CAMILLA DARTED BEHINDÂ Synton, praying they would be able to exit the room before the hexed painting did whatever it was about to do.
But it was too late.
too late.
An inhuman screech rent the air. Her body felt suddenly hollow, as if giving life to the hexed object had taken something from her in return.
Camilla grabbed Syntonâs arm at the exact moment he reached back for her, as they tried to take in whatever vileness sheâd set loose.
From what she could tell, it was enormous, crouched or hunched before them, a dense shadowy form with glowing crimson-orange embers for eyes.
In all her years, in all her nightmares, Camilla had never seen the like.
Not in the stories her mother and father had told. Not even in the places her mind had roamed.
Whatever it was, she understood that it wasnât the throne itself; it had been the hexed thing living inside the throne, using its physical form.
Fire raged around them, growing stronger, wilder, like its shadow master.
Its hatred was palpableâits fury unmatched.
Camilla sensed it wanted to burn the entire estate, the whole city, until nothing but ash remained. Destruction. Cruelty. Chaos. Who knew how many years it had plotted revenge, locked within the confines of its prison? Maybe the old stories had it wrong, maybe the witch had hexed the throne to keep this creature far from the world. Maybe her hatred wasnât a threat so much as a protection.
Truth was often lost or rewritten over the centuries.
âWhatâs happening?â Camilla shouted, her voice swept away by the next gust of sulfuric wind.
Synton squeezed her hand but didnât comment.
What was there to say?
The world was breaking and re-forming into a hellscape before their very eyes.
Camillaâs mother had been less obsessed with the mythology of the other worlds than her father, but she had held fast to one rule: Pierre should never open his talent to a demon, and sheâd raised Camilla that way too.
Camilla never would have painted the throne if sheâd known what it truly was. And there was no way anything that malevolent was anything but demonic.
Winds howled in the most frightening manner, the air growing uncomfortably hot, smelling of death and ash.
Embers seared her skin, falling like some cursed snow from the devilâs domain.
Terror seized her. This would not end well.
Camilla needed to get herself and Synton to safety. If she destroyed the paintingâ¦
She inched forward, determined toâ
âStop.â
Synton barely raised his voice, but the creature heard him all the same. It stilled. And so did Camilla.
From deep within the bowels of the Underworld they now stood in came a sinister laugh.
It was layered, as if multiple voices in varying tones spoke at once.
âYou dare to command me?â the hexed demon seethed.
Synton completely ignored the violence in the creatureâs tone. He took a step toward it as if it should fear âYou have information for me.â
Camilla wanted to throttle Synton. Did he not notice how much danger they were in?
Before she could pull him back, the demonic creature lurched forward, drawing in deep breaths like it was scenting them.
âSo much power. So much⦠sin.â
The shadowy form exhaled slowly, its eyes flaring a brighter red.
âYour Highnesssssss.â
Camilla went perfectly still.
Its head swiveled in her direction. In the next moment, it was her mind, speaking to her silently.
it said.
she thought back at it.
he Inside her mind the Hexed Throne laughed wickedly. It had seen her realization.
it hissed, delighted, It wasnât talking about Synton. The creature was speaking of someone much, much worse. And she felt it again, then: that strange hollowness from before, and she knew her talent was gone. Her heart pounded wildly. Heâd stolen her talent, her very essence.
She didnât have long to dwell on that horrid revelation; she gasped as a crown shimmered to existence on top of Syntonâs head. Emerald-tipped, beautiful.
âAhhh.â The throne purred, speaking aloud again. âPrince of Envy. There you are. In hiding no more.â
âWhat?â Confusion warred with Camillaâs terror, winning for a moment.
Without glancing in her direction, Synton strode toward the throne, magic cracking around himâ
âwith each mighty step.
If the throne was power, then, impossibly, the alleged prince was the source from which it sprang. She could feel the magic unspooling from him now.
Camillaâs heart pounded a furious beat. What Synton? Surely he couldnât beâ¦
âTell me what I want to know.â Syntonâs tone was insolent, demanding. Royal. âNow.â
The flames on the throne shot upward, a towering inferno of fury and chaos that the elemental creature danced before. The hexed object raged at the command, but just as Camilla was convinced it would strike out, it whispered, âHush! Those goose, lose no text.â
There was a beat of silence before the lord reacted.
âSend my regards to your king.â
Syntonâs arm lashed out, and it shrieked, its many voices screaming in unison as a gleaming blade pierced through the shadow-like creature with ease.
Faster than it had begun, the fire, the embers, the wind, and the throne itself winked out of existence. In fact, the very painting sheâd created had turned to a pile of ash. The only thing that remained was the emerald-tipped crown sitting atop Lord Syntonâs head.
The throne had called him the Prince of Envy.
A charge he hadnât denied.
Camilla watched as he finally shifted to meet her accusing stare, his expression cold, without an ounce of remorse. His gaze was fathomless, unflinching. Inhuman.
It all made sense, suddenly.
There was an ancient loneliness in his eyes because he was no mortal, brokenhearted man. Lord only knew how old he was. How many lives heâd lived, how many loves heâd lost.
If he was even capable of such an emotion. Maybe heâd simply shown her what she wanted to see, manipulated her to the full extent of his power.
Prince of Envy.
Now that the initial shock had passed, Camilla could think more clearly.
Most in Waverly Green believed the tales of the seven demon princes to be fiction, but she should have known better. She was well aware that it was unwise to write something off simply because youâd never seen it.
Many strange things were often found hiding in plain sight. The world was a vast, curious place filled with curious creatures. People rarely showed their true selves. But in all the stories sheâd heard, demons couldnât lie.
She laughed then at the irony, the sound anything but amused.
âLord Synton. Clever. You must have had a good laugh at all our expenses.â Her tone hardened along with her expression. âYou claimed you and Vexley were nothing alike, but here you are, nothing but a ruthless liar. And a miserable demon.â
His hand fisted at his side, his gaze darkening.
A spark of temper ignited in his eyes now, burning away the iciness.
One thing had been true in his charade, at leastâhe did not appreciate being likened to Vexley.
âNot so miserable when Iâm in your bed, Miss Antonius.â His gaze mocked now. âYou got a small taste of my powers.â
Despite her anger, heat lanced through her. No wonder heâd pushed her so thoroughly out of her mindâhe was a prince who literally ruled over sin. No human in this whole world could compete with his skill in debauchery; since the stories were apparently true, the princes had practically invented the term. He had owned her with his tongue, and like every other fool who ended up in his sheets, sheâd willingly sold her soul for that taste.
He smiled then, a quick brutal flash of teeth.
âI sense your arousal, Miss Antonius. Even knowing what I am, even hating that I lied, you want me.â
Attraction or not, it would be a cold day in hell before she invited him into her bedchamber now.
Another thought hit Camilla.
âWhich brother did I meet?â she demanded.
At the ball, Syn had said there were seven brothers total. Truth as far as she knew. Probably the only bit of truth sheâd been granted this whole time.
The Prince of Envy narrowed his eyes.
That look was definitely the sin he ruled over rearing its head. Good. Now she knew one of his weaknesses.
âLust.â
That certainly explained things.
âWhich brother is Alexei?â
âHeâs my second-in-command.â Envyâs gaze glittered, dark and ominous. âThink twice before you threaten to bite him again, pet. Alexei is a vampire, and I promise heâll bite back much harder. Although his venom can give you untold pleasure. Youâd come as you died and beg for more with your last breath.â
Camilla knew he was trying to shock her, but most fiction spoke of vampires and their dangerous seduction, so the fact that Alexeiâs venom could create orgasms to die for was hardly the most inconceivable part of her evening.
Which was rather remarkable.
âSince our bargain is now complete, I highly doubt Iâll encounter your pet vampire again, Your Highness.â Camilla drew herself to her full height, wishing she werenât still wearing the damn painterâs apron. But at least using his true title seemed to rankle the prince.
God save her. The Prince of Envy. A fairy-tale villain sprung to life, and heâd had her convinced sheâd experienced heaven in his devilish arms the night before.
With nothing left to say to the lying scoundrel before her, Camilla headed toward the door, but paused with a sinking heart. She leave. To win her talent back, she needed to play the game. The throne was very clear on that. She wished she could claim she had no idea what the throne had meant, but she did. She subtly tried to summon her talent⦠to no avail.
Camilla took a deep breath. She knew very little of how the games worked, but sheâd heard legends of their deadly stakes before, and of the sneaky game master himself. Losing her talent, her ability to paint, was the one thing heâd known sheâd never endure, the one move he could make that guaranteed sheâd play.
And if she was joining a current game, then odds were that was what SyntonâEnvyâdamn it, whoever he was, had been up to all along. She felt her anger rising, but she reminded herself that if all this was true, then she needed Envy. At least until she figured out what she had to do next. Or she found another player toâ¦
She closed her eyes. Of course. Lord Garrey. Recalling how Synton had helped him meet his end, she wasnât sure it would be a good idea to let the demon prince know he had a new competitorâher.
And itâd be an even worse idea to let him find out sheâd kept her own secret all along too. For now, sheâd not reveal anything about her stolen talent, either. Heâd become suspicious.
What was one more secret, anyway?
When she opened her eyes again, Envy was standing directly before her, looking dangerous.
âDo you know what the throne said?â
âA bunch of gibberish.â She tried to say it calmly, but her heart pounded so hard she worried heâd hear it.
âYou are proving my point beautifully, Your Highness,â she managed.
âIt was a clue.â Envy looked briefly offended. âAn anagram.
Deciphered it says, .â
Camillaâs mouth snapped shut.
The prince didnât miss a beat. His smile was victorious.
She kept her face blank. Her game and his were truly intertwined.
âSo you see, my darling,â he continued, âyou have unwittingly become a part of the game Iâm playing. A game I have spent many years waiting to win.â
He had no idea how correct he was about that.
With his free hand, he made to reach for her, then dropped it before making contact, a serious look overtaking his face.
âI might have lied to you about my name and title, but you have to understand, I will use any means necessary to win.â Then he gave her a wolfish smile. âAnd I love being a sinner too much to ever be a saint.â
âNo one would nominate you for sainthood.â
âAnd be glad of that. Saints donât typically kill to protect their investments.â
âIs that what you think I am?
investment?â
âI think youâre delaying the inevitable and wasting time.â
âPerhaps I want you on your knees, apologizing before I decide what to do.â
His expression turned dark with sinful promise.
âIâve been on my knees for you. If you want me there again, just ask. But if you expect an while Iâm down there, youâll be disappointed. At least in that regard.â
She gave him a withering look but said nothing.
âChoose to accompany me, or donât, Miss Antonius. Either way, youâre coming with me to House Sloth.â
Heat coiled low in her belly. Most inconveniently. She be aroused by the damned brute.
Camilla cursed that wretched little deviant inside her, the one who purred seductively at the villain for his unbridled vices and mocked the hero for his unshakable virtues.
Life would be so much simpler if she would fall for the male whose moral compass was as dependable as the North Star.
But helping Envy was the key to helping herself now. For better or worse, they were partners in this game, no matter that he didnât know that. At least not yet.
âSince you need me for whatever the next clue suggests,â she said at last, âI want time to prepare, at least.â
Her tone was firm, her stance clear. This would be a negotiation, or sheâd find another way to play the game.
Envy looked her over. âAn hour.â
âTwo.â
He stared at her a long moment. His expression was carved from stone, but she swore she saw the faintest flicker of respect before he blinked it away.
âTwo hours,â he agreed, gritting his teeth. âEat, bathe, dress warmly. Weâll leave precisely at midnight.â
She graced him with a single nod.
He held the studio door open for her. âCamilla?â
She paused on the threshold, glancing back.
âIf you run, I will chase you.â
She saw how serious he was. Envy would pursue his goal ruthlessly.
Part of her was intrigued by the intensity of wanting something so badly that no moral line would go uncrossed. A male that driven, that focused⦠fascinated her on the most basic level.
She spun around, heading for her chamber before he could see the tiny thrill she felt at that dangerous vow.