Queen of the Magnetland (The Elemental Phases Book 5)

BOOK: Queen of the Magnetland (The Elemental Phases Book 5)
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Queen

of
the

Magnetland

 

Book
Five of the Elemental Phases

 

Cassandra
Gannon

Text
copyright © 2013 Cassandra Gannon

Cover
Image copyright © 2013 Cassandra Gannon

All
Rights Reserved

Published
by Star Turtle Publishing

 

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For
Grady

Who
clawed the Enter key off the computer as he tried to wedge his 105 pounds onto
my lap,

Who
mangled the plug so now the battery only charges if the screen is held at a
weird angle,

Who
put his head on my arm to
siiiiigh
every time I focused on typing
instead of fetching him dog treats,

And
who has the youngest soul and gentlest heart in the world.

 

I
love you, bunny.

Also by Cassandra Gannon

 

The Elemental Phases Series

Warrior from the Shadowland

Guardian of the Earth House

Exile in the Water Kingdom

Treasure of the Fire Kingdom

Queen of the Magnetland

Magic of the Wood House

Coming Soon
:  Destiny of the
Time House

 

A Kinda Fairytale Series

Wicked Ugly Bad

Beast in Shining Armor

Coming Soon:
  Happily Ever
Witch

 

Other Books

Not Another Vampire Book

Love in the Time of Zombies

Vampire Charming

Cowboy from the Future

Once Upon a Caveman

 

If you enjoy Cassandra’s books, you may
also enjoy books by her sister, Elizabeth Gannon:

 

The Consortium of Chaos series

Yesterday’s Heroes

The Son of Sun and Sand

The Guy Your Friends Warned You About

Electrical Hazard

The Only Fish in the Sea

 

Other Books

The Snow Queen

Travels with a Fairy Tale Monster

Prologue

 

Believe that
you have died today and that your life's story is over,

And
henceforth regard what future time you are given as an unpromised gift.

 

Marcus
Aurelius- “Meditations”

 

Mara
died on a bright sunny day, surrounded by the ugliest wallpaper in the
universe.

She’d
always hated the subtle vertical stripes that encircled her bedroom.  The
former queen had selected it, no doubt inspired by the perpetual gloom of the
Magnet Kingdom.  Grey on grey, the wallpaper was tasteful, and elegant, and
about as warm as a jail cell.  It was like being in a cage.

A
badly decorated cage.

For
sixty-seven years, Mara had been Matched to Chason, first the prince and then
the King of the Magnet House.  For sixty-seven years, she’d either been preparing
to become the queen or wearing the crown.  And for sixty-seven years she’d
hated looking at that wallpaper.

Every
decade or so, someone would replace the old grey stripes with new grey
stripes.  Each time, Mara would make a face at the hideous bars and not rock
the boat.  She’d allowed her domineering father-in-law and the stifling Magnet
House traditions to rule her life.

That
had been a huge mistake.

She
should have rocked the boat
more
, not less.

For
sixty-seven years, Mara had tried hard to be a perfect queen.  To be what
everyone wanted.  She should have painted her bedroom amethyst or orchid.  She
should have burned all the massive, uncomfortable furniture in a bonfire and gotten
a cushy chaise to read on.  With pillows.  Purple pillows.  Purple was her
favorite color.  She should have concentrated on being happy.  She should have
just been
Mara
.

Maybe
then, Chason would have smiled more.

Maybe
then, they would have had a better relationship.

Maybe
then, she wouldn’t have to die surrounded by the most hideous wallpaper in
creation.

Maybe,
maybe, maybe.

At
the end of her life, Mara realized that “maybes” just plain sucked.

It
took a tremendous effort to lift the notepad off the bed beside her.  She
wasn’t even sure why she bothered.  It was pointless to keep a “To Do” list,
since she only had a few hours left to live.  But, she still felt the bizarre
compunction to keep track of all the things that she wanted to accomplish. 
Deep down, Mara had always been an optimist.

For
one of the few times in the one hundred and sixty years she’d been alive, she
was experiencing total clarity and she wanted to record it.

Mara
picked up the lavender colored pen and added another “should have” to her
inventory of regrets.

Number
thirty-one:  Redecorate bedroom.

She
squinted down at the jagged letters for a beat and then added an exclamation
mark.  Her handwriting grew worse and worse as the list grew longer.

Fever
ravaged her insides even as chills shook her body.  The notepad fell against
her chest, as another round of racking coughs overtook her.  The deathly rattle
nearly cracked her ribs and her lungs burned like they were on fire.  She
almost didn’t mind the pain, though, because it proved she was still alive. 
Far scarier was the blankness she felt waiting on the other side of the
physical misery.

Mara
closed her eyes.

Her
strength was fading to the point so she couldn’t even hold a pen without
extreme effort.  She could see her skin shrinking against the bones of her
hand.  The coughing and the pain in her head.  The shivering and her aching
body.  Optimist or not, Mara saw the stark truth barreling down at her.

Darkness
was closing in.

Very
soon she’d die from this plague.  Over the past five days, she’d seen so many
others succumb.  Her cousins, her subjects, her friends, and even total
strangers.  So many Phases that the universe could never recover.  More people
than Mara could even count.

For
a woman who’d never had an enemy --who’d spent her life trying to be what
everyone wanted-- it was hard for Mara to comprehend that she was dying in a
war.

Released
by Parald, of the Air House as revenge against the Council and the Water House,
the plague had slipped beyond anyone’s control.  It was careening through the
Elemental ranks, pushing them to the brink of extinction.  And i
f
the Elementals fell, the rest of the universe would go down with them.

This
illness would wipe out everything before it was done.

The
Fall.

One
tiny germ could erase the entire world.

Since
the beginning of time, the Phases held together the interconnected processes of
nature.  The Elemental Houses supported everything from Gravity to Fire to
Time.  Nothing could survive without them.  If the Fall wiped out the
Elementals, it would wipe out all of existence.  Everyone and everything would
go out like a light.

Mara’s
ebony colored eyes slid over to the overwrought armchair on the other side of
the room.

Her
cousin Kahn slouched in its hideous depths, his huge boots stretched out in
front of him, his blond head slumped at an awkward angle.  His large body
barely fit on the seat and his handsome faced stayed creased with strain even
in sleep.  It was the first time he’d closed his eyes since the beginning of
the Fall.  He’d nodded off while watching over her, pushed to the limits of his
endurance.

Love
and sorrow filled her.

Kahn,
of the Light House.

The
only cousin she had left.

Just
a few days before, she’d had seven.  Kahn and his six sisters.  Kahn had raised
Mara and the girls by himself, after their parents had all died in various
pointless ways.  Now, the girls were gone, victims of the plague.  Victims of
the war.

Kahn
and Mara had been at the bedside of each of the girls when they died.  Livinia
succumbed first, on the second day of the Fall.  Syllia and Aggie followed on
the third day.  Then, Roma, Tonia and Prinny all perished within the next
twelve hours.  Their deaths happened so fast, one on top of another, so that
Mara hadn’t been able to process one girl leaving before the next one faded
away.

Prinny
had held on the longest.  She was the youngest sister and had always been so
full of life.  Of
course
, she’d want to stay as long as she could.  The
horrible stillness after her breathing stopped was deafening.  By that point,
Mara had fallen into a numb shock.  All she could do was hold her cousin’s small
hand and listen to the silence where Prinny had once been. 

But
Kahn had… shattered.  Watching his baby sisters fade away destroyed something
inside of him.  Something Mara feared would change him forever.

Kahn
seemed immune to the disease, but the Fall was killing him just as surely as it
had wiped out the girls.  He’d given everything he had to sisters. 
Everything

Kahn could never recover from this heartache.  And Mara’s death would only make
it worse.

Mara
was so worried about what would happen to Kahn after she was gone.

Even
if the Fall didn’t erase the entire universe, who would look after a man like
Kahn?  He pissed off everyone he met.  No one but his sisters and Mara ever saw
the softness beneath his grouchy exterior.  Who would Kahn even let close to
him, now?  How could he survive if he was left completely alone?

Mara
picked up the notebook again and added number thirty-two to her list.

Find
Kahn a Match
.

Her
hold on the pen was so weak that the ink barely made an impression on the page. 
It was only a matter of time, now.  Soon she’d slip into the coma that came
before death.  Soon she’d go to sleep and never wake up.

It
wasn’t fair.

There
was so much that Mara still wanted to accomplish.  So much that she hadn’t
done, yet.  Mara gathered her strength and pressed forward.

Number
thirty-three:  Visit the Color Kingdom.  It was so beautiful there.  At least,
it was in photos and she’d always meant to go see it for herself.  Why hadn’t
she found the time?

Number
thirty-four:  See
Singin’ in the Rain
.  Why had she never seen
Singin’
in the Rain? 
She’d always meant to.  She loved musicals so much.  All the
stupid films she’d watched over the past decades and she’d never seen
Singin’
in the Rain
.  It was insane.

Number
thirty-five:  Have child.

Tears
welled at that one.  She’d
more
than just “meant to” have a baby.  She’d
wanted one desperately.  A little version of Chason and herself to love.

And
now it was too late.

Mara
blew out a long breath.  She didn’t want to spend her last few moments of life
being miserable, but anyone on their deathbed had the right to be a
little
maudlin.

Number
thirty-six:  Dance with Chason.

They’d
danced on their Phazing Day.  The Andrew Sisters sung
I’ll Be With You in
Apple Blossom Time
as Mara and Chason danced into the night.  She’d been so
happy.  Why hadn’t they danced more?  Why hadn’t she fought harder to get
through to him?  To free him from his shell?

Number
thirty-seven:  Convince Chason to fall in love.

Why
hadn’t she made him really love her?  She’d tried little things, but she’d been
so scared to rock the boat and push him passed his comfort zone of tepid
propriety.  Too scared to fight.  She’d settled for too little.  She’d let
him
settle for too little.

They
could have been so much…
better
.

Mara
could hear Chason in the hallway, arguing with the latest doctor he’d scrounged
up.  Her Match wasn’t a quitter.  He was obsessed with finding a way to cure
her.  Mara was touched by that.  It sort of surprised her that Chason was so attached
to having her around.

He
paid no attention to the scores of medical professionals telling him that it
was hopeless.  Every time a doctor insisted that there was no cure for the Fall,
Chason would just throw them out and find another one to interrogate.

Only
all the doctors were dying off, along with the rest of the Phases.

Chason
was down to the last one.  And Salamis, of the Weather House wasn’t even a real
doctor.  He hadn’t graduated from med school, yet.  The kid was inexperienced
and terrified.  Not just of the Fall, but of Chason.

“But…
But… There’s nothing that I can do, sire.  There’s nothing that
anyone
can do.”

“If
you can’t help, then get the hell out!”  Chason roared in a completely
un-Chason like way.

Mara
tucked the notepad under her pillow and struggled to sit up.  Chason was always
so… perfect.  So generous and proper and good.  Yelling at some poor medical
student, probably dying of the Fall himself…?  It wasn’t like her Match.  But, Chason
was so upset.

Of
course, he was.

They
were connected.  If she died, she could hypothetically pull him down with her.

Mara
was one of the lucky Phases who’d found her Match early in life.  For
Elementals, there was only one special person whose energy could combine with
their own, forming one symbiotic whole.  Their Phase-Match was their other
half.  Mara had met Chason when she was very young.  When they’d finally Phazed,
she’d believed that the rest of their lives would be one long happily-ever-after.

Only
things hadn’t turned out that way.

Most
days that made Mara terribly lonely, but it was turning out for the best.  If
Mara died –
When
she died-- Chason would go on.  He seemed immune to the
Fall.  Provided that the universe didn’t crash like the Hindenburg, Chason
would survive.  So often, when one Match died, the other one followed.  That’s
what had happened to her parents.  But, Mara and Chason had never been that…
intertwined.  Even when they Phazed, there was always that little bit of
distance between them.

Besides,
in human terms, they were still newly-weds.  They lived very separate lives.  He
would be okay without her.  Mara was sure of it.

And
that meant more to her than anything.

Mara
wouldn’t want live without Chason.  Better that he be the one to survive.  He
could endure and go on.  He could still have a life.  Hopefully, he’d make the
most of it and try to be happy.  He deserved that.

Chason
slammed back into the room loud enough to jolt Kahn awake.

Her
normally immaculate Match looked even worse than Mara did.  He was usually such
a handsome man.  Not preoccupied with his appearance, but always spick and span
just because of his studious personality.  Now, his purple eyes were bloodshot,
his dark hair sticking up as if he’d been running his hands through it
repeatedly.  He hadn’t even shaved.  Chason
always
shaved.  He was
incredibly neat and tidy.

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