take Shonan herself. The thought shook
him.
There was only one thing for it, then. He sighed. He
had not moved through the earth in human form in this lifetime, but he
knew it could be done. The instincts were still there. He reached down,
and the earth opened her arms to him.
It was not so much a
feeling of sinking as one of falling. Overhead he could feel Shonan
tearing at the earth, but she would never reach him that way. It was
almost physical pain not to take his true form here, with the earth's
heart blood singing in his veins, but it remained sealed even in this
holy place. He traveled miles in the space of a few breaths, but they
were the breaths of the earth itself, slow and steady. Dusk had given
way to dawn it what seemed like seconds, and Ander had moved farther
than any dragon could fly.
The terrain was rolling hills
here, not rocky like the land around the palace. It was no place he had
ever been. Silence and the early light of morning pressed down on him,
and suddenly he was tired, so tired he couldn't stand. He sat awkwardly
before his legs could crumple under him. He had fought the binding with
all he had, but by the time he knew it was there it was too late.
How long had it been there? It had been days before Iole's coup since
he had taken true form. The bindings could have been placed on him any
time in the span, and he would never have noticed. He blamed himself.
The bodyguards had died protecting their king. He was supposed to be
the last line of defense. He had failed in that, as he now failed to
bring justice on Iole's head. He was honest enough to realize that the
best he could do was take himself and his powers far away from Iole's
mysterious influence. But it galled.
He
sighed. The grass prickled through his house clothes; Ander hadn't
dressed for a short walk, let alone a trek through the wilderness. He
thought back to the Iole's costume and let out a bemused sound; he'd
never seen the huntress wear clothing like that. Perhaps she considered
it just another sort of camouflage. He fell to a tired sort of staring,
taking in the green-gold hills, dotted with dark volcanic stone, as if
he were waiting for something to happen. He was tired, but it was
bone-deep weariness from the events of the day, not the need to rest so
his sister could start her work. He felt no pull to be anywhere, as he
would if the next ruler were waiting for his call. Perhaps Iole had
sealed that along with his true form, hoping that he'd come whimpering
back to her.
But
why allow him any of his powers, if she could deny that? No, it didn't
make sense. Before, when the ruler had been assassinated, the dragon
(in that case, it had been his sister) had immediately fallen into the
earth. Ander had arrived scant days later with a new leader, and all
had progressed as if the Queen had simply died of old age. What made
this time so different?
He shook his head and shifted in the grass, pulling his thin coat off
to protect his face from the prickly grass. The sky was blue through
the scarred branches of the oak, but not the clear, almost painful blue
of the court. He wanted to be home, arguing with the king over some
matter of philosophy. He swallowed around the lump in his throat. Truth
be told, he wanted Sleep to take him so his sister would deal with this
mess, but it didn't appear that whatever governed their lives wasn't
going to make it that easy.
It felt like he'd just drifted off to sleep when the sound of muffled
sniffling brought him awake. The sun was well on its way to setting
now; he'd managed to sleep the day around, which was more an testament
to his exhaustion than to his ability to sleep when he was troubled.
His back was stiff, his skin prickly, and it seemed to take forever to
blink his eyes clear to see who was crying.
Two rabbit children were hiding their faces against the trunk of the
tree he'd taken shelter under. The choice could not have been
co-incidental; rabbits had an uncanny knack for detecting both strength
and generosity, and they were utterly ruthless in playing on the
latter. These two were particularly pathetic, stifling their sniffles
on each other's shoulders, which meant they undoubtedly wanted
something from him. Ander sighed. He'd never been able to deny the
little things, even though he knew they were far from helpless; four of
them had claimed his protection at court, where (luckily) it was little
more than a formality. But out here it would be a weighty task, and
Ander didn't even have the resources to fend for himself. If they were
seeking a protector, he would have to turn them down.
Once he pushed himself up on his elbows, however, they pounced. Without
any of the usual show of weakness, they clung to him, shivering in the
particularly frantic way only rabbit children seemed capable of.
"Please, please! Help our protector, our master, Bad Men came and took
her away!" The female sobbed. Her thin ears were tight against her
scalp; not the courtly white, but a nut-brown like her hair. Her
overlarge eyes filled and overflowed, making Ander's insides clench
helplessly. "We are so alone now, and they're going to kill her, we
just know it!"
The younger and more timid male nodded his head emphatically, too-long
hair spilling into his eyes. Ander shifted, arms out, and hesitantly
patted them on the shoulders. He knew offering any consolation would
only encourage them, he knew he was in no shape to rescue anyone two
rabbits considered powerful enough to be their Protector—but he just
couldn't help himself.
Their crying stilled quickly. The shivering took longer, but it was
still far sooner than he expected when the eldest picked up her head,
indulged in a sniffle, and—with remarkable steel—stared up at him. "You
are going to help, aren't you? You must. She's such a good and
wonderful person, always a perfect protector even though we've only
known her a few weeks. And they jumped on her and knocked her out, but
Jekob couldn't help because she told him—"
The younger one gave her a sharp jab in her ribs, gave Ander a
significant look, and stared back at his elder. The meaning was clear; we can't trust him with that. Ander extracted himself while they glared at each other, so unlike the timid, wilting things he'd known at court.
The younger one seemed to take this as a sign that he was trying to
leave, and cried out in protest. "Please don't do! You're powerful, you
can save her!" Ander sighed, brushing the grass
off his pants. He stooped to retrieve his jacket. "I don't know what I
can do. Much of my power has been sealed, and there many problems I
have to deal with." He looked down. Groaned. Gods, he should have known
better than to try and argue this point. "An entire kingdom is at
stake, may hinge on what I do!" He tried anyway, but those eyes stabbed
at him. It wasn't fair that there were four of them; two accusing eyes
were bad enough, but two rabbit children were too much even for his
will. He sighed, admitting defeat in his posture, and the twin looks of
adoration made his face warm. "All right. We'll sneak up and take a
look, and if it doesn't look like I can deal with it we'll try to find
a town to help." Inwardly he didn't have much hope. With his true form
sealed, he was only a passable mage; even bandits would probably be too
much for him.
2 comments
Kate January 29, 2006 01:39 AM PST Squee! write more. I likes it a lot. tis very cute and interesting.
Jasper June 28, 2004 04:04 PM PDT Needs some small editing, primarily of spelling. If I can notice it, you know your in trouble. Otherwise once again a fantasic begining.