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Lilophea, the Bride of the Sea King
Lilophea, the Bride of the Sea King

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Lilophea, the Bride of the Sea King

Язык: Английский
Год издания: 2023
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“Don’t make friends with just anyone,” the Seneschal advised. “It can turn into trouble.”

“Is it in your case?”

“Have I ever caused you any trouble?” He flapped his luxurious wings vigorously, trying to keep up with her.

“Well, except for the chatter…” she tried to remember. What had he done wrong already? The princess herself had admired his abilities and taken him in. Had he behaved with dignity? He was certainly not grateful to Lilophea. He took her shelter for granted.

“It was dangerous to meet strangers!” He repeated like a parrot.

“Well, I met you!”

Lilofea expected that such insolent and truthful remark will be followed by a barrage of objections, but the peacock somehow dejectedly hushed. Did he really think he was a danger to her?

She felt unusual in his company, but he certainly couldn’t be dangerous.

“Those creatures of the water…” he murmured.

“Nereida is just spoiling. She probably wasn’t allowed to do that at home. I think she came with ambassadors from Etar, which means that in her homeland, she even had to cover her face with a veil. By the way, we should go back and ask her about her country.

“No need!” The peacock was frightened. “You shouldn’t talk to crazy people who bathe in fountains. She might want to drown you in it!”

“Stop it!” Seneschal was understandable. Having found a worthy hostess, he feared he would not lose his nourishing place. If anything happened to her, where would he find the second princess, and how could he become her pet? No wonder he was jealous of everyone.

“Tonight you’re the only one who’s my beau! I promise not to dance with anyone else.”

It would look like fun. She would be spinning around her own axis in the ballroom and a peacock would be flying over her head. But, alas, the young men reached out in succession to ask her to dance. Lilothea wished she had started a ballroom card. It was hard even to remember who she had promised the cotillion and who the quadrille. All around were masks. She should try to remember her admirers by them. Forest elf mask, black dragon mask, scarab mask, falcon or eagle mask, even a mask of peacock feathers, to which Seneschal grunted unhappily.

She did not get to dance with the peacock. Morissa, on the other hand, was luckier. No one asked her to dance at all. Apparently, both the princess and the hapless girl were easy to spot, even under a mask. Morissa came in wearing a half-mask in the form of a dragonfly. The monkey sat on her shoulder, and no other suitor was expected for the evening. Neither pirates nor cutthroats were invited to the ball, of course. Morissa walked dejectedly among the dancers. Even the monkey was not particularly faithful to her and kept trying to jump on the shoulders of the more elegant ladies, which sometimes raised a squeal in the hall.

“Traitor! Get back!” Morissa shouted at the unfaithful pet. Sometimes one shout was not enough to calm him down and she had to catch him with her hands. It was no accident that she had chosen such an expressive name for him. The beast had indeed proved itself to be a thorough traitor. Lilophea thought, with a chuckle, that a guy who wanted to cheat wasn’t that easy to deal with. Morrin, for instance, can’t be caught with the hands, and you can’t keep him away from a whole group of girls he’s flirting with. The newt mask is clearly him. But the adorer of beauties suddenly lifted the mask to smile at passing Lilophea, and it turned out that it’s not Morrin at all. Apparently he’d borrowed the camisole and mask from the lord, too.

And where is Morrin? Have the royal privateers been invited to the masquerade ball, or are they not allowed here either?

Lilothea recoiled in horror from the bear mask that some fat man had worn. In size, he looked like one of the ministers who strenuously advocated that the princess go to the Etar’s harem. He managed to frighten her. He marched to the table with treats and wines. The fat guests all adored the refreshments, and those who were stout preferred to dance. On the high gallery musicians gathered. The lute, mandolin, harp, and flute sounded. It was a wonderful quartet.

Seneschal flapped his wings to the music, careful to keep his distance straight over his hostess’s head, but Lilophea had to dance with the others. She lost count, memorizing the masks of everyone she danced with. Meanwhile, Morissa was training Traitor, catching him off the plumes of the next ladies he jumped on, and reprimanding him for infidelity. Curious, did he understand anything at all? Seneschal was an exception, he had mastered human speech, but could monkeys speak human?

Nereida’s multicolored hair seems to have flashed in the fountain already in the corner of the room. Or was it colored tinsel? Lilothea wanted to look closely, but the dancing pas got in the way. She had to wait until the minuet was over. And now she had some free time. We could skip the next dance. But then someone in the mask of a water king approached Lilophea. How suddenly he appeared. It was as if he had grown out of the floor! A luxurious mask with spikes of coral stretched a crest on the back of his head and back, oriental clothing hinted at the status of the sultan of a distant overseas country. It was probably him! How greedily he looked at her!

Lilothea wanted to slip away from him and could not. Cold arms encircled her waist. The stranger spun her in a dance. Gliding across the parquet with him was much more pleasant than dancing with others, or alone. The dance was like swimming. The unusual couple was already being looked at enviously by others. Lilophea had such a fabulous feeling, as if she were dancing not with the mask, but with the water king himself.

Suddenly she noticed wet footprints on the parquet. Her beau’s hands were wet, too. They soaked his expensive corset with water. Lilophea noticed that the mask’s eyebrows, eyelashes, and lips were lined with gold ochre, and the forehead was decorated with pearls and coral. What if it wasn’t a mask at all? And would it be an insult if she tried to rip it off him right now to see the face under it? What if there is no other face under it? If there isn’t, there’s no one more beautiful than him. This mask is not just a work of art. Such forbidden beauty can only be created by magic.

Where did the cold and sea breeze suddenly come from in the ballroom? Lilophea tried to break free from the hands that held her and could not. The dance was not over yet. The cavalier wouldn’t let her go. And the peacock suddenly flew up to the ceiling and hovered above the chandelier, as if he’d never met his mistress. What a jittery he had become! Instead of being jealous of his mistress and making snide remarks, he seemed to be frightened.

Lilophea became dizzy. Before her eyes flashed the blues, gold, and purples that made up her partner’s costume. She should have shown up at the masquerade dressed as a waterman. All those coral spikes and gold gills made a strong impression. It feels like she’s being danced on by a real waterman who got in here from a lake in the park. It leaves a wet trail on the parquet. Lilothea slipped. And the waterman backed her up.

“Where did you come from?” She tried to distract herself with conversation from the feeling that she was dancing with an underwater creature. What if it turns out that in fact he is just a sheik or a rajah from a distant country? “Have I not seen you at court before? Have you come from afar?”

“Came from the stream in the garden,” he whispered in her ear, and at once she had vivid visions of someone with blue skin and scales climbing out of the spring among the jasmines and leaving wet footsteps on the grass. She glanced sideways at the floor. Small puddles had already collected there. Water was running off her partner. He’d probably just taken a dip in the creek in the garden and was teasing her. There are some very picturesque places in the royal gardens of Aquilania. And in the evening, in the darkness, few are able to see that a guest is swimming in the pond or the streams. Even in a fountain, like Nereida.

“You decided to live in that stream,” she decided to tease him back. “You have a very underwater look. I’d even say seawater!”

“That’s right, Princess,” his voice sounded serious enough, without mockery. “I live in the sea, not in a stream.”

“Then it is strange why you came from the creek, for the coast is very near. Don’t sea carriages go overland? Did you have to get there some other way?”

“You guessed again, as if you’d traveled on the seafloor,” her partner put his arm around her waist so tightly that it was suddenly very cold. It was as if she had fallen into the river instead of his embrace.

“Seaways aren’t meant for land, but I’m lucky, all the waterways are connected. It’s easy to get from the sea to a pond or a river.”

“Or even a fountain?” She remembered Nereida.

“It was true again!” The waterman held her tighter against him. “How did you know about the sea coach made of shells and jellyfish? Your mirror is an eye to the underwater world, but it has not shown them to you yet, or I would know.”

Only the one who gave it to her can know about the miraculous mirror. Lilophea involuntarily tensed.

“Who are you?”

“Haven’t you guessed that yet?”

His face, with its bluish skin and golden eyebrows, leaned right up to her face. Why does she think of the mask as a face? She’d have to dodge and pull that mask off him, and then she’d know there was only a man underneath it.

The peacock under the chandelier became very worried and flapped its wings so vigorously that the crawler must have been staring at it. And Lilophea cautiously ran her fingers over the luxurious mask of the waterman. It was not silk or cardboard or papier-mâché that was palpable beneath her fingers. It was real cold skin, smooth and gliding like water. Droplets of moisture protruded from the coral spikes that grew on her head like a crown.

“You are a waterman! A real waterman! Not a mask!” She whispered faintly, but he caught every sound. His golden lips almost pressed against hers. It felt good and cold at the same time. There was only one thought pounding in her head: How beautiful he was, and how much she wanted to go down with him. Around her was a ballroom, but her partner seemed to draw her into the abyss of the sea. How tempting to be there with him, to see the wonders of the sea. But at the bottom she would not be able to breathe and would drown!

On the galleries above, rows of torches suddenly flashed. It was the king ordering them to be lit. Lilophea heard the excited shouts of the heralds. The flames were blazing everywhere, like monochrome orange fireworks. It was getting warm all around, and she was freezing in the embrace of the watery creature. So someone shouted from the other end of the hall. The water creature! How can you call this handsome creature that? Yes, he is unusual. He has corals and golden gills growing right out of his skin, but how graceful his features are. How athletically built he is! With him it is a pleasure not only to dance, but also just to stand beside. She was only embarrassed by the puddles on the floor, in which small fish were already fussing.

“It’s water, not blood,” he remarked, “but I’ll drown your whole kingdom in it if you don’t marry me.”

Lilothea didn’t have time to tell him that threatening was unnecessary. She was ready to go anywhere with him right now, even if it meant dying in the waves. He had bewitched her. But the flames erupted quite close by. Someone threw a torch right at him. It seems the Second Minister had told him to build a bonfire right in the middle of the ballroom so that the unholy things would crawl back out to sea. How could that be? Lilothea wanted to shout something indignant, but the blue-gold figure with gills and tail had already rushed into the nearest fountain. That was it! In a minute the waterman was as good as gone. The guards didn’t even have time to release the hounds.

The torches burned, but the water on the parquet had time to form letters:

“Come to the bridge!”

What bridge? That’s all the water had time to say! The Second Minister ordered torches around everything, and the night got even hotter than it was.

“This is no longer an island of paradise, but a scorcher!” Lilophea appealed to Seneschal, who finally flew up to her head. He came down from the top when it was safe. The torches all around the palace did not frighten him. Apparently peacocks are afraid of cold water, not hot fire.

A fire was indeed built in the middle of the ballroom to chase away any remnants of the sea invasion. The Second Minister will probably even invite clergymen or wizards here to close the impure ways back with witchcraft or prayers. It doesn’t matter what. The main thing is that he vigilantly guarded the royal daughter he liked so much, and with her the safety of the whole state.

He bowed to Lilophea and went with the guards to search and find the waterman, who, in his opinion, had probably not yet swum back out to sea from the palace ponds. How well he appeared to be aware of the habits of the sea-dwellers. She, on the other hand, had not been told a word about them. She was fortunate that he knew nothing about talking birds, or he would have taken Seneschal away from her and locked her up so that he would not teach the princess all sorts of nonsense.

The guests began to disperse, talking excitedly about what had happened. The waterman was long gone. Lilophea was left alone, not counting the Seneschal hovering overhead. She left the ball in the company of a peacock as she arrived.

Sea Rainbow

The gifts were from the waterman. The mirror was from him too. And as it turned out, it was capable of showing not only the depths of the sea. Now, for example, it showed a picturesque and gruesome picture of the water apocalypse, when the waves overflowed and flooded all of Aquilania. And inside the sinking state, beautiful and terrifying underwater inhabitants crawl out of rivers, lakes, springs, even fountains and suffocate all those who have not yet drowned.

At the ball, the waterman made it clear to her that he would destroy everyone if he did not get what he wanted. The mirror clearly showed her what could happen if she refused the underwater lord.

“For now it is only water, but I will drown your entire kingdom in blood if you do not marry me!”

This phrase rang in her head for a long time before she went to sleep.

The palace stood on the very shore. The sea beat beneath the balcony. Aquilania is an island kingdom. It is surrounded by the sea everywhere. To get out of here, you have to get on a ship. And what does it cost a waterman to destroy just one ship instead of an entire country? Once on the ship, she will be in his territory, and therefore completely at his mercy. After all, the sea is his element. It turns out that Morrin’s offer to sail away together and become mistress of the small island kingdom that he will take over is now, alas, unfeasible. The waterman messed up all the plans. He disturbed court life and now all the guards walk through the galleries armed with torches to scare away the water spies by means of fire. The torches looked ridiculous in the daytime. But what can you do if the creatures that crawled out of the water are only afraid of fire. Ordinary weapons, it was rumored, could neither wound nor frighten them. The flames, on the other hand, had a devastating power over them.

“I wish there were dragons in Aquilanía, like in the mountain kingdom of Tiór,” complained the First Minister. “I wish we could negotiate with the local lord to get one for us. A dragon would be a much better defense against maritime incursions than flaming arrows. Besides, what’s the point of shooting them from the towers if they can fit through any fountain?”

“All fountains should be drained,” the royal advisers said. “And all rivers and pools could be ringed with torches. Dragons are dangerous to summon. They could easily burn down the realm in self-defense. And Aquilania would be nothing but a pile of ashes in a sea of fire.”

Lilophea was tired of hearing them argue. No one locked themselves in their father’s study to discuss falling out of the water anymore. Arguments were held around the clock in the council chamber. The doors there were wide open so that everyone could come in and voice their plan on how to protect themselves from the watermen. The king was not particularly embarrassed by the fact that they came sneaking around at night and making mischief. So, they sank a couple of merchant ships in the port, dragged a few decent pages or fishermen to the bottom, demanded to give them some maidens as a sacrifice, flooded the market square once on the day of the High Tide Festival. It’s all nonsense. The kingdom itself survived! But the waterman’s kidnapping of the king’s daughter from the ball was serious! It was almost a kidnapping. But the clarification was of little concern to anyone.

The creature from the sea! Lilothea cringed when she heard such a nickname again. How could such a charming creature be called a creature from the sea? Yes, the waterman is treacherous, powerful, surely he is mean and cruel if he sinks ships and demands human sacrifice, as they say about him. But he is so fabulously beautiful!

She closed her eyes dreamily.

He has a tail of coral, he has gills of gold, he has skin the color of the sea, but he could still be her lover. Earth girls would not understand her in this. Even Morissa would not approve of such a choice. But Lilothea herself believed that it was a sin not to fall in love with a waterman, if otherwise the whole of Aquilania would end. She was a princess, after all. She just has to be a patriot and at least drown herself to save her kingdom from water invaders. And here it is required only not to sacrifice herself to the waters of the sea, but to fall in love with the king of the sea. Although, no… He did not mention anything about such a condition as love. Only that she must marry him. Lilophea knew that princesses marry strangers from the other side of the world without even asking for consent. The main thing is that the future husband himself should be a ruler: a king, emperor, sultan, shah, raja, or even an underwater king. However, no one has ever married an underwater king. She would probably be the first. Lilophea was saddened to think that it was just an ordinary dynastic deal, devoid of romance. Apparently, the waterman only wants her for some political reasons. For example, he cannot possess all the surrounding islands until he marries the princess.

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