Swallowing Darkness - Laurell K. Hamilton [145]
Ash and Holly bore wounds, for they had joined the fight after I called for Cel’s death. That Cel could wound them so quickly said just how much I’d underestimated him as a warrior.
I said “No.” The crown glowed like a dark halo as I moved forward. I looked at Sholto on the edge of the field with his sluagh, and I yelled out, “Why did you not join the fight?”
“The queen forbade it,” he called back.
I stared across the field at Andais. She wasn’t quite to us. I called out, “Andais, do you see the crown upon my head?”
She hesitated, then said “Yes.” The one word sighed and seemed to touch everyone on the field.
“What crown is it?”
Her hand tightened on the pommel of her sword, Mortal Dread, which could bring true death to anyone. “It is the Crown of Moonlight and Shadows. It was once my crown.” There was bitterness to that last.
“Now it’s mine.”
“So it seems,” she said.
“You vowed in open court that whichever of us became pregnant first would be your heir. You may not have intended to keep your word, but faerie kept it for you. Goddess and Consort have crowned me.”
“You wear the Crown of Moonlight and Shadows,” she said.
Cel screamed out, “And it is mine! You promised it to me!” Doyle’s sword tip pushed a little harder, and a drop of blood welled black in the moonlight.
Andais stood there with her cloak of darkness and shadows swirling around her. Her helmet was tucked under one arm. We looked at each other over that cold ground.
“Did you promise him your crown?” I asked.
“Yes,” she said.
“After promising me the chance to be queen,” I said.
“Before,” she said.
“You are an oathbreaker, my aunt. The wild hunt lives.”
“I know you and my Perverse Creature can summon the wild hunt. I know you slew your cousin and the other conspirators of the Seelie Court.”
“Would you have us hunt you?” I asked.
“Would it save my son’s life?”
“No,” I said.
“But still, I am an oathbreaker. I deserve to be hunted.”
Andais was the ultimate survivor. There was only one reason she would choose to die.
“Before Sholto and I give chase, I will order Cel’s death,” I said. “Our chase will not give him time to escape, and I don’t think he has enough friends left in court to save him.”
“I have allies,” Cel yelled from the ground.
I looked only at my aunt, not at him, as I said, “Siobhan is dead, and your so-called allies fled when they could. The only one who came to save you is your mother. If she is dead, then I think, cousin, you will find that you have no allies left. They don’t follow you. They follow her.”
“They will not follow you, Meredith,” Cel said. “Crown, or no crown, if it is not me on the throne, then they will kill you and choose their own ruler. My spies have heard them plot this.”
I laughed, and finally looked down at Cel. Whatever he saw on my face widened his eyes, and made him catch his breath, as if he saw something that frightened him. “You never understood me, cousin, or you, my aunt,” I said. “I never wanted to rule. I know they hate me, and no matter how much power I show them, they will always see me as the future of the sidhe. They see me as the diminished them. They see in me what they see in Sholto, that the sidhe grow weak. They would rather hide in their hollow hills and waste away than change and go outside to meet the world. I had hope for our people. My father had hope for our people.”
“His hope is what killed him,” Cel said.
I looked down at him where he lay on the ground, Doyle’s sword at his throat, but he didn’t look frightened. He believed that Andais would save him. Even now, he was confident in her power to protect him.
“How do you know that hope killed my father?” I asked.
Something crossed through his eyes, some thought or emotion. I smiled at him.
“It’s just an expression,” he said, but his voice wasn’t so confident now.
“No,” I said, “it’s not.” I knelt beside him.
“Cel,” Andais said, “Cel, don’t….”
My smile