The Shadow Queen

Read The Shadow Queen for Free Online

Book: Read The Shadow Queen for Free Online
Authors: Anne Bishop
Tags: Epic, Science Fiction And Fantasy
know you would come to no harm by doing it. It was a relief to be a son, to really be a son of a father who drew a firm line about some things and wouldn’t bend but who also had a fine understanding of when to be indulgent—or look the other way altogether.
    A father who truly understood him.
    He was just scraping the last of the treat out of the second bowl when that father thundered into the room.
    Mother Night, Daemon thought, hastily vanishing both bowls.
    “If you truly owe a favor to that little prick’s family, then we will pay the debt and be rid of him,” Saetan snarled. “Or I can send him to the bowels of Hell here and now.”
    “What? Who?”
    “The ill-mannered Warlord Prince who came to the Keep looking for someone? He’s looking for you. He says you owe his family a favor.”
    Ice shivered in his veins, a prelude to his unsheathing the lethal blade of his temper. “Who?” he asked too softly.
    “Theran. From Dena Nehele.”
    Dena Nehele. A place he wouldn’t forget.
    Daemon tightened the leash on his temper. “What does he look like?”
    A light brush against the first of his inner barriers. When he opened that first level of his mind to his father, he saw the man. The same green eyes. The same sun-kissed skin. The same dark hair.
    “Jared,” Daemon whispered.
    Saetan shook his head. “He said his name was Theran.”
    “The man I knew. Jared. This one has the look of him.”
    He could feel Saetan reevaluating, making an effort to rein in his own formidable temper. “Do you owe them a favor?”
    “Not exactly.”
    Jared had left a written account of his journey with Lia while being pursued by Dorothea’s Master of the Guard. Within that account, which Jared had left at the Keep for Daemon, Jaenelle had found the answer to cleansing the taint from the Blood without destroying all of the Blood.
    So, in a way, he did owe Jared. Whether he owed anything to Jared’s bloodline . . .
    “I liked Jared,” Daemon said. “He was a good man. So for his sake, I would be willing to talk to this Prince Theran and find out what he wants.” He paused and considered. “But not here. I’d like Jaenelle to meet him.”
    “Why?”
    “Because I would trust her instincts about him better than I’d trust mine.”
    Saetan considered that and nodded. “Then we’ll arrange to have him brought to the Hall. How soon do you want me to discover your whereabouts?”
    Daemon huffed out a laugh. “Since you’re my father, you’d know where to find me.”
    “Oh, he doesn’t know I’m your father. As far as Prince Theran is concerned, I’m just the assistant historian/librarian. Just a ‘pissy old cock.’ ” Saetan’s smile turned feral and sharp. “The boy doesn’t shield his thoughts as well as he should.”
    Oh, shit. “Arrange to have him arrive at the Hall late this afternoon.”
    “Done.” As if trying to shake off the mood—and the temper—Saetan looked at the table and raised an eyebrow. “I see you enjoyed the sweet-cheese confection.”
    Damn. He must not have vanished the bowls fast enough.
    “Even so,” Saetan continued, “you should eat some of the beef and vegetables.”
    An undercurrent of amusement. A fatherly kind of amusement.
    Feeling like a boy wasn’t as much fun when he didn’t choose to feel like a boy. And feeling like an erring son was downright uncomfortable. “I just meant to taste it.”
    “Hmm.” Saetan pulled out a chair and sat down. He took a spoonful of vegetable casserole and a slice of roast beef, and warmed his customary goblet of yarbarah, the blood wine that was all the sustenance the demon-dead—and Guardians—needed.
    Not seeing any options, Daemon sat across from his father and filled his own plate.
    “There’s been very little of interest in those piles of papers,” Saetan said. “Even with the preservation spells that were put on them, most are illegible or the parchment crumbles when it’s touched. But I did find a few things—like the recipe for that sweet-cheese confection. Well, the basic idea for it at any rate. I had

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