Time slowed, and I couldnât make sense of what I was seeing. That Ian was no longer whole. That there was so much red everywhereâon the ground, on me. That it was his body falling, and it was his head rolling across the floor. It didnât make sense.
Neither did the way I saw the Handmaiden lift her hand, her lips parted on a shocked gasp. Or how Prince Malik jerked back a step, the smug impassivity slipping from his handsome face as the wall around his emotions cracked just enough for me to feel the pulse of disbelief echoing through him. I didnât understand Tawnyâs screams as she backed away, why Emilâs eyes were so wide, or how quickly the blood drained from Kieranâs face, and the silent scream that etched itself onto Vonettaâs features. I didnât get why Naill had closed his eyes or why Casteel was wrapping his arm around my waist, trying to turn me away, but I couldnât be moved. I wouldnât be moved. Agony ripped into my heart and chewed its way through my skull. Images of Ian and I flashed over and over in my mind, every single memory of him rapidly taking form.
âI loved him. I loved him as if he were my own flesh and blood!â Isbeth screamed, and then she calmed. âLook at what you made me do.â
Everything stopped as the entirety of the kingdom seemed to close in on me. I lifted my gaze from Ian.
Casteelâs arms tightened around me. âYou vindictive bitch,â he snarled.
Her dark eyes glistened with tears as she shuddered. âItâs not my fault.â She turned to me. âI warned you. You didnât listen.â
And thenâ¦and then everything sped up.
What came out of my throat was a sound Iâd never made before. My chest cracked open, and what poured out of it was pure, untapped rage. There was no thinking. There was no understanding. There would be no ultimatums. All that mattered was that sheâd taken him from meâsheâd killed him, and I let that ancient instinct take over. It knew what to do with all the rage and pain.
I threw out my arms, breaking Casteelâs hold as the wave of energy pulsed out of me and rolled through the chamber. Casteel skidded back as Kieran turned. Royal Guards and knights rushed forward. They slammed into Tawny, where she stood frozen, her mouth open as she stared at me. I lost sight of her in the crush of men and shields and drawn swords as they circled the Blood Queen. And I saw the flicker of surprise on Isbethâs face just as the covered windows along the walls cracked and shattered. Intense silvery-white light crowded my vision and formed in my mind, a thick webbing that stretched out from me as I took a step forward. I took out the Royal Guards first, shattering their shields and swords, and in the next breath, them.
Casteel unsheathed his swords as guards spilled into the chamber, but there was no one between Isbeth and me. Drawing in the anger and fear throbbing around me, I pulled on my hatred, funneling it through the cords snapping and streaming toward her. I was going to tear apart the walls around her mind like I had wanted to do with Casteelâs father. I wouldnât stop this time. I would peel apart her mind, one section at a time as I broke every single godsdamn bone in her body. The silvery-white light pulsed over her andâ
Isbeth laughed.
She threw back her head and laughed. I lost control of my will as Casteel whipped around, staring up at the Blood Queen. âDid you not believe what I said, dear child?â She reached out, flicking a red-painted nail against the thrumming wall of power. The light flared and then collapsed into shimmery dust. âThat has always been one of your greatest weaknesses, Penellaphe. Your doubt in what you see with your own eyes and what you know with your heart. If you had truly believed in what I said, you wouldnât have dared such a reckless thing. You would know that we are gods, and you donât fight a god like that.â
She lifted a hand. Icy-cold fingers gripped my throat, digging into my windpipe. I reached for the handsâhands that werenât there. A razor-thin bit of air worked its way into my throat as my eyes widened and thenâ¦nothing. I stumbled back, scratching at my neck.
âPoppy!â Casteel shouted, dropping a sword as he grasped me around the waist. I stared up at him, my mouth moving but without air to give my words life. His head twisted toward the Blood Queen. âWhat are you doing to her?â
âTeaching her yet another valuable lessonââ
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Lyra shift, heard her clothing rip. It was so fast. Sheâd been mortal one moment, wolven the next, andâ¦
Isbeth turned her head toward her.
Kieran shouted a warning, and then Lyraâs high-pitched yelp and thick, snapping and crunching sounds followed. I tried to turn my head but I couldnât. The grip on my throat tightened.
âA lesson that will get worse if another single wolven whoâs eyeing me like Iâm dinner takes another step toward me. The same goes for the Atlantians,â she said, and I wheezed pitifully, damp sweat coating my skin. âI will snap her neck.â
âStop!â Casteel yelled. âStand down. Now!â
I dug at my throat, panic blossoming in my chest. I couldnât breathe. Pain streaked down my throat as my nails drew blood.
âLet her go,â Casteel said, dropping his other sword as he clasped my wrist. âDamn it, let her go!â
âI donât think I will. You see, she needs to understand the same lesson you were so resistant to,â Isbeth said. âShe has no choice. She never has, and I can tell she still believes otherwise. Perhaps she is a perfect fit for you, and sheâll never learn. Your brother has been far more accommodating.â
My lungs burned as sharp, stabbing pinpricks attacked my hands and armsâmy legs. Black dotted my vision. Pressure clamped down on my skull. Those icy fingers sank into my head, into my mind. Pain sliced through meâthe kind that seized control of my entire body, and thisâoh, gods, this was what I had planned to do to her but hadnât been quick enough or known how. It felt like she was tearing me apart from the inside, scattering my brain. I jerked, straining against Casteel as I clasped the sides of my head. I twisted, only aware that I breathed because I could scream.
âPoppy!â Casteel gripped my arm as I clutched at my head, tore at my hair as those claws kept digging in. Panic filled his eyes as wet warmth gushed from my nose, from my ears. âNo. No. No.â He pulled me to his chest as he twisted toward her. âPlease. I beg you. Stop. Please, godsdamn it. Stop! Iâll do anything. You want Atlantia? Itâs yoursââ
âYou are not the true heir,â she cut him off. âYou cannot give me what I want.â
âShe canât give it to you if you kill her,â he shouted as my teeth bled. âYou want to control her? You want me, then. Take me. I wonât fight you. I swear. I wonât. Just stop. Please.â His voice cracked.
Consciousness was slipping away as I fell further and further into the soul-shredding pain. I could barely hear their words or understand them. I was losing the ability to makeâ¦thoughts, but I heard thatâheard Casteel begging, and through the torrential pain, I shook my head. I took those screams roaring through me and all those frayed slivers of thought to form one word, over and over. âNo. No. No,â I whispered and screamed as all the light went out around me because I would rather be dead. Iâd rather beâ
âYouâre killing her. Please,â Casteel pleaded. âPlease, stop.â
âYou. Oh, you have always been my favorite pet. And when she wakes, sheâll know how to keep you alive,â she replied, her voice fading and draining away until I wasnât sure that what I heard was real. âMalik. Retrieve your brother.â
And then there was nothing.
My head throbbed endlessly, and there was a metallic taste in my mouth when I opened my eyes. Fragments of sunlight drifted through the thick branches of an elm.
âPoppy?â Kieranâs face leaned over mine. My headâ¦my head was in his lap. âYou there?â
I swallowed, wincing at the pain. âI think so.â I started to sit up. âWhere are we?â
âIn the woods just outside of Oak Ambler,â Hisa answered as Kieran helped me up. I rubbed my aching head as I squinted. Hisaâs features were stark.
I kept looking as my mind slowly cleared away the fog. Delano sat beside Naill, who stood with a hand over his heart. Emil and Vonetta knelt beside theâ¦beside a prone body. âTawny?â
âSheâs alive.â Emil looked up quickly, his eyes haunted. âBut sheâs been wounded.â He stepped aside, and I saw the darkness staining the rose color of her gown around the shoulder. âThe bleeding has stopped, butâ¦â
Vonetta pulled the collar of Tawnyâs gown aside, and I inhaled a shaky breath. Her veins stood out under the rich brown skin, thick and black. âI donât know what this is.â
I rose, unsteady. My clothing was stiff with blood. Some was mine, but most of it had belonged to Ian. âI can help her.â
âI think you should just sit back down for a little bit.â Kieran was on his feet beside me.
Pressing a hand to my head, I kept looking and keptâ¦searching the patchy memories. The sound of crunching, breaking bones came back to me. âLyra?â
Kieran shook his head.
My heart started thumping as I slid my hand to my sore throat. Isbeth. âWhere is Casteel?â
Vonetta turned back to Tawny, her shoulders tightâtoo tight.
Silence.
A tremor rippled through me. The hum in my chest pushed and expanded, and my heartâmy soulâtwisted because I already knew. Oh, gods, deep down, I already knew the answer. I cracked as I drew in a too-shallow breath.
I stumbled around in a circle. My eyes locked with Kieranâs as I felt my broken heart crack even more. âNo,â I whispered, stepping back and then toward Tawny. I needed to help her, but I bent, doubled over. âNo. He didnât.â
âPoppy,â Kieran whispered. âThere was nothing we could do. Casâ¦he handed himself over. We had to leave. Isbeth said Tawny was a giftâa sign of her goodwill. One that she said she hoped you would return.â
âNo.â Tears rushed my eyes as I tried to make myself go to Tawny. My stomach dropped as I jerked straight and looked at my left palm. The imprint was still there. I closed my hand and then my eyes, and I saw Ianâ¦I saw him falling. I heard her laughing. I heard him begging. âNo. No.â I gripped the hair that had come free, pulling until I felt my scalp burn. I could hear Casteel saying: âI was nothing more than this thing without a name.â That was what sheâd done to him. What she would try to do again. âNo. This wasnât supposed to happen.â
âPoppy,â Delano said, and I hated how he said my name, how softly he spoke it. I hated the sorrow pouring into the air around him, soaking my skin. I shook my head, twisting toward Vonetta.
âWeâll get him back,â Vonetta promised, but sheâ¦she couldnât make that promise. âWe will, Poppy.â
Kieran inched closer, his hands at his sides. âLook at me, Poppy. â
Still shaking my head, I backed up. I couldnât catch my breath. I couldnât breathe again as my chest throbbed with eather. The pain tore through meâthe pain and fear because Ian was gone, and I knew what would happen to Casteel. I knew what they would do to himâI knew what she would do because I knew what she had already done to him, to Malik, and to Ian.
Ian.
My gaze fell on Tawny, and Iâ¦
Throwing back my head, I screamed as the rage erupted from me. Over and over, I saw Ian falling. Over and over, I heard Casteel shoutingâbegging for her to stop. Lightning ripped through the sky, heating the air. A deafening boom of thunder exploded, rattling the trees and sending birds flying in every direction. Hisa and the guards froze. Delano pressed back, bumping into Naill. They began to back up slowlyâaway from me as my fury charged the air, whipping up a storm. And in the distant parts of my mind, I realized it had always been me. It hadnât been the gods thatâd caused the storms. It hadnât been Nyktos. The blood rain had been them, but thisâ¦this was meâthe violent stir of energy colliding with the world around me. It had always been meâthis absolute power.
But Iâ¦I wasnât me.
I wasnât the Queen of Flesh and Fire.
My chest rose and fell as my fingers spread wide. I was vengeance and wrath given form, and in the moment, I was exactly what Alastir and the Unseen feared. I was the Bringer of Death and Destruction, and I would tear down the walls they sought to protect themselves with. I would rip apart their homes, scorch their lands, and fill their streets with blood until there was nowhere to run or hide.
And then I would destroy them all.
Streaks of silver-white energy crackled off my skin as I turned back to the edges of the woods, toward the city.
âPoppy. Pleaseââ Vonetta shouted, leaping in front of me.
I threw out my hand, and she skidded through the tall grass. I stalked forward, the wind whipping overhead. Leaves snapped and fell. Trees bent under the weight of the rage pouring out of me, their limbs slamming into the ground all around me.
âPoppy!â Vonettaâs scream was caught in the wind. âDonât do this!â
I kept walking, the ground trembling under my feet, the image of Ian collapsing, of Lyra being struck down, playing over and over to the sound of Casteel beggingâbegging her.
Kieran darted around one of the branches as it slammed down, kicking up dirt. âListen to us,â he shouted, the force of my anger tearing at his clothing. âYou donâtââ
I sent him back, his feet slipping out from under him as I screamed. Another pulse of energy reverberated through the forest. The trees in front of me shattered, and I saw the black wall of the smaller Rise surrounding the village outside of Oak Ambler. The guards saw me coming forwardâcoming for them. Several unsheathed swords of bloodstone as others raced through the gate. In my mind, the silvery webbing fell over the wall and seeped into it, finding those cracks Iâd seen in the larger Rise. I latched on to those weak spots and tore the wall apart from the inside. Stone exploded, mowing down the guards.
A cloud of grayish dust blanketed the air as screams of panic rang out, and I smiled. Screams tore through the air, and I felt something gruesome curling the corners of my lips. I stalked forward, silvery-white light crackling between my fingers.
In the thick dust, an immobile shadow took form. It was her. The Handmaiden. She was the only still thing among the smoke, the screams and panicked shouts, her dark hair hanging in a thick braid over one shoulder.
âThese people had nothing to do with what happened back there. They are innocent. Stop her.â The young woman lifted the bow, completely unfazed by the gathering energy and the streaks of lightning. Not a single muscle trembled as she took unwavering aim at me. âOr I will.â
I cocked my head, seeing the silvery-white light stretch out toward herâ
âSorry,â she said. âThat doesnât work on me.â
The energy recoiled from the Revenant. I pushed harder, but the eather shrank back, crackling and spitting.
âKeep trying.â The glow of silvery-white light shone brightly across her face. âIn the meantime, do you know what will work on you? Shadowstone, which is what each of my arrows is tipped with. I put one of them through your head, you may get back up, but it wonât be anytime soon.â
My chest rose and fell rapidly as I zeroed in on the tip of the arrow. The fading sunlight reflected off the shiny black surface.
âSo, Iâll repeat myself,â she continued, walking forward as she raised her voice. âThese people have nothing to do with what was done. They are innocent. Stop this, or I will stop you.â
Innocent.
Behind her, people scattered into the dirty streets, rushing toward the Rise. They carried nothing but themselves and screaming, red-faced children. They were just mortals caught between the Blood Crown and me, and I could see from where I stood, that the gate to the city was closed.
And I knew that the Ascended who still remained within wouldnât open it. They wouldâve already done that if any of them had been likeâ¦like Ian. I sucked in a broken breath as I stared at the people crowding the gates of the larger Rise, their fear a pulsing mass.
I was not what Alastir and the Unseen claimed.
I was nothing like the deities they feared.
And I sure as hell wasnât like my mother.
âIâm sorry,â the Handmaiden said, and my gaze snapped back to her as a jagged tremor rocked me. âI really am. I knew Ian. I liked him. He wasnât likeâ¦a lot of the others.â
Despite the grief and the rage tearing its way through me, I focused on her, opening my senses. That ability still worked as it had before because I knew I was reading her emotions. I could taste themâthe tartness of uncertainty and the bitterness of sorrow.
âBut you need to leave. The Blood Crown has already left here. No one remains who played a role in what happened.â
âExcept for you,â I countered.
There was a slight wince. âDid you have a choice when you were the Maiden?â
I stared at the Handmaiden. She couldâve struck me with one of the shadowstone arrows at any point, and I doubted she wouldâve missed. But she hadnât. She stood between me and the villagers outside the city, the poorest among those who called Solis home. Not between me and the Ascended.
Myâ¦Coralena had been different, hadnât she? Sheâd been a Handmaidenâone of those Revenant thingsâbut she had taken Ian and I away from Isbeth. Sheâd loved Leopold. I remembered how theyâd looked at each other. I thought of the look on this Handmaidenâs face when sheâd been summoned to prove what a Revenant wasâthe wave of hopeless desperation and then the feeling of surrender. Emotions I had been painfully well-acquainted with. And I thought of how Prince Malik had behaved when Isbeth had called her forth. Heâd stepped forward and then seemed to stop himself. I wondered how many times sheâd been used for show and tell, and then I decided I didnât care.
It took every ounce of my self-control, but I pulled the energy back to me. The static charge of power faded from the air around me. The wind eased, and the trees stopped groaning behind me. âWhere is she taking him?â I demanded, taking a step forward. The Handmaidenâs eyes narrowed. âIf youâre thinking about firing the arrow, youâd better aim true,â I warned. âI donât need eather to fight you. I imagine that regrowing sliced limbs and a head is quite the painful process.â
Her lips twisted in a brittle, thin smile. âDonât worry. I will strike true.â
I returned her grin. âTell me where they are taking him. If you donât, youâd better kill me when you take me down because I will come back. And I will kill you.â
âDo you really think that is a threat? That I fear dying? After doing it as many times as I have?â She laughed, and the sound was as crumbling as the grimace of a smile. âI welcome the final death.â
âDo you welcome the death of the people you seek to protect right now?â I challenged, ignoring the spike of empathy I felt for her. âBecause if you donât fear your end, then maybe youâll fear theirs.â
Her nostrils flared. âYou all are no better than them.â
âYouâre wrong. I stopped,â I said. âWould any of them have stopped? Would your Queen?â
She said nothing.
âI have no desire to kill innocents. I want to help the people of Solisâfree them from the Blood Crown. That is what we wanted to do,â I told her. âBut they killed my brother and took the one person who means the world to me. I will do anything to get him back. No matter how badly it stains my soul.â
âThen you know how to get him back,â she snapped. âSubmit to her and take Atlantia in her name.â
I shook my head.
âSo, you wonât do anything for him, then?â
âBecause once she has what she wants, she will kill him,â I said. âShe will kill me.â
âThen I guess youâre screwed.â
âNo. Because I wonât let either of those two things happen,â I said. âIâm going to give her what she wants, but not in the way she thinks.â
Curiosity flickered through the Handmaiden, but then her attention shifted just the slightest to my shoulder.
âPoppy,â Kieran called quietly as several archers on the Rise scrambled into their nests.
Her chest rose with a shallow breath. âSheâll take him to the capital. I donât know where. No one knows where she keeps herâ¦pets.â
A shiver of rage brushed my skin, stroking the throbbing in my chest, and her lip curled in disgust. It was brief. I wasnât sure that she was even aware of it, but I saw it.
âBut it doesnât matter,â she continued. âSheâll have every Revenant on hand guarding him. Sheâll have him watching over your King,â she told me, and I knew that she spoke of the Prince. âYou wonât get near him.â She lowered her bow, her shoulders settling. âUnless you can bring the fire of the gods with you, none of you stands a chance.â
A chill swept through me as I stared at her. Fire of the gods? Her gaze met mine as she took a step back. âIâm sure we will meet again,â she said.
âWe will.â
I sat in the wooden chair of the hunting cabin Casteel had brought me to, after heâd saved my life and risked so much in the process, and stared at the bed.
Tawny lay there, her face too pale, her breathing too shallow. Iâd tried to heal her. Iâd tried once when I went back to the woods. My gift had flared to life then, and the wound had closed, but she didnât wake. I tried again when we stopped halfway here, after weâd mounted the horses that Hisa had brought. I placed my hands on her too-warm skin as soon as we arrived at the cabin, but she didnât wake, and those dark veins had spread up her throat.
Weâd traveled straight through the Wastelands and had reached the hunting cabin as night descended. We had to stop. Everyone was tired, and Tawny⦠I didnât know what was wrong with her or what had pierced her flesh to cause thisâfor my gift to not do much beyond closing her skin.
The arrow the Handmaiden had held resurfaced. It had been fashioned from shadowstone. The same weapon my mother had had the night the Craven came to the inn. The same kind of weapon the deities had been buried with and the skeleton soldiers had held. I couldnât remember seeing what kind of weapons the guards had. Iâdâ¦Iâd obliterated the ones who stood in front of me, but the Handmaiden had said it would put me down for a while. I glanced at Tawny. Could it have been shadowstone? Was that why my gifts had only worked to a certain point?
My gaze lowered to my hand. I turned it palm up and, in the glow of the candlelight, saw the marriage imprint shimmer. I closed my hand, squeezing my eyes shut against the burn.
I hadnât cried.
I wanted to. I wanted to cry for Ian. I wanted to cry for Lyra. I wanted to cry for Tawny because I feared sheâd never open her eyes again. I wanted to cry for Casteel because I knew what he faced, even if I could imagine what he must be thinking or feeling to know that his brother had not only betrayed him but would also become one of his prison keepers.
Anger had grown with each mile we got closer to Atlantia. If we had known the truth about who the Queen really was, we couldâve better prepared. We wouldâve known it was impossible for her to be an Ascended. We wouldâve known that anything was possible. Instead, weâd gone into the meeting hobbled by lies. No part of me believed for even one second that Eloana hadnât known the truth. Possibly even Valyn had known. The knowledge theyâd withheld couldâve changed everything.
Because it already had.
A soft knock drew me from my thoughts. I rose and stiffly walked to the door.
Kieran stood there. âCanât sleep. None of us can.â Beyond him, I saw several shapes sitting around a small fire. He looked over my shoulder. âHow is she?â
âStill asleep.â
âI know you havenât slept.â
I shook my head as I stepped out into the cool night air, closing the door behind me. I glanced over at the bent and bowed trees as I walked with Kieran over to where the others sat.
Vonetta glanced up as I sat beside her. She offered me a flask, but I shook my head. Iâd apologized to her and to Kieran, but I felt like I needed to do it again. I opened my mouth.
âDonât,â she cut me off. âI know what youâre going to say. Itâs not necessary. I understand. We all understand.â
There were several murmurs of agreement from around the fire. My gaze briefly met Hisaâs and then Delanoâs and finally Naillâs. âHeâs still alive,â I said roughly. âShe wonât kill him. Not when she thinks she can use him to control meâcontrol Atlantia.â
They nodded, but I sensed relief. They had needed to hear that. Iâd needed to say that. âDoes anyone know anything about shadowstone? That was what the Handmaiden had.â
âI heard what she said,â Kieran said.
âDo you think that could be whatâs causing Tawnyâs injuries?â I asked.
âI donât know.â Hisa dragged a hand over her head. âSheâs mortal. Iâve never seen a mortal wounded by shadowstone before. A lot of Healers in Evaemon and some of the older Elders may have seen something like this.â
I thought of Willa and then her diary, and the next breath I took hurt.
âWhat is the plan?â Emil asked as Vonetta handed him the flask. He took a drink.
We hadnât really spoken on the ride away from Oak Ambler. Not about anything, but I had done a lot of thinkingâabout what Isbeth had said, what even the Duchess had claimed in Spessaâs End, and what the Handmaiden had told me.
Even though Iâd refused Isbeth, she believed that everything was falling into place. She had the Prince and now the King of Atlantia. She had found a way to control me, and in her mind, she therefore controlled Atlantia. Just like Duchess Teerman had claimed, I would succeed where the Queen had failed.
But they were wrong.
I looked down at my handsâat the marriage imprint. You always had the power in you. That was something I had also thought about. I now knew where Iâd first heard it. The silvery-blonde Iâd seen when I had been so close to dying. That is what she had said to me.
You always had the power in you.
And it was what Nyktos had said. A part of me wondered if the woman Iâd seen was his Consort. That, in her sleep, sheâd reached out to me, to either warn or help me. It would make sense that she would.
After all, I was her granddaughter, if she was who I believed.
My fingers curled into my palms. The center of my chest hummed with powerâthe eather of the King of Gods. The kind that shouldâve been powerful enough to destroy whatever the hell Isbeth believed she was. But I hadnât been prepared. I hadnât fought like a god because I did not believe I was one.
But Casteel had, hadnât he? Did he ever really believe I was a deity?
I exhaled roughly. âShe was right.â
Vonetta looked over at me. âWho?â
âThe Queen. I am a god,â I stated.
Her brows rose as she glanced over at Emil and Naill. âUmââ
âNo. Wait.â Kieran rose, understanding flickering through him. âIf what she claimed is true and Malec is one of Nyktos and his Consortâs sonsâand youâre their grandchildâyou are a god,â he reiterated what Iâd just been thinking.
Delano nodded slowly. âIt doesnât matter what in the hell Ileanaâ Isbethâis. You are the grandchild of Nyktosâof a Primal God. That is why your bloodline is so potent. You are a god, not a deity.â
âShit,â Emil muttered, taking another drink before Vonetta snatched the flask from him.
âThatâs what Nyktos meant,â I said, swallowing. âI never needed his permission.â
âFor what?â Naill asked.
âTo use his guards,â I said, knowing thatâs what the Handmaiden had meant by the fire of the gods. âTo summon the draken.â