For some reason, Hunt had expected a stone dungeon.
He didnât know why, since heâd been in these holding cells beneath the Comitium countless times to deposit the few enemies Micah wanted left alive, but heâd somehow pictured his capture to be the mirror of what had gone down in Pangera: the dark, filthy dungeons of the Asteri, the ones that were so similar in Sandrielâs palace.
Not this white cell, the chrome bars humming with magic to nullify his own. A screen on the wall of the hallway showed a feed of the Comitium atrium: the one body spiked to the iron crucifix in its center, and the glass box, covered in dripping blood, sitting at its feet.
Justinian still groaned every now and then, his toes or fingers twitching as he slowly asphyxiated, his body trying and failing to heal his taxed lungs. His wings had already been cut off. Left on the marble floor beneath him.
Viktoria, her essence invisible within that glass box, was forced to watch. To endure Justinianâs blood dripping on the lid of her container.
Hunt had sat on the small cot and watched every second of what had been done to them. How Viktoria had screamed while Micah ripped her from that body sheâd been trapped in for so long. How Justinian had fought, even as they held down his brutalized body on the crucifix, even as the iron spikes went into him. Even as they raised the crucifix, and heâd begun screaming at the pain.
A door clanged open down the hallway. Hunt didnât rise from the cot to see who approached. The wound on his temple had healed, but he hadnât bothered to wash away the blood streaking down his cheek and jaw.
The footsteps down the hall were steady, unhurried. Isaiah.
Hunt remained seated as his old companion paused before the bars.
âWhy.â There was nothing charming, nothing warm on the handsome face. Just anger, exhaustion, and fear.
Hunt said, aware of every camera and not caring, âBecause it has to stop at some point.â
âIt stops when youâre dead. When everyone we love is dead.â Isaiah pointed to the screen behind him, to Justinianâs ravaged body and Viktoriaâs blood-soaked box. âDoes this make you feel like youâre on the right path, Hunt? Was this worth it?â
When heâd gotten Justinianâs message that the deal was going down, as he climbed into bed, heâd realized it wasnât worth it. Not even with the medwitchâs antidote. Not after these weeks with Bryce. Not after what theyâd done on that couch. But Hunt said, because it was still true, âNothingâs changed since Mount Hermon, Isaiah. Nothing has gotten better.â
âHow long have you three been planning this shit?â
âSince I killed those three drug lords. Since they told me about the synth and what it could do. Since they told me what kind of power it gave Danika Fendyr when she took it in the right doses. We decided it was time. No more fucking bargains with Micah. No more deaths for deaths. Just the ones we choose.â
The three of them had known there was one place, one person, who might get the synth. Heâd paid the Viper Queen a private visit a few days ago. Had found her in her den of poisons and told her what he wanted. Vik had the gold, thanks to the paychecks sheâd saved up for centuries.
It hadnât occurred to him that the snake would be in the Archangelâs pocket. Or looking for a way into it.
Isaiah shook his head. âAnd you thought that you, you and Vik and Justinian and whatever idiots would follow you, could take the synth and do what? Kill Micah? Sandriel? All of them?â
âThat was the idea.â Theyâd planned to do it at the Summit. And afterward, theyâd make their way to Pangera. To the Eternal City. And finish what was started so long ago.
âWhat if it turned on youâwhat if you took too much and ripped yourself to shreds instead?â
âI was working on getting my hands on an antidote.â Hunt shrugged. âBut Iâve already confessed to everything, so spare me the interrogation.â
Isaiah banged a hand on the cell bars. Wind howled in the corridor around him. âYou couldnât have let it go, couldnât serve and prove yourself andââ
âI tried to stop it, for fuckâs sake. I was on that barge because I realized â¦â He shook his head. âIt makes no difference at this point. But I did try. I saw that footage of what it really did to someone who took it, and even with an antidote, it was too fucking dangerous. But Justinian and Vik refused to quit. By the time Vik gave the Viper Queen the gold, I just wanted us to go our separate ways.â
Isaiah shook his head in disgust.
Hunt spat, âYou might be able to accept the bit in your mouth, but I never will.â
âI donât,â Isaiah hissed. âBut I have a reason to work for my freedom, Hunt.â A flash of his eyes. âI thought you did, too.â
Huntâs stomach twisted. âBryce had nothing to do with this.â
âOf course she didnât. You shattered her fucking heart in front of everyone. It was obvious she had no idea.â
Hunt flinched, his chest aching. âMicah wonât go after her toââ
âNo. Youâre lucky as fuck, but no. He wonât crucify her to punish you. Though donât be naïve enough to believe the thought didnât cross his mind.â
Hunt couldnât stop his shudder of relief.
Isaiah said, âMicah knows that you tried to stop the deal. Saw the messages between you and Justinian about it. Thatâs why theyâre in the lobby right now and youâre here.â
âWhatâs he going to do with me?â
âHe hasnât declared it yet.â His face softened slightly. âI came down to say goodbye. Just in case we canât later on.â
Hunt nodded. Heâd accepted his fate. Heâd tried, and failed, and would pay the price. Again.
It was a better end than the slow death of his soul as he took one life after another for Micah. âTell her Iâm sorry,â Hunt said. âPlease.â
At the end of the day, despite Vik and Justinian, despite the brutal end that would come his way, it was the sight of Bryceâs face that haunted him. The sight of the tears heâd caused.
Heâd promised her a future and then brought that pain and despair and sorrow to her face. Heâd never hated himself more.
Isaiahâs fingers lifted toward the bars, as if heâd reach for Huntâs hand, but then lowered back to his side. âI will.â
âItâs been three days,â Lehabah said. âAnd the Governor hasnât announced what heâs doing with Athie.â
Bryce looked up from the book she was reading in the library. âTurn off that television.â
Lehabah did no such thing, her glowing face fixed on the tabletâs screen. The news footage of the Comitium lobby and the now-rotting corpse of the triarii soldier crucified there. The blood-crusted glass box beneath it. Despite the endless bullshitting by the news anchors and analysts, no information had leaked regarding why two of Micahâs top soldiers had been so brutally executed. A failed coup was all that had been suggested. No mention of Hunt. Whether he lived.
âHeâs alive,â Lehabah whispered. âI know he is. I can feel it.â
Bryce ran a finger over a line of text. It was the tenth time sheâd attempted to read it in the twenty minutes since the messenger had left, dropping off a vial of the antidote from the medwitch whoâd taken the kristallos venom from her leg. Apparently, sheâd found the way to make the antidote work without her being present. But Bryce didnât marvel. Not when the vial was just a silent reminder of what she and Hunt had shared that day.
Sheâd debated throwing it out, but had opted to lock the antidote in the safe in Jesibaâs office, right next to that six-inch golden bullet for the Godslayer Rifle. Life and death, salvation and destruction, now entombed there together.
âViolet Kappel said on the morning news that there might be more would-be rebelsââ
âTurn off that screen, Lehabah, before I throw it in the fucking tank.â
Her sharp words cut through the library. The rustling creatures in their cages stilled. Even Syrinx stirred from his nap.
Lehabah dimmed to a faint pink. âAre you sure thereâs nothing we canââ
Bryce slammed the book shut and hauled it with her, aiming for the stairs.
She didnât hear Lehabahâs next words over the front doorâs buzzer. Work had proved busier than usual, a grand total of six shoppers wasting her time asking about shit they had no interest in buying. If she had to deal with one more idiot todayâ
She glanced at the monitors. And froze.
The Autumn King surveyed the gallery, the showroom stocked with priceless artifacts, the door that led up to Jesibaâs office and the window in it that overlooked the floor. He stared at the window for long enough that Bryce wondered if he could somehow see through the one-way glass, all the way to the Godslayer Rifle mounted on the wall behind Jesibaâs desk. Sense its deadly presence, and that of the golden bullet in the wall safe beside it. But his eyes drifted on, to the iron door sealed to her right, and finally, finally to Bryce herself.
Heâd never come to see her. In all these years, heâd never come. Why bother?
âThere are cameras everywhere,â she said, staying seated behind her desk, hating every whiff of his ashes-and-nutmeg scent that dragged her back twelve years, to the weeping thirteen-year-old sheâd been the last time sheâd spoken to him. âIn case youâre thinking of stealing something.â
He ignored the taunt and slid his hands into the pockets of his black jeans, still conducting his silent survey of the gallery. He was gorgeous, her father. Tall, muscled, with an impossibly beautiful face beneath that long red hair, the exact same shade and silken texture as her own. He looked just a few years older than her, tooâdressed like a young man, with those black jeans and a matching long-sleeved T-shirt. But his amber eyes were ancient and cruel as he said at last, âMy son told me what occurred on the river on Wednesday night.â
How he managed to make that slight emphasis on my son into an insult was beyond her.
âRuhn is a good dog.â
âPrince Ruhn deemed it necessary that I know, since you might be ⦠in peril.â
âAnd yet you waited three days? Were you hoping Iâd be crucified, too?â
Her fatherâs eyes flashed. âI have come to tell you that your security has been assured, and that the Governor knows you were innocent in the matter and will not dare to harm you. Even to punish Hunt Athalar.â
She snorted. Her father stilled. âYou are incredibly foolish if you think that would not be enough to break Athalar at last.â
Ruhn must have told him about that, too. The disaster that had been this thing between her and Hunt. Whatever it had been. Whatever using her like that could be called.
âI donât want to talk about this.â Not with him, not with anyone. Fury had disappeared again, and while Juniper had messaged, Bryce kept the conversation brief. Then the calls from her mother and Randall had started. And the big lies had begun.
She didnât know why sheâd lied about Huntâs involvement. Maybe because explaining her own idiocy in letting Hunt inâbeing so fucking blind to the fact that heâd led her around when everyone had warned her, that heâd even told her he would love Shahar until the day he diedâwas too much. It gutted her to know heâd chosen the Archangel and their rebellion over her, over them ⦠She couldnât talk to her mom about it. Not without completely losing what was left of her ability to function.
So Bryce had gone back to work, because what else was there to do? Sheâd heard nothing from the places where sheâd applied for new jobs.
âIâm not talking about this,â she repeated.
âYou will talk about this. With your king.â A crackling ember of his power set the firstlights guttering.
âYou are not my king.â
âLegally, I am,â her father said. âYou are listed as a half-Fae citizen. That places you under my jurisdiction both in this city and as a member of the House of Sky and Breath.â
She clicked her nails together. âSo what is it you want to talk about, Your Majesty?â
âHave you stopped looking for the Horn?â
She blinked. âDoes it matter now?â
âIt is a deadly artifact. Just because you learned the truth regarding Danika and Athalar doesnât mean whoever wishes to use it is done.â
âDidnât Ruhn tell you? Danika stole the Horn on a lark. Ditched it somewhere in one of her flying-high-as-a-fucking-kite moments. It was a dead end.â At her fatherâs frown, she explained, âThe kristallos were all accidentally summoned by Danika and the others who took synth, thanks to the black salt in it. We were wrong in even looking for the Horn. There was no one pursuing it.â
She couldnât decide whom she hated more: Hunt, Danika, or herself for not seeing their lies. Not wanting to see any of it. It haunted every step, every breath, that loathing. Burned deep inside.
âEven if no enemy seeks it, it is worth ensuring that the Horn does not fall into the wrong hands.â
âOnly Fae hands, right?â She smiled coldly. âI thought your Chosen One son was put on its tail.â
âHe is otherwise occupied.â Ruhn must have told him to go fuck himself.
âWell, if you can think where Danika unloaded it in her synth-high stupor, Iâm all ears.â
âIt is no trivial matter. Even if the Horn is long defunct, it still holds a special place in Fae history. It will mean a great deal to my people if it is recovered. Iâd think with your professional expertise, such a search would be of interest to you. And your employer.â
She looked back at her computer screen. âWhatever.â
He paused, and then his power buzzed, warping every audio feed before he said, âI loved your mother very much, you know.â
âYeah, so much you left a scar on her face.â
She could have sworn he flinched. âDo not think I have not spent every moment since then regretting my actions. Living in shame.â
âCould have fooled me.â
His power rumbled through the room. âYou are so much like her. More than you know. She never forgave anyone for anything.â
âI take that as a compliment.â That fire burned and raged inside her head, her bones.
Her father said quietly, âI would have made her my queen. I had the paperwork ready.â
She blinked. âHow surprisingly un-elitist of you.â Her mother had never suggested, never hinted at it. âShe would have hated being queen. She would have said no.â
âShe loved me enough to have said yes.â Absolute certainty laced his words.
âYou think that somehow erases what you did?â
âNo. Nothing shall ever erase what I did.â
âLetâs skip the woe-is-me bullshit. You came here after all these years to tell me this crap?â
Her father looked at her for a long moment. Then strode for the door, opening it in silence. But he said before he stepped into the street, his red hair gleaming in the afternoon sunlight, âI came here after all these years to tell you that you may be like your mother, but you are also more like me than you realize.â His amber eyesâher ownâflickered. âAnd that is not a good thing.â
The door shut, the gallery darkening. Bryce stared at the computer screen before her, then typed in a few words.
There was still nothing on Hunt. No mention of him in the news. Not a whisper about whether the Umbra Mortis was imprisoned or tortured or alive or dead.
As if he had never existed. As if she had dreamed him up.