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Excerpt
Chapter One
In the Kingdom of the Faeries, all was well. For the most
part, the faeries were happy as most faeries usually are for
they have an unerring ability to see the good in everything.
Of course, there were exceptions for just as individual
personalities vary in the land of the humans, so too do they
vary amongst the faeries. The king for example could be
moody and arrogant, not desirable characteristics to be
sure, but in his own defense he would remind his subjects
that it was the worry of running a kingdom that made him so.
His loyal subjects did not fully understand this since the
kingdom ran so smoothly that there was little to be
concerned about.
The crops were bountiful. The fields were a luscious green
and dotted with beautiful daisies, buttercups, poppies, wild
orchids and cowslips. Beneath the ever permanent, glistening
rainbow, the rabbits and unicorns ran across the land with
wild abandon. But it never rained during the day. The
rainbow was just a legacy of the precipitation of the night.
Rain only fell during the night whilst the sun shone warmly
all day long.
The blonde-haired, blue-eyed faeries lived in joy and peace.
Crime was unheard of, places of incarceration did not exist
for faeries were honest and noble, and there was simply no
need for such dark places in their kingdom of light. The
kingdom was filled with music and song and happy chatter.
But the very best sounds of all came from the laughing lips
of little faery children and the contented gurgling of faery
babes.
And sadly this was what was missing in the lives of the king
and queen.
“But not for very much longer,” the queen whispered to her
husband who lay in the royal bed beside her.
Frowning, the king touched his wife’s swollen belly. “You
have lost eight babes, Admira. None survived longer than
five days.”
Queen Admira did not allow the tears to flow. She was the
queen of the faeries and had to be strong and optimistic.
“This babe shall live and will bring us the joy that we do
so deserve.”
“And all eight babes were girls. Can you only make females,
my wife?”
Queen Admira sucked in a breath. She found the tone in her
husband’s voice accusatory, and it made her feel sad. “This
babe shall live because I sense that it is a boy. He will be
a strong boy who will one day rule as king.”
“I hope that your senses speak true, Admira. You are the
oldest woman in the kingdom to carry a child. In fact, you
should be a grandmother by now.”
“I realize that this child will be my last, Emporo.”
“Then it must be a male.”
She looked up into the eyes of the king and shuddered, for
she liked not what she saw there. They were not the eyes of
the happy, handsome prince that she had wed so many faery
years before. They were darker and more cynical, and so she
had to quickly look away. “It will be a healthy male child.”
The king ran his finger around the rim of the polished
wooden goblet that held his clear, elderflower wine. “I must
have an heir, Admira.”
“I know this, Emporo.”
“Then also know that if the child dies then I shall be
forced to do that which no faery king has ever done before.
Realize, wife that the Oblue dynasty has been in existence
for five thousand faery years, and this noble house shall
not end with me. Always the king has produced a male heir
and, as a consequence, the kingdom has prospered.”
“But could we not have a queen, should I bear a female?”
He shook his head vehemently from side to side. “Never has
it been done. Always there has been a male heir, and that is
the way it must be for order and stability in the kingdom.”
A single tear did fall. “Then if I bear a female, you will
seek another queen.”
The king sipped his wine, stared at the intricately made
flower tapestry on the wall, and merely nodded.
Her heart constricted. She felt real fear and tried not to
show it. “This time, all will be well, dear husband.”
“It had better be.” He tossed his goblet across the room,
his anger getting the better of him. “I am laughed at,
Admira. My own brothers laugh at me. Younger brothers and
all three of them have large, thriving families.” He smashed
his fist into his palm. “I am the king. I should have
everything that I want, and I want a male child!”
The queen recoiled as the king suddenly jumped off the bed
and lurched to his feet.
“I shall have what I want!” he shouted. “I want a male heir
and,” he continued, wagging a finger at his wife, “if I do
not get what I want then be forewarned that your life is
going to change drastically.”
Queen Admira was shaking; she had never felt so terrified.
Her dear husband was turning into a monster, and she was the
cause of it. She was to blame because she was incapable of
giving him a living child. She clutched her belly and felt
the babe in her faery womb give a strong kick. It reassured
her a little, the kick was very strong indeed. That had to
mean it was a male.
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