Hunt had no words in his head, his heart, as Bryce shoved her burning starlight into the Gate.
White light blasted from the Gateâs clear stone.
It filled the square, shooting outward for blocks. Demons caught in its path screamed as they were blinded, then fled. Like they remembered whom it had once belonged to. How the Starborn Prince had battled their hordes with it.
The Starborn line had bred trueâtwice.
Ruhnâs face drained of color as he remained kneeling and beheld his sister, the blazing Gate. What sheâd declared to the world. What sheâd revealed herself to be.
His rival. A threat to all he stood to inherit.
Hunt knew what the Fae did to settle disputes to the throne.
Bryce possessed the light of a star, such as hadnât been witnessed since the First Wars. Jesiba looked like sheâd seen a ghost. Fury gaped at the screen. When the flare dimmed, Huntâs breath caught in his throat.
The void within the Heart Gate was gone. Sheâd channeled her light through the Horn somehowâand sealed the portal.
In the stunned silence of the conference room, they watched Bryce pant, leaning against one side of the Gate before sliding to the slate tiles. The crystal archway still shone. A temporary haven that would make any demons think twice before approaching, fearful of a Starborn descendant.
But the rest of the Gates in the city remained open.
A phone rangâan outgoing call, linked to the roomâs speakers. Hunt scanned the room for the culprit and found the Autumn King with his phone in his hands. But the male was apparently too lost in the rage crinkling his face to care that the call was audible to everyone. Declan Emmet showed no sign of even trying to make the call private as Ember Quinlan picked up the phone and said, âWho isââ
âYouâve known she was Starborn Fae all these years and lied to me about it,â the king bit out.
Ember didnât miss a beat. âIâve been waiting for this call for more than twenty years.â
âYou bitchââ
A low, agonized laugh. âWho do you think ended your goons all those years ago? Not me and Randall. They had her in their graspâby the neck. And they had us at gunpoint.â Another laugh. âShe realized what they were going to do to me. To Randall. And she fucking blinded them.â
What blinds an Oracle?
Light. Light the way the Starborn had possessed it.
Bryce still sat against the archway, breathing hard. Like summoning that star, wielding the Horn, had taken everything out of her.
Ruhn murmured, more to himself than anyone, âThose books claimed there were multiple Starborn in the First Wars. I told her, and she â¦â He blinked slowly. âShe already knew.â
âShe lied because she loves you,â Hunt ground out. âSo you could keep your title.â
Because compared to the Starborn powers heâd seen from Ruhn ⦠Bryceâs were the real deal. Ruhnâs ashen face contorted with pain.
âWho knew?â the Autumn King demanded of Ember. âThose fucking priestesses?â
âNo. Only me and Randall,â Ember said. âAnd Danika. She and Bryce got into some serious trouble in college and it came out then. She blinded the males that time, too.â
Hunt remembered the photo on the guest room dresserâtaken in the aftermath of that. Their closeness and exhaustion the result not just of a battle fought and won but of a deadly secret revealed at last.
âHer tests showed no power,â the Autumn King spat.
âYes,â Ember said quietly. âThey were correct.â
âExplain.â
âIt is a gift of starlight. Light, and nothing more. It never meant anything to us, but to your people â¦â Ember paused. âWhen Bryce was thirteen, she agreed to visit you. To meet youâto see if you could be trusted to know what she possessed and not be threatened by it.â
To see if he could handle that such a gift had gone to a half-human bastard and not Ruhn.
Hunt saw no fear on the princeâs face, though. No envy or doubt. Only sorrow.
âBut then she met your son. And she told me that when she saw his pride in his Chosen One status, she realized she couldnât take it away from him. Not when she also saw that was the only value you placed in him. Even if it meant she would be denied everything she was due, even if revealing herself would have meant she could lord it over you, she wouldnât do that to Ruhn. Because she loved him that much more than she hated you.â
Ruhnâs face crumpled.
Ember spat at the Autumn King, âAnd then you left her on the curb like garbage.â She let out another broken laugh. âI hope she finally returns the favor, you fucking asshole.â She hung up.
The Autumn King hurled a pitcher of water before him across the room, so hard it shattered against the wall.
Huntâs blood thrummed through him as a conversation from weeks ago flitted back to him: how heâd spoken of having gifts he didnât really want. Bryce had agreed, to his surprise, and then seemed to catch herself before joking about attracting assholes. Deflecting, hiding the truth.
A soft female hand landed atop Huntâs. Queen Hypaxia. Her dark brown eyes glowed when he looked over in surprise. Her power was a song of warmth through him. It was a hammer to every wall and obstacle placed on him. And he felt that power focus on the haloâs spell upon his brow.
Sheâd asked him weeks ago what heâd do if she removed it. Whom heâd kill.
His first target was in this room with them. His eyes darted toward Sandriel, and Hypaxiaâs chin dipped, as if in confirmation.
Still Bryce sat against the Gate. As if trying to rally herself. As if wondering how she could possibly do this six more times.
Demons in adjacent streets beheld the starlight still glowing from the Old Square Gate and stayed back. Yes, they remembered the Starborn. Or knew the myths.
Aidas had known. Had watched her all these years, waiting for her to reveal herself.
Hypaxiaâs power flowed silently and unnoticed into Hunt.
Sandriel slid her phone into her pocket. As if sheâd been using it under the table.
Ruhn saw it, too. The Crown Prince of the Fae asked with savage quiet, âWhat did you do?â
Sandriel smiled. âI took care of a problem.â
Huntâs power growled within him. Sheâd have told the Asteri all sheâd seen. Not only what glowed in Bryceâs veinsâbut about the Horn, too.
They were likely already moving on the information. Quickly. Before anyone else could ponder Bryceâs gifts. What it might mean to the people of the world if they knew a half-human female, heir to the Starborn line, now bore the Horn in her very body. Able to be used only by herâ
The truth clicked into place.
It was why Danika had inked it on Bryce. Only the Starborn line could use the Horn.
Micah had believed the synth and Bryceâs bloodline would be enough to let him use the Horn, overriding the need for the true Starborn power. The Horn had indeed been healedâbut it only worked because Bryce was heir to the Starborn line. Object and wielder had become one.
If Bryce willed it, the Horn could open a portal to any world, any realm. Just as Micah had wanted to do. But that kind of powerâbelonging to a half-human, no lessâcould endanger the sovereignty of the Asteri. And the Asteri would take out any threat to their authority.
A roar began building in Huntâs bones.
Ruhn snarled, âThey canât kill her. Sheâs the only one who can shut those fucking Gates.â
Sandriel leaned back in her chair. âShe hasnât made the Drop yet, Prince. So they most certainly can.â She added, âAnd it looks like sheâs wholly drained anyway. I doubt sheâll be able to close a second Gate, let alone six more.â
Huntâs fingers curled.
Hypaxia met his stare again and smiled slightly. An invitation and challenge. Her magic shimmered through him, over his forehead.
Sandriel had informed the Asteriâso theyâd kill Bryce.
His Bryce. Huntâs attention narrowed on the back of Sandrielâs neck.
And he rose to his feet as Hypaxiaâs magic dissolved the halo from his brow.