Atlanteans had been before Conlan smashed right through that tradition.
“Why her? She’s not Fae. Why do you want her?”
“Ah, is that what you believe? I know what you are, now, you know. Atlantean. Evidently you know less than you think you do, for a living example of an ancient race.” The Fae finally appeared, roughly in the same place from which his voice had been projecting. “Fiona is a descendant of Fae royalty. Seelie Court, to be exact. She will be very happy in my . . . well, let’s just call them unification efforts, shall we? Show me how to work the Siren, or I will make her life quite unpleasant, shall we say? There are many ways to harm a human without breaking her. Humans are so delightfully fragile, aren’t they?”
Christophe didn’t waste time or breath on more threats. “What do you want?”
“The Siren. Show me. The ancient legends tell us that it holds enormous power, and I’ve only been able to access a fraction of it. Your young warrior friend, the one so besotted with my dear sister, knows nothing of how to access the gem’s power. But, of course, he doesn’t have your magic, does he? So now you show me how to control the full spectrum of power, or else—”
“Yeah, I get it. Or else bad things happen, and so on and so forth. Show me Fiona. Now.”
“Never.”
“Take me to Fiona, so I can see for myself she is unharmed, or you can stuff this gem up your hairy elf ass,” Christophe snarled. “I have no incentive to help you unless I know for sure she is safe and well.”
Gideon’s face turned red, then white again, and Christophe was sure he was finally going to die, right there on the spot.
“Yes. I will allow you to see Fiona,” Gideon finally said. “After that, you will show me how to control the Siren’s power. Willingly speak it to me, or I will kill you now.”
Christophe inclined his head. “After I see Fiona, I will show you the full power of the Siren. Willingly spoken.”
Satisfied, Gideon pointed toward a doorway that hadn’t been there before. Christophe led the way out of the door.
The first chamber they entered was a deep, rich forest. The scent of green and growing things and the rich loam in the soil permeated the air and made Christophe wonder how creatures of such viciousness and hate could create and control nature’s perfection so beautifully. Then he saw the unhappy faces of several wood sprites, and he knew the truth. The Unseelie Fae could harness, imprison, and control, but none of nature worked willingly in cooperation with them.
Would it be enough to lead to their downfall? He didn’t know. Millennia of Fae history said the opposite.
As they neared the end of the forest chamber, Christophe heard splashing and laughter like tiny bells. Nymphs. He schooled his face to be completely expressionless, in case Fiona was there, too. Nymphs could be fairly outrageous and he’d prefer not to react.
When they rounded the final tree and came upon the pool, however, it wasn’t Fiona he saw, but her brother. From the looks of him, he was in excellent spirits, too.
Not to mention stark naked.
Expressionless didn’t cover this. Christophe had to force himself not to laugh. Luckily the Fae had kept walking and was some distance ahead.
Declan saw him and turned red, making an attempt to cover himself. “Christophe! Did you come to get me out of here?”
The nymphs, three of them, all naked as the day they were born and absolutely lovely in their watery play, smiled and beckoned him to come join them.
He bowed but shook his head. “Alas, ladies, my heart is given to my one true love.”
They pouted but gave up gracefully. Nymphs could overpower any man’s will except for one who was truly in love. For them to have given up so easily, they must have sensed it powerfully in him.
“That’s delightful,” one said.
“Lovely, lovely, love,” the second said, nibbling at Declan’s toes. He turned an even brighter shade of red.
“We love virgins. Not that he is one, anymore,” the third said, rubbing her breasts on Declan’s back. His groan was heartfelt, but he splashed his way out of the pool and toward Christophe.
“Can you at least put that thing away?” Christophe tried not to laugh, but it was getting harder.
“They stole my clothes,” Declan said, covering himself with his hands and hopping back and forth.
Christophe took pity on him, but they needed to get moving before the Fae changed his mind. “Compliment them and then ask about your clothes,” he advised. “But they have to be really flowery compliments. Nymphs love to be flattered. Catch up to me as quickly as you can.”
Christophe took off without waiting to hear what Declan came up with, and he caught up to Gideon just as the Fae was opening another doorway.
“He may come with you, since his sister needs to see that he is safe, according to our agreement,” the Fae said, as if bestowing a favor upon a subject. “I will leave the doorway for him to find.”
Christophe had never wanted anything as badly in his life as he wanted to crush this murdering bastard like the monster he was. Not yet, not yet, not yet. Soon.
The next chamber was like and yet unlike the first. This, too, was woodlands, but it was
Christophe almost wanted to turn away from the intimacy of it, but then he remembered how Denal had come to the Summer Lands.
“Denal,” he called out, careful not to approach the throne. “It’s Christophe. Are you still yourself?”
Denal slowly raised his head, and Christophe saw that the dark blue of his eyes contained something else. Something more. Fae magic. Intertwined with Atlantean.
He was too late.
“I spoke truly and willingly, Christophe. Go home to Atlantis. I have served Maeve as her knight for three Fae years and willingly stay longer still. My duty compels me to honor my promise to her.”
“Duty? What of your duty to Atlantis?”
A wave of sadness passed over Denal’s face. “They don’t need me. Maeve does. I belong here, at least for now.”
Then there was nothing left to say, but for one final thought.
“Be well, my friend,” Christophe said, realizing as he said it that it was truth. Denal was his friend. It had been Christophe who had pushed the rest of the Seven away so he could be alone, nursing his anger and sense of betrayal. If he could finally find love, he could accept other bonds, too. “Be well.”
Denal stood and bowed to Christophe. “And you, my friend.”
As Denal returned to his seat, he sent a message to Christophe on the shared Atlantean mental pathway.
Christophe nodded.
Gideon was still moving, striding along toward the far wall of the chamber, and Christophe followed. This time, they entered a room that, though filled with trees and flowers, was more like an enormous bedchamber than anything nature had created.
Fiona, dressed in green silk, sat in a miserable, huddled ball in the middle of the bed.
“Now. You have seen her. She is unharmed. Show me how to work the Siren. I know it enthralls shifters on a far larger scale than I have yet done. Whole countries will fall to my will with this at my command.” Gideon’s voice shook with excitement and greed.