she is the light, and she loves this daughter well. But if your sister were in your power, my lord, I imagine that your faerie mother would reveal to you the location where she has hidden your betrothed.”
Marzina stood. Picking up the reflecting bowl she emptied it with shaking hands into a planter. She needed to reach her mother, and quickly. But suddenly in a clap of thunder and flash of lightning Kolgrim stood before her, smiling. Marzina shrank from the hand he held out to her. “I will not go with you,” she said.
“Ah, you were listening to us, were you?” he replied. “In mortal society they consider it rude to eavesdrop, but we don’t consider it that at all, do we, my pretty one? How on earth would we learn what we need to know if we didn’t listen at doors?” He laughed at the guilty flush suffusing her face.
“She can’t hear you, Marzina. I put a spell about your house as I came. I certainly don’t want our mother interrupting us. You know, of course, who I am.”
“You are Kolgrim, the Twilight Lord,” Marzina said.
“And your brother,” he added with a charming smile.
“I did not know that until recently,” Marzina replied.
“How did you learn it? I would have thought our mother would not want to share that information with you,” Kolgrim remarked. “Unless, of course, she means to use you against me, little sister. Does she?”
“I overheard her speaking with Grandmother,” Marzina said low.
Kolgrim burst out laughing. “You were eavesdropping!” he chortled. “It must have been quite a shock to learn that the revered Magnus Hauk was not your sire.”
“He was my father!” Marzina cried angrily. “Do not ever say he wasn’t!”
“I will agree that he believed you his own child, and raised you thusly,” Kolgrim said. “But it was my father’s seed that gave you life. We are blood kin, little sister, and as such I can never, by our own laws, harm you.”
“Yet you murdered your own concubines and their children without a moment’s hesitation or remorse,” Marzina surprised him by saying. “You violated your own laws, my lord. There is no way in which you can justify such bestiality.”
“I wanted my son to have no sisters threatening his rights as the Darkling Ciarda threatened mine and my brother’s,” Kolgrim responded. “Other than Ciarda the women were no kin of mine.”
“And the children?” Marzina pressed him. “They were your blood.”
“Females, and barely formed most of them,” he said casually. “They had some of my blood in them, but
She gasped, surprised, whirling about. She could see beyond an open balustrade the jagged purple snowcapped peaks of a range of mountains that seemed to go on forever. The skies were a reddish-dun color filled with lightning. Marzina did not need to ask where she was. The Twilight Lord had brought her into the Dark Lands. It was terrifying and beautiful all at once. She was fascinated in spite of herself.
“Now, little sister, you are going to be my guest until my marriage is celebrated and consummated,” Kolgrim said in perfectly pleasant tones.
“Take me back immediately!” Marzina snapped at him, knowing even as she spoke that he would not obey her. But she had to try.
“Now, sweeting, you know I cannot do that,” Kolgrim said. “Mother has hidden my chosen bride away. I might find her for myself, but I do not choose to waste the time when it’s easier to simply take something that our mother values instead.
“No! I didn’t even know you had chosen a bride. Why doesn’t Mother want you to have her?” Marzina asked him candidly.
“She is a descendant of Ulla, and carries her powers,” he answered. It was not necessary to say more, for being of the magic world Marzina would understand the rest.
“It has taken aeons to get to this point,” Marzina said thoughtfully. “The mating of a descendant of Ulla’s with a descendant of Jorunn’s.”
His eyes lit up with pleasure at her intelligence. “You understand the ramifications,” he said, smiling at her. While he believed that ordinary women were beneath the male of the species, Kolgrim knew that some women could be their equal, or close to it. His mother was one of these women. This little sister he had so newly discovered was obviously proving to be another. He could actually talk with her, and he had to admit to himself that he had been lonely for another with whom he might speak on equal footing. “Then you also comprehend why I must regain custody of Nyura. Soon the season of the mating frenzy will come upon me, and she is the chosen one even as our mother was once our father’s chosen one.”
“If you can only sire one son, and it must be on the chosen one, then why can’t you just wait until you find the girl?” Marzina asked. “And who chooses your bride for you?”
“The strongest son is sired during the season of the mating frenzy,” Kolgrim explained to her. Then he said, “Come, and I will show you the Book of Rule. It directs me in all my important actions,” he said as he beckoned her across the chamber where the book sat upon its stand. Opening it, he saw new words upon the page.
The Faerie Maiden who is your kin can aid you in all you do. Or destroy you. She cannot be harmed no matter her direction. Win her over, and the victory is yours.
“I realize that you cannot read the words, for only certain of us can comprehend this ancient language of the Twilight,” Kolgrim said.
“What does it say?” Marzina asked him innocently, but to her surprise the words upon the parchment page were quite understandable. Still she knew it was wiser to keep this knowledge to herself.
“It directs me to treat you well as my guest while you are here, little sister,” he told her, lying with such charm that had she not known better she would have easily believed him. He smiled warmly at her.
“Oh. I expected it would be something with far more portent,” Marzina replied, sounding quite disappointed.
He laughed. “The Book of Rule is not always portentous,” he said. “Just sometimes.” Then changing the subject, he asked, “Do you like my Throne Room?”
“It is beautiful,” she responded. “I like the black, the gray and the silver.”
“You see,” he said. “You will not be unhappy here, little sister.”
“You cannot keep me here, my lord,” Marzina said.
“Ah, but I can,” Kolgrim told her. “I have put a lock upon your magic. You cannot leave until I let you leave.”
“You are brave,” he told her admiringly. “I only intend keeping you until
“I have no desire to know you better, my lord,” Marzina said.
Kolgrim laughed. “You are a poor liar,” he responded. “You wanted to know all about me, which is why you watched me in your reflecting bowl. I could sense your eyes on me, which is why I was able to catch you so quickly, little sister.”
“You did not even know about me until the dwarf told you,” Marzina replied. “Who is he? He is very old.”
“Aye, he is. He has served several Twilight Lords before me as chancellor. His name is Alfrigg. He would spend his declining years tending his mushroom and nightshade gardens if he could, but I have found no one to replace him,” Kolgrim told her. “I have never known him to keep a secret from me before, but I forgive him for he saved this secret for the time I would need it the most.”
“Return me to my hall,” Marzina said. “By taking me you have set yourself up against a host of those who would gladly destroy you.”