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The Traitor Queen (The Bridge Kingdom Book 2)
The Traitor Queen (The Bridge Kingdom Book 2) Read online
Contents
Also by Danielle L Jensen
1. Aren
2. Lara
3. Aren
4. Lara
5. Aren
6. Lara
7. Aren
8. Lara
9. Lara
10. Lara
11. Aren
12. Lara
13. Aren
14. Lara
15. Lara
16. Aren
17. Aren
18. Lara
19. Aren
20. Lara
21. Aren
22. Lara
23. Aren
24. Lara
25. Aren
26. Lara
27. Aren
28. Lara
29. Aren
30. Lara
31. Lara
32. Aren
33. Lara
34. Aren
35. Lara
36. Aren
37. Lara
38. Aren
39. Lara
40. Aren
41. Lara
42. Aren
43. Lara
44. Aren
45. Aren
46. Lara
47. Aren
48. Lara
49. Aren
50. Lara
51. Aren
52. Lara
53. Aren
54. Lara
55. Aren
56. Lara
57. Aren
58. Lara
59. Aren
60. Lara
61. Lara
62. Aren
63. Lara
64. Aren
65. Lara
66. Lara
About the Author
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
THE TRAITOR QUEEN
Copyright © 2020 by Danielle L. Jensen
All rights reserved. Neither this book, nor any parts within it may be sold or reproduced in any form without permission.
Cover Artwork Illustration: Dominique Wesson
Interior Formatting: Silver Wing Press, LLC
Based on Audible Originals’ production of THE TRAITOR QUEEN
Published by: Context Literary Agency, LLC
125R Cedarhurst Avenue, Suite B
Cedarhurst, NY 11516
Ebook: 978-1-7330903-3-9
Hardcover: 978-1-7330903-5-3
Paperback: 978-1-7330903-6-0
Also by Danielle L Jensen
The Malediction Trilogy
Stolen Songbird
Hidden Huntress
Warrior Witch
The Broken Ones (Prequel)
The Dark Shores Series
Dark Shores
Dark Skies
The Bridge Kingdom Series
The Bridge Kingdom
The Traitor Queen
For my dearest friend and confidant,
Elise Kova
1
Aren
He’d been blindfolded for thirteen days.
Shackled too, and occasionally gagged, but despite the persistent burn of the ropes sloughing the skin of his wrists and the foul taste of the fabric shoved in his mouth, it was the endless shadow of the blindfold that was driving Aren, the former King of Ithicana, to the brink of madness.
For while pain was an old friend, and discomfort almost a way of life, to be confined to what sights his own mind could conjure was the worst sort of torture. Because despite his most fervent wish it were otherwise, all his mind wanted to show him were visions of her.
Lara.
His wife.
The Traitor Queen of Ithicana.
Aren had more pressing matters to consider, the foremost how the bloody hell he was going to escape the Maridrinians. Yet the practicalities of that need faded as he examined every moment with her, trying and failing to decipher truth from lie, reality from the act—though to what end he could not say. What did knowing if any of it had been real matter when the bridge was lost, his people were dead and dying, his kingdom was on the brink of defeat, and all of it the result of him trusting in—loving—his enemy.
I love you. Her voice and face filled his thoughts, honey hair tangled, her azure eyes bright with tears that carved their way through the mud smearing her cheeks.
Truth or lie?
Aren wasn’t sure which answer would be a balm to the wound and which would tear it wide open again. A wise man would leave it alone, but God knew he had no claim to that particular attribute, so around he circled, her face, her voice, her touch consuming him as the Maridrinians dragged him, kicking and fighting, from his fallen kingdom. Only once he was off the seas and beneath the heat of the Maridrinian skies did he get his wish: the blindfold removed.
Wishes were the dreams of fools.
2
Lara
Lara hadn’t known Eranahl had a dungeon.
But there was no other word for the dark cell built into caverns beneath the island city, the stone walls slick with mildew and the air stagnant. The steel bars were devoid of even a hint of rust, because this was Ithicana, and even the things that were barely used were well maintained.
Lara lay on her back on the narrow cot, the thin blanket she’d been given doing little to ward off the damp chill, her stomach tight with hunger because she was subjected to the same rations as everyone else on the island.
This wasn’t how she’d hoped things would go.
Rather than convincing Ahnna of her plan to rescue Aren from her father’s clutches, all her display of martial skill in the council chamber had done was see her slapped in irons, dragged through the city streets, and tossed in this cell. Those who brought her food and fresh water refused to speak to her, ignoring her pleas to see Ahnna.
And every day that passed was another day that Aren remained prisoner in Maridrina, subjected to God-knew-what sort of treatment.
If he was even still alive.
The thought made her want to curl in on herself. Made her want to scream with frustration. Made her want to break free of this place and try to free Aren herself.
Except she knew that would be folly.
She needed Ithicana.
If only she could make them realize that they needed her, too.
3
Aren
“Good morning, Your Majesty,” a voice said as the blindfold was removed from Aren’s face.
Aren blinked rapidly, tears streaming down his cheeks as the sun seared into his eyes, blinding him as surely as the sweat-stained fabric ever had. Gradually, the burning white receded to reveal a manicured rose garden. A table. And a man with silvered hair, sun-darkened skin, and eyes the color of the Tempest Seas.
The King of Maridrina.
Lara’s father.
His enemy.
Aren lunged across the table, not caring that he was unarmed or that his wrists were bound. Knowing only that he needed to hurt this man who had destroyed everything he held dear.
His fingers inches from their mark, Aren found himself snapped back against his chair, a chain belted to his waist holding him in place like a dog to a post.
“Now, now. Let’s not be uncivilized.”
“Fuck. You.”
The Maridrinian king’s upper lip curled with disdain, as though Aren had barked rather than spoken. “You are as your kingdom was, Your Majesty. Feral.”
Was.
The sneer turned into a smile. “Yes, Your Majesty. Was. For I’m afraid Ithicana is no longer, and your title now a courtesy you will have to do without.” He leaned back in his chair. “What shall we call you? Master Kertell? Or perhaps, given we are family of sorts, a certain amount of familiarity is appropriate, Aren.”
“I don’t give a shit what you call me, Silas. As to your other point, the bridge is not Ithicana. I am not Ithicana. My—”
“—people are Ithicana,” Silas finished, his gaze gleaming with amusement. “Pretty words, boy. And perhaps there is truth to them. Ithicana stands . . . for as long as Eranahl does.”
Aren’s stomach twisted, the name of his city on his enemy’s lips both unfamiliar and unwelcome.
“Such a secret to keep.” King Silas Veliant shook his head. “Yet a secret no longer.”
“If you mean to use me to negotiate Eranahl’s surrender, you’re wasting your time.”
“I don’t waste my time. And I don’t negotiate.” Silas rubbed his chin. “Nearly all your people gathered on one island, cut off from supplies and with no hope of salvation. How long will they last? How long until Eranahl is not a fortress, but a tomb? No, Aren, I don’t need you to see the destruction of Ithicana through to completion.”
It wouldn’t come to that. Whoever was in command of Eranahl would begin smuggling civilians out of Ithicana under the cover of the storms. North and south. Scattered to the winds.
But alive.
And as long as they were alive . . . “If I’m so useless, why am I here?”
Silas steepled his fingers together, silent. Aren’s heart sped, thundering against his chest, each beat more violent than the last.
“Where is Lara?”
An unexpected question, given that Aren had expected her to be here. Back in Maridrina. Back at her father’s side. That she wasn’t . . . That her father didn’t know where she was . . .
I love you.
Aren shook his head sharply, a bead of sweat running down his cheek. She’d stabbed him in the back, lied to him from the beginning. Nothing she’d said mattered now. “I have no idea.”
“Is she alive?”
Unease prickled across his skin, Lara’s voice echoing through his thoughts: I thought I’d destroyed all the copies. This is . . . this is a mistake. The tears in her eyes had glinted like jewels. “Your guess is as good as mine.”
“Did you let her go? Or did she escape?”
Please don’t do this. I can fight. I can help you. I can—
“Allowing a traitor to go free seems an ill-advised choice.” Yet it had been the one he’d made. Why? Why hadn’t he killed her when he’d had the chance?
The other man’s head cocked. Then he reached into the pocket of his gleaming white coat and extracted a ragged and stained piece of paper, the gilt long worn off its edges. “This was found on your person when you were searched. Such an interesting document.”
Silas laid it flat on the table. Aren’s writing was barely visible through the watermarks and bloodstains. “On one side, she betrays me. On the other”—he flipped it over—“she betrays you. A puzzle. I must say, we were uncertain what to make of it, especially in conjunction with your visit to my fair city. Tell me, where do you believe Lara’s loyalties lie?”
Aren’s shirt glued itself to his back, the stink of sweat filling his nose. “Given our present circumstances, I’d say the answer is obvious.”
“On the surface, perhaps.” The Maridrinian king’s fingers grazed over the damning piece of paper. “If I might ask, who killed Marylyn?”
“I did.” The lie slipped out before Aren could question why he felt the deception necessary.
“No,” Silas mused. “No, I don’t think you did.”
“Believe what you want. It makes no difference.”
Folding the paper, Lara’s father leaned over to tuck it into the neck of Aren’s shirt. “Let me tell you a story. A story about a girl raised in the desert with her beloved sisters. A girl who, upon hearing that her own father intended to kill her and ten of her sisters, chose not to save herself but to risk herself to save their lives. Chose not to flee into a certain future but to condemn herself to a dark fate. All to save those precious lives.”
“I’ve heard this story.” Pieces of it. From Lara. And from the sister she’d murdered.
“Heard it, perhaps. But did you understand it? For within every good story, there is something to be learned.”
“By all means, enlighten me.” Aren lifted his bound wrists. “I’m a captive audience.”
Silas chuckled, then asked, “Why, given the girl was so damned and determined to protect her sisters’ lives, would she take one of them herself?”
“Marylyn threatened the others.”
“The others were not there. She had time. Yet instead of using it, she snapped her sister’s neck. Which leads me, Aren, to believe that something she valued greatly was in more immediate jeopardy.”
Images flashed across Aren’s vision. Lara’s face when her eyes had landed upon him on his knees, her sister’s knife at his throat. The way she’d searched the room, not for a means of escape, but for a way through an impossible situation. There had only been one choice: his life or Marylyn’s.
Silas Veliant leaned across the table, not seeming to care that he was well within reach of Aren’s hands. “I made my daughter a promise, Your Majesty”—his voice was full of mockery—“I promised that if she ever betrayed me, I’d have her killed in the worst of ways. And I always keep my promises.”
Maridrinian bastard blue. That was the color of this man’s eyes. And Lara’s. But whereas hers had been full of depth and life, staring into her father’s eyes was like meeting the gaze of a snake. Cold. Dispassionate. Cruel. “She didn’t betray you. You have what you wanted.”
A slow smile revealed teeth that had seen too much tobacco. “Even now, after all she’s cost Ithicana, you lie for her. You love her.”
That was a lie. Lara had cost Ithicana its bridge. Its people their lives. Aren his throne. He hated her. “I care nothing for her.”
Silas chuckled, then murmured, “We shall see. For of a surety, she knows I have you here. And with even greater surety, she will come for you. And when she does, I will cut her down.”
“I’ll hand you the sword.”
His chuckle turned to a wild, jarring laugh. “We’ll see if you’re singing the same tune when your wife is on her knees begging for your life. Or when she starts to scream for her own.”
Without another word, the King of Maridrina rose, leaving Aren alone and chained in the garden. And though for days all Aren had wanted was sight to wipe away the vision of her face, now he closed his eyes to see it. Run, Lara. And don’t ever look back.
4
Lara
The sound of footfalls invaded her dreams, and Lara jerked upright, blinking blurrily in the darkness.
How many days had she been down here? Without the sun, the only way to tell was the daily arrival of her singular meal. Six? Seven? She shook her head to try to clear the fog, then focused on the light that accompanied the footsteps.
The Princess of Ithicana, Commander of Southwatch Island, and Aren’s twin sister appeared before her cell door. Ahnna gave her a once-over. “You look like shit.”
“I wasn’t expecting company.”
And Lara wasn’t the only one looking the worse for wear. Ahnna was dressed in the typical tunic, trousers, and boots worn by most everyone in Ithicana, her dark hair pulled into a tail at the back of her head. But shadows darkened the skin beneath her eyes, and her mouth was drawn into a thin line of exhaustion. The wound Ahnna had received fighting the Maridrinian invaders was still a livid red line stretching from forehead to cheekbone, and as Lara watched, she touched it once, as though reminding herself it was still there.
Though she was terrified to ask, Lara said, “Is there news of Aren?”
Ahnna shook her head. “There’s been a bad storm sitting above us for close to a week, so we’re cut off.”
“Then why are you here?”
Taking hold of the bars to the cell with both hands, Ahnna leaned against them. “The whole city is demanding I execute you. Do you know how we deal with traitors in Ithicana?” She didn’t wait for Lara to answer. “We dangle them about hip-deep in the sea and then chum the waters. If you’re lucky, a big one will come along and finish the job quick, but that’s not often how it goes.”
Lara stared at the princess. “Do you intend to accede to their request?”
Ahnna was silent for a long moment, before saying, “I’m going to give you the opportunity to convince me otherwise. I think the best place to start is the truth.”
The truth.
Aren was the only person she’d ever trusted with it, and even still, there’d been much she’d held back. Lara wouldn’t hold back now.
Ahnna listened silently as Lara told her about being taken with her sisters to the compound in the Red Desert. About the ordeal that was their training with Serin, the Magpie. How they’d been brainwashed to believe Ithicana the villain, never once suspecting the true evil was their own father. About the dinner where she’d saved her sisters’ lives by sacrificing herself, and then everything that had come after, sparing no detail.