"Hurry along, my dear," said the king to his young bride, "if any of my son's hideous progeny defeat my Horsemen and get through, we'll be safe from them."
"How can you be so sure?" she asked him, as they walked through the King's Royal Catacombs.
"Well," the king replied, casually, "either the Horsemen will finish them off, or I'll set off the explosives hidden in each of these lovely artifacts."
"Explosives in the artifacts?!?" the newly crowned queen gasped.
"Of course," the king replied. "Surely you didn't think I was so vain that I really
needed an underground trove of treasures?"
And with that, they rounded another corner, walked a few steps, and the king stopped short.
"Here we are," he announced.
"So..." she began hesitantly, "the map to your hiding place is hidden in this bookshelf?"
"No," he replied, "the bookshelf
is the hiding place."
And with the pulling of a specific book, the doorway slid open.
In another part of the catacombs, the elven heir and the clown girl were in pursuit.
"What's with all the statues and nonsense?" asked Harlequin.
"My father's so vain he needs an underground trove of treasures," Breagadoir replied, casually.
"How do you know where you're going with all the different corridors?" she asked.
"I have my ways," he replied slyly.
Back in the king's saferoom, the monarchs discovered they were not quite so safe as they had thought.
"Grandfather," greeted Sotal. "Whatever took you so long?"
"How did you get in here?" demanded the king.
"I took the shortcut," the ghost replied.
The answer was, "What shortcut?"
"When you were most of the way here, I just came through the wall," replied the ghost with a smile.
"I was walking through the walls following you the whole time. I made sure to mark the path as we went. Father will be following my trail here right now," he added. "In fact, I think I here a noise at the door."
"Thanks for leaving such a nice trail," Breagadoir said to his son. "It made finding this place extremely simple."
While the queen shrieked and ran from the room, the king decided to take some anger out on the ghost who had been his undoing.
Before Breagadoir could stop him, the king had thrown a bottle at Sotal's feet, and as Breagadoir watched, his heir slowly vanished from existence.
"What did you do?" demanded the prince.
"It's a banishing potion," laughed the king. "The threat of that elixir is how I kept Famine in line. It even protected me from the haunting aspects of his presence." And with that, Breagadoir pulled his wand and began a spell.
The king laughed dismissively as he said, "You know I'm immune to your fire and ice blasts. Go ahead and try."
"Not trying those," said Breagadoir. "You just threw away your protection from a haunting curse."
While Breagadoir and his father were having their exchange, the Watcher-turned-queen was simply trying to flee. She went exactly the route Harlequin had expected.
"This doesn't have to go badly," said the former Watcher. "We can talk through this. I'm a queen now. I can give you riches."
"This
does have to go badly," responded the clown girl with a sneer. "We won't talk through this. I'm a mother now. You had my son abducted. I'm going to give you a beating."
Back in the no-longer-saferoom, the king received the full blast of Breagadoir's spell and recoiled in fear as a form came into existence before him.
"No!" shrieked the monarch. "That's not possible!"
"Obviously it is," said Breagadoir. "and now that Sotal's spirit has been anchored to you, he can haunt you for the rest of your days. Don't worry though," he added, "we'll make sure you don't have too many of those left."
And indeed, Breagadoir locked the king and his bride (after Harlequin had a few more hours of vengeance on her) in the tower...in the same room where the king had locked his first wife. On his third day on the throne, Breagadoir decreed that the tower was to be knocked down...without removing those locked within. Sotal enjoyed the gift of these few more days on earth.
In the days, months, and years that followed, the elven-prince-turned-king and the clown-girl-turned-queen ruled over their people effectively, if not compassionately, and even if peace did not always reign, the violence was honest.
Many thanks to my readers. I hope that you have enjoyed following this story every bit as much as I have enjoyed writing it. Special thanks to Rosa, Dolls, Wiry, hearts, Squirt, Dex, and other people that I'm sure I forgot to mention specifically for their contributions of characters, story ideas, and for being effective sounding boards for my ideas. Everyone who has read and/or commented has been a wonderful gift to me as a writer. Thank you.