The Queen's Secret (The Queen's Secret #2) - Melissa de la Cruz Page 0,1
Montrice spurs these speculations. There is fear within the High Council and among my generals that a renewed Dellafiore dynasty may have territorial ambitions that extend to Stavin and Argonia.
This is why I write now, to urge you both to take public action. If members of the Aphrasian order retain a hidden stronghold in the swamps and forests of Renovia, they have a base from which these incursions and attacks may take place. Their ongoing presence can only fuel these unhappy rumors that Renovia—and, by implication, Montrice—not only tolerates, but encourages their violence and terror.
Personally I do not suggest for one moment that Your Majesties do not desire the obliteration of this relentless scourge. Still, it is vital that you turn your attention at once to its immediate eradication.
If you are unwilling or unable to suppress the Aphrasian order and cannot secure the ancient scrolls and keep them away from evildoers, then the Duchy of Stavin must take action. Our military forces will be forced to enter Montrice to protect our own lands and people. We will not be annexed by another kingdom, and we will not permit ourselves to be attacked by terrorist forces based in another kingdom, however unwelcome and covert a presence they may be there.
This is an unprecedented act in peacetime, but let me be clear—Stavin, too, is a sovereign nation, and I am its ruler. With every week that passes, more and more of my subjects believe that Your Majesties are unwilling to take action, and the burden of suspicion falls on Renovia and Your Most Serene Majesty, the queen Lilac Dellafiore.
I await your reply with much interest and, as always, the deepest respect.
Goranic R.
Grand Duke of Stavin
Prologue
In the far north of the Kingdom of Montrice, winter arrives early once more. The mellow days of autumn are over, the fruits of the harvest hastily packed into granaries and cellars, and cured meat dangles from oak rafters. The fields are empty apart from golden bales of hay ready to be transported to stables and stacked high in barns. This far north, they are accustomed to snow.
So when a blizzard swirls in before the trees have shed their last leaves, no one gives it much thought at first. For three days the wind howls and snow falls in frigid ropes. In the village of Stur, snow piles so high that tunnels must be dug to allow doors to open, and every family wakes to darkness, their houses packed in snowdrifts. At last, when the blizzard passes, they climb out to find snow heaped on rooftops, clogging chimneys, and encrusting wells.
The village elders say that Stur has never seen so much snow, not in living memory. It makes them uneasy about the winter that lies ahead. But the snow has transformed the muddy streets and plowed fields into a sparkling white wonderland. After the children of Stur finish their morning’s work, they gather to play on snowy banks, creating makeshift sleds by lashing branches together. The village rings with the happy shouts of children tumbling down hillsides and jumping into drifts.
The pond is covered by thick white ice; its surface is the face of the moon. A dog skids across the ice, barking with surprise, and some of the children decide to try skating, something they’ve heard about but never experienced. They hurry to strip bark from the birch trees around the pond and strap it to their boots with ribbons of leather. The bravest go out first, soaring across the ice, laughing when they lose their balance and sprawl across its hard, slippery sheen. Soon the village children play on the frozen pond.
A crash of thunder sounds, splintering the calm of the afternoon. A dark cloud moves across the wintry blue sky so the snow no longer glints in the sun. Some of the children look up, hoping for more snow.
But no more snow falls. Not one crystal snowflake. Thunder crashes again, so loud the nearby houses shake. Lightning cracks open the sky, and ink-black fingers shoot across the pond’s surface, staining the ice with veins of ebony. The same black ripples from the hillsides to the banks surrounding the pond, and outward to the snowbound streets of the village.
Along these ominous fault lines, ice begins to crack. Snow melts as suddenly as it fell. Torrents of freezing water pour down the hills, and Stur’s main street is transformed into an icy river, sweeping people and animals into its freezing surge. With a thunderous crack,