Saturday, June 30, 2018
Book Tour + #Giveaway: PRISONER OF THE CROWN by Jeffe Kennedy @jeffekennedy @SDSXXTours
PRISONER OF THE CROWN
Chronicles
of Dasnaria #1
by
Jeffe Kennedy
Genre:
Fantasy
Pub Date: 6/12/2018
She was raised to be beautiful,
nothing more. And then the rules changed . . .
In icy Dasnaria, rival realm to the Twelve Kingdoms, a woman’s role
is to give pleasure, produce heirs, and question nothing. But a plot
to overthrow the emperor depends on the fate of his eldest daughter.
And the treachery at its heart will change more than one carefully
limited life . . .
The Gilded Cage
Princess Jenna has been raised in supreme luxury—and ignorance.
Within the sweet-scented, golden confines of the palace seraglio,
she’s never seen the sun, or a man, or even learned her numbers.
But she’s been schooled enough in the paths to a woman’s power.
When her betrothal is announced, she’s ready to begin the
machinations that her mother promises will take Jenna from ornament
to queen.
But the man named as Jenna’s husband is no innocent to be cozened
or prince to charm. He’s a monster in human form, and the horrors
of life under his thumb are clear within moments of her wedding vows.
If Jenna is to live, she must somehow break free—and for one born
to a soft prison, the way to cold, hard freedom will be a dangerous
path indeed…
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I
grew up in paradise.
Tropically
warm, lushly beautiful, replete with luxury, my childhood world was without
flaw. My least whim was met with immediate indulgence, served instantly and
with smiles of delight. I swam in crystal clear waters, then napped on silk. I
chased gorgeously ornamental fish and birds, and enjoyed dozens of perfectly
behaved pets of unusual coloring and pedigrees. My siblings and I spent our
days in play, nothing ever asked or expected of us.
Until
the day everything was demanded—and taken—from me.
Only
then did I finally see our paradise for what it was, how deliberately designed
to mold and shape us. A breeding ground for luxurious accessories. To create a
work of art, you grow her in an environment of elegance and beauty. To make her
soft and lusciously accommodating, you surround her with delicacies and
everything delightful. And you don’t educate her in anything but being
pleasing.
Education
leads to critical thinking, not a desirable trait in a princess of Dasnaria,
thus I was protected from anything that might taint the virginity of my mind,
as well as my body.
Because
I’d understood so little of the world outside, when my time came to be plucked
from the garden, when the snip of the shears severed me from all I’d known, the
injury came as a shock so devastating that I had no ability to even understand
what it meant, much less summon the will to resist and overcome. Which, I’ve
also come to realize over time, was also a part of the deliberate design.
But
I’m getting ahead of myself. Let me go back to the beginning.
I
grew up in paradise.
And
it was all you’d imagine paradise to be. A soft palace of lagoons and lush
gardens, of silk bowers and laughter. With little else to do, our mothers and
the other ladies played with us, games both simple and extravagantly layered.
When we tired, we napped on the velvet soft grass of the banks of the pools, or
on the silk pillows scattered everywhere. We’d sleep until we awoke, eat the
tidbits served us by watchful servant girls, then play more.
Hestar
and I had our own secret games and language. All the ladies called us the royal
pair, as we were the emperor’s firstborns and we’d been born less than a month
apart.
My
mother, first wife, the Empress Hulda, and the most highly ranked woman in the empire,
spent much of her day at court. When she was home in the seraglio, she
preferred to relax without noisy children to bother her. Hestar’s mother,
Jilliya, was second wife and kept getting pregnant, forever having and
sometimes losing the babies. So, by unspoken agreement, we kept clear of her
apartments, too. Something else I understood much later, that the miasma of
misery has its own brand of contagion—and that those who fear contracting the
deadly disease stay far away.
Saira,
on the other hand, third wife and mother of our half-sister Inga, had a
kindness and sweetness to her, so we kids often played in her apartments when
we grew bored of games like climbing the palm trees to see who could pluck the
most dates while a servant counted the time. Inga, along with my full brother,
Kral, were the second oldest pair—the
second-borns,
also arriving in the same month, to my mother and Saira. Less than a year
younger than Hestar and me, they completed our set of four. Our six other
brothers and sisters played with us, too, but they were babies still, needing
to be watched all the time. Whenever we could, the four of us ditched the
babies, exploring the far corners of our world, then making hideouts where no
one could find us.
Though,
of course, when the least desire took our fancy, someone always appeared
instantaneously to satisfy us. Another of the many illusions of my childhood.
Hestar
and I, we had a cave we’d made under a clump of ferns. He’d stocked it with a
box of sweetmeats and I’d stolen one of my mother’s silk throws for a carpet.
Embroidered with fabulous animals, it told tales of a world beyond our corner
of paradise. We loved it best of all our purloined treasures, and made up
stories about the scenes and creatures, giving them names and convoluted
histories.
One
day—the kind that stands out with crystalline clarity, each detail incised in
my memory—we played as usual. Hestar had been mysteriously gone for a while the
day before, or perhaps several days before or for several days in a row. That part
fogs in with the timelessness of those days that never ended, but blended one
into the next. What I remember is the elephant.
“And
the miskagiggle flapped its face tail, saying nooo—”
“It’s
called an elephant,” Hestar interrupted me.
“What
is?”
“It’s
not a miskagiggle. It’s an elephant, and the face tail is a trunk.”
Hestar
beamed with pride at knowing something I didn’t.
“You’re
making that up.”
“No,
I’m not! My tutor told me.”
“What’s
that?”
“A
teacher. My tutor is named Ser Llornsby.”
“Is
that where you went?” Hestar and Kral had been whisked off by servants, and no
one would tell me or Inga where they were, just that we’d see them again soon.
Hestar’s
blue eyes went wide and he looked around to see if anyone was listening. “Want
to know a secret?”
Oh,
did I. Even then I understood that secrets were the carefully hoarded and
counted currency of the seraglio. “Yes!”
We
pulled the silk throw over our heads to make a tent. It was the usual grass
beneath, so we didn’t really need the carpet. Having it just made our hideaway
more special—and the throw became a blanket, excellent for exchanging secrets.
“We
went through the doors!” Hestar told me, whispering but much too loudly.
I
hushed him. I didn’t question how I knew, but this secret held power. Most of our
secrets had been silly, frivolous things, like how Inga kept candied dates
under her pillow. Or ones everyone already knew, like that Jilliya was pregnant
again. With the unabashed enthusiasm of children, we absorbed all the murmured
gossip and repeated it with equal relish. This, though—I recognized immediately
how important it was.
No
wonder no one would tell us where they’d gone. Children didn’t go through the
doors. Only my mother and some of the women. The rekjabrel and other servants,
they went in and out all the time. But a lot of times they came back crying or
hurt, so we understood the doors led to a terrible place. And yet Hestar had
gone and returned, beaming.
“Was
it terrible? Were you scared? Did Kral go, too?”
Hestar
nodded, solemnly. “We were brave boys though. And it’s not like here. There
aren’t the lagoons and it’s not as warm. They took us to a library and we met
Ser Llornsby. We looked at pictures and learned animal names.”
I
couldn’t bring myself to ask what a library might be. I wanted to look at
pictures and learn animal names. Though I didn’t know the emotion to name it at
the time, a jab of envy lanced through my heart. Hestar and I always had
everything the same, only I had the better mother, because she was first wife.
It wasn’t fair that Hestar got to go through the doors and learn things without
me. An elephant. I whispered the exotic word to myself.
“Elephants
are huge and people ride on their backs, and the elephants carry things for
them in their trunks.” Hestar continued, full of smug pride. “Ser Llornsby is
going to teach me everything I need to know to be emperor someday.”
“Why
do you get to be emperor? My mother is first wife. Yours is only second wife.
Besides, I’m older.”
Hestar
wrinkled his nose at me. “Because you’re a girl. Girls can’t be emperor. Only
empress.”
That
was true. It was the way of things. “Well then you can be emperor and I can be
empress like Mother.”
“All
right!” Hestar grinned. “We’ll rule the whole empire and have lots of
elephants. Kral and Inga can be our servants.”
For
the rest of the day we played emperor and empress. Kral and Inga got mad and
decided they would be emperor and empress, too, not listening when we said
there could only be one of each and we were firstborn so they had to be our
servants. They went off to play their own game, but we got Helva to be in our
court, and also her little brothers, Leo and Loke. The boys were identical
twins and liked any game they could play together. Baby Harlan could barely
toddle, so he stayed with his nurse. Ban went off with Inga, of course, as he
followed her everywhere, but her full brother, Mykal came to our side.
We
didn’t care, because our court was the biggest. Besides, everyone knew the
emperor gets to pick his own empress, and Hestar already promised me I’d be
first wife and I could pick his other wives, just like Mother did. Which meant
Inga wouldn’t get to be one. Maybe not Helva, either, though I told her she
would be.
Mother
didn’t much care for Saira and Jilliya, so maybe I wouldn’t have other wives at
all. I didn’t need them to be empress.
Playing
emperor and empress turned out to be terribly fun. Hestar made me a crown of
orchids and we took over one of the small eating salons, getting the servants
to clear out the table and pillows, instead setting up two big chairs to be our
thrones. His Imperial Majesty Emperor Einarr Konyngrr, our father, had a
throne. So we’d heard. And we badgered one of the rekjabrel who’d served in the
court to tell us what it looked like.
“Huge,
Your Imperial Highnesses,” she said, keeping her eyes averted.
“It
towers above, all platinum and crystal, so bright you can’t look upon it. I
can’t say more.”
“What
about the Empress’s throne?” I persisted.
“Just
the one throne, Your Imperial Highness Princess Jenna.”
“That
can’t be right,” I told Hestar, when we let the rekjabrel go. “She must not
have seen properly.”
“We
don’t have platinum anyway,” he replied.
So
we decorated the two big chairs, which ended up taking a long time. They needed
to be sparkling, which meant we needed jewels. Leo and Loke were good at
persuading bangles off the ladies, but then didn’t like to give them up. By the
time we chased them down and got everything decorated, we had only a little
time to have actual court. When my nurse, Kaia, came to get me for my bath, we
made all the servants promise to leave everything as it was.
“Kaia?”
I asked, splashing at the warmed milk water as she poured the jasmine rinse
through my hair.
“Yes,
Princess?”
“Have
you seen an elephant?”
She
laughed. “No, Princess. I’ve never heard of such a thing. Is this one of your
games?”
“No—they’re
real. Their face-tails are called trunks.”
“If
you say so, Princess.”
I
fumed a little. How could I find out more about elephants when no one even
believed they were real? “When do I get to go through the doors and look at
pictures of animals and learn their names?”
Kaia
dropped the pitcher of jasmine water, breaking it on the tiles. I would have
scolded her for clumsiness, but she had such an odd look on her face that I
stopped mid-word.
“Where
have you heard of such a thing, Princess?” She had her head bowed, but with her
scalp shorn, she couldn’t hide her face. She’d gone white, her eyes squinched
up like she hurt. Just like that time Mother accused her of drinking from her
special teapot, and had Kaia lashed until she confessed. Kaia had cried and
cried, not wanting to play with me for days afterward. But this time she didn’t
have any blood, so I didn’t understand why she went all pale like that.
“Hestar
got to go. And Kral, too, and he’s younger. I want to go. I command you to take
me tomorrow.”
“Your
Imperial Highness, I cannot.”
“You
will or I’ll tell Mother.”
“Up
and out, Princess,” she replied, dumping the shards into a waste bin, then
holding out a towel. “We must address this with Her Imperial Majesty. You can
ask her in person.”
She
dried me off, too briskly, and I almost reprimanded her, but she still looked
so scared and I didn’t want her to not play with me for days again. “I already
said goodnight to Mother.” Mother didn’t like to be disturbed after goodnights,
and the prospect began to make me a little afraid, too.
Kaia
wrapped my hair in a towel, then rubbed me all over with jasmine scented
unguent. She worked as thoroughly as always, but wouldn’t answer any more questions,
simply saying that I could ask my mother momentarily.
She
pulled my nightgown over my head and had me put on a robe, too, which wasn’t
usual. And we went with my hair still damp, not carefully combed dry before the
fire while she told me stories.
I
didn’t want to miss my stories and I began to be afraid I’d said something
terribly wrong. I’d known this was an important secret. How could I have been
so careless? It was the elephant. “Let’s not go see Mother,” I said.
Kaia
shook her head, pressing her lips together. “I apologize, Princess, but I’m
afraid we must.”
“I
don’t want to. Tell me my stories. My hair is still wet.”
But
she didn’t bend, which scared me even more. Kaia always did what I told her.
Almost always. She took my hand in a grip so firm it nearly hurt and
practically dragged me to Mother’s private salon. I resisted, and would have
thrown a fit, but Mother wouldn’t like that. An imperial princess gives
commands in a firm and gentle voice, never shrill, and
tears
are unacceptable.
Still,
when Kaia called out through the closed yellow silk curtains, and my mother
snapped out a reply, I nearly did cry. And Kaia didn’t relent in her grip,
which made me think she was angry with me and Kaia was never angry, even when I
refused to eat my supper and demanded dessert instead. She parted the curtains
and slipped me inside, kneeling beside me and bowing her head to the plush
tapestried carpet. I lowered my eyes, too, though I didn’t have to kneel.
“Well?”
the empress demanded in a cold tone. “What is the meaning of this, child?”
“My
humble apologies, Your Imperial Majesty,” Kaia said, though Mother had clearly
asked me. Her voice shook and her hand had gone all cold and sweaty. I yanked
mine away and she let me. “Her Imperial Highness Princess Jenna has asked me
questions I cannot answer. I thought it best to bring her to you immediately.”
“It’s
not your responsibility to think,” Mother replied. A hissing sound as she
breathed in her relaxing smoke. “You are to keep the princess well groomed, as
she most certainly is not at the moment. Your hair is wet, Jenna.”
A
tear slipped down my cheek, making me glad that I was to keep my eyes averted
unless given permission. Maybe she wouldn’t see. “I’m sorry,
Mother,”
I whispered.
“As
well you should be. Interrupting my quiet time. Going about like a rekjabrel
with wild hair. Are you a princess of Dasnaria?”
“Yes,
Your Imperial Majesty.”
She
hmphed in derision. “You don’t look like one. What question did you ask to
upset your nurse so?”
Kaia
had gone silent, quaking on the carpet beside me. No help at all. I considered
lying, saying Kaia had made it up. But Mother wouldn’t believe that. Kaia would
never so recklessly attract punishment. I happened to know she hadn’t snuck the
tea—one of the rekjabrel had taken it for her sister, but Kaia had never said.
“Jenna,”
Mother said, voice like ice. “Look at me.”
I
did, feeling defiant, for no good reason. Mother reclined on her pillows, her
embroidered silk gown a river of blues over their ruby reds. Her unbound hair
flowed over it all, a pale blond almost ivory, like mine. In contrast, her eyes
looked black as ebony, darker even than the artful shadows outlining them.
She’d removed most of her jewelry, wearing only the wedding bracelets that
never came off. She held her glass pipe in her jeweled nails. The scarlet of
her lip paint left a waxy mark on the end of it, scented smoke coiling from the
bowl.
“Tears?”
Her voice dripped contempt and disbelief. “What could you possibly have said to
have your nurse in a puddle and an imperial princess in tears, simply in
anticipation?”
“I
didn’t say anything!” I answered.
“Your
nurse is lying then,” the empress cooed. “I shall have to punish her.”
Kaia
let out this noise, like the one Inga’s kitten had made when Ban kicked it. The
ladies had taken it to a better home and Inga had cried for days until they
gave her five new kittens just like it.
“I
only asked about the elephants,” I said, very quietly.
“Excuse
me?” The arch of her darkened brows perfectly echoed her tone.
“Elephants!”
I yelled at her, and burst into full-fledged sobbing. If you’d asked me then,
what made me break all those rules, raising my voice, defying my mother, losing
the composure expected of an imperial princess, firstborn daughter of Emperor
Einarr, I likely could only have explained that I wanted to know about
elephants so badly that it felt like a
physical
ache. Something extraordinary for a girl who’d rarely experienced pain of any
sort.
Once
I’d had a pet, an emerald lizard with bright yellow eyes. Its scales felt like
cool water against my skin, and it would wrap its tail tightly around my wrist.
I’d only had it a day when it bit me. Astonished by the bright pain,
the
blood flowing from my finger, I’d barely registered that I’d been hurt before
the servants descended, wrapping the wound in bandages soaked in sweet smelling
salve that took sensation away.
They
also took the lizard away and wouldn’t give it back, despite my demands and
pleas. When the salve wore off, my finger throbbed. And when they took the bandages
off, the skin around the bite had turned a fascinating purple and gray. They
tried to keep me from looking, but I caught glimpses before they made it numb
again, then wrapped it up and I couldn’t see it anymore. I’d tap my finger
against things, trying to feel it again. My finger and the lizard, both gone.
I
felt like that, full of purple bruising and soft pain, as if I’d been bitten
inside, and somehow numb on the outside. I wondered what might disappear this
time.
“Elephants,”
my mother pronounced the word softly, almost in wonder.
Then
she laughed, not at all nicely. “Leave us,” she snapped, making Kaia scurry
backwards. “It’s apparently time for me to have a conversation about life with
my daughter.”
Jeffe
Kennedy is an award-winning
author with a writing career that spans decades. Her fantasy BDSM
romance, Petals and Thorns, originally published under the pen
name Jennifer Paris, has won several reader awards. Sapphire,
the first book in the Facets of Passion series, has placed first
in multiple romance contests and the follow-up, Platinum, is
climbing the charts. Her most recent works include three fiction
series: the fantasy romance novels of A
Covenant of Thorns, the contemporary
BDSM novellas of the Facets of
Passion, and the post-apocalyptic
vampire erotica of the Blood
Currency. She is
currently working on Master of the
Opera and The
Twelve Kingdoms, a fantasy trilogy.
Jeffe lives in Santa Fe, with two Maine coon cats, a border collie,
plentiful free-range lizards and a Doctor of Oriental Medicine. Jeffe
can be found online at her website: JeffeKennedy.com or every Sunday
at the popular Word Whores blog.
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2 comments:
I appreciate learning about some terrific books we had not known about previously, through your blog. It sure helps find books my family would enjoy reading since they all love to read. Thanks so much!
thanks for hosting the excerpt and giveaway! :-)
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