THE TATTOOED WOMAN - Chapter 17
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The Tattooed Woman Volume 2 - Chapter 3: Dinner and a Dance
Shalidar rose as Demeritus entered her tent unbidden. She had disarmed, her servants had carefully removed the segmented bronze carapace of her armour and with their usual attentive care, they had bathed and oiled her body before gently scraping the detritus of her travels from her skin. The sheer silk robe she now wore was comfortable and while she found its sensuous touch almost decadently pleasing, she had chosen it more for how well its cut accentuated the full curves of the shape she wore. Burned incense flavoured the air of the tent, but the candles could not entirely mask the unearthly and yet strangely enticing scent that seemed to emanate from the woman.
Sensing his fickle mood, she carefully schooled her expression and her mouth deliberately curled into a smile that was as broad and bright as it was insolent as she turned to face him, but despite her almost playful tone her eyes still glittered dangerously in the subtle illumination of her boudoir, "Cousin, how sweet it is for you to visit, how might I reward this kindness?"
"You disobeyed me," he growled.
The woman drifted to a small table with languid grace, knowing his eyes would be drawn to the tantalising sway of her hips as she moved, and she poured a generous measure of wine both for her uninvited guest and herself from a golden chalice before turning back to him and offering a goblet. Her tone was light as she replied, but Demeritus saw through the mask and noted the smouldering spark of rage concealed in the depths of her eyes, "How so? Pray elucidate, and explain my failings, your Highness, for surely my misery would be limitless if I thought I had failed you even in some small way."
The creature took a step forward and for a moment she thought he would slap the offered drink from her hand. With no small amount of discipline, she stilled her fast-beating heart and remained unmoved as he all but spat, "Do not play coy with me! You know damned well what I mean. Did I not say that you did not require escort, and yet you flaunted my direction by taking one regardless."
"Oh, is that all? For a moment I was concerned I had failed my mission in some regard."
"You dare..."
"Contain yourself cousin, firstly I did not disobey any command, for you did not prohibit an escort, you merely stated that I would not need one. Simply put, I did not trust the honesty of your intelligence, so I erred on the side of caution. Would you not do the same I ask?"
He drew an angry breath, his face contorted, and he bared his teeth in a snarl, "I should chastise you for your disobedience to my wishes!"
Shalidar's gold-flecked eyes flashed, and she crushed the goblet in her hand so suddenly that wine splashed in all directions, "You can try!"
The air around the creatures stirred as Demeritus took a step closer, "Your mate is gone witch! He is nothing more than a ruined, shattered husk! Now I am the eldest! I am the strongest! You would do well to remember that
cousin."
Shalidar all but hissed as she spat back at him, "And you would do well to remember who it is you threaten dear cousin. I am not some witless Drow to be slaughtered meekly, I would resist your touch unto
death
, and while I might not survive, I would inflict such wounds upon you that you would remember their pain for a thousand years!"
With mercurial speed, her mood shifted, she checked her temper and favoured him with a truly wicked smile as she delicately licked the wine from her fingers. His gaze was almost involuntarily drawn to the deliberately provocative way in which she savoured the drops from under her razor-sharp nails, and her eyes glittered with gleeful malice at the quickening of his breath, "Then of course, you would have to explain to our Master, how you came by such wounds, and how it is you deprived him of a useful asset in time of war for no other reason than a fit of selfish anger. I'm sure he would understand, for he strikes me as the forgiving sort."
Demeritus took a shuddering breath and stepped back, "It would be prudent for you to rethink this strategy of antagonising me Shalidar, for one day you will push things too far, with ruinous result, for you."
"You are merely upset that I mated with Typhonos and not you. It is unseemly to bear such a petty grudge," she sighed, "however in the spirit of our kinship I will endeavour to be courteous, so I apologise for my behaviour cousin. My words were harsh, and my threats unjustified. There! Will that not suffice to placate you this day?"
Demeritus grumbled but drew another breath to steady his temper and sipped at the contents of the goblet before replying. His eyebrows went up almost involuntarily in appreciation of the heady flavour, "This is a fine beverage my cousin, what is the vintage?"
"Fomorian blood, I recently, and rather unexpectedly, came into a small supply and I thought you might enjoy it. What say you? Pax? For today at least."
He sighed, "Very well, Pax it is. I offer apology for my own behaviour, it has been a tiresome day, cousin, but that is a poor excuse for my ill manners."
She smiled, "No apology is necessary, you bear a heavy weight upon your shoulders, and it must be burdensome at times. Might I at least make my report to you regarding the errand you set me? I would have come earlier, but I saw you were ensconced with our Master and in truth, I was fearful to interrupt with merely a mundane accounting of trivial matters."
He gestured, "Please."
Shalidar poured herself another goblet but only sipped the brew, "In all honesty, there is very little to say on the matter. I travelled to the shrine as you commanded and found it unoccupied, though there was sign of some earlier battle. I suspect the hounds previously dispatched were engaged by a company of Dwarves..."
"Not more fucking Dwarves," he complained.
"Cousin?"
"Never mind, please continue."
She paused a moment before continuing, "Anyway, it appears the Dwarves destroyed the hounds, though at a cost. The shrine itself is, as you know, very old, and on investigation, I found it was possessed of an "echo" if you will, of its former mistress."
"An echo?"
She nodded, "Indeed, it was a most curious thing, but I believe the Phantom Queen herself once stood there, in person."
He nodded, "That is my understanding."
"Well, her physical presence seems to have infused the stone upon which she stood with some echo of her spirit. I cannot think what else to call it," she swallowed, and her voice trembled slightly, "she must have been puissant in her day..."
"Indeed so. Do you think this echo can threaten us?"
"I doubt what I describe could be of any real concern. But it was somewhat troubling to be near. She was an old enemy of our Master I understand, so I suspect her malice may be in some way specifically directed towards him, and thus also his allies, making it more quarrelsome than it might otherwise be. I would doubt that it would be overly antagonistic to one of another faction."
Demeritus finished his drink with relish, and as she refilled the goblet with a smile he mused, "Perhaps not, but mayhap I should dispatch some forces to level the place, nonetheless."
With the ease of long centuries of practice, she lied seamlessly, "As you please, I broke the stone at the shrine and would expect the echo to fade in time, though, in all honesty, I would not know how long that would take, mayhap a few days, possibly many years."
"Do you advise against destroying the place then?"
With a chuckle Shalidar offered a shrug of utter indifference, "I could not care less! I do not concern myself with such trivia, if you wish to pulverise a few overgrown and mouldering stones then be my guest," she changed the subject with a sly, half-hidden smile, "might I ask why you seemed concerned by Dwarves?"
"Oh, My Lord commanded they be left in peace for now until we have destroyed the DΓΆkkΓ‘lfar. He would prefer to devour our enemies piecemeal if possible."
She frowned, "They cannot threaten us surely?"
"No, I would not think so, but you know how militant they are, and how tiresome it would be to winkle them from their caves. It is more a matter of simplicity and neatness rather than any real military concern."
"That seems logical, but I am no student of tactics. I prefer to take my pleasure in softer things."
"You were ever the hedonist."
She grinned, "Typhonos did not complain of my appetites."