Meet Lady Bone and her knights, the Dark Fae who controls the Wilding.
Excerpt from Spells of Air
Orielle didn’t think she fell asleep. This fraught day
wearied her with its pre-dawn beginning with the gobber, leading to her
encounter with the wyre, and ending with a wight on her back. How could one
sleep standing up? But she must dream, for bone-white horses threaded through
the straight trees. Snow-white riders, stiffly erect in their saddles, wore
cloaks of ice blue and storm purple. The material flowed around them, drifted
by a gentle wind.
Only the metal bits of the night-black bridles jingled as
the horses circled the camp. No snorts or huffs of ice-fogged breath broke the
silence. The hooves were muted thuds. The saddle leather didn’t creak.
Nor did the riders speak. In their frozen marble faces,
their black eyes spoke for them. Who?
From where? From when? Why? Deep questions, rolling like distant thunder.
First to cross the camp wards was a woman, her features
carved as sharply as ice shards, a smile greeting Orielle while her black eyes
lacked any warmth. Silver hair streamed to her waist, like waterfalls over her
glacial blue gown. Her arms were long and thin, the joints of wrist and elbow
prominent. The gown flowed behind her like wings. She was beautiful and
eldritch strange. Orielle knew Fae without their glamour. The Fae had an
unfading beauty equal to this woman. They shared the longer limbs, the slow-swift
drifting movements, the ever-present golden aura of magic. This woman was not
Fae. She was like to them, but stilly silent, frozen life, without the golden
warmth of power, as far from Fae as the Fae were from human, even the wizards
who wielded the same power.
The woman’s dark eyes flickered. Long icy-white lashes swept
down then up. Her close-mouthed smile revealed her satisfaction at Orielle’s
awe. She looked pure as ice—the purity that cleaved coldly sharp decisions that
lacked the human inclination toward mercy.
A man followed, then a second. Knights, guarding their
queen. Carved of the same frozen ice, similar yet different, harder than the
hard woman. One had a drawn sword, the flat blade leaned against his shoulder.
The metal glowed with the blue of glacial ice.
The other didn’t draw his sword. Icy violet gleamed dully
through a scabbard worked from silver and ice filaments. The snow-white fingers
of his left hand curved around something. A shadowy tendril left his hand but
vanished into the darkness, inches from rider and steed.
Those pale fingers tightened.
Orielle’s upward glance snared the knights. She felt the ice
of a deep Mont Nourian winter, the frozen wind from the mountain heights
whipped to a frenzy by a storm, the shaking chill that only a blazing fire
could dispel.
The other riders encircled the camp. Silent, frozen,
untouched by drifting wind that lifted the snow-white manes of their horses.
Their camp had no leaping flames to offer warmth, just
smoldering coals that held more ash than heat.
She shivered. The second knight smiled. Had he sent the
ruthless cold she endured? When his lips parted, she saw his teeth, sharpened
to fangs. He stopped his horse beside the woman. He released his reins, the
black leather straps sliding against the bone-white horse. He stretched his
free hand toward her, and she sensed a cold deeper than winter.
Orielle thought she dreamed until Grim appeared. His hand grazed hers as he bowed deeply.
The touch broke her sleepy stupefaction. She curtsied as deeply as she would have to the ArchClan of the Enclave or the king of Mont Nouris. She watched the woman, stranger than all the others, for she had led the men across the camp wards. Orielle’s magic hadn’t stopped them nor alerted her.She feared these creatures more than the gobber, more than
the wyre.
“Who comes through my Wilding?” The woman’s voice had rich tones that rang
deep to her bones.
Grim bowed again. “I am Rhoghieri, Lady Bone.”
“Havener.” The black
eyes glittered with a strange inner light. “I know you. We keep the pax. This
one, woman who is not-wizard, name her.”
At the command, the second knight’s smile increased.
Orielle had skipped many lessons, but she knew the power of
names. Cringing inside, she lifted her chin, striving to balance bravery and
respect. Fear and insolence would feed icy cruelty.
Grim had edged closer. She clasped his hand as she sank into
another curtsey. Then she tossed back her hood.
The first knight lifted his sword. Extending his arm high,
he brandished the steely blue blade. “Aiwaz Solsken,” he shouted.
Orielle fell back from his thunder.
Grim caught her, dragged her against his side. “Steady,” he
warned, for the sword knight had dismounted without moving, slipping between
one blink of her fluttering lashes and the next.
Sword held in both hands, he approached. The eerie blade lit
his snow-white skin, giving it the glacial tones of the Lady’s gown. Sigils
writhed the length of the blade, as tall as she was, with a brightly glowing
gem pommel. She crowded into Grim as the knight held the sword aloft. She had
to tear her gaze from him to focus on the woman.
The sword knight stopped his advance.
Orielle dared not look at him. Despising her cowardly
instinct, she straightened away from Grim and managed a step away.
The knight shifted with her, keeping the blade between her
and the Lady.
A third curtsey would seem mockery. Orielle bent her head
then dared the Lady’s gaze. “I am as you called me, Great One. I am a
not-wizard of the Enclave in Mont Nouris.”
“That is not a name.”
“I have learned to be wary of names, Lady.”
“Not so, for this wight knows a name.”
The Lady’s words were a signal, for the leash knight jerked
the black rope he held. His right hand snatched the air. When his hand lifted,
a ghostly form appeared. Wispy tendrils coalesced into a thick fog—wearing the
face of her dead cousin Raigeis.
Orielle winced. Grim, behind her, grunted.
She forced herself to survey the wight’s guise. He had
Magister Raigeis’ arrogance, the flared nostrils and lofted chin, the swept-back
grey hair, the stiff carriage of a man who understood his importance.
But ghosts didn’t walk the earth, not as tangible beings.
The wight had taken her cousin’s form to terrify. Emotional energy, Grim had
said.
She looked at the creature masked as Raigeis, once second in
command of all the wizards in the Enclave, dead now and another in his place.
“A foolishness that I regret, Lady.” Once again she dared that cold stare. “I
wished to impress the Rhoghieri.”
“The wight did not frighten you when it tried to attach
itself to you?”
“No, Lady,” she lied. She looked again at Raigeis. His
features were blurring. Did the wight lose energy when it had no emotions to
sustain its guise?
“You are arrogant, Lady Aiwaz Solsken.”
“The Rhoghieri says that I am foolish. I have never before
ventured into the Wilding. I have much to learn. For example, I cannot
discover, Great Lady, how you and your knights cross my wards.”
The Lady’s laugh was a sharp tinkling sound that could have
broken glass. The leash knight permitted another smile. Orielle dared not look
at the sword knight. He had advanced when their gazes met. Would he advance
more if that again happened? She would not peek to see if his grin matched all
the others encircling their camp.
Behind her, Grim hissed, displeased with her once again.
“A bargain we will strike, Not-Wizard.”
“No,” Grim whispered.
Not feeling reckless, Orielle wished to offer his word as
her own. How did she refuse this magical queen? Should she even attempt to
wiggle out of the proposed bargain? “I have nothing to offer,” she tried.
Grim’s groan told that she’d said the wrong thing.
“We will find an appropriate offer at the appointed time. Cyning honorel. Wight, na strincte.
The name returns to Neothera. Take it. It offends my sight.”
The darkness that had cloaked the wight descended over him.
Her last look saw Cousin Raigeis dissipating like vapor. A muffled howl rose.
The knight jerked the leash, cutting the howl into a whimper. Another jerk
stopped that tiny sound.
“What will happen to this wight?”
“You have care for a creature that would suck away your
magic?”
“No,” she hastened to say. “I would not want another
traveler to fall into its trap.”
“Have care to yourself, not for the next traveler this wight
meets.”
“It returns to its place, on the crest at the cairn?”
The Lady’s smile widened. Sharp fangs glinted, as sharp as
the Leash Knight and just as deadly.
And the wight whimpered.
“Eventually. It will pay a tithe for its lie.” She spoke again, the strange language like
Faeron but not, the words harsh yet with an enthralling undertone that could
trap the unsuspecting.
The knight shifted the glowing sword to his left hand. Once
again he extended it to the sky. The storm-purple cloak fell back. His
snow-white forearm had lightning-jagged scars. Muscles bunched at the sword’s
heft, but he held it aloft, his strength making the steel weightless. Orielle
stared at the glittering tip of the sword. She watched for lightning, but
nothing struck. His right hand extended. Elongated fingers cupped her face.
They froze her skin. His gaze seized hers.
“Lady—,” Grim called.
“She is safe, Rho. For now.”
Again her tingling laugh jangled the silence.
The knight loomed before her, inches from her, but that
snow-cold frame emitted no heat. Black eyes bored into hers as his cold, bony
fingers pressed hard into her flesh. A faint pulse beat in his temple, the only
sign that blood pulsed within him, pumped by a heart, making him mortal as the
long-lived Fae, mortal as Orielle.
Is the Lady mortal?
Her breath fogged the chilling air.
“Do you fear me, Aiwaz Solsken?”
“I fear what you do.”
Her breathy words caused a flicker in those black eyes. “It
is good that the wight lost its grip before it felt your fear.”
She shuddered.
His hand lifted away only for his index finger to return, to
trace a symbol in the center of her forehead. She tried to follow the shape. He
obliged by redrawing it, three, four, five times.
His teeth weren’t fanged. They looked slightly pointed with
only the eye teeth sharpened. An odd puzzle to snag her mind rather than the
eerie tingling of his finger on her brow, writing a symbol over and over. Then
he whispered, imparting the secret, “Once for each tenet.”
“Thank you.”
“The Lady gives it. I am hers as you are the Rho’s.” He stepped back. He slowly lowered the sword,
steadily sheathed it until only the blue gem above the cross-guard gave its
light to the moon-cold night. Without a flicker of his black eyes, he turned,
walked back to his horse, and vaulted into the saddle.
With his leaving, devastation whorled through her, scoured
with blizzard-sharp ice.
“Would you steal my knight, Not-Wizard? He seems to court
you.”
The words jarred her frozen mind. “Oh, no, Great Lady. He is
yours, none of mine.”
That fang-toothed smile returned. “Well answered, though I
would send him in your need. Call upon me should you need my aid. I will send
one of my knights.”
Orielle bowed her head. “I am humbled by the gift, Lady.”
The smile vanished. “Kyrgy deal in bargains, my offer
matched to yours. Remember that, Aiwaz Solsken. You have much to learn of the Wilding. I hope you survive to complete our
bargain.”
Obedient to an unseen signal, the horses turned as one. The
Lady and her two knights rode into the forest, their horses swishing their
tails as they crossed the wards. Then the others followed, knights and dames,
as stilly silent as before.
As she had not seen their arrival, Orielle watched their
leaving, and Grim at her shoulder watched as well. Tall figures on tall horses,
their cloaks blending into the darkness. Between one blink and the next, they
vanished.
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