CAMILLA STARED ATÂ her reflection in the mirror, at once foreign and familiar.
Her face was mostly unchanged. If anything, her eyes were a bit more metallic, the silver polished to a gleam. Her hair shimmered with a brightness it hadnât had before, like moonlight on a cold winterâs night.
Her ears⦠there was no denying what she was, no hiding. Any notion she might have harbored about returning to Waverly Green was gone now.
Not that she wanted to return anymore. After experiencing the Seven Circles and even the terrors of Malice Isle, Camilla had seen the breadth of the world. The idea of returning to Waverly Green without her family, without⦠anyone⦠no longer appealed.
But she wanted Bunny. Needed to go back and retrieve her sweet cat. Say a proper goodbye to Kitty, too.
She touched the soft tips of her elongated ears, now foreign to her.
The choice to be glamoured hadnât been Camillaâs.
Not much in her life had been, in fact. She was a child when everything familiar was suddenly wrenched away. Her home, her family, her realm. One night she was a high princess of the Wild Court, the next she was a mortal child without magic in Waverly Green.
Her mother, Prim Róis Fleur, had kidnapped her from the Wild Court for reasons she would probably never fully understand. Ever since, Lennox had been trying to tempt her back. Wanting her to take her throne.
To Camilla, it had been one of the worst games her parents had ever played.
But one piece still didnât fit: Why had Prim Róis stolen the locket, and then left it with Camilla? And why had Lennox gone through so much to get it back?
More puzzles, more riddles, more deception. Such was the way of her family.
Not all had been a lie, though. Her mother had become fond of Pierre. Had even used her true middle name, offering him some honesty.
It hadnât taken much magic for her mother to convince Pierre that the young child had been hisâsheâd given him false memories, of her being pregnant, of the first few years of Camillaâs life. Of him teaching Camilla how to hold a paintbrush nimbly between her fingers.
All lies, pretty little magical glamours.
But Camilla had truly loved him. Staying in Waverly Green, running Pierreâs galleryâthat had finally been Camillaâs choice. With her human father, Camilla had learned how powerful love was. How fear could never hope to compete.
Camilla wondered, though, if her mortal father had known. If there had been a piece of him that could see through Prim Róis and her Fae magic. She feared that that was what ultimately drove him to his obsession and madness.
But perhaps it was also what led Pierre to fill her head with fairy tales. Heâd been the one to warn her of the Fae and their bargains. Heâd taught her about the vampire prince. And the seven ruling Princes of Hell.
Camilla did not believe in coincidences.
Her fingers brushed the soft curve of her ears again.
Would her mortal father hate this form?
No. Heâd love her anyway. Pierreâs love was unconditional, without games or strings.
She dropped her hands into her lap.
Envy was not Pierre. He would not care for her now that her truth was revealed.
âPrincess?â Wolf called from outside her door. âYou indecent?â
His tone held a note of teasing, and maybe a little hope. He would wait for her.
Heâd told her as much when heâd walked her to her bedroom suite. And that ought to comfort her, knowing she wouldnât be alone. Envy was only ever going to be hers for one night. That was truer now than it had been before her deception was revealed.
âPrincess? Youâre making me think thoughts that are downright filthy.â
Camilla finally managed a smile, the first since sheâd arrived here.
âCome in.â
He slipped into her chambers and gave her an appreciative once-over. âBold.â
âI tried.â
She knew he didnât mean the cut of the gown, which plunged to form a deep V to her navel in both the front and the back.
Camilla had chosen the deepest shade of green in the wardrobe sheâd found in her suite. It might not matter, but even if Envy wasnât there to see it, she wanted the Wild Court to know it hadnât all been a lie.
Her father, however, would not be pleased.
She assumed heâd hate the emerald-and-diamond ring sheâd strung on a necklace, to rest over her heart, even more.
Wolfâs gaze paused on the emerald. âHeâs an ass.â
âHeâs hurt,â Camilla said. âI should have told him who I was.â
Wolf snorted. âIâm sure he was nothing but honest with you.â
âIâm not responsible for anyoneâs actions but my own.â Camilla exhaled. âMy human father taught me better. I was afraid. I let fear of losing my talent forever rule my actions first. Then as I grew⦠closer to Envy, I feared how heâd react to my truth. He hates Unseelie royals.â
âI repeat, heâs an ass.â
âI imagine you arenât here to discuss my love life,â she said, smiling weakly. âHas the king summoned me?â
Wolf nodded slowly, his gaze drifting around her private suite.
Windows took up three of the four walls, and the ceiling was also made of glass, allowing the moonlight to cascade in like a silver waterfall.
When his attention came back to her, he seemed uncertain.
âPlay your fatherâs game, Camilla. Or things will go very badly tonight.â
Sheâd already played enough of Lennoxâs games, but she nodded to keep from speaking the lie aloud.
Wolf looked her over, a frown tugging at his lips, then escorted her to court.
âGood.â Lennox glanced at Camilla, his gaze narrowing on her gown. He didnât miss the subtle of her color choice. âYouâre right on schedule.â He motioned to the guards flanking him. âBring her here. Iâm ready to begin.â
All but the new head guard descended on her. He hung back, holding an object under a velvet cloth, surely something nasty to threaten her with if she didnât do as her father said.
She felt Wolf stiffen beside her, didnât dare to look in his direction. Her father was watching her every move, the cunning gleam speaking volumes. She hadnât failed to notice that no one else was present in the Crescent Court now. An oddity. When she was a child, the room, shaped like a crescent moon, was always filled with Fae.
Now it was still. Silent, save for the handful of guards, Camilla, Wolf, and the Unseelie King. Perhaps they were all still indulging outside on the terrace. That didnât feel rightâ¦
She glanced around again, her unease growing.
The silver floor had been designed to reflect the moonlight streaming in through the glass ceiling, but for some reason her father had had the roof covered.
Another ominous, foreboding sense of worry gnawed at her.
The Wild Court worshipped the moon, bathed in its light, celebrated it. That her father had covered its magic⦠didnât bode well for her.
She allowed the guards to usher her to her fatherâs throne. An easel and a small wooden table had been set up near the foot of the dais, holding a strange assortment of art supplies.
A paintbrush, charcoal, silver paint. Black, gold, and iridescent Fae colors not available in the mortal world. The Fae colors drew her eye, made her drift closer despite the prickle of trepidation she felt.
âYou will paint the key and locket together.â
Lennox held the portal key up in one hand, and the silver locket swung in his other fist.
Camillaâs heart raced. Pierre had become obsessed with that portal key. It looked so much like a regular skeleton key, with an emerald set in its base, but to her it had become so much more. She wanted to steal it back, hold it to her chest, and promise her mortal father that sheâd never let it out of her sight again.
âCamilla.â Lennoxâs voice was laced with disapproval. âI thought the mortal adoration was an act earlier. Tell me you donât actually harbor feelings for that pet your mother played with?â
Wolfâs warning fluttered through her mind.
. Camilla bit the inside of her cheek, stopping herself from snapping at the king.
Instead, she stared at the portal key and the locket, trying to puzzle out why heâd want them painted together. What nefarious plot had he hatched now? Asking him outright would only enrage himâthe Unseelie Kingâs orders were to be met with obedience.
Stillâ¦
âHow are they meant to be painted together?â she asked, the question innocent enough.
Lennoxâs hair shifted from silver to white to black, his mood rapidly changing.
âA chain, a rope, a ribbon of silk,â he said, shrugging. âYour talent will guide you. All that matters is that the two are bound.â
Camilla knew exactly what she wouldnât paint, then. But her defianceâ¦
She swallowed hard, then picked up the paintbrush, her gaze once again drifting to the shimmering, ethereal Fae colors. Oneâlavender, blue, silver, undulating in iridescent wavesâwas magic in liquid form. She dipped the tip of her brush in it, then accepted the portal key and her locket, laying them both on the little wooden table, on top of each other, her pulse suddenly racing.
âOh, one more thing.â
Lennoxâs voice was a dagger dipped in poison, pinning her in place.
âShould you not do as I say, Iâll destroy this.â
He motioned to his head guard, who unveiled what heâd been holding. It was meant to torture her, all right. Except it wouldnât simply hurt her. It would destroy Envyâs court.
There, clasped in the guardâs hands, was what had to be the Chalice of Memoria. The cup was etched over with runes, the magic dulled but waiting.
Camilla swallowed the sudden lump in her throat. Her father hadnât let Envy leave yet. Hadnât yet ended the game. No matter that she didnât want to bind the portal key and the locket together, she couldnât harm Envy or his court again.
Lennox watched her closely, the corner of his mouth tipped up. He loved it when his plan unfolded perfectly, had bet sheâd fall into line.
And worst of all, he was correct.
Outmaneuvered, cornered, and without choice, Camilla dove into that well of magic, the talent that came from other worlds, just like her.
She closed her eyes, allowing her muse to take over, to show her how the object wished to be bound. Thin Fae-colored chains spiderwebbed around the key and the locket.
Giving herself fully to her talent, Camilla painted each thread in the magical color, going so far as to add little droplets, like dew on a spiderâs web. The stem of the portal key slowly fused with the locket, the silver liquefying and seeping until the two objects melded into one.
It wasnât a painting, but a new tangible object.
A shocking, horrible truth broke free, tossing Camilla backward in a magical blast. Her body flew several feet across the throne room before she crashed and fell into a heap, her head smashing against metal bars.
She could scarcely see the here and now; she was still half lost to that strange power. Last time, Envy had been there, shaking her back to reality. Now she was on her own.
And what sheâd seenâ¦
âHexed object.â It was all she could manage to whisper. On their own theyâd been just a portal key and her locket. Bound, they became something more, something other.
Camilla commanded herself to focus, to find her reality.
Cool metal pressed against her palms.
No.
was sprawled on a metal floor. The Crescent Courtâs floor wasnât metal.
She blinked, trying to force herself into the here and now.
A clang rang out, drawing her attention up.
âNo.â Her voice shook. Heâd caged her. And hung her far above the throne room, where her cage swayed dangerously with each of her movements.
It was a fine prison. A mockery of a cell.
âLet me out.â
Lennox didnât bother to look at her; he strode down to where sheâd left the bound key, plucking it up and turning it over.
âDo you have any idea what this is now capable of?â he asked.
Nothing good, clearly.
Camillaâs hands wrapped around the metal bars, burning from the iron. She wrenched them back, then tried again, shaking the door. For doing as heâd commanded, her father had imprisoned her in iron. It was unfathomable.
âYou cannot cage me.â
Lennox gave her a pitying look. âI just did.â
âWhy?â she asked, uncaring that she wasnât meant to question the king. âI did as you asked!â
His hair turned black and his eyes gleamed white.
âIs that what I didâ¦
you? Like a nice mortal friend. A loving, human father. Or did your give you an order? One you would have refused had I not given you a not to?â
He advanced on her, his gaze steely and void of any pretense of civility.
âYou mistake your place in my court, daughter. You were invited to come home.
. First with a friend I sent for you, in case you needed one of our kind. Next, I sent Wolf. In case you required a mate. You chose to stay in that mortal cesspool, lowering yourself. Pretending you were a human.â
Anger unleashed her tongue. â
didnât choose to leave in the first place. Or have you forgotten your little game with Mother? You made me a changeling. Then you condemn me for choosing to stay where Iâd been just another game piece. I never would have left the Wild Court.â
âThe queen stole you,â Lennox snapped. âYou should have proven your loyalty to our court when I summoned you the first time.â
âMy loyalty? It seems like I am simply your little pawn, moving around your game board based on your whims.â
His smile was crafted of nightmares. He held the key up. âThis is the Silverthorne Key, little pawn. Do you know what it does?â
Camilla felt as if sheâd taken a hit. She slowly shook her head, an awful realization emerging. Puzzle pieces clicked into place. Pierreâs obsession with the portal key, with keeping it in Waverly Green. The locket her mother told her never to let go.
Silverthorne Lane. The dark market in Waverly Green. The place where Unseelie solitary and exiled Fae bargained with mortals.
Somehow, some way, the key and the dark market were connected. And if Camillaâs growing fear was correct, she had likely created a direct link from the mortal world to this court.
âNo.â
Lennoxâs gaze turned ebony again, his hair shifting back to its godlike silver-white curtain.
âI see you understand perfectly well. Silverthorne Lane a realm line. This key? It unlocks that doorway and leads it straight toâ¦â
He walked to a silver mirror leaning against the wall, oversized, wide. Large enough for even the tallest human to pass through.
âHere.â
Lennox stuck the key directly in the center of the mirror, the glass rippling like liquid as he twisted the hexed object. Camilla stared, trapped in her cage, as the mirror flickered. Shadow and light, light and shadow. Images played across it, too fast to see clearly; then came sounds. Birds, people, carriages⦠the sounds of Waverly Greenâs bustling streets.
âNo,â Camilla said, again, rattling her cage. The iron burned, the pain a wild ache in her bones. âPlease. Leave them.â
Lennox glanced over his shoulder, his expression one of egregious delight.
âOne by one, little pawn, Iâll lure everyone from that city here. Weâre in need of fresh fun in the Wild Court. And once Waverly Green falls, weâll move on to the next. Now be silent.â
He cocked his head, then ran a hand over his clothing, magicking a new suit before her eyes. If Camilla hadnât known how dark and twisted he was, Lennox would have looked like a fairy-tale prince. Except this prince was a diabolical king and this cruel king wasnât interested in stealing hearts at allâhe wanted to break souls. Beaming with false kindness, he turned back to the mirror as the first few mortals stumbled through, bright-eyed and dreamy.
Widow Janelle, the Lords Harrington and Walters, and several other regulars from Vexleyâs circle stepped into the throne room.
Camilla pressed her hand to her mouth, biting back a scream. She knew these humans. Had attended parties and gatherings with them.
And they did not deserve the fate that awaited them here.
Their gazes swept around the chamber, then paused on her, on her Fae ears.
Camilla looked at them and screamed,