Hunt ate only because his body demanded it, slept because there was nothing else to do, and watched the TV screen in the hall beyond his cell bars because heâd brought this upon himself and Vik and Justinian and there was no undoing it.
Micah had left the latterâs body up. Justinian would hang there for seven full days and then be pulled off the crucifixâand dumped into the Istros. No Sailings for traitors. Just the bellies of the river beasts.
Viktoriaâs box had already been dumped into the Melinoë Trench.
The thought of her trapped on the seafloor, the deepest place in Midgard, nothing but dark and silence and that tight, tight space â¦
Dreams of her suffering had launched Hunt over to the toilet, puking up his guts.
And then the itching began. Deep in his back, radiating through the framework now beginning to regrow, it itched and itched and itched. His fledgling wings remained sore enough that scratching them resulted in near-blinding pain, and as the hours ticked by, each new bit of growth had him clenching his jaw against it.
A waste, he silently told his body. A big fucking waste to regrow his wings, when he was likely hours or days away from an execution.
Heâd had no visitors since Isaiah six days ago. Heâd tracked the time by watching the sunlight shift in the atrium on the TV feed.
Not a whisper from Bryce. Not that he dared hope sheâd somehow find a way to see him, if only to let him beg on his knees for her forgiveness. To tell her what he needed to say.
Maybe Micah would let him rot down here. Let him go mad like Vik, buried beneath the earth, unable to fly, unable to feel fresh air on his face.
The doors down the hall hissed, and Hunt blinked, rising from his silence. Even his miserably itching wings halted their torture.
But the female scent that hit him a heartbeat later was not Bryceâs.
It was a scent he knew just as wellâwould never forget as long as he lived. A scent that stalked his nightmares, whetted his rage into a thing that made it impossible to think.
The Archangel of northwestern Pangera smiled as she appeared before his cell. Heâd never get used to it: how much she looked like Shahar. âThis seems familiar,â Sandriel said. Her voice was soft, beautiful. Like music. Her face was, too.
And yet her eyes, the color of fresh-tilled soil, gave her away. They were sharp, honed by millennia of cruelty and near-unchecked power. Eyes that delighted in pain and bloodshed and despair. That had always been the difference between her and Shaharâtheir eyes. Warmth in one; death in the other.
âI heard you want to kill me, Hunt,â the Archangel said, crossing her thin arms. She clicked her tongue. âAre we really back to that old game?â
He said nothing. Just sat on his cot and held her gaze.
âYou know, when you had your belongings confiscated, they found some interesting things, which Micah was kind enough to share.â She pulled an object from her pocket. His phone. âThis in particular.â
She waved a hand and his phone screen appeared on the TV behind her, its wireless connection showing every movement of her fingers through the various programs. âYour email, of course, was dull as dirt. Do you never delete anything?â She didnât wait for his response before she went on. âBut your messages â¦â Her lips curled, and she clicked on the most recent chain.
Bryce had changed her contact name one last time, it seemed.
Bryce Thinks Hunt Is the Best had written:
I know youâre not going to see this. I donât even know why Iâm writing to you.
Sheâd messaged a minute after that, I just ⦠Then another pause. Never mind. Whoever is screening this, never mind. Ignore this.
Then nothing. His head became so, so quiet.
âAnd you know what I found absolutely fascinating?â Sandriel was saying, clicking away from the messages and going into his photos. âThese.â She chuckled. âLook at all of this. Who knew you could act so ⦠commonly?â
She hit the slideshow function. Hunt just sat there as photos began appearing on the screen.
Heâd never looked through them. The photos that he and Bryce had taken these weeks.
There he was, drinking a beer on her couch, petting Syrinx while watching a sunball game.
There he was, making her breakfast because heâd come to enjoy knowing that he could take care of her like that. Sheâd snapped another photo of him working in the kitchen: of his ass. With her own hand in the foreground, giving a thumbs-up of approval.
He might have laughed, might have smiled, had the next photo not popped up. A photo heâd taken this time, of her mid-sentence.
Then one of him and her on the street, Hunt looking notably annoyed at having his photo taken, while she grinned obnoxiously.
The photo heâd snapped of her dirty and drenched by the sewer grate, spitting mad.
A photo of Syrinx sleeping on his back, limbs splayed. A photo of Lehabah in the library, posing like a pinup girl on her little couch. Then a photo heâd gotten of the river at sunset as he flew overhead. A photo of Bryceâs tattooed back in the bathroom mirror, while she gave a saucy wink over her shoulder. A photo heâd taken of an otter in its yellow vest, then one heâd managed to grab a second later of Bryceâs delighted face.
He didnât hear what Sandriel was saying.
The photos had begun as an ongoing joke, but theyâd become real. Enjoyable. There were more of the two of them. And more photos that Hunt had taken, too. Of the food theyâd eaten, interesting graffiti along the alleys, of clouds and things he normally never bothered to notice but had suddenly wanted to capture. And then ones where he looked into the camera and smiled.
Ones where Bryceâs face seemed to glow brighter, her smile softer.
The dates drew closer to the present. There they were, on her couch, her head on his shoulder, smiling broadly while he rolled his eyes. But his arm was around her. His fingers casually tangled in her hair. Then a photo heâd taken of her in his sunball hat. Then a ridiculous medley sheâd taken of Jelly Jubilee and Peaches and Dreams and Princess Creampuff tucked into his bed. Posed on his dresser. In his bathroom.
And then some by the river again. He had a vague memory of her asking a passing tourist to snap a few. One by one, the various shots unfolded.
First, a photo with Bryce still talking and him grimacing.
Then one with her smiling and Hunt looking at her.
The third was of her still smilingâand Hunt still looking at her. Like she was the only person on the planet. In the galaxy.
His heart thundered. In the next few, her face had turned toward him. Their eyes had met. Her smile had faltered.
As if realizing how he was looking at her.
In the next, she was smiling at the ground, his eyes still on her. A secret, soft smile. Like she knew, and didnât mind one bit.
And then in the last, she had leaned her head against his chest, and wrapped her arms around his middle. Heâd put his arm and wing around her. And they had both smiled.
True, broad smiles. Belonging to the people they might have been without the tattoo on his brow and the grief in her heart and this whole stupid fucking world around them.
A life. These were the photos of someone with a life, and a good one at that. A reminder of what it had felt like to have a home, and someone who cared whether he lived or died. Someone who made him smile just by entering a room.
Heâd never had that before. With anyone.
The screen went dark, and then the photos began again.
And he could see it, this time. How her eyesâthey had been so cold at the start. How even with her ridiculous pictures and poses, that smile hadnât reached her eyes. But with each photo, more light had crept into them. Brightened them. Brightened his eyes, too. Until those last photos. When Bryce was near-glowing with joy.
She was the most beautiful thing he had ever seen.
Sandriel was smirking like a cat. âIs this really what you wanted in the end, Hunt?â She gestured to the photos. To Bryceâs smiling face. âTo be freed one day, to marry the girl, to live out some ordinary, basic life?â She chuckled. âWhatever would Shahar say?â
Her name didnât clang. And the guilt he thought would sear him didnât so much as sizzle.
Sandrielâs full lips curved upward, a mockery of her twinâs smile. âSuch simple, sweet wishes, Hunt. But thatâs not how these things work out. Not for people like you.â
His stomach twisted. The photos were torture, he realized. To remind him of the life he might have had. What heâd tasted on the couch with Bryce the other night. What heâd pissed away.
âYou know,â Sandriel said, âif you had played the obedient dog, Micah would have eventually petitioned for your freedom.â The words pelted him. âBut you couldnât be patient. Couldnât be smart. Couldnât choose thisââshe gestured to their photosââover your own petty revenge.â Another snakeâs smile. âSo here we are. Here you are.â She studied a photo Hunt had taken of Bryce with Syrinx, the chimeraâs pointed little teeth bared in something terrifyingly close to a grin. âThe girl will probably cry her little heart out for a while. But then sheâll forget you, and sheâll find someone else. Maybe there will be some Fae male who can stomach an inferior pairing.â
Huntâs senses pricked, his temper stirring.
Sandriel shrugged. âOr sheâll wind up in a dumpster with the other half-breeds.â
His fingers curled into fists. There was no threat in Sandrielâs words. Just the terrible practicality of how their world treated people like Bryce.
âThe point is,â Sandriel continued, âshe will go on. And you and I will go on, Hunt.â
At last, at last, he dragged his eyes from Bryce and the photos of the life, the home, theyâd made. The life he still so desperately, stupidly wanted. His wings resumed their itching. âWhat.â
Sandrielâs smile sharpened. âDidnât they tell you?â
Dread curled as he looked at his phone in her hands. As he realized why heâd been left alive, and why Sandriel had been allowed to take his belongings.
They were her belongings now.
Bryce entered the near-empty bar just after eleven. The lack of a brooding male presence guarding her back was like a phantom limb, but she ignored it, made herself forget about it as she spotted Ruhn sitting at the counter, sipping his whiskey.
Only Flynn had joined him, the male too busy seducing the female currently playing billiards with him to give Bryce more than a wary, pitying nod. She ignored it and slid onto the stool beside Ruhn, her dress squeaking against the leather. âHi.â
Ruhn glanced sidelong at her. âHey.â
The bartender strode over, brows raised in silent question. Bryce shook her head. She didnât plan to be here long enough for a drink, water or otherwise. She wanted this over with as quickly as possible so she could go back home, take off her bra, and put on her sweats.
Bryce said, âI wanted to come by to say thanks.â Ruhn only stared at her. She watched the sunball game on the TV above the bar. âFor the other day. Night. For looking out for me.â
Ruhn squinted at the tiled ceiling.
âWhat?â she asked.
âIâm just checking to see if the skyâs falling, since youâre thanking me for something.â
She shoved his shoulder. âAsshole.â
âYou could have called or messaged.â He sipped from his whiskey.
âI thought itâd be more adultlike to do it face-to-face.â
Her brother surveyed her carefully. âHow are you holding up?â
âIâve been better.â She admitted, âI feel like a fucking idiot.â
âYouâre not.â
âOh yeah? Half a dozen people warned me, you included, to be on my guard around Hunt, and I laughed in all your faces.â She blew out a breath. âI should have seen it.â
âIn your defense, I didnât think Athalar was still that ruthless.â His blue eyes blazed. âI thought his priorities had shifted lately.â
She rolled her eyes. âYeah, you and dear old Dad.â
âHe visited you?â
âYep. Told me Iâm just as big a piece of shit as he himself is. Like father, like daughter. Like calls to like or whatever.â
âYouâre nothing like him.â
âDonât bullshit a bullshitter, Ruhn.â She tapped the bar. âAnyway, thatâs all I came to say.â She noted the Starsword hanging at his side, its black hilt not reflecting the firstlights in the room. âYou on patrol tonight?â
âNot until midnight.â With his Fae metabolism, the whiskey would be out of his system long before then.
âWell ⦠good luck.â She hopped off the stool, but Ruhn halted her with a hand on her elbow.
âIâm having some people over at my place in a couple weeks to watch the big sunball game. Why donât you come over?â
âPass.â
âJust come for the first period. If it isnât your thing, no problem. Leave when you want.â
She scanned his face, weighing the offer there. The hand extended.
âWhy?â she asked quietly. âWhy keep bothering?â
âWhy keep pushing me away, Bryce?â His voice strained. âIt wasnât just about that fight.â
She swallowed, her throat thick. âYou were my best friend,â she said. âBefore Danika, you were my best friend. And I ⦠It doesnât matter now.â Sheâd realized back then that the truth didnât matterâshe wouldnât let it matter. She shrugged, as if itâd help lighten the crushing weight in her chest. âMaybe we could start over. On a trial basis only.â
Ruhn started to smile. âSo youâll come watch the game?â
âJuniper was supposed to come over that day, but Iâll see if sheâs up for it.â Ruhnâs blue eyes twinkled like stars, but Bryce cut in, âNo promises, though.â
He was still grinning when she rose from her barstool. âIâll save a seat for you.â