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Ebon Rebellion
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Ebon Rebellion
Shadows of Otherside Book 4
Whitney Hill
This is a work of fiction. Any references to real events, people, or places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or to actual events is purely coincidental.
EBON REBELLION
Copyright © 2021 by Whitney Hill
All rights reserved. This book is for your personal use only. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, or by any information storage and retrieval system without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. Thank you for supporting the author by purchasing this book.
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ISBN (ebook): 978-1-7344227-7-1
ISBN (pbook): 978-1-7344227-8-8
Library of Congress Control Number: 2021906988
Cover Designer: Pintado (99Designs)
Editor: Jeni Chappelle (Jeni Chappelle Editorial)
For anyone who has decided to fight for what’s theirs.
Chapter 1
Life comes at you fast, but elven fists come faster.
Three elves circled me, all unarmed, not that it mattered. My gaze darted between them as I tried to read who would do what. Two were Darkwatch. The third was a high-blood, not Darkwatch but trained in both self-defense and auratic attacks.
He swung, I leaned back in a dodge, and the four of us flowed into a dance.
I was doing well at holding them off until the door leading to the bar’s main floor creaked. Someone was coming.
My half-second of inattention was exactly what Troy Monteague had been looking for. He swept my feet from under me and had me face-down on the sparring mats, my right wrist twisted up and between my shoulder blades, before I could finish shouting, “Goddess damn it!”
I reached for Air, and Troy hunched lower on my back, wrenching my wrist higher. He smelled only of herbs and male sweat, not of the meringue scent that would signal drawing on Aether.
“No cheating, Finch,” he murmured. The nearness of his voice and the weight of his body pressed tight to mine sent shivers over me that weren’t fear. Allegra and Iago moved to intercept whoever was interrupting our training session as Troy added, “You can’t allow situational awareness to become distraction. What would you do if I had bronze on you now?”
Bronze would cut me off from my magic. I froze, the heat of attraction going cold as I flashed back to my escape attempt at Jordan Lake. My breath came a little too fast as I remembered one of a group of elven terrorists sitting on my back as Troy slipped bronze over my arm, sealing my fate.
As soon as he sensed the change in my mood, he was off me and three paces away. “I’m sorry,” he said, keeping his distance as I scrambled into a seated position and scooted to put my back against the wall. The skin around his eyes tightened as he fought to keep his face impassive. “I didn’t mean to—”
“It’s fine,” I said, voice rough. I dropped my head, inhaled deeply, and held it against the burgeoning anxiety attack. Leith is dead. I killed him. The Redcaps are dead. Troy and I killed them together. Callista is gone. Artemis has her, thanks to me.
Gone wasn’t dead though, so that last enemy still kept me up at night. Callista had escaped the gods’ prison once, so in my mind, she could do it again. A concern I’d have to deal with eventually but one that was lower on the list than the humans boiling over about the vampire Reveal eight weeks ago and the elves splitting on the alliance. And when I say “splitting,” I mean I had three individuals solidly on my side, versus three whole Houses on the other. I suppose it shouldn’t have been surprising that the faction who’d had a bounty on elementals like me for millennia wouldn’t just roll over and accept a sylph staging a coup, ousting the Triangle’s previous head bitch in charge, and establishing herself as the area’s arbitrating power.
Especially now that I wasn’t just a sylph anymore. I took another deep breath, reaching for calm as I remembered my own power. Sometimes I wondered what was more offensive to the elves: the fact that I’d gained control of Fire, Earth, and Water in addition to the Air magic I’d been born with, thus becoming the first primordial elemental since the last Great Flood, or the fact that I was the only child of an elven prince by a djinni, both of them slaughtered along with his entire House for the crime of having me.
Elves hated unfinished business. Especially when it walked, talked, and had elemental powers.
“Who’s here?” I pulled myself together and re-opened my bond with Troy. He’d already unblocked it from his side, and the sense of wary frustration throbbing through to me was probably as much for reminding me of our contentious past as it was for having been interrupted at a teachable moment. When I looked up, he was crouched off to the side, casually keeping himself between me and…
“Roman?” I frowned, looking him over. He hadn’t changed: tall for a werewolf, sturdily built, and handsome, with stormy grey eyes and dark brown hair cut short on the back and sides. He was also my ex, and he was supposed to be on the other side of the state.
“Hey, Arie.” He frowned hard at each of the three elves blocking him from coming all the way into the sparring studio I’d converted from what Callista had used as a basement dungeon. The energy in the room ratcheted up toward dangerous as he stood there with fisted hands. “What the hell is going on?”
I’m fine. Thanks for asking. “Training. Is there some kind of emergency? We weren’t expecting you back in town,” I replied, sharper than I’d intended. I didn’t like the little flutter in my chest or the flip-flop in my belly at the sight of him, and it made me mouthy.
Roman relaxed and offered a little smile, like he could smell the reason for my mood and liked it. “The kobold at the bar said you were down here. I heard fighting.”
And, of course, came to the rescue when I didn’t need it and probably after Zanna told you not to. I sighed and couldn’t help a glance at Troy. He’d kissed me at the vampire Reveal two months ago. I’d liked it and shouldn’t have. Neither of us had spoken about it again, but the elf could give Roman a run for his money in the looks department and I’d enjoyed the physical nature of our new sparring routine a little too much the last few weeks.
I cleared my throat, pulling my mind away from thoughts of Troy’s body close to mine, alongside lingering memories of Roman’s in much more intimate situations. “Yeah. No more hapkido, but I still need close-combat training.”
“With elves?” Roman’s tone was less than courteous, and I frowned.
Allegra pulled back to look at him, chin tucked, arms crossed, and eyebrows raised. “What’s wrong with us?”
Roman’s eyes darted between them again, his face fixed to stubbornness. “From what Vikki has passed along, y’all are the last folks I’d expected to find near Arden. In a friendly fashion, at least.” A hint of a wolfy growl entered his tone as he focused on Troy. “Especially that one.”
I closed my eyes and rubbed my temples, counting it a blessing that—for the most part—the hierarchically-inclined elves seemed content to let me do the talking. “Roman, the situation here is a lot more complicated than it was when you left.”
W
hen you broke up with me to go back to your estranged fiancée and toxic-ass family.
The words, both said and unsaid, hung between us for a long few heartbeats. He had the grace to look embarrassed.
I just tried to keep my temper.
“Wait for me upstairs, please.” I was supposed to be in charge here. Might as well pull rank and end the public awkwardness. If he was going to turn up unannounced, I had to establish my boundaries hard and fast.
Roman bristled at the tone in a way that he wouldn’t have before, when he’d always acted like I was the alpha in our relationship. Then he took a last, long look at each of the elves with the silver eyes of his wolf and went back upstairs without a word.
“Ass,” Allegra muttered as she checked her locs in one of the mirrors against the far wall, tucking those that had come out of their bun back into place. She’d pass for Black among the humans, with skin only a few shades of golden brown lighter than mine and honey-colored eyes. “As though anyone with ill intent could get to you in the bar.”
“Troy and I managed against Callista.” I winced at her hard look. That was a sore point for her and a defense of Roman, neither of which I particularly wanted to do. “But yeah. Sign on the door.”
“Boundaries,” Troy mused. When I looked at him, his black hair had fallen over eyes the color of moss on sandstone. He ran his fingers through it to comb it back off his face, not looking away from me.
I broke eye contact first, hoping they’d take my flush for exertion and praying that he thought the flustered snarl of my thoughts was because of Roman’s sudden appearance—not because I’d kind of wanted to resettle his hair for him. “Yeah. Exactly.”
“What’s the story with the wolf?” Iago was a Luna, average height and vaguely Hispanic in appearance. I wasn’t sure why he’d sided with me when the rest of his House was inclined to follow the Monteagues, but Troy and Allegra vouched for him.
“Eldest Volkov son,” I said, unwontedly clipped and short. “Formerly exiled. Accepted back into the pack several months ago. I have no idea why he’s back in town.”
“I know all that,” Iago said gently. Sometimes it seemed like he did everything gently, until he was sparring. “I’m asking why it felt like I was watching a lover’s quarrel.”
“Because we used to be lovers.” I spun away and grabbed a towel, my face flaming more than a little now as I headed up the stairs.
Allegra was waiting when I finished freshening up in the bar’s bathroom. I couldn’t read the expression on her face as she asked, “Do you need me to stay?”
“For…?”
She shrugged. “Moral support. Backup. Not every day your ex randomly comes back to town and busts in on you with another man on your back.” Her eyes twinkled for a moment before she sobered again. “I think Troy wanted to offer, but he said something about giving you space and headed out.”
Decent of him. We were still navigating my bad memories and his role in them, despite the changes in the last six months and his efforts to make amends. After some initial missteps, he’d become surprisingly good at respecting the boundaries I’d set and, even better, at anticipating when I’d be enforcing them—part of the reason why I wasn’t bugging him about when he’d get around to breaking the mutated Aetheric bond between us. “I’ll be okay. I just wish I knew why Vikki didn’t warn me.”
Allegra pulled me into a hug. She was one of the few people I’d allow it from, and I patted her back awkwardly. When she pulled away, she said, “Maybe she didn’t know. From the last report I saw, things are a little shaky out west. Likely why ex-horndog is here. If she does know, she’s probably as pissed as you, given her ambitions.”
“Fair.” I pressed my lips together in annoyance. Vikki’s plans to start a new werewolf pack probably meant keeping her elder brother out in the mountains near Asheville and her younger brother trapped in wolf form and eating kibble from a dog bowl.
Either way, Roman was here now. “Thanks for the session,” I said. “Same time on Thursday?”
“Sure.” She studied me. “You want the boys back as well?”
“If they want.” I caught myself crossing my arms and turned it into an awkward clothing adjustment.
Her grin said everything. “I’m sure Troy wouldn’t miss it. Take care, Arden. Let me know if there’s any news about next steps for dealing with the mundane protests.”
When I sighed and nodded, she hustled for the front of the bar.
I stood there a few moments longer, gathering myself. Roman had been my first real relationship. He’d also been the first person I told about being a sylph—voluntarily, anyway—and despite my initial resistance to being in a relationship or falling in love, I’d done both. The betrayal I’d felt when he’d decided to take up his family’s offer to return to the pack and re-establish ties with a woman he’d been betrothed to as a teenager had cut me deep. I hadn’t had time to process it before being thrown into the next crisis and managing the Reveal, but the eight weeks since then had given me plenty of time to rehash everything. Usually in contrast to my shifting feelings for Troy.
Which was fucked up, given I’d learned that his grandmother had slaughtered my parents and destroyed my father’s House.
Shaking my head at my own mess, I steeled myself, found a neutral expression, and made my way to the front. Roman was in a booth by the door, a bottle of beer in front of him. He looked up as though he’d sensed me, and I raised a hand to signal I’d be with him in a minute.
Zanna, my kobold landlord and new full-time barkeep, looked up from restocking the beer fridge. “Your wolf is rude. Didn’t offer greetings. Ignored the sign.”
“I know. He’s not my wolf anymore but sorry anyway,” I said. He was apparently here for me, so it made zero difference to Zanna. This might not be my home, but the four-foot fae could curse a bar as easily as a house and nobody wanted to drink beer that was actual piss, now that they’d learned the hard way that legend was real. “I’ll talk to him.”
“See that you do.”
“How’s everything otherwise?”
She glanced at one of the TVs I’d asked Terrence’s leopards to install as part of the bar’s retrofits. “Fine in here. Getting worse out there.”
I turned and scowled at the ticker rolling across the bottom of the screen: PROTESTS ESCALATE IN FRONT OF DURHAM CITY HALL. I scanned the signs being pumped in the air by agitated protesters. There seemed to be as many pro-vampire as anti-fang. The humans had thought the Reveal was a hoax for a good couple weeks, but then the New York coterie had followed suit with an event of their own, then Miami. New Orleans, Austin, and Los Angeles had followed, and then the vampiric Reveal had gone global. Even then the humans had thought it was some kind of publicity stunt...until a body had hit the street.
Then the “fake news” became all too real, and the humans didn’t like it one bit. They also didn’t seem to know what to do about it. Sales of garlic and crosses had spiked before they realized neither had any effect on vampires. Shit had briefly gotten violent and had stayed at a simmer of unrest for weeks as politicians and law enforcement pleaded for calm.
Because Raleigh had gone first, the Triangle was one of the epicenters of the protests. Everyone was looking to North Carolina to see what tone would be set. In a state that was purple at best during the mundane presidential elections, none of us knew whether we were looking at a new apartheid state or an evolution in human nature. Things were manageable in the bigger cities, but drive an hour out and you were in iffy territory.
Sighing, I turned away from the TV, filled a glass with soda water, and dropped in a slice of lemon. “I’ll deal with it.” A tension headache tightened in a band around my head, and I muted the bond enough that it wouldn’t afflict Troy. “Somehow. Roman first.”
Zanna nodded and eyed me from behind her wild mane of curls, her brow creased in worry.
Grey eyes watched me intently as I made my way across the bar, stopp
ing to speak with people on the way. It hadn’t been Callista’s way—she’d ruled with the iron fist—but I wanted to do things differently. After growing up alone, isolated, and endangered, I sought to build alliances. Even Othersiders couldn’t help wanting to respect, if not like, the people who put themselves in charge, so I tried a less aloof route.
So far it seemed to be working. At least, I thought it was working. People brought me information voluntarily because they thought I could help, rather than because I’d bullied, blackmailed, or abused them. Whether it was everything Callista used to get, I didn’t know, but I couldn’t lead the Triangle worrying about what she’d had. Besides, we had newcomers in town, drawn by rumors of me or, in the case of the valkyrie sipping an ale in the corner, by the possibility that the protests would turn violent.
Roman leaned back in the booth and smiled as I sat down on the other side of the table. “Quite the thing you’ve got here, Arie.”
I shrugged, proud of what I’d done in the last few months but irritated by his using my nickname. All the same, I tried for the same neutral friendliness I gave everyone else. “Yeah. A lot of work, but the community seems happy.”
“So what’s the story with training with elves? With Monteague?”
Ah. So it’s more Troy than elves in general that bother him. Interesting. “We have an understanding,” I said carefully, wondering why he was making this an issue.
“Arie—”
I didn’t like the condescendingly patient note in his tone. “I appreciate that you may still see me as an extension of your pack, but…” I shrugged again. “You left. I made the deals I had to make in order to survive. That included agreements for security, training, and information with whoever was willing and able to offer them. Is that going to be a problem?”
The grey in his eyes shifted to storm clouds then to silver as his jaw clenched. “Not so long as Blood Moon continues to receive equal consideration,” he said grudgingly.