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Trial of Shadows (Order of the Elements Book 3)
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Trial of Shadows
Order of the Elements: Book Three
Emma L. Adams
This book was written, produced and edited in the UK, where some spelling, grammar and word usage will vary from US English.
Copyright © 2020 Emma L. Adams
All rights reserved.
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Contents
Trial of Shadows
Preface
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Thank you for reading!
About the Author
Trial of Shadows
Some problems can't be solved with the roll of a die…
After a major betrayal shook up my life, I'm attempting to lie low. Naturally, that's when the King of the Dead decides to show up on my doorstep again.
Seems His Deathly Highness needs a new Elemental Soldier, and he wants to hire me as his security guard to stop anyone from sabotaging the contest. Since the Order has been ghosting me ever since I accidentally blew up a vampire's house, I could use the cash -- even if it involves dealing with hot-tempered fire mages.
Problem is, everyone in the Court of the Dead has their own agenda. And with an upcoming school reunion threatening to drag up dangerous memories of my lessons in spirit magic, I find myself at a crossroads in my life, in more ways than one.
In the Parallel, not everything stays buried for long, and if I'm not careful, the Court of the Dead's many secrets will spell my own end.
Preface
The magically gifted have always lived among us.
After centuries of living in hiding, a group of mages banded together and created their own parallel world to the everyday one, a paradise designed as a home for the magically inclined. Mages, vampires, elves, shapeshifters and many others flocked there, and for centuries, they flourished, ruled over by the Council of the Elements.
Then, several decades ago, the spirit mages turned on their fellow Elements and slaughtered them. The resulting war brought an end to the old Council of the Elements and left the magical world in ruins.
Since then, it has remained fractured. Clans of shapeshifters, vampires, and others rule the cities, while the Court of the Dead dominates the areas even the bravest fear to tread. It may be a paradise no longer, but to many of the magically inclined, it’s still home.
Welcome to the Parallel.
1
It was always a bad way to start the weekend when the King of the Dead showed up on my doorstep.
With no customers for hours and no missions from the Order of the Elements in the last week, I’d volunteered to watch the front desk for the afternoon in case someone showed up wanting to buy a custom cantrip. Given that the only business Devon and I had had in the last month had been on behalf of the Order, the odds were low, but it gave me something to do that wasn’t racking up achievements on Skyrim or designing new D&D characters for more games than I had time to play. Or wondering when the other shoe would drop, and the Order would find out about my illegal use of spirit magic and show up and arrest me.
The threat of the Order’s retribution hung over my head like a storm about to break, and when the shop door opened, my hand was halfway to a defensive cantrip when I recognised the soundless footfalls of the Death King. He wore his human face as he usually did when he walked around the streets here on Earth, because a masked faceless monster dressed in black armour would be an alarming sight to the average person. For me, it made a disarming impression to see a pale, handsome face and curly dark hair in place of the obsidian mask of a lich: an immortal death lord with a habit of showing up when I least needed or expected him.
“Oh, it’s you,” I said, without enthusiasm. “If you’re here to ask for a favour, the door’s that way.”
“How do you know I’m not a customer?” he said.
If this was an attempt to ingratiate himself with me and he thought I’d fall for the ruse, he was sorely mistaken. “What do you want, then? A charm for hair-loss?”
Once, I’d have quaked in my boots at the notion of pissing off the notorious King of the Dead, but times had changed, and I didn’t take kindly to people who went back on their promises. Living or dead.
“I would like your assistance,” he said. “In an important matter.”
“You want to hire me to work for you?” I said. “As I told you the last time, I work for the Order. Not you, and not the Court of the Dead.”
“You changed your mind once before,” he said, “and you didn’t regret the decision.”
That was before you ghosted me. The Death King had promised to teach me spirit magic, but every time I’d tried to get into the castle in the last few weeks, I’d found my way barred by liches who said he wasn’t taking visitors. Even his Air Element, Ryan—who happened to be part of our D&D group—didn’t know what the hell he’d been doing.
“Who are you to say whether I regretted it or not?” I said. “People died. I almost died myself. Working with you is about as good a life choice as skydiving without a parachute. Anyway, as I repeatedly told you, I’m not here to solve your people’s drama. If one of your liches has got their cloak stuck in a drain or something—”
“It’s not the same as before,” he interjected. “I’m not asking you to work as a consultant or a retriever of dangerous items. I find myself in need of a security guard.”
I stared at him for an instant. “You want me to do what?”
“You might recall the incident which cost me my Fire Element.”
Did I ever. My own personal fire mage had turned traitor, too. “It rings a bell.”
“I intend to hold a contest to pick Davies’s replacement,” he said. “I will need stringent security around my castle while the contest is taking place, and I thought your unique skills would suit you to the task particularly well.”
My mouth parted. That was actually a sensible idea, given how many people seemed to want him dead—or as dead as it was possible for a semi-immortal death lord to be, anyway. But that didn’t make me qualified as a bodyguard. I was a novice spirit mage missing the memories of most of my training. He was the King of the Dead. How could I possibly protect him?
“You will be well compensated for your time and effort,” he went on, “and there is no need for you to be involved in the contest itself. I simply require someone to join my other three Elemental Soldiers in guarding the castle and keeping an eye out for potential transgressors. By opening my doors to mages from the rest of the Parallel, I run the risk of inviting in another threat.”
He had a point there. Davies had turned traitor right underneath his nose, after all. “Are you sure this isn’t just a ruse to get me to be your Spirit Element in everything but name?”
“Why is that a bad thing?” he said. “Give me one good reason you shouldn’t take me up on my offer.”
“You’re dead.”
“Technicalities,” he said. “You’re qualified for the job, and you’re the only mage ou
tside of my three Elemental Soldiers who’s proven herself trustworthy.”
“We’ll discount the fact that I brought a rogue mage into your castle not long ago.”
Namely, my ex-boyfriend Brant. Since his betrayal, my quota of fucks to give had eroded to almost nothing, and I’d dearly have liked a reasonable explanation from His Deathly Highness about the last promise he’d broken before I got myself entangled in his business again.
He arched a brow. “Unless you’re pursuing a romantic relationship with another questionable character who’s likely to be grievously injured in action, that shouldn’t be an issue.”
Ouch. I’d only gone and rubbed salt in my own wounds with that comment, and the last person I wanted to discuss my dating life with was the King of the Dead. “I’m not. Doesn’t mean I’m in need of an extra job, and I wouldn’t put it past the Order to kick up a fuss if I take you up on the offer of working for you.”
“As I informed you before, the Order—”
“Yes, I know they’re wrapped around your little finger.” I rolled my eyes at him. “Besides, you can’t ignore me for weeks and then come crawling back when you want a favour. I don’t appreciate that.”
“When have I ever ignored you, pray tell?” he said. “I wasn’t aware you felt deprived of my presence. I seem to remember you hated me.”
Hate was a strong way of putting it, but we weren’t exactly friends. “Try the last few weeks? I’m not here for you to treat like a convenience.”
“I don’t recall ever using you as such before,” he said. “I believe I paid you well for your previous work. Might you enlighten me on what I’m supposed to have done?”
Right… that wasn’t him. It was Brant who’d used me. The Death King, for all his numerous faults, hadn’t. Yet I’d been working for him when my life had blown up and it was hard for my brain to separate the two. That he’d denied me the magic lessons he’d promised when I was already expecting the Order to put me in cuffs and lock me up in a cell had only poured fuel on the fire of my resentment. “If you’re so certain I hate you, why in the world do you want to hire me?”
“You and I might be at cross-purposes, but you’re moral to a fault,” he said. “You’ll do the work and you won’t turn against me.”
“How do you know that?” I resisted the urge to back away when he walked up to the desk until we were almost nose to nose, and it was hard to remember his face was an illusion and his body wasn’t even solid.
“Because I do.” He examined an elaborately carved cantrip Devon had left on the desk. “Your friend should consider selling these in Arcadia’s market.”
“She’d rather cut off her left hand, trust me,” I said. “She’s working on a mass custom job for the Order. I’m also still technically under the Order’s watch, too, so I can’t say they’ll be thrilled at the idea of me gallivanting off into the Parallel. When is this contest?”
Devon and I had been under house arrest after the furore a few weeks ago, and to be honest, I’d been happy to avoid Arcadia for a bit. I mean, I had blown up a house in the vampires’ district using the very magic which had cost me two years of memories when I was seventeen years old. Yet I’d been willing to reopen old wounds and run the risk of arrest if it meant getting real lessons in spirit magic from His Deathly Highness himself. Too bad he seemed to have forgotten that promise.
And now he wanted me to do him a favour? Yeah, right.
“The first round of the contest starts next Monday and there’ll be one round per day until the result is announced on Friday,” he said. “For the duration, all the competitors will be housed within my castle, to enable me to keep an eye on them. However, I haven’t discounted the possibility that someone will take advantage of the contest to get close to me.”
“And steal your soul amulet again,” I said. “Unless you’re planning to do the same thing as last time and parade it around in front of your enemies on purpose.”
“Would I tell you if I was?”
“And you wonder why I don’t trust you,” I said. “You don’t even pretend not to have your own agenda, and I don’t need any more enemies than I already have.”
“Very well,” he said. “I will give you the weekend to consider my offer. The payment I offer will be enough to make up for any Order missions you might receive during the next week.”
We both know that number is zero. If he even knew the Order had been ignoring me for weeks, considering he hadn’t been around. “I’ll consider it, but don’t think I’ve forgotten you promised me lessons in spirit magic.”
Not that he’d specified a time frame, and it was obvious that said magic lessons were a lot more important to me than they were to him. He wasn’t the one who risked his life every time he exposed his powers. Except for a few brief flashes I’d seen—generally during near-death experiences—I couldn’t recall a single minute of my lessons with Dirk Alban. He knew full well how vulnerable it made me, considering he’d been a spirit mage himself back when he’d still been alive. Before he’d given up his old life for immortality.
“I have been occupied,” he said. “Both the search for my former Fire Element and my arrangements to hire a successor have taken a considerable amount of my time. However, if it means that much to you, I will endeavour to make time for a lesson or two during the contest.”
That’s what I got for mentioning the subject, because it seemed that now he’d decided that no bodyguard duty would mean no magic lessons. Why hadn’t I guessed he’d wait until he had something to hold over me before he set about keeping his word? That was the sort of thinking that had got me ensnared by Brant’s lies. I should know better.
“You seem confident the Order won’t question what I have to offer you as a bodyguard, Death King.” And their questions would inevitably lead them to the only likely conclusion: I was using spirit magic again. No matter the allure of lessons in controlling my magic, it wasn’t worth the risk.
“I’m sure you can think of an explanation.” He stepped back from the desk as Devon entered via the back door connecting the shop with our living quarters. Her hair was cut shorter than mine and dyed pink today, while she wore a pair of leggings patterned with unicorns.
“Your phone’s ringing,” she told me.
“Who is it this time?” The Death King, thankfully, did not have my number. His newfound habit of showing up at my workplace was annoying enough on its own. “Not the Order?”
“Maybe.” She nodded to the Death King. “Hey, Grey.”
I never should have told her about the nickname Lord Blackbourne had used when he’d spoken to his old friend.
“Devon, is it?” said the Death King, momentary surprise flashing across his face, as though he could hardly believe she’d had the nerve to address him so casually.
“That’s me.” Devon feared nobody, not even the King of the Dead. If I left her alone in the shop with him, I might come back to find her turned into a lich.
“I will leave you to it, then.” He turned and vanished into thin air, taking his shadows along with him.
“Did he just hop through the node?” asked Devon.
“He doesn’t need one.” Perks of being the King of the Dead. The guy could disobey the usual laws of magic openly and had done so on numerous occasions. “I’ll go and answer the phone.”
I went into the back room to find my mobile phone lying on the table displaying a missed call from my mother, then hit the return call button.
“Liv!” Mum said. “Devon said you were dealing with a customer.”
“Kind of.” She’d met the Death King, once, when he’d been wearing his human mask, but I’d rather he stayed away from my family for the rest of his eternal life, thanks. “What’s up?”
“Just wanted to check in with you,” she said. “How’re things?”
“Not too bad.” Mum and her wife, Elise, didn’t know anything about the Parallel, and the bare minimum about the Order, so my main job was to reassure them that I wasn’
t in imminent danger of losing my life.
In other words, lying. It wasn’t fun, but that’s what happened when a practitioner was born into a non-magical family. Mum and Elise thought of the Order as like Hogwarts but with less of the glamour and excitement… which was true in a way. No wands or broomsticks at their academy, just reams of exams and lectures on the dangers of magic.
“Good,” said Mum. “I’m glad to hear it. I’m glad it’s working out for you, despite… everything.”
She knew some of my history, but not the extent of the aftermath of the memory spell the Order had used to extract two years of my memories, which was probably for the best. I had quite enough drama in my life without my enemies targeting my family, too.
“I guess.” I hesitated. “If you got a job offer from someone that might, erm, compromise your current position, would you take it?”
“It depends who you’d rather work with,” she said. “You never liked your job, did you?”
“I guess not.” It always seemed to come down to who I trusted more, the Death King or the Order. And to be honest, I’d always come down on the Death King’s side. At least he’d been upfront with me about his manipulative nature.
“Well…” Mum paused for a moment. “Let us know.”