Total pages in book: 218
Estimated words: 205594 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 1028(@200wpm)___ 822(@250wpm)___ 685(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 205594 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 1028(@200wpm)___ 822(@250wpm)___ 685(@300wpm)
I dislike Lionel intensely. I dislike his florid face and his blond beard and the way he laughs so loud so as everyone will look over at him. I hate his jovial manner because it’s fake, and I hate that he married poor Erynne when Erynne is in love with her maid, Isabella.
And I really hate it when Lionel looks over at me. “Who would have thought that plump, silly Candromeda would suddenly become important to the court?” He gives me a scathing smile. “Today truly is a day of precipitous events.”
“Why, whatever do you mean?” I ask, fluttering my lashes and feigning ignorance. “What has happened, Your Grace?”
Lionel’s eyes narrow on me, and for a moment he looks just like his father. King Balnor was an unpleasant man with cruel eyes, and he came perilously close to marrying my mother to secure his claim on the throne. Luckily for all of us, Mother was penniless (and already married, but such things are unimportant to a king), Balnor had an heiress wife and a marriage was arranged between Erynne and his oldest son, Lionel, instead. Lionel has the same aggressive, cruel streak his father did, and he’s determined to have a glorious war, again, just like his father.
Which is why we’re in the situation we’re in. He wants a war with Darkfell and he won’t stop until Lios is fully embroiled in a new conflict.
I keep the dumb smile on my face as I rise to my feet and wait for him to tell me the news.
“As you know, the Golden Moon is rising once more.”
I nod. “Praise to the Golden Moon Goddess,” I say automatically. The golden moon—the symbol of the goddess of chaos—appears in the skies every thirty years and remains for seven long years. During those years, the seas are violent, the weather full of madness, and it’s a sign that the goddess is unhappy with mankind. She has been since the First War, when Ravendor Vestalin defeated her champion and established the first kingdom, Lios. To appease the prickly goddess, when the Golden Moon arises, a Royal Offering of bloodlines from both Lios and Darkfell must both be given to the Tower of Balance. There, the best of both kingdoms’ bloodlines must remain for seven years, until the Golden Moon Goddess disappears from the skies.
To step foot out of the tower is to anger the goddess once more.
Meryliese was supposed to be the sacrifice from the bloodline of Vestalin. Our ancestry reaches back to Ravendor, and no other bloodline in Lios is as pure. Even now, we stand apart from the rest of Lios. My sister Erynne is the swan of the court. The blood of Ravendor runs through our veins, evidenced by our dark hair and green eyes in a kingdom full of blue-eyed blondes. It’s rumored that Princess Ravendor married a warrior of Darkfell, and all descendants of her line have Fellian dark hair and eyes. My sister Erynne is pale and beautiful, her figure willowy and her manner elegant. Her jet-black hair flows down her back like a waterfall, and jewels gleam amongst her tresses like stars in the night sky. She is gorgeous and ethereal, a credit to the Vestalin bloodline.
Me…well, I am more of a plump sort of hedgehog. But a charming one, I like to think. I’m good with wooing people and winning them to my side. Unless you’re Lionel. He can rot in the Gray God’s dungeons for all I care. I’m not charming for him deliberately.
“If we do not send a sacrifice to the Tower of Balance, the land will be in turmoil,” King Lionel continues. “The seas will be impossible to sail, our ships dashed upon the rocks. The crops that feed the people will be decimated. We must send our sacrifice to the tower within the next three days.”
Three days. Three days until the Golden Moon Goddess returns.
Dragon shite. I am in such danger.
My lungs tighten, and I feel a swell of panic, but I tamp it down. “I trust in the king to do what is right,” I say sweetly, all the while mentally flinging daggers at Lionel’s fair head. “You will guide the people properly.”
“Your sister, Meryliese, was to be the sacrifice to the Golden Moon Goddess,” he says. “Her ship was on the way to the tower and was destroyed. There were no survivors.”
His blunt voice makes me flinch. I recover quickly and affect a pious expression. “And I shall keep her in my prayers, poor thing. She would say to us if she had to give her life, that she should give it in the service of the gods.”
“Her death poses a new problem,” King Lionel says, drumming his fingers on the arm of his throne. “The last two of the Vestalin bloodline are yourself and my lovely wife.” Then, he puts a hand on Erynne’s stomach, deliberately touching her very pregnant belly. He goes silent, clearly waiting for me to speak up.