Hi, friends! I decided that it might be a good idea to give you a sample of Silver Rose. Enjoy!
Chapter 1 Strange Encounters
It all started when a bright red flash darted past the castle’s mullioned windows. I gasped, my hands flying to my mouth, which caused the water pitcher I was carrying to clatter to the floor, shattering to pieces and spilling water on myself. What was that? I thought, rushing to the window. I had glimpsed a triangular head, scales, and a long, tapered tail. It couldn’t be. I scanned the courtyard below. Something red by the ground caught my attention. I squinted, but I couldn’t see anything. Don’t be ridiculous, I told myself. They weren’t real. They were just a myth. They inhabited the mists of old tales. They were on the fringes of stories, stealing, killing, and wreaking havoc.
“Penelope! What is the meaning of this?”
Quaking, I turned and looked up into the face of the matron in charge of housekeeping, Mrs. Sophia Thompson. Her hands were on her perfectly starched waist and her mouth was a thin line of displeasure. I became fascinated with my black shoes, trying to ignore my hammering heart and the sodden hem of my handmaiden dress.
“Miss Bogg, kindly explain yourself.”
“I dropped the pitcher on the floor. My apologies,” I mumbled.
“Are you injured?” Mrs. Thompson asked, inspecting me from head to foot.
I shook my head. My cheeks were burning.
“Well, if you are positive, report to the Queen’s private chambers. She is expecting you.”
I waited until Mrs. Thompson had rounded the corner before gathering the pieces of broken pottery and placing them in a nearby rubbish bin. Satisfied with my work, though cringing at the damp spot that remained, I headed toward the queen’s apartments on the third floor.
A noise attracted my attention on the stairs. There was a lit torch burning off to my left, but it was too dim to make out any details. Just my imagination, I thought, when suddenly a dark red shadow detached and started toward me. I backed up hastily, my foot slipping on the step. I waved my arms wildly, trying to keep my balance, when something tackled me from behind, sending me sprawling to the ground.
“Lydia!” I grunted, as I righted myself and turned to see my younger sister. She helped me to my feet and the figure disappeared into the shadows again. “What are you doing here? You know you’re supposed to wait in your room while I’m working.”
My twelve-year-old sister pouted. “I was bored,” she said. “I was walking down the hall when I heard something break. I ran past Hazel going in the opposite direction. Are you all right?”
I stared intently at her, touched. She was tall for her age at almost five feet, no matter my four years and three inches on her. “Yes, I’m fine. Why don’t you visit Constance in the village?”
Lydia perked up immediately at the mention of her best friend. She took off running down the stairs, taking them two at a time.
“Don’t forget!” I called after her. “Malcolm will be home later today. Be back in half-an-hour.” Malcolm was our older brother and the captain of the castle’s guards. He had been gone for the last few days on a special mission for the queen. Something to do with werewolves.
As I started away from the staircase, footsteps could be heard heading in my direction. Thinking it was Lydia again, I turned, but it wasn’t her. Instead, the figure on the stairs stood watching me. It was difficult to tell whether it was a she or a he, but whoever it was wore a dark, almost blood red hooded cloak. The figure was at least half a foot taller than me.
We stared at each other for a full minute. The figure was completely still, except for the fingers of its left hand, which were drumming against its leg. Is this person going to speak or not? I thought.
I had just turned away, when the figure spoke. It had a raspy, yet feminine, voice. “Penelope Bogg, I must talk to you.”
“Who are you?” I asked.
“A friend,” she said, stepping forward, past another torch bracket on the wall. The torch inside was spluttering fretfully. “Please, Miss Bogg, you must help me.”
But, I heard no more. The girl had stopped near the sputtering torch, which had suddenly flared to life. My eyes widened with shock. “Magic!” I whispered. How did she get magic? I knew only two people with that kind of power: my late mother and the court wizard, Casimir. I took one last frightened look at the girl before I took off running down the hall toward the queen’s rooms. Stopping before the third door on the left, I knocked smartly on the wooden surface.
“Enter,” the queen’s voice said.
I yanked the door open and slipped inside, closing it with a soft click.
“Penelope, there you are,” Queen Alana said. She was a beautiful woman with long, black hair, piercing blue eyes, and a kind smile. She was wearing a green velvet dress with a white bow encircling her waist. She was standing in front of a full-length mirror decorated with carved roses.
The room itself was a pale turquoise. Several chairs and a couch decorated the center of the room. There was an old desk in the corner. I loved that desk. I saw it at least once a day. It reminded me of the desk my mother used to own. A portrait of a blonde-haired woman with Queen Alana’s blue eyes hung above the couch, staring out across the room. She was wearing a necklace shaped like a crescent moon. I smiled. This was Queen Rebecca, Queen Alana’s grandmother and founder of Kelton Castle.
Queen Alana had inherited her grandmother’s good sense. She was never rash or impulsive, but ruled the entire kingdom of Alsmora fairly. On her desk, I could see Malcolm’s latest report about the current state of the werewolf population.
“I don’t know, Malcolm,” the queen had once said to him, while I cleaned the room around them. “The werewolves are getting out of control. There are more attacks daily.”
“We could attack back, Your Highness,” my captain of the guards brother had suggested.
“No, they are normal most of the time, except when the moon is full. We must come up with another solution.”
Queen Alana had been agonizing over this for weeks, trying to decide whether to give werewolves more or less rights. She had finally sent Malcolm to investigate a werewolf attack in the west of Alsmora. While there, he was to arrange a meeting between an ambassador werewolf and Queen Alana.
I turned my attention to the rest of the room. Another handmaiden was there, buttoning Queen Alana’s forest green dress.
“Milady,” I said, with a curtsey.
The other handmaiden, Hazel, smiled at me, but it didn’t quite reach her cold, gray eyes. She had never liked me, ever since she had discovered that my mother, Alice Bogg, had been an old friend of Queen Alana’s. Hazel thought it was wrong for a handmaiden and the captain of the guards to have known Queen Alana since childhood.
“Precious Penelope,” she had once muttered loudly as I passed. “Thinks she can get away with anything, just because her mother was friends with the Queen.”
I averted my eyes, mumbling a greeting to Hazel.
“Penelope, hand me that shawl,” Queen Alana said, extending her hand.
I spotted the shawl in question, a dark red that complimented the green beautifully, but reminded me forcefully of the figure outside the room.
Handing it to the queen, I stood beside her, waiting for further instructions. I could see myself in the mirror. I stared at myself thoughtfully. Lydia and I looked the same. We both had brown hair, round brown eyes, and fair skin. Lydia’s hair was longer, though. It reached as far as her waist. Mine, on the other hand, fell to slightly below my shoulders. My handmaiden uniform was a dark blue dress and a white mobcap.
Hazel stepped back, her task complete. “I am finished, Your Highness.”
Queen Alana withdrew from the mirror and sat in one of the chairs. “Hazel, go find Viola and see how my dress for the gala tonight is coming along.”
“Yes, milady.” She exited through the open door.
I was left alone in the room with the queen.
“Penelope, find me the pale blue dress in the wardrobe.”
While I was searching, pushing aside at least three green dresses, the queen said, “Hazel has reported that Lydia was running in the halls. She shouldn’t do that.”
I turned around and saw that Queen Alana’s eyes were twinkling with humor.
“How old is she?” Queen Alana continued.
“Lydia?” I said, returning to my task, my hand slipping on some yellow fabric. “Twelve.”
“Has she shown any signs of magic yet?”
“No,” I said, looking through a dozen pale blue dresses. Which one did she want? “But, her birthday will be soon.”
I lapsed into thoughtful silence as I selected a pale blue with short sleeves. My mother had told me that thirteen was the age in which magic was said to appear in young children. She never knew why this was. It had never surfaced in me. At sixteen, I was much too old for it. Lydia, however, was the right age.
“If she shows, I would like to introduce her to my magical advisor, Casimir.”
“That is a great honor, milady. I thank you.”
Casimir was a mystery to most of the servants in the palace. He had appeared one stormy night two years ago, offering the king his magical services. King Marcus was Queen Alana’s husband. He had scoffed at Casimir, telling the wizard to take his bag of tricks and depart at once. Unperturbed, Casimir had used a spell to calm the skies of their wrath. Impressed, the king accepted him as his magical advisor.
A little over a year ago, the king had gone off to stop an invading army. He drove them back into the sea from whence they came, but died from a stray arrow in the process.
Queen Alana had been in mourning for a year afterward. She took over the kingdom and had been a fair and just ruler ever since. She kept Casimir around for his magic and because he had been on the field with King Marcus at the time. He had tried everything to save the king, but to no avail.
I tried to imagine Lydia learning magic from Casimir. At once, I could see Lydia becoming a witch. She would have the power to do whatever she pleased and wouldn’t have to work as a handmaiden.
“Thank you,” I said again, handing the pale blue dress over. “I will mention this to Lydia when she returns from the village.” Speaking of which, nearly half-an-hour had passed. Where was she?
The queen smiled and patted my hand as Hazel stepped back into the room, accompanied by the third handmaiden, Viola.
Viola curtseyed; her eyelids drooped over her tired green eyes and her brown hair had come undone from its bun.
“My Queen,” she said in a strained voice. “I am afraid your dress is not complete as such.”
“Explain.”
“The fabric is sewn and hemmed, but lacks lace.”
“How much is missing?”
“We are almost complete. All that is left is the neck, but all the lace has disappeared.”
“It is most peculiar,” Hazel said. “Your ladyship sent me to buy lace only last week.”
I frowned. I had been with Hazel during that outing and I remembered what at the time had seemed like a mountain of lace.
“Could we have used it up on something else?” Queen Alana asked.
“It is indeed possible, Your Highness,” Viola said. “The seamstresses have been hard at work on your dresses for weeks.”
“Penelope,” the queen said. “Go down to the village and buy more lace from Mrs. Wilkins’s shop.”
I curtseyed and departed, shutting the door quietly on the sounds of the queen’s continued conversation with Viola and Hazel.
I paused, staring down the hallway where I had seen the strange figure, but she had gone. The only evidence of her presence was the brightly burning torch. I skirted around it, making my way to the staircase and descending to the first floor. The pendant my mom had given me before she died two years ago thudded against my chest. The pendant was shaped like a star and in the center, like a large egg, sat a ruby.
I kept it on a chain around my neck, under my dress. The ruby must have cost a fortune and would have easily allowed me to quit my position as handmaiden, but I couldn’t do it. My mother’s voice echoed inside my head whenever I thought of selling it.
“This pendant is very powerful, Penny,” she had said. She had still been quite young, only in her mid-forties, but an unknown sickness had claimed her. “It cannot fall into the wrong hands. Keep it safe for me.”
I had for these last two years. Whenever I was sad or lonely, I would feel for the chain and smile at the pendant’s familiar weight.
The cook greeted me as I entered the kitchen and headed for the servant’s exit. “Morning, Miss Penelope.” A pleasant, plump woman, she smiled good-naturedly at me, handing me a bit of bread.
“Good morning, Mrs. Appleton.” I grabbed a basket from the table.
The air was crisp and full of the songs of birds as I made my way from the castle grounds. A black and fluffy cat watched me from a low bench. A paw was dangling over the edge. A pattern like an “M” could be seen on its furry forehead. The cat was rather small, unlike the old cat Constance Wilkins owned, who also had an “M” on her forehead, but Petals the Maine coon was at least twice the size of this cat.
I had always liked cats and this one appeared to be a stray, though a well-fed stray. I left the piece of bread beside it on the bench, noticing as I did so that the cat’s front half was raised slightly higher than its back, like it was lying on something. I shrugged and continued on my way.
I followed the cobbled street into the village of Kelton. Near the edge of the village was the tanner’s, where the smell from the cured hides assaulted my nose, making me cough. Beside the tanner, was the cobbler, his shoes visible through the window.
Rounding the corner, I stumbled to a halt. There, across from where I stood, was the figure in dark red that I had seen in the castle. A strange silver glow was coming from her right hand. My stomach plummeted. Not again.
A tense moment passed as we stared at each other. I took a deep breath and walked forward. The figure started across the street toward me as well.
“Who are you?” I demanded, stopping several feet from her. “Why are you following me?”
“I can see it now. You are definitely the right descendent, Penelope Bogg.” She turned her right hand slightly and I saw a mass of silver and black. Before I could ask what she was talking about, a voice hailed me.
“Greetings, Penelope.”
I turned to see the widowed owner of the general store, Mrs. Georgina Wilkins. She was a short woman, who was hardly taller than myself. She was watering her flowers in the window box in the front of her store. Mrs. Wilkins once told me that she thought the window box made her store feel more homey.
“Good morning, Mrs. Wilkins,” I said, turning back toward the girl. She had disappeared again.
“Are you here for anything, dear?”
“…Yes, the Queen sent me to buy lace.”
“Lace? I believe I have some in the back,” Mrs. Wilkins said, leading me into the store. Within seconds, she had brought out the same white lace that was supposed to adorn Queen Alana’s unfinished dress.
After I had paid for the lace and placed it in my basket, I left the store, thanking Mrs. Wilkins.
“Don’t forget, dear,” she called before the door slammed shut. “Constance and I will be in Dewdrop Village next week. Old Mr. Pewter will be looking after the store.”
As I crossed the square back toward the castle, I heard laughter from behind Mrs. Wilkins’s shop. It sounded like Lydia, so I decided to investigate.
Lydia and Constance Wilkins were standing, talking to a tall man with black hair and mismatched eyes. The left eye was brown, while the right was green.
“… and that, girls, is why you should never taunt a wild mushroom,” the black-haired man said. “Ah, the elder Miss Bogg. Welcome.”
“Greetings, Master Casimir,” I said with a curtsey.
Casimir smiled and gave a long, sweeping bow. “Your sister and her friend have been a most enjoyable audience.”
Lydia giggled. “I liked your story of the evil wild mushroom.”
“Did you really slay it with nothing more than an onion stalk and the dye from a flower?” Constance asked in awe.
Casimir winked at me. “Don’t forget the magic.”
“Lydia, its time to return to the castle,” I said. “Malcolm will be back soon and I have to get this lace back to the Queen.”
“Allow me,” Casimir said, pulling out his staff. He muttered something under his breath and the lace disappeared from my basket. “Queen Alana should be receiving it momentarily, along with a message claiming credit for you.”
“Thank you,” I said, frowning that he hadn’t asked me first.
“My pleasure. I must be going now. I told the Queen I would be joining her for the gala this evening. I will be seeing you shortly, Miss Bogg, girls.”
As he twisted and vanished in a gust of gray smoke, Lydia turned to me. “That was amazing. I wish I had magic.”
I glanced at the empty basket. Queen Alana would be expecting me soon. “You might,” I said. “You still have a few weeks. If you do show, the Queen would like you trained by Casimir himself.”
Lydia looked excited, but I couldn’t help shivering, even though it was a warm, clear, day.