The Storm Prince
By M. L. John and TBD
()
About this ebook
Beriani Quintinar, the youngest son of Faerie’s High king, is brilliant, beautiful, and spoiled as only a prince of the Sidhe can be. He has committed an unforgivable sin—he has fallen in love with the half-human daughter of a traitor. When ogres conquer Avalon and execute his father, he must convince the treacherous Queen of Summer
M. L. John
The first novel M. L. John ever read was Frank L. Baum’s The Wizard of Oz, and she has had a love of fantasy ever since. As soon as her handwriting was good enough to write full sentences, she started writing stories about beautiful princesses who spent their time rescuing princes and slaying dragons. Very little has changed about her writing style since that time, with the possible exception of her penmanship. She lives in Colorado with her true love, their three children, an obnoxious baby brother who still won’t let her change the television channel, and a small menagerie of yippy little dogs and cats big enough to saddle. These days, she spends most of her time explaining different mythologies to her kids until their little eyes glaze and roll back in their heads.
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The Storm Prince - M. L. John
Contents
Copyright Page
Dedication
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1
Chapter 5
Chapter 10
Chapter 15
Chapter 20
About the Author
The Storm Prince
by
M. L. John
All rights reserved
Copyright © January 5, 2014, M. L. John
Cover Art Copyright © 2014, Chaz Kemp (http://www.chazkemp.com)
Gypsy Shadow Publishing, LLC.
Lockhart, TX
www.gypsyshadow.com
Names, characters and incidents depicted in this book are products of the author’s imagination, or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of the author or the publisher.
No part of this book may be reproduced or shared by any electronic or mechanical means, including but not limited to printing, file sharing, and email, without prior written permission from Gypsy Shadow Publishing, LLC.
ISBN: 978-1-61950-574-2
Published in the United States of America
First eBook Edition: February 1, 2014
Dedication
This book is for my true love, my husband Ian John. Thank you for cooking dinner while I write, for staying awake until two in the morning listening to me talk about people who don’t exist, and for being my best friend.
Foreword
Dearest Reader,
This novella is meant to be read in conjunction with Lady of the Veils. Instead of following Karen during the six months of their separation, it follows Beri through the Summerlands and details the adventures he had while he was there. It begins when he leaves Karen at the Lake of Dark Dreams and ends when they find each other again outside the rebel colony. You may find, at the end, you still have unanswered questions. Please believe these questions will be answered in time.
With Gratitude,
The Author
Acknowledgements
A great many people were instrumental in the making of The Storm Prince, and I would like to take a moment to thank them for their kindness and hard work. This book could not have been written without you.
I would like to thank the Prose 3 writer’s group for their endless patience with my endless rewrites. This book would have been much worse quality without your help. I am grateful to each of you with every new story you help me to perfect.
Many thanks to my brilliant beta readers, Lin Barrett, L.M. David, Ian John, Mary Lavender, Jeri Willson-Otero, and Kristine Hall-Garcia. Each of you placed your fingers on this book, and there are traces of every one of you in these pages. I read a quote the other day that said, A book is like a pearl. The writer provides the grit, but it is his friends who make the work shine. Of course, this may be to make him less irritating.
Thank you all for the endless shining.
Thanks, as well, to Chaz Kemp for designing this amazing cover.
Special thanks to Kristy Carey, for calming me when I was freaking out about blurbs and art in the middle of the night. And thanks to Ian Sell, without whom the knight’s armor would be much less effective. No writer could ask for better friends.
And finally, I would like to thank Charlotte Holley and Denise Bartlett of Gypsy Shadow Publishing for believing in me and my stories enough to help me present them to the world. I am eternally grateful for all the editing, advice, hand-holding, and general support you ladies give me with every book I send to you. Thanks for being the ones to give me my shot. I hope I make you proud.
Chapter 1
Karen was sick, very sick. Just below her breast was a gash deep enough to flay her skin from the wet, red muscle below it. Pus and blood had dried in a striated crust on the surface of the make-shift bandage, and when Beri pinned her hands in one of his own to peel the fabric away, she struggled against him and cried out.
Red lines of infection, spiky and multiple as the limbs of a spider, radiated toward her heart. The wound needed stitches. The girl had not bled to death, though it had been a near thing. Beriani Quintinar had allowed himself to believe the worst was over and she would pull through until this very moment. He swallowed alarm as she turned her face away from him, the tendon in her neck standing out. Good. He hoped she was too ill to have noticed the dismay in his expression.
It took all of his High Court conditioning to keep his voice calm. This is abscessed. You need a healer, and now.
Goddess, they were in the middle of nowhere, days away from civilization. Just… just stay here. I will find one.
Her head whipped about, dark eyes wide and wild. Curls stuck in sweating clumps to her forehead. Her lips were colorless as the belly of a dead fish.
What? No! You can’t leave me! What if the Ogres find me? What am I supposed to do?
Beri shook his head. Karen. I have to get help. You are in no shape to travel any farther. You have to stay here.
No.
The wounded girl pushed herself up onto her elbows. A spurt of cloudy blood gushed from her side where the scab had ripped loose. Beri pushed against her shoulder to keep her still. Through clenched teeth she said, I’ll go with you.
How can you?
Taking a shaky breath, he added, You are pale and sweating. Mother. I have done this with my idiocy. I never should have let you come.
Karen’s eyes flashed. Yeah, you’re a real jackass. I forced you to bring me along and then I threw myself between you and an archer. This is all your fault.
Beri glared at her and she glared back. She was right; of course she was right. No one let Karen MacGregor do anything, even when one happened to be the eldest surviving member of the royal Quintinar house. Sighing, he tucked one of her damp curls behind her ear.
I will offer you a compromise,
Beri suggested. I will stay here until you fall asleep. Then I will erect a defensive circle and go for a healer. Will that do?
She blinked. What if something happens to you?
Beri considered his answer carefully, his desire to keep her calm warring with his need to keep her safe. Your chances are as small if I stay as if I am unable to come back. You cannot ask me to watch you die when I can help you. There is nothing so cruel in you.
She chewed the corner of her bottom lip, then nodded. Her gaze was haunted with fear. You’ll stay until I fall asleep?
Beri pulled her against his side and she rested her head against his heart. She was as hot as a sun and trembled endlessly. She must have spent the entire night worsening in order to be this sick at dawn. He had asked her to tell him if the wound started to hurt again, but he had known even as he said it he could not stop infection if it happened. His magic was not in healing. She must have seen through him. She always did.
Karen’s ragged breathing slowed and evened. He dropped a kiss onto the top of her hair and managed to extricate his arm from under her. She didn’t wake.
He cast the circle as he had promised; he even attempted to disguise their makeshift camp—though he had little talent for Glamourie. He turned his fear into violence and sang a song of lightning before he left her. Perhaps this delicate half-human beauty would die of her wounds, but she would not be accosted by anything from outside his defenses.
Beri stumbled as he walked away from her and his vision blurred. He paused only long enough to shake the fog from his brain and rub his eyes clear. He didn’t have much left now. He needed to find help, and quickly.
On all sides of him, the Enchanted Forest stretched as far as his eyes could see, emerald green and changeless. Birds sang above his head and shafts of sunlight struggled through the thick leaves to pierce the wooded gloom. Finding help would be easiest accomplished with magic, but it had been days since he’d eaten a proper meal and the protective circle had exhausted him. Mage exhaustion lurked in the weight of his limbs.
Beri had no idea where he might go to find help. Even if he found a healer in this lush wasteland, it was unlikely she might be induced to use her skills on his companion. Karen was half-Fey. Her very birth had been an act of treason. He started walking anyway.
Beri was a wizard; he had spent the entirety of his childhood studying meteomancy and was therefore not much given to superstition, but as he walked he prayed. Mother of Us All, let me find some village with a kindly populace or a clever hedge witch. Please do not let Karen die.
I have only now grown courage enough to love her.
But either the Goddess did not hear or She did not care, because Beri wandered on and on and no miracle appeared. His belly grew empty, but he had no time to see to its demands. He had become increasingly used to hunger since fleeing Avalon. He ignored it.
In the distance, a faint sound increased to a dull, steady roar. Beri paused, then altered his direction. It sounded like water, perhaps a strong river. Water Fey often had healing magic. Perhaps he could convince one of them to come back to camp with him.
Cynical, he thought, Having a Quintinar owe you a favor is no small prize.
Through the trees water shone, coin-silver, in the sunlight. As he approached, Beri realized he had miscalculated: he had not found a river. At his feet lay the edge of a tall, white cliff, and below him was a lake so huge it stretched past the range of his vision. White waves crashed against the rocks at the cliff base, and around these the sinuous, scaly tails of mermaids flicked plumes of water into the air.
Beri thought, Where there are mermaids, there are Nixies to eat them, and shuddered. No. There would be no healers in those viciously populated waters. He turned away from the cliff’s edge and moved back inland.
This aimless wandering was not helping. He did not want to wear out his slim energies, but the girl he loved was going to die if he did not think of a better way. Perhaps… perhaps he would just open his senses a little and let the weather flow into him. Reading air currents was something he could do with minimal effort. Closing his eyes to aid his concentration, Beri breathed in the magic hovering in the air around him. Power filled his head and chest like the smell of distant rain.
Above him and to the East, that evening’s pending storm was a knot of potential at the edge of his senses. He felt the moisture in the clouds, the sharp snap of electricity as energy built. There, too, hidden in the condensing raindrops was the salt tang of grief, sharp enough to sting. He knew the storms were for his father. Until someone took the High Crown, Thael Quintinar’s rampaging magic would be free to disrupt the natural patterns of everyday life in Faerie. Or perhaps the Goddess missed him as Beri did and these storms were how she wept.
Focus, fool, he told himself. He dropped his attention into the forest canopy above his head. Birds and rodents altered the patterns of the wind currents as air splashed against them; a swarm of pixies generated their own cloud of magical potential. The barometric pressure dipped between the ancient, sleeping trees. Soon, it would be raining. The small animals that dwelt in the branches moved to and fro as they prepared to take cover.
Hot air rose. His awareness rode the currents of cool air toward the ground. The disturbances in the air were larger here. The lake breathed mist into the waiting sky as its top layer evaporated. He turned his attention away from it; a body of water was too much input and would not help his search. He was looking for something living. Particles of air forced themselves against a bear’s shape, then splashed back against him as the creature shook itself. A rabbit expelled its last puff of breath and began to cool as a fox buried its snout into entrails hot enough to release vapor. No. He needed something sentient. A healer.
Closer than he expected, almost close enough to hear a shout, something walked on two legs. Beri’s attention snapped to it and his focus narrowed. The person felt large, almost as large as the bear. A troll, then, or a rock sprite? He hummed a breeze just strong enough to kiss the person’s face. The moving currents outlined a pair of long tusks like those of a boar extruding from the creature’s bottom lip.
Beri recoiled. Ogres, he thought. They were closer now than they had been since Karen was wounded. In the back of his memory, the Wizard Gen whispered, Focus, young prince. Was it one Ogre or many? The answer could mean life or death. His consciousness eddied against a second warm body, then a third, then a group around a cook fire. A troop, then. A troop close enough to hit with a well-thrown rock.
Another mind brushed his thoughts like a caressing hand. Meteomancer, it greeted.
Beri’s eyes flew open and he ran.
Behind him, a voice shouted in Ogre. Branches broke and foliage crashed. Beri swerved around a tree and jumped over a fallen log. He had magic enough to defend against the number of Ogres that chased him, but that voice in his head was wizard-strong. That much magic meant other Fey. After the strain of living in the forest for nearly two weeks, he was not up to a full-on wizard’s duel. Who were they? Avalon was not at war with other Fey! Still, he heard the musical voices of trained magic users mingling with the harsh tones of shouting Ogres. Perhaps Avalon had not been at war with them, but they certainly wanted him now.
He had to get back to Karen; those wizards might be strong enough to break the circle in which he had left her. He shouted down his wards as he drew into sight of his camp and dove into the tent he had made them from leaves and a purple string.
He shook her awake, hard. With one hand she rubbed her face. I’m up, I’m up.
Good,
Beri whispered as Karen opened her eyes. We have to run.
Her sleepiness and confusion turned to fear all in an instant. What is it?
Keep your voice down,
Beri hissed. Ogres. They know where we are.
Oh, no,
Karen whispered back. How did they find us?
"There are