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  Cold Flame

  A Royal States Novel

  Susan Copperfield

  Cold Flame

  A Royal States Novel

  by Susan Copperfield

  Leaving behind her royal life should have solved most problems for Rachel of New York. While wandering the Royal States buys her peace for a while, her sister’s suicide drags her back into the cutthroat world she’d left behind.

  The RPS hunting her down to deal with her sister’s body is bad enough, but one nameless bachelor at a wedding in Illinois changes everything.

  Again.

  With the help of a sole RPS agent, Rachel attempts to build a new life for herself in the west. With her mental health crumbling under the pressure of remaining in hiding and dodging a crown she doesn’t want, she’s running out of time. If she doesn’t choose her future, someone will choose it for her.

  She never anticipated how far Ethan of California would go to win her—or that behind the fiery beast lurking within her is a talent that will forever change the world.

  Content advisory: this novel contains potentially triggering subject matter, including the realities of suicide, depression, and other mental health issues. Proceed with caution.

  Copyright © 2020 by Susan Copperfield

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Contents

  1. As I didn’t want anyone to find the ashes and ruins of her life, I erased even the smoke.

  2. I didn’t need to impress anybody, so why not wear used clothes?

  3. It was the little things in life.

  4. Like hell my talent wasn’t suitable for California.

  5. My brother reigned as the king asshole over all other assholes.

  6. Caller ID was my friend.

  7. It’s not crap.

  8. I needed more help than even a therapist could provide.

  9. You’re going to be busy.

  10. You’re just a stalker right now

  11. Lucky cats and rats.

  12. Apparently, the scale lied.

  13. I have no idea what I’m doing.

  14. I’m not sure your brothers are impressed with you.

  15. What do you mean they come in different sizes?

  16. Insanity is accurate enough.

  17. But I wanted to take over a kingdom.

  About Susan Copperfield

  One

  As I didn’t want anyone to find the ashes and ruins of her life, I erased even the smoke.

  Cold flame begins following the events of huntress.

  I burned my sister’s body in the heart of the Rockies, and as I didn’t want anyone to find the ashes and ruins of her life, I erased even the smoke. When the RPS had come to me, the last direct member of New York’s royal line they could approach about her body, it had become my responsibility to deal with the final consequence of her actions.

  The RPS didn’t want to keep a royal on ice forever, and no one else wanted to deal with her.

  That pissed me off. I hadn’t liked what she’d done, but to be the only one to care at all would never sit well with me.

  It served as yet another bitter reminder of what it meant to be a royal from New York. Somewhere along the way, we’d forgotten how to be human.

  I meant to change that, somehow.

  Sylvia’s suicide didn’t surprise me. Little did anymore. Stripped of her magic, stripped of her rank, and stripped of everything that had made her who she’d been, it’d only been a matter of time. It didn’t matter if she’d deserved the punishment.

  Nobody deserved to be completely abandoned, not even her.

  It was well enough the RPS had found me wandering through the mid-west when she’d let go and moved on to the next life. Upon notification, I’d agreed to see Sylvia’s body, but I’d agreed to nothing more. I supposed the RPS had been so used to flat-out rejections regarding her they’d been happy to take what they could get.

  Upon reaching the morgue where they were storing her, it’d only taken me two hours to claim her frozen body, a bag, and one of the RPS’s black SUVs. Technically, I’d stolen all three, but they’d get the SUV back at some point.

  They’d just have to live without the body or the bag.

  “You’ve really made a mess of it this time, Sylvia,” I informed my sister’s ashes. As expected, she didn’t answer. I wondered if I could’ve done something—anything—to prevent the tragedy that had slowly ripped the royal family apart.

  My parents, in their stupid, prideful way, wanted a man to take over New York upon their deaths. My brothers deserved some credit; while they took after my father more than I liked, they’d learned bitter lessons from our sister.

  Only one of my brothers would make a decent king. Anyone with a pair of eyes would recognize there was only one New Yorker who could go anywhere in the Royal States or abroad and be welcomed with a smile and warmth—the kind of warmth our magic couldn’t provide.

  Personally, I thought Ian deserved the bloody burden of rulership, but I’d never gotten along well with him in the first place. He’d thrived on stepping on my toes and attempting to drown me every time I stepped out of line or stole his beef jerky.

  If the greedy bastard had agreed to share his jerky, I wouldn’t have had to steal it.

  Sylvia’s ashes settled to the ground, and even the relentless mountain winds refused to touch her, leaving my sister with only me.

  Sometimes, life truly wasn’t fair. Had things been different, I would’ve been one of those willing to forget about her and everything she’d done, but the truth haunted me.

  If I didn’t take care of her, no one would. I expected to share her fate down the road. The RPS still kept tabs on me and would for another few months, but I’d all but abdicated in earnest. I remembered my parents’ threats when I’d walked out the door years ago, and I believed them.

  Us New Yorkers were wretched bastards on a good day, and it’d be a cold day in hell before either would forgive me for leaving. If they’d been in a good mood, they would’ve waited a full twenty-four hours before notifying the RPS I was no longer a part of the royal line.

  If they were in a bad mood, as usual, they’d wait until I finished their dirty work and finished removing the evidence of my sister’s existence before officiating what they should’ve done years ago.

  I didn’t make a good New Yorker.

  I cared too much.

  Ian didn’t make a good New Yorker, either, but if my parents had any sense in their thick skulls, they would recognize he was the key to the kingdom’s future survival. He even had his eye on a woman who’d make an excellent queen, assuming everyone remembered magic needed to come second to things of more importance.

  Ian’s magic would more than make up for his woman’s lack thereof. Hell, if anything, she might make it so future royal children wouldn’t live every day expecting to go up in flames, taking a city block out with them when they went.

  New York didn’t need any more damned magic.

  I waited for the wind to change its mind and finish what I’d started, scattering Sylvia’s ashes. My mother claimed I could out stubborn a rock, and I sat down on a nearby boulder to wait.

  It took a while, but the wind finally accepted what no one else would.

  I stayed until all that remained of my sister was a memory and a dark stain on the pale mountain stone.

  With my final royal duty done, I dumped the RPS’s SUV off the road near the mountains, left them a note telling them they could take New York’s crowns and shove them up my parents’ asses f
or all I cared, and headed west.

  I made it half an hour of failed hitchhiking attempts before the same damned SUV I’d dumped rolled to a halt next to me. A smug-ass RPS agent, hot even by New York standards, leaned out the driver’s side window. “Need a ride, Your Highness?”

  “Stalker RPS,” I complained, eyeing the man who couldn’t have been a part of any detail for long; from what I could recall, agents started as early as nineteen, and the good ones stuck around until they retired or could no longer pass the physicals. “Did they strike the literacy requirement for RPS agents?”

  “No. I’ve just decided against reading it until later. I’ll do that after I get you where you’re going, wherever that might be.”

  “I’m anonymously heading to a kingdom out west.”

  “California, then. I have some news that might change your opinion on some things, and we’ve been asked to pass along a message from Montana.”

  Well, screw me with a stick sideways. “Montana?”

  “You look tired. Why don’t you get on in and take a load off? There’s a diner down the way. If you don’t tell anyone, I won’t.”

  “Since when did the RPS hire humans?”

  “The way I see it, ma’am, it takes a damned good human to do what you’ve done, and it only seems fair to treat you like you treat others.”

  He spoke of my sister, and I appreciated the way he used the word ‘human’ to mean something a little more than a walking, talking bag of flesh and bone. “Got a name?”

  “Terry, Your Highness.”

  “Rachel. I already told my parents to shove their crowns before I wrote that pissy little letter. Seems like my first name is the only thing you need to call me. So, keep your last name to yourself. Tit for tat, or what have you.”

  Terry nodded, and he went through the standard hesitation of an RPS dealing with a principal who wanted to be called by their name for a rare change. “All right, Rachel. I’m from Montana’s RPS. I can show you my badge if you’d like.”

  Damn. Montana really wanted to get a message to me if he was sending one of his agents out to follow me around like some official stalker. “Why is Montana stalking me?”

  “You claimed your sister’s body without question or hesitation, and His Royal Majesty had instructions for the first New Yorker to accept their duty.”

  Sylvia would haunt me for a long time, I just knew it. I bet the bitch would linger as a ghost, determined to make more of a mess of my life thanks to her misguided attempts to make Montana’s king hers.

  It would’ve taken more than a miracle to make that man love anyone other than his queen. My brother had been the first to see that. Sighing, I circled the vehicle, yanked the door open, and climbed inside. “I’m doing this under protest.”

  “Under protest is fine. What kind of dinner would you like? You look tired, and we’ve learned that the best way to put a royal at ease—and prevent trouble—is to make sure they’re well fed.”

  “Something normal. Something that tastes like a real person made it.”

  “I’d take you to Texas, but I fear the royal family might try to adopt you.”

  My brows shot up at that. “Pardon?”

  “His Royal Majesty of Texas is a bleeding heart who firmly believes he can fix everything with good food. Her Royal Majesty of Texas has carefully cultivated this behavior, mostly to protect her easy access to his cooking. But you’ve been extended invitations.”

  “I’ve been what?”

  “Extended invitations. The RPS reported to all monarchs about Princess Sylvia’s death, and once you took her body, they were also notified that you handled her burial. Protocol,” Terry replied, his tone apologetic. “There’s a list of kingdoms willing to take you in should you decide you need some time away from New York.”

  “Pass. I’m going to slip into California as a refugee.”

  Terry blinked and stared at me, both of his brows rising. “You’re going to try to enter California as a refugee?”

  “I’ll pass their dumbass test. I’ve taken the dummy tests, and I passed it every time, thank you. I’ve read into the entire process. They won’t even do a face scan. All I have to do is tell them I want to test in, and that’s exactly what I’ll do.”

  “Well, taking an RPS vehicle to the border won’t work, then. I will make arrangements, if that’s what you wish to do.”

  “It is.”

  “Would you consider a slight detour?”

  “A slight detour?” Royal life annoyed the hell out of me on a good day, and a slight detour meant I was about to be majorly inconvenienced. Judging from Terry’s tone, if I knew what’s good for me, I’d go along with the slight detour quietly.

  “You’ve been invited to a wedding. His Royal Majesty of Montana felt you were deserving of something positive. Have you been following politics?”

  “No. I’ve been hitchhiking.” For years. I surfaced every now and then to pull out a few hundred in cash so I could buy new clothes, but thanks to my talent, I hunted and foraged without needing to do more than find somewhere to sleep to survive.

  It’d been more than six months since I’d last slept in an actual bed, and most days of the week, I liked it.

  I didn’t feel like a princess anymore.

  “We’re aware. His Royal Highness of Illinois is getting married in a few weeks. We can arrange for you to slip into the wedding. If you’d like to remain anonymous, it’s possible with the help of an illusionist.”

  Time had done its work, and more often than not, I didn’t recognize myself in a mirror, not that I crossed many mirrors. “My own mother wouldn’t recognize me at this point. I don’t have a dress, and I wouldn’t wear one anyway.”

  “I’m sure we could find something appropriate for you to wear that isn’t a dress. Perhaps a professional skirt? Slacks?”

  “You’re serious.”

  “I will make arrangements for His Royal Majesty of Montana to transfer funds from your private accounts to an anonymous account, so you have access to your money without being quite so easily tracked. The card will look like a credit card, in case anyone observes you using it. We’ve found people make assumptions when credit cards are used, which makes it easier to hide principals who don’t want to be noticed.”

  Withdrawing money had gotten me in trouble in the first place, and I appreciated an opportunity to get on with my life. Having cash wouldn’t do me any good in California, as the kingdom liked when their refugees fully relied on them, but I could have the card for a rainy day. “You have my attention.”

  “I thought that might work. So, some good food that hasn’t been tortured until it became a gourmet meal for dinner. Then a nice drive to Illinois for a wedding? Afterwards, I’ll take you to California in an unmarked car registered in Montana. We have policies for transferring anonymous refugees into California, so I can get you there without anyone being the wiser.”

  Like most in my family, I was a fool, but I’d be a fool who was doing something for me and only me.

  In that regard, my sister and I were birds of a feather. We had mastered the art of burning bridges.

  “All right. I have no idea why anyone would want to invite me to a wedding, but all right.”

  “If it makes you feel better, His Royal Majesty wasn’t exactly planning on inviting you; he wanted to issue the invitation to the first decent member of the New York royal family that isn’t your brother.”

  “Why not my brother? Which one?”

  “Prince Ian; he was issued an invitation to represent New York, as he’s the most tolerable official royal at present.”

  That made sense. My brother could charm a rattlesnake if he wanted, and a little like me, he didn’t make a very good New Yorker. “He is basically the best of a lot of bad choices,” I acknowledged. Ian would hate ruling anything more complex than his closet, but I thought he’d do a good enough job.

  Had things been a little different, I would’ve done a better job, but that made sense.
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  I cared too much.

  Somehow, I’d dodged the family tradition of unnecessary cruelty. I still didn’t understand how I’d realized, from even an early age, that most of my family indulged in behavior that went against everything decent people did.

  Power and wealth ruled most, and they didn’t care who they crushed on the way to securing more power and wealth for themselves.

  Her Royal Majesty of Montana was a perfect example of the exception to the rule, and Her Royal Majesty of Alaska came a close second. It worried me New York women were rising to become powerful royalty—royalty with a good reputation.

  People might start looking at—or for—me again because of it. Despite having told Terry I didn’t follow politics, some still managed to creep in every time I passed through civilization.

  “There are some who believe he’s a good choice from a bad lot, but that there is another New Yorker who should be held in even higher regard. It seems only fair to warn you that you can try to hide, but you won’t be able to hide forever. New York needs a suitable monarch, and His Highness is not the first choice. Retreating to California might work, though. If you play every last one of your cards right. I would advise against holding your breath.”

  “And what’s your part in this game, Terry? I’ve been around long enough to know you RPS agents play the system almost as much as us royals.”

  “New York officially revoked your detail due to your disappearance a year ago, likely as part of a ploy to make recovering you easier. Their ploy, to date, has failed. Part of this is because Montana opted to take over your detail due to what he feels is suspicious circumstances. I’ve been following you around for the past year, and officially, Montana, as the controlling agency behind your detail, has made it clear any New York RPS agents interfering would be a direct attack against Montana’s sovereignty. If New York wanted to retain you as a princess, they shouldn’t have cut off your detail. As such, I’ll handle your transportation up until you arrive in California, and I will give you several ways to contact me. I will move into the kingdom so I can be close should you require me. Officially, I’ll be functioning as a Montana contact in California to handle small RPS matters, which will be used to disguise my real reason for being in the kingdom.”