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Valley of Secrets

by H. L. Moore

This city of fools will be brought to order!

Deposed, her father presumed dead, her friends slaughtered and the cavern in chaos, Grace Harrington is on the run and entirely alone. The only ally she has left is the man she hates most in the world: Nathaniel Morgenstern, the assassin who murdered her mother and seduced her father.

Grace’s only hope of reclaiming the throne and saving her people is to seek the aid of Éamon Tadhg, the High Druid of Arajon. But she needs to survive the hostile streets of Iole City before she can even think about fleeing to the Violet Valley.

Nathaniel made a vow to Doran to protect Grace, but he could never have imagined how quickly and horrifically their lives would fall apart.

Grieving the dual losses of the man he loved and his new friend Tsa Lien, Nathaniel devotes himself to the service of the overthrown Lady Archon who despises him – even if it costs him everything he is.

Excerpt:

“Join me.”

“Where are we going?”

“To bathe in the hot springs.”

“Oh, but I don’t have anything to wear –” Grace said, unwilling to go back outside and strip naked in front of all of Clan Uisce Te, only Éamon was already walking away – not in the direction of the springs outside, but deeper into the cave. Grace quickly downed the rest of her mead and followed, stepping after Éamon until the passageways opened up into an enormous internal hot spring, its surface rising with steam and the stone warm under her hand where she touched it.

Éamon began to strip.

“Mankind is not meant to stifle our bodies with fabrics when swimming in the waters from which we came,” he said. “I bathe nude. As the gods intended.”

Grace’s eyes followed Éamon’s muscles, and blushed and averted her gaze at the sight of Éamon’s large, firm breasts and the thick bush between strong thighs.

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“You’re curious, aren’t you?” Éamon said, lowering himself into the hot water of the spring to wade across to a natural stone seat, stretching out and lifting his arms up and behind his head to relax. “As to why I use male honorifics, when I am very clearly no man?”

“As a daughter of the Valley, I already –” Grace started to say, then at Éamon’s amused, raised eyebrow, she flushed and admitted, “Yes. If it’s all right.”

“Growing up, I felt an affinity for masculinity, so I claimed the honorifics. I require no connection to manhood to do so, and indeed have no desire to be male. Nothing more.”

“I see.”

“I’d like to ask you something, now.”

“To be clear, I didn’t actually ask you,” Grace said, stripping her own clothes off as modestly as she could, aware of Éamon’s burning gaze upon her body as she followed the alleged will of the gods to also bathe naked.

Éamon lifted a shoulder. “You could have declined.”

Grace scoffed. “Fine. Ask.”

“Bryson was well into his fifties. You were a girl of seventeen when you married him. Why did you accept his proposal?”

“He was the Archon of Arajon. I wasn’t going to say no.”

“Plenty of women over the years had said no.”

“I didn’t realise that at the time.”

“So you married him for power?”

“No! I – I married him because I thought – I thought he was a decent man, just receiving poor advice. I thought I could… influence him.”

Éamon laughed. “You thought you could change him? You married him in an attempt to fix the city? You are a fascinating woman, Grace Harrington. All this time I had assumed you were like the others of the Bronze, scheming social climbers circling the throne like a pack of wolves for the opportunity to snatch it away from the Carlyons and impose your own family’s lineage upon the nation. That, or you simply desired older men. He was a handsome beast, with his dark southerner’s skin and his mother’s Valley blue eyes which won him a tacit acceptance from the Draoidhean –”

“You sound as if you desired him.”

Éamon waved a hand. “I am capable of appreciating the aesthetic of a finely made man. My desires...” His gazed drifted across Grace, now nude as the day she was born, from head to toe, his violet eyes glinting, “lie elsewhere.”

Grace’s mouth turned dry. Her arms, crossed over her chest, tightened – then fell away.

Éamon held her gaze, but she noticed the corner of his mouth twitch upwards.

Grace stepped into the hot spring, then submerged her body, issuing a low groan as the warmth of the water immediately soothed her aching muscles.

“It is said that the waters of the hot springs are healing,” Éamon said.

Grace believed it. She already felt better. She closed her eyes and breathed slowly and deeply. For several, wonderous minutes, it was as though there was nothing wrong in the world at all – no coup, no Iovanius, no Draoidhean.

She felt the water ripple as Éamon waded closer to her, though she did not open her eyes.

“For your entire year on the throne, I wondered why you did not make your pilgrimage to the Valley to meet me,” Éamon murmured. “I understand now it was because you could not, out of fear of the snakes in your court.”

“You could have accepted any of my invitations to come to the city for the seasonal celebrations,” Grace pointed out, opening her eyes now. Éamon was much closer than she had realised, and found herself wetting her lips, though they were of course already damp from the rising steam of the spring.

“The invitations were taken by the Elders as insults,” Éamon said to Grace’s utter mortification. “An attempt at authority, demanding us to come to the heathenish city rather than bothering to make the journey to us. The Draoidhean are not at the beck and call of the Archon. The Archon is at ours.”

“I didn’t mean to insult you,” Grace said. “I was trying to be – friendly.”

Éamon gazed at her through heavy-lidded eyes, a gentle smile upon his mouth.

“I see that now, Grace Harrington,” he said softly.

COLLAPSE

About the Author

H. L. Moore is a Jewish Australian writer. She holds a Master of Arts in International Relations (2015) and a Bachelor of Media in Communications and Journalism (2012), both from the University of New South Wales.

She has been writing stories since she was old enough to hold a pen. Her biggest literary influences are Adrian Tchaikovsky, Brandon Sanderson and C. S. Pacat.

She is the author of the Death’s Embrace fantasy series and the Tales from the Jovian Empire sci-fi novella series. She has been published four times in the Stringybark Short Stories Award.