34 Frost Age of Kings
Year 19
The sky stretched in endless beauty before her. The horizon as she flew away from the mountains and higher lands, flattening into rolling hills dotted with trees and the occasional farmstead. Bundled against the freezing bite of Frost, she peered over the top of her scarf which had been pulled to cover her nose and mouth. She scanned the ground below between the beats of the Volareans wings. Year 19
It was hard to put aside the memories of unrestrained passion. The echo of his kiss left her lips tingling. His touch had set her skin alight, she remembered with painful clarity the way he had run his fingers along her arms and down her back. The scent of him had intoxicated. Furs pressed against her spine she had given her whole heart. With Malcolm she had been freed. She held the memory close, unwilling to let it fade. After all, a memory was all that she would carry.
Soon, the edges of the sky would turn grey. The mountains behind her would be set afire with pinks and golds as the sun began its rapid descent. It was taking longer than she had expected to catch up to the Kings retinue. A lone Skyrider, silhouetted against the ice blue sky. Her hands flexed on the thick leather reins and she bent, stretching her back as she lent forward.
He had fallen asleep. How many times had they spent their desire, only to find it renewed? The small smile returned to her lips. It was a good memory to have. Though her heart ranged from weightless delight to despair and back again. There was nothing to fight. No argument she could make to the King. That power had been Malcolm’s alone, and he had tried. A small part of her screamed internally that he should have tried harder. But that voice was silenced. Why break herself, over and over for what could not be had? She had her memory; and he had his.
He had slept and she had dressed. Pressing a final kiss to the token he wore around his neck, she had collected each of her belongings with care. Elyna knew better than to leave any trace of herself behind. Every last hair tie, her scarf, her hat, any evidence of her existence in the room removed. But the memory they both would keep.
What was he doing now? Her thoughts drifted to the Wolf. Was he thinking about her? Did he regret what had passed between them. He hadn’t seemed to at the time, but Elyna held no illusions. He would have spent the last few days with his wife to be. The striking brunette and perfect Lady. Would he prefer Lady Penelope? Would he kiss her as though they were both drowning?
Elyna shook herself and inhaled the shock of freezing air. Was that something ahead? Perhaps a small group of travellers.
She had slipped silent from the Keep that night, unseen in the shadows. Returning to her rooms before the dawn she had pulled a pouch of herbs from her bag and returned to the kitchen. They led Yvan out for his walk once more, around the village. She had turned away from the window and returned to her room without a second look. Tea in hand she had sat on her bed and taken careful sips; Moon tea. To fall pregnant now would be worse than dangerous and irresponsible, it would be cruel.
Had she slept? Elyna didn’t remember. Emily had bounded into her room with the sunshine and delighted, thrown a newspaper onto her bed.
‘Uh!’ Elyna started, sitting up. Her eyes heavy with sleep she stared at her friend. ‘What?’ She demanded. Had the night before been a dream?
‘Look!’ Emily grinned with delight and pointed to the large announcement. In clear black ink. The expected marriage of the Duke of Mayce to Lady Elyna Burhan.
Elyna felt the blood leave her face. It was clear her Mother had made the announcement as quickly as humanly possible upon hearing the news. Every paper would proclaim the same. Elyna lay down again. Rolling onto her side and pulling the covers over her head. In many ways, the night before had been a nightmare. All her dreams unravelled.
‘Ely?’ Emily was atop her, pulling back the covers. ‘Ely aren't you happy? What’s wrong?’
She couldn’t breathe. Even as her friend stroked her hair. She started to cry and Emily wrapped her arms around her.
Eventually, she’d found the strength to explain that engagement had been broken. Emily had turned white with shock and then fury. The small blonde ready to knock sense into the King himself.
‘You’ll be okay…’ Emily promised, and helped her wipe tears away. ‘Did you not get any sleep at all? You’re so tired.’
Elyna shrugged, ‘how could I sleep? Knowing that everything just…’ she exhaled.
‘You’re better without him,’ Emily tried to lie and Elyna couldn’t help but smile.
The royal party had left the next day on 33rd as planned. Elyna had been in the mews, tending the bruised wing of a cranky Volarean. She watched the horses and carriages rolling away, from where she stood in the hayloft. She bit her lip, hard enough to draw blood. Wiped away her silent tears and returned to her work.
It was the next morning that a Skyrider appeared with the dawn. The man looked exhausted, half falling from his seat.
Emily and Elyna helped him steady himself, tending the mount and ensuring he was fed and given something hot to drink.
‘I have a missive to deliver to the King,’ he explained and produced a sealed packet of notes. Elyna didn’t need to see the writing along the side or the thick wax seals, to realise it was from Nejem. It smelt of sand.
‘He’s not here,’ the young women explained, ‘they departed yesterday.’
‘You should have passed them on the road?’ Elyna frowned.
The man stared at them aghast, ‘I must have missed them in the night!’ He moved to stand and found their hands on his shoulders, holding him down.
‘They can’t be more than a day’s flight away?’ Emily suggested and looked to the Volareans stabled in the mews.
‘I’ll go.’
Emily stared at her friend, ‘are you sure?’
‘I’ll go.’
—-
The missive was safely secured to the Volarean. Wrapped in a wax paper and strapped into a special bag, it wouldn’t fall to the ground. And so Elyna had found herself chasing the Kings’ retinue for most of the day and her thoughts had drifted.
It had taken longer than she had expected until she sighted them ahead. She spotted the horses and coaches at an Inn, just off the road to Andaris. Her heart tightened and she began her descent. The Volarean wheeled slowly down and she scanned the snow covered ground for a place to land.
She spotted the young boys, three of them beside a tree with red and orange leaves still. A number of guards stood nearby, but let the boys be. The tree was nearly two hundred paces from the Inn itself and the woman smiled to herself. Perhaps after a long journey, even Princes needed to let off steam.
There was movement in the Inns courtyard and she raised a hand in standard greeting, realising that she had been noticed. Still, her gaze returned to the boys and her heart nearly stopped beating. There was something wrong with the picture.
The tree was one she knew well, a native to Burhan it thrived in the foggy conditions and rarely grew beyond the borders of her land. Where it did grow, it grew beside water. Always with thick roots the size of her leg plunging into the liquid. If the tree was here, it was beside water. The boy’s weren’t standing on snow covered ground. They were standing on snow covered ice. Ice that would be thin around the roots. From so high above, she could just about see the outline of the lake they stood upon.
With a shout of warning she wheeled the Volarean to the side. The creature let out a screech that’s split the sky. Pressed flat to its back, she shouted for the boys to move away from the tree. Whether they heard her or not, her sudden dive towards the party has the guards rushing to grab the Princes. One started to shout about ice, and with relief she knew they had understood about the tree, the water and the unseen danger.
She saw Marcus pulled to one side, away from the ice. Noah had followed the guards, face pale with shock as the Volarean dropped from the sky and landed on the snow a few paces from where the boys had been. Elyna was already jumping from the back of the Volarean.
Her scarf was wrenched away from her mouth. Freed, it was caught by the wind and pulled away from her body as she ran. A ribbon of green it twisted through the air before coming to rest in the heavy snow.
She could see Vaughn, stood beside the roots, frozen with fear as the guards realised they had all pulled Marcus to safety and left Vaughn behind.
‘Climb the tree!’ Her shout came urgently as the boy looked down. She’d heard the same sharp crack of ice as she closed the distance between them. The snow had thinned where the boys had been standing, pulling at the heavy red leaves that still clung to the branches.
Vaughn looked up at her as she reached him. A frightened boy he stretched his arms toward her and she grabbed him. The ice shifted beneath her feet, but she was close enough now that she could shove the boy forward. Elyna pushed him towards the guard with a strength she didn’t recognise. She saw Vaughn safe in the man’s grasp, his eyes wide with fear as saw the ice slip away beneath her feet and she dropped.
Hand outstretched she clawed at the thick roots, trying to catch a hold as she fell into freezing water. The Volarean screamed, dancing on the bank of the lake before darting forward.
The cold hit like a hammer to the chest. Elyna knew the cold. She knew ice water. She knew not to allow herself the pained gasp for air that would only fill her lungs with liquid. She sank, body as stone until she kicked, fighting back to the surface. Her gloved hand closed around a root or thick grass and she struggled to rise. With every movement she felt more exhausted, felt the heat leaving her body. But she broke back through to the surface. The winged mount backing up like a horse with the Skyrider clinging to its reins for her life. She was pulled to the roots, where she found strength to wrap her arms around the thick gnarly bark. She didn’t have the strength to pull herself from the water. It was too cold. Lake water dropped from her hair and froze on her face. Tired. It had been a long flight. Her mind felt as though it was stuffed with wool. The bark pressed to her cheek, winters kiss biting the soft skin with its continued caress.
‘Message,’ she fought for consciousness, why was the sky so dark? ‘Message for the king.’ Heavy eyes closed, breath came in an erratic puff of mist. Was it still cold? She felt almost comfortable, everything willing her to sleep. She was so tired. Sleeping would be so easy. Her grip began to ease around the root and the woman started to slip back into the water.