Through the Last Door by J.A. Jaken
Book Title: Through
the Last Door
Author: J.A. Jaken
Publisher: White Owl Publishing (December 16, 2014)
Book Length: 378
pages
Genre: Gay, Fantasy,
Romance, Dystopian, Adventure
Book Blurb:
When Kaori
Sansa’s father dies, he is forced to return home to claim the throne as the
rightful heir of the country of Kazure. In the aftermath of his father’s death,
he learns that the country he loves is riddled with corruption, and is hovering
on the brink of war. Will he be able to hold the kingdom together despite the
odds that are stacked against it, and somehow unlock the buried powers of
Shinja, the Sacred Beast of Kazure?
Author Bio:
J.A. Jaken has been writing m/m fiction for more than ten
years. She got her start in the profession writing slash fanfiction, where she
has published numerous stories under the pen-name Rushlight. Over the years she
has written short stories and novels in genres ranging from science
fiction/fantasy to gothic horror to modern detective mysteries. Outside of
writing, her interests include studying foreign languages, riding horses,
practicing martial arts, and collecting medieval weaponry.
Author Contact Links:
Email: rushlight75@gmail.com
Giveaway:
Through the Last Door eBook
Buy Links:
Excerpt:
"You really should try to eat something, High
Lord," Ishaya said.
Kaori closed his eyes. The smell of the food --
while undoubtedly well-prepared and mouth-watering -- was making him feel ill.
But if he hadn't eaten all day, then neither had Hunter. And Hunter would not
eat before he did; not out of a misguided overabundance of fealty, but because
he was as much of a mother hen as Ishaya was.
Reluctantly, he selected a plate of light
crackers and cheeses, adding a pile of thin-sliced veal at Haku's insistence.
The food clung to his throat when he tried to swallow, without any taste at
all. He nodded gratefully when Haku handed him a cup of spiced wine to wash it
down with.
"You, too," he said, frowning in
Hunter's direction. "Don't tell me you aren't hungry."
Hunter made no move to accept the offer. "I
want to be sure you have enough to eat first," he said. "You
need--"
"There's more than enough here to feed all
of us if we want it, and half the grounds staff besides. Eat, damn you."
A small smile touched Hunter's face as he slid
down to sit at Kaori's other side and reached for a plate, piling it high with
sliced veal and fruit. "If you insist." There was an ironic twist to
the words.
The familiar byplay made something inside
Kaori's chest loosen. Hunter, at least, wasn't treating him any differently
because his father had died. Taking comfort from the shoulder brushing so
warmly against his, he finally found the courage to look up and meet Ishaya's
eyes.
"There are probably things I need to
know," he said. The words felt heavy in his mouth. "Affairs of state,
or... something." He felt lost.
Ishaya smiled kindly at him. "There's no
need for you to worry about that tonight, High Lord." His eyes were soft.
"Rest assured that all is running as it should within your kingdom. For
tonight, at least, you have no responsibilities other than spending time with
your friend."
"I'd like to hear about that university in
Gyre," Haku said, selecting a grape from the platter and taking a slow
bite from it. "What was it like, living over there? Was it horrible?"
"No, it wasn't horrible at all. Gyre is
really a wonderful place. Let me tell you about the campus where I was
living...." Kaori was glad for the delay in having to face his new reality
for that much longer. He felt more relaxed now as he talked about the country
he had spent the past three years visiting, the things he'd learned there, the
culture, the language, the people. In return, Haku told him about the trials
he'd passed in order to become a member of the Palace Guard, and some of the
campaigns he'd been on. Kaori was unsettled to realize that his friend had
significant battle experience now, and had even killed on occasion, when it had
become necessary. That image jarred discordantly with the image of the
childhood companion he carried around in his mind's eye. In many ways, this new
Haku seemed a stranger to Kaori; the thought made him feel sad. But time moved
on, and people changed. That was the way of the world.
At length, he began to feel quite sleepy. He
realized with some surprise that he had eaten more than he thought he'd be able
to.
"Your room has been prepared," Ishaya
said, drawing his attention, "if you'd like to retire for the night."
Kaori caught himself in the middle of another
yawn and ducked his head embarrassedly. He really was very tired. The thought
of going to sleep as if nothing untoward had happened disturbed him, but at the
same time he wanted it desperately, wanted the dark and the temporary oblivion
it offered.
"Yes," he said, sighing. "I think
I'd better." He smiled, feeling very much aware of his friends sitting
around him like a balustrade, like armor, sitting with him so he wouldn't have
to be alone on this night of all nights. "Thank you."
He got up to walk out of the room, but stopped
before he reached the doorway. Turning around, he met Haku's eyes and asked,
"Did my father suffer at all?"
Haku hesitated before replying. "It wasn't
easy for him," he said at last. "But what is, in this life?"
Ishaya leaned forward in agitation.
"Haku!" he said sharply, with a disapproving frown. "There was
no reason for him to know--"
Haku shrugged, unimpressed by the other man's
ire. "We shouldn't get into the habit of lying to him. Life is hard, and
it's only going to get harder." He glanced in Kaori's direction, his gaze
contemplative. "Especially for him."
The words sent a wave of coldness washing
through Kaori, but he nodded agreeably enough. "Thank you, Haku."
Feeling numb, he left the room.
He'd taken nearly five full steps before he
realized that Hunter had fallen in beside him. Glancing at the man irritably,
he said, "You'd better get some sleep, too."
"Of course." Hunter's tone was
nonchalant. It occurred to Kaori that he'd never once seen the other man sleep.
He just always seemed to be there, watching over him.
"Seriously, Hunter." That thought
worried him, for some reason. "I don't think you have to worry about
anyone trying to assassinate me here in the palace tonight."
"No," Hunter said agreeably. "You
should be safe enough here."
"So get some rest. Please."
Hunter's eyes were extraordinarily dark when
they looked at him. For the first time, Kaori wondered if he was mourning
Akashi's passing, too. Had the two of them been close at all? They must have
been, for Akashi to have assigned Hunter the task of protecting his only heir.
"I will," Hunter said after a moment's
pause. "Promise me you'll get some sleep as well. Don't just lie awake,
worrying."
It had been nearly three years since Kaori had
last slept in a room alone. Having a roommate had been troublesome for him at
first, but he'd swiftly grown accustomed to the sound of another breath in the
darkness next to his own. All of a sudden, he missed Ben so poignantly it
brought a physical ache to his chest.
"Yes," he said, wondering if he
sounded half as insincere as he felt. "I promise."
They walked in silence the rest of the way to
Kaori's room. At this hour, there was no one else out and about in the
corridors. The emptiness of the palace was unsettling, as if it were inhabited
by nothing more than ghosts, or memories. Kaori wasn't sure which of the two
would be worse.
He paused outside the door to his bedroom when
he reached it, staring hard at the elaborate whorls etched into the polished
wood. At his side Hunter waited patiently, as if sensing that he needed to find
the courage to speak.
"Everything's changed," he said at
last. There was no one else he could have made such an admission to, not even
Haku. "And I don't think... I don't think I can be what they need from
me."
"Nonsense." Hunter's tone was kind.
"You've spent the past two years -- nearly three -- studying politics and
economic stratagems. You're already more educated than your father ever hoped
of being."
"My father was a great warrior."
"It takes more than war to rule a
country."
"I'm too young. The lords of the Council
are going to laugh at me if I try to tell them what to do."
"I assure you they won't."
"They'll be right to. I don't know
anything. I mean, I do, but it's all book knowledge. I don't know anything about their fears,
about the issues they're facing."
"You'll learn. The important thing to
remember is that you aren't alone. We're all here for you, and we're rooting
for you. We'll help you all that we can."
Hunter. Haku. Ishaya. Kaori smiled slightly at
that reminder. "I'm probably going to fall on my ass."
The corner of Hunter's mouth curled upward.
"If you do, you'll pick yourself up again. You'll make mistakes, you'll
learn from them, and life will go on. Your father made more than his fair share
of them."
That made Kaori raise his head, surprise
widening his eyes. The thought that his father might have been fallible rocked
the foundations of his world.
After a moment, he asked, "Do you miss
him?"
For a moment, it didn't look as if Hunter was
going to answer. Then he turned away with a small sigh, so soft Kaori almost
couldn't hear it.
"I think you have the potential to be a far
greater ruler than your father ever had a hope of being," he said, without
looking at Kaori's eyes. "I think people are going to assume, at first,
that you might be just like him... and that they'll be pleasantly surprised
when they find out you're not."
Kaori turned those last statements over in his
head and tried to determine if, taken as a whole, they amounted to a compliment
for him, or for his father. He decided he was too tired to come to a coherent
conclusion and that he'd do best to just let it go for now.
He slid the fingers of one hand over the surface
of his door, feeling the familiar warmth of it slide in through his skin.
"Promise me," he said, staring down at his hand. "Promise me...
you aren't going to change. Promise me you'll never treat me any differently
because of... of what I am."
Hunter turned to look at him then, surprise at
the words tightening the skin between his brows. A moment later, his expression
softened. "Is that an order, High Lord?"
Kaori frowned. "No. It's not. It's only a
request."
Hunter nodded seriously. "Then
unfortunately, I'm going to have to decline. I can't promise never to change. I
don't know anyone who could do that." When Kaori opened his mouth to
speak, he said, "But I will promise always to treat you as I have in the
past."
"Like an obsessive mother hen, you
mean," Kaori said, subsiding with a grin.
"If you'd like to think of it that
way." Hunter's eyes sparkled. "But seriously, Kaori. You don't have
anything to worry about. No matter what happens, I'll always be by your
side."
It was ridiculous, how much comfort that promise
gave him. Kaori was struck by the sudden urge to ask the other man to go into
his bedroom with him, just so he wouldn't have to sleep alone.
Flustered, he turned back toward his door.
"Go get some sleep, then. You promised."
"I did." Hunter lifted a hand and
ruffled Kaori's hair, his palm settling in a warm, heavy weight on the top of
his scalp. "You go to sleep, too."
Kaori repressed a shiver. "I told you I
would." He pushed open the door and stepped into his room, feeling
strangely bereft when the other man's hand fell away from his hair.
He didn't look back when he closed the door.