Alanna turned her face into the night breeze flowing through the Star Chamber, trying to relax. In recent weeks she had spent many sleepless hours at the boundary to the women's quarters, distracting herself by studying the exquisite mosaic. Here a swordsman on a rearing horse was pierced by three arrows, one eerily close to the same spot where her own thigh had been punctured three months ago. Her muscles winced.
"He lived?" she asked softly, lifting her lamp higher, eyes travelling over the hordes of aggressors ranked behind the black dragon standard streaming above the swordsman's opponent. Over the last few weeks, having more time on her hands since the Tahl no longer interrupted her routine, she had also applied herself to her language lessons and 'progressed' to speaking fluent, if basic, Tahlm'ese. Slightly too swiftly for reality but hey, she was bored.
Her four guards all nodded and Malik elaborated, indicating the figure on the horse, "Goshta Tahl was crowned after his father was killed in the battle; he became the great grandfather of Xanir Tahl."
"Just as Paolo dek Drake was the grandfather of Justin dek Drake." Omar scowled at the opponent leading the ranks underneath the Sianese banner.
"But you said this battle ended the War of Seven Gods? There has been peace between Siane and the empire ever since?"
A soft sound of derision behind her, and Alanna spun, her heart leaping. Searing, miserable anger quenched the unruly excitement an instant later.
She blinked. It wasn't Xanir. Simmering black eyes scoured her from head to toe as a sinewy man twice her age emerged from the corridor leading to the chambers of the Tahl-Mat, the Queen Mother.
Another insomniac
?
She let out a soft breath, shoulders drooping. The royal-blue trousers wrapped around his hips and the deep bows of her guards identified who this must be. Only males of the Royal Family or Zalmat would not be killed for passing beyond this room. This older, more slender version of her husband was neither dressed as a guard, nor carried himself like one.
Alanna's eyes fell from those of Haman the Scholar while she sank into her curtsy, mind whirring. The only surviving sibling of the Great Tahl was renowned for shunning court life, having categorically renounced all desire for the throne years ago, and removed himself to live as an ascetic hermit in his remote home in the far West, to stabilise the nation.
Why was he here now
?
"'There can be no true peace between dragons'," the prince quoted softly.
Rising from her bow, Alanna blinked under the piercing look Haman Zan pinned her with. She flushed. Part of the colour was private amusement at a private thought: she had just lost
millions
.
Shortly after the Tahl had returned and demanded tea, Helene had challenged her to a wager. That second evening, exasperated, her friend had bet that at least
one
of the males who waylaid their ruler's new bride each day would actually look at her
face
, greeting Alanna, the person. The bet had turned into a rollover. Over the ensuing weeks, Alanna had been slowly amassing a fortune, the sums having continued to rise despite the sharp drop-off in gratuitous male attention since the Tahl had turned his attention elsewhere -- refusing to summon her again until she apologised properly.
Now along came Haman Zan and she was a pauper.
Huh
.
The Scholar's brilliant black eyes crinkled as he tried to judge what had lifted the corners of his brother's bride's fascinating mouth. "My word, princess," he murmured in Kjell, stepping forward. "The poets have not done you justice. No wonder Xanir is entranced."
Her smile vanished.
Alanna's eyes dropped to the floor and she blinked fiercely to ward off the moisture engendered by the infuriating, unruly surge of longing at just that name. Her nipples were peaked in aching desire, brushing the soft material of her night wrap, and her stomach writhed in a cramp of lust and misery.
Her colour flared higher. The insomnia was humiliating, but worse was the soft binding of her wrists and hands when she slept, to prevent her unruly hands from straying in response to her dreams. The will of the Tahl -- he had tuned her body to yearn for pleasure, but none was now permitted until she apologised - in the most public, humiliating typical Tahlm'ese fashion.
No way
.
The tears wavered, but she beat them back with anger and memory, a little snarl twisting the side of her mouth. She could return home in less than nine months now. Her heart ached. She missed her home.
She missed Xanir, an unruly thought surfaced.
No
.
Gathering her calm, Alanna lifted her head to belatedly respond, as evenly as she could. "That is not the word I would use."
Damn him. Whatever her blood whispered in her dreams, she was
not
going to disgrace the house of Kjell and apologise as he demanded -- the tales of Rihanna's shamelessly inventive apology in the great hall and the ensuing nightly orgies were feeding Xanir's ego enough already. Alanna's eyes were narrowed, stony chips.
Xanir's brother's eyes lit in response. "Such fire," he smiled. "So appropriate for my scrappy little brother: always in a fight, never sitting still." The black gaze was uncomfortably penetrating as he added coolly. "What word would you use, princess?"
"Bored," snapped Alanna without thought. This man reminded her of her cousin Glen, with his slight build and far-seeing eyes hiding formidable intellect. And she was sleepy and miserable and sexually frustrated,
angry
at herself for that longing, and tired of guarding her tongue. So what if Xanir had a new toy? Courtesy of Rihanne, who had taken along a lissom fellow-countrywoman to assist her with her apology. By all accounts Rihanne didn't mind sharing. Or being shared.
Revelled
in it.
Haman blinked at the passion behind the stormy blue eyes, his heart aching a little for her, too. "Did Bethesda not explain a true apology to you?" he asked softly. Watching the colour spread down her delicate neck while those stunning blue eyes flashed again, he added wryly, "I can see that she did."