eese kicked, but Keen was being a bastard and holding her tight. He carried her from the room of fighting Fae. âLet me go!â
âWe must get you out of here,â he said, his voice strained with what sounded like fear and a bit of desperation. âAfter the outburst that got her daughter killed, Portia will have your head.â
âTheda is queen. Or she will be as soon as this is all over.â
âTheda is dead.â
That was what heâd said earlier. Reese squirmed some more to get out of his hold. âShe canât die. Sheâs Fae; Theda will heal.â
He set her on the ground in one of the corridors inside the palace and grabbed her shoulders. âTheda is dead. Fae are almost immortal, unless the injury or abuse is severe.â
Reese couldnât read Keenâs feelings the way she could everyone else, but that didnât mean he was without any signs of emotion. Sheâd heard the fear and strain in his voice, but now she saw it in his eyesâand that undid her.
âNo, no, it canât beâ¦â She went numb.
She didnât object when he grabbed her hand and urged her to run with him down the hallway, up two flights of stairs, and to the end of another hallway. And then they were rushing through a door and past flashing lightâspinning and whirling through what could only be a portal.
Reese fell on her butt, and Keen would have landed on top of her if it hadnât been for his quick reflexes that had him dodging her at the last moment.
They were outside. In the town sheâd traveled to with her friends. The cobblestones, the gas lamps⦠âWhat are we doing here?â
âHiding you.â At some point during their mad dash through the palace, Keen must have grabbed a cloak, because he threw it at her. âPut it on and do not show your face.â
The air outside was cool, and Reese shivered. Sheâd shaken for days when she first arrived in Tirnan. Keen had told her it was a part of her gaining her magic. This shaking wasnât from magic, though; it was from adrenaline, from worry over her friends, and from the fear that what Keen had said was true. Theda was dead.
What would happen to Elena? Who would rule New Kingdom? Leaving Portia in charge was unacceptable. The woman was using the Fae code of honor against them.
Keen helped her with the cloak, pulling it down low over her eyes and covering her hair. He grabbed her hand. âYou are my pet, should anyone ask.â
âYour ?â
He stopped and turned to her, squeezing her hand. âYour position at the palace was precarious. Theda murdered Portiaâs daughter tonight. Portia will have you all slain, do you understand? I need you to do as I say. I cannot fight you and save you at the same time.â
âI donât need a man to save me.â
He sighed. âHere, in Tirnan, you do. But I must also help Elena. Will you cooperate so that I may help your friend?â
She hated that he was right. âYes. Of course. Where are we going?â
âTo Luciferâs Larder.â
âThe brothel? Is that why you want me to tell people Iâm your pet?â
âLuciferâs Larder has lodging. You will be safe there. No one will touch you if they believe you are with me.â
âBut they saw me last time. They know Iâm Halven.â
âIt was not a Halven who killed Beatrice. By the time the details are worked out, Iâll have moved you somewhere safe.â
âThereâs just one problem. Why are you helping me at all, when you should be helping Elena? Or, better yet, Portia? You know, that lady youâve pledged to protect?â
âElena has Derek. He will get her out of the kingdom.â
âAnd Portia? Youâre supposed to be protecting .â
He sidestepped a muddy puddle and guided her around it. âPortia isnât in danger at the moment. The fighting has ceased.â
âHow do you know?â
He cut her a look. âIâm listening.â
âWeâre here.â Keen opened the door to the tavern and ushered her across the room. It wasnât as busy tonight. In fact, only a couple of patrons occupied the space. Which made sense, because Reese could swear sheâd recognized several people fighting for Theda from her previous visit to the tavern.
A proprietress with light brown hair pulled into a tight bun came out from behind the counter. She was wearing a sturdy gown similar to what Reeseâs seamstresses wore. Kind of conservative for a brothel owner.
âWe need a room,â Keen said.
âCertainly.â The woman tapped a bell on the counter, and a young man scurried out. âWatch the customers,â she told him.
The proprietress led them to a back hallway and up a narrow staircase. She pulled out a large key ring and unlocked a door at the end. The room was simple, with a large bed, a small chest of drawers, and what looked like a toilet curtained off. âWill you be needing food?â
Reese shook her head.
âNothing for now,â Keen said.
He gave the woman some sort of token or tip, Reese wasnât sure, but as soon as the woman pocketed it, she quickly left the room and closed the door behind her.
Reese pulled off the cloak and covered her face with her hands. Everything had gone so horribly wrong.
She looked up at Keen, who was staring at her, concern on his face. âWe have to help Elena. You need to go after herâfind them. Help them with Thedaâ¦â
He walked over and very slowly pulled her into his arms. She closed her eyes and sank into his warmth. They shouldnât be touching like this, but she didnât care about or right now.
Even if she scoffed at the notion of needing it, she always felt so safe and protected with Keen.
Why him? The one she could never have.
He pulled back. âI will find the others and bring them here.â
She nodded and watched him walk to the door.
âLock it behind me.â He pointed to an extra key on a side table.
And then he was gone.
After about an hour of moderate silence, in which Reese paced the room and picked off the last of the red nail polish sheâd applied weeks ago in the Earth realm, she heard crying. A muffled, keening cryingâand multiple footsteps coming up the stairs.
She pressed her ear to the door. Voices of men, womenâand not just any women. She heard .
Reese threw open the door to find her friend walking beside a soldierâ¦who was carrying her motherâs still body.
It was real. Theda was gone.
Elena looked up, tears streaming down her cheeks. The magnitude of sorrow pouring off her best friend had Reeseâs chest aching.
She crossed the hall and wrapped Elena in her arms, squeezing her tightly. There was nothing she could say. Nothing she could do to make it better.
âThis way.â Keen motioned to a room down from Reeseâs. He must have gotten a second set of keys from the proprietress.
He unlocked the door, and the handsome soldier holding Theda strode inside and gently sat on the bed with Theda in his arms. Reese had seen the man fighting alongside Theda earlier. And the way he was looking at her nowâthe mix of emotions⦠He loved her. Reese wasnât certain what kind of love, but she suspected the everlasting, unrequited kind.
The soldier brushed a lock of pale blond hair off Thedaâs forehead. She was covered in bloodâfrom the stab wounds in her torso.
Reese swallowed and turned to Derek. âWhat happened?â
Elena sat beside the soldier and leaned down, touching her forehead to her motherâs.
Camille had entered silently behind them and now faced the wall, her arms wrapped around her chest. Anguish, despair, confusionâall rolled off her the way they did everyone else in the room.
Derek stepped back, bringing Reese with him. âTheda saved Elena, but the girl she subdued⦠She didnât survive. And neither didââ He looked at Theda.
Reese pressed a fist to her mouth. âItâs my fault. I read Beatriceâs emotions before she acted.â She turned to Elena. âI thought I was helpingâ¦â
Elena looked up, but she appeared to be in shock, her face expressionless.
Tears filled Reeseâs eyes. âIâm so sorry.â
âI heard Beatriceâs thoughts at the last minute as well,â Keen said. âYou and Theda saved Elena. Theda knew what she was risking by attacking Beatrice, and she chose to save her daughter.â
Derek rubbed his forehead. âThe attack on Theda happened so fast, as if a switch had been flipped. Once the guards turned on her, she had no hope. Too fastâit all happened too fast. I couldnât get to her in time.â
Elena bent over her mother, her arms trembling. But she glanced up, some of the daze cleared from her eyes. âIt wasnât your fault, Derek. Or yours, Reese.â She stared down at her mother and cradled the queenâs head. âThere was always riskâto all of us.â
Reese walked over and sat beside Elena.
Elena looked up at the soldier holding her mother. âWhat do we do now?â
He finally pulled his gaze from Theda and looked out at the room. âWe give her a proper burial.â His voice choked on the last word.
Elena leaned over her mother again and kissed her forehead, her hands shaking. After a moment, she stood and peered around the room, looking panicked. âKeen? I donât know what to do. With my mother goneâ¦â
Though Elenaâs expression was panicked, her emotions were subdued. Depressed.
Keen was leaning his shoulder against the wall with his head bent. He looked at her now. âYou know what to do, Elena.â
She swallowed and rubbed her eyes. âI canât go through with it.â
He eased away from the wall. âI am loyal to her majesty, but you have a claim to the throne, just as Derek took over Old Kingdom once his father passed.â
Derek muttered an oath. âAre you saying Elena and I could be ruling opposing kingdoms?â
âHas it ever been any different?â Keen asked. âYou were the Halven prince of Old Kingdom, and now you are king. Elena was a princess to the rightful queen, and now she is queenâshould anything happen to Portia.â
Derek paced the room. âIâll give up the kingdomâIâll stay and help Elena.â
âDerek,â Elena said, âthatâs crazy.â
âShe must win it back first,â Keen pointed out. âAnd this is where I leave. I cannot help you and be true to the present queen.â
Reese had been listening to the back-and-forth, but at this she stood. âYouâre leaving?â
His lips were stiff, and he wouldnât look her in the eye. âAn agreement has been arranged. As soon as I return to the palace, my engagement becomes official.â
âYou said you didnât want it. And after everything thatâs happened tonight⦠Why?â
âThe queen insists.â He gave her a hard, unfathomable look. âWithout the betrothal, tensions between the kingdoms will rise. If I marry Radnorâs Fae daughter, the queen feels she can negotiate with Old Kingdom.â
âWhat do you mean, negotiate?â Derek said. âAs far as I know, Iâm still in charge. The only person she should be negotiating with is me.â
âReeseâs father is also of noble blood and next in line to the throne,â Keen said. âHe will challenge your rule unless I marry his daughter. After losing Beatrice, Portia is bereavedâgrasping. She believes I can convince you to renounce your claim to the throne and bring peace between the kingdoms.â
âYou mean let you rule,â Derek said. âAnd if I donât want to play nice with you or Portia?â
âI must kill you.â
âNo!â Elena yelled. âYouâre still my bodyguard.â
âI am not,â Keen said darkly. âI work for her majesty.â
âIf thatâs true, why are you helping us?â Elena asked bitterly.
He glanced at Reese, and so did everyone else. âIt is time I leave.â
âI donât understand.â Elena looked between Keen and Reese. âWho is he supposed to marry?â
Reeseâs heart felt heavy as she waited for Keen to walk away. This time for good.
He would marry another. Wouldnât be there for her anymore. Sheâd told him she didnât need him to protect her, but she him at her side. Wanted to argue with him, and kiss him, andâ¦
Reese straightened her back, answering the question Keen wouldnât. âHeâs to marry my sister, Illa Radnor.â