Mistress of the Night Read Online Free Page A

Mistress of the Night
Book: Mistress of the Night Read Online Free
Author: Don Bassingthwaite, Dave Gross
Pages:
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table, Dhauna Myritar twisted around to greet her.
    Feena only barely managed to bend in respect. Somehow, it seemed, her muscles had forgotten how to move and her eyes had forgotten how to blink.
    The High Moonmistress of Moonshadow Hall was all but lost within the silver lace and blue silk of her vestments, her head and face overshadowed by a high, stiff collar. For as long as Feena had known her, Dhauna had been a cheerfully plump priestess often mistaken for a woman twenty years younger than her actual age. But no one would underestimate the woman's age again. Her brown skin had faded to the color of crumpled parchment, and her dark gray eyes had lost their luster. She was not merely thin, but so gaunt that her gown was loose on her wasted frame.
    "Mother Dhauna..." Feena murmured in shock.
    "Oh, stand up!" Dhauna's gesture was sharp, making her irritation plain. "It's the vestments. They make me look like a starving dwarf. Life waxes, life wanes—time
    catches us all, eventually." She swatted at Julith's hands as the priestess attempted to brush her fine, white hair. "It looks fine, Julith!" Her eyes focused on Feena again. "You took your time."
    Feena finally blinked and fumbled for the excuse she had spent so long fussing over. The shock of the changes in the high priestess had her shaken. Was that what Mifano had been trying to warn her about?
    "I couldn't come any sooner* High Moonmistress," she managed. "It's been a busy month. Two of the village women were..." Her carefully rehearsed words began to slip away from her. She clutched at them desperately, "...were sick. And one was pregnant with a difficult boy."
    Dhauna grinned and replied, "In my experience, all boys are difficult."
    "He had a jaundiced leg," said Feena hastily. She grimaced as soon as the words were out of her mouth.
    "And the rest of him?" asked Dhauna.
    "Twisted," Feena said.
    Dhauna laughed.
    Julith stood behind the high priestess, a simple circlet of silver bearing the disk of the full moon in her hands, staring open-mouthed at their exchange. Dhauna stretched around and glanced at the circlet.
    "Not that one," she ordered. "The moon's road tiara! You know that!"
    "But Mother Dhauna-"
    "The tiara!" As Julith laid down the circlet, Dhauna turned back to Feena. "Why didn't you come, Feena? The truth this time."
    Feena looked down at her feet. Above the soles of her sandals, they were very dirty.
    "I didn't want to face Moonshadow Hall and Yhaunn again," she confessed. She glanced up. "You know I don't belong here."
    "You're happier in the fields and woods, I know. It's your nature, just as it was your mother's nature. Even more so, I suppose." Dhauna winced as Julith set an
    ornate confection of a tiara—six crescent moons surrounding a full moon—on her head. The white puff of her hair sank under the weight and Julith reached for a comb to fix it in place. Dhauna ignored her, keeping her gaze on Feena. "But I called for you, Feena." A pleading tone entered her voice. "I called for you at every turning of Selune's face."
    "I know," said Feena. "I heard every call."
    "Then why didn't you come?"
    "I couldn't just drop everything and abandon my village!" Feena protested. "The people do need me."
    "I know that! I gave you time," Dhauna's voice rose in accusation.
    Feena's rose as well. "Eventually!"
    "When I realized you weren't going to come quickly enough."
    " 'Be here for the full moon of Eleasias,' you said." Feena spread her arms. "Here I am!"
    "Just barely! Ow!" The High Moonmistress let out a shriek. She clapped one hand to her head and whirled around in a cascade of silk and lace to snap at Julith. "What are you doing?"
    The young priestess stood with the tiara in one hand the comb in the other, and a look of dismay on her pale face. "The moon's road tiara is too heavy, Mother Dhauna. Your hair's too fine to support it, even with a comb—"
    Dhauna's face twisted and her eyes came back to life with sudden rage. "Then give me the full moon
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