Evangeline had thought Marisol had betrayed her before, but she hadnât, not really. Bewitching Luc wasnât betrayal. Thereâd been nothing to betray. Evangeline and Marisol had lived in the same house, but they werenât really sisters. Theyâd never shared secrets, theyâd never shared heartaches, and they had never been as honest as theyâd been with each other tonight. But Evangeline should not have been so truthful.
âMarisol, donât do this,â Evangeline pleaded.
Marisolâs only reply was to sink to the ground and hug her knees, making herself look small and vulnerable as the door to her suite flung open.
Evangeline frantically searched for an escape, but there was only the balcony. She wouldnât survive a jump, and there wasnât enough time. Two guards, quickly followed by another pair, rushed into the room in a clatter of drawn swords all pointed at her.
âShe just confessed to murdering Prince Apollo,â Marisol lied.
âThatâs not trueââ Evangeline was cut off as several soldiers converged, grabbing and restraining and cutting off her words.
âMy heart! My heart! Are you all right?â Tiberius burst through the open doors. He sounded just like his brother, when heâd been cursed, as he rushed into Marisolâs arms, and Evangeline felt utterly stupid once again for believing her stepsister had not bewitched him. Marisol might have confessed some things, but clearly she hadnât been honest about everything. She was really behind all of this.
âPut Evangeline in my chambers,â Tiberius ordered.
âDarling, are you sure thatâs a good idea?â Marisol latched on to his arms, doing an excellent impression of a helpless maiden. âShouldnât you take her down to the dungeon? Lock her up where she canât hurt anyone else?â
âDonât worry, my heart.â Tiberius pressed a kiss to Marisolâs forehead. âI just need to question her. Then Iâll make sure sheâs put somewhere she canât hurt anyone else ever again.â
The guards used little care as they dragged Evangeline into Tiberiusâs chambers and tied her to one of the chairs. After they relieved her of Jacksâs dagger, her ankles were roughly secured to the legs, and her arms were stretched behind her. Her hands were bound at the wrists and then tied again with a rope that went all the way around her midsection, cutting into her ribs and making it uncomfortable to breathe.
Tiberius didnât spare her a glance as it was done. He didnât acknowledge it when she repeatedly cried, âI swear, I didnât kill your brother!â
Tiberius simply stared into a great black stone hearth and ran a hand through his long copper hair, watching as one of his guards started a fire.
He no longer looked like the impish rebel prince sheâd met at her wedding. Lines that had not been there before bracketed his mouth, and his eyes were full of red. He didnât appear bewitched right now; he looked as if he were in mourning. Which was one good thing. If Tiberius were really mourning, if he really loved his brother as she believed, then he would want to know who the real killer was.
All Evangeline had to do was to stay alive long enough for Tiberius to see the blue bottle of Fortunaâs Fantastically Flavored Water containing the antidote sheâd made. It was sitting on the low center table across from her, next to his other bottles of liquor. If he just saw it and drank it, all would be right in the world.
Evangeline would have tried to bring the bottle to his attention, but she imagined mentioning it would only make them all suspicious.
She sensed how each of the soldiers in the room had felt about Prince Apollo from the way they regarded her. Disgust. Anger. Loathing. There were no hints of pity. Although Havelockâhis personal guard, whoâd also been there the night that Apollo had diedâlooked regretful. He probably felt as if heâd failed his prince.
Tiberius continued staring into the fire. He picked up a fireplace iron shaped like a trident, placed its tip in the burgeoning flames, and watched as it turned red.
Evangeline started sweating, skin going slick against her bonds. She didnât know if Tiberius was planning on torturing her with the fire iron or killing her, but she feared either option.
âYour Highness,â Havelock said softly, ânow that we have Princess Evangeline in custody, we should delay tomorrowâs wedding. This news mayââ
âNo!â Tiberiusâs voice was slightly unhinged.
The soldiers did a good job schooling their expressions, but Evangeline swore at least two went wide-eyed, and she wondered if they suspected something was amiss with the young princeâs engagement.
âI can handle this from here.â Tiberius tore the heated iron from the fire and blew on the tip until it went brighter. âYou can leave us. All of you.â
âButââ Havelock again. âYour Highnessââ
âCareful,â Tiberius seethed. âIf youâre about to imply that I canât handle one tied-up female, then Iâm going to either be offended or think youâre incompetent at tying knots.â
The soldiers filed toward the door.
âWait!â Evangeline begged. âDonât go! Heâs been bewitched by Marisolââ
âDo not besmirch my love!â Tiberius whirled around and brought the fire iron down on the low center table, shattering one of his liquor bottles.
Glass flew like arrows.
Liquid sizzled.
Evangeline sucked in a gasp as she watched the bottle of Fortunaâs Fantastically Flavored Water totter back and forth.
It fell on its side.
Thankfully, it didnât break.
That had been close. Evangeline would have to be more careful. Mentioning Marisol was clearly out of the question unless she wanted to risk her only chance of surviving. There was also the hope that Jacks might make a perfectly timed appearance and come to her rescue once again, but she couldnât rely on that. For all she knew, he was still asleep on his sofa.
The soldiers all left the chamber.
Tiberius stalked closer, boots pounding on the broken glassâ
He stopped abruptly and eyed the tipped-over bottle of antidote with a scowl. âHow did this get in here? I hate these things.â He picked up the bottle with two fingers and brought it toward the fire.
No! No! No! She wanted to scream.
But instead of throwing it in, the bottle worked its magic. Tiberius stopped, took another look at the concoction, popped the cork with his mouth, and drank.
Evangeline felt her hope grow bright.
But after only a few seconds, Tiberius wrenched the bottle from his lips. He shuddered and gave the drink a foul look. âOnce Iâm king, these drinks will be the first thing I outlaw.â
Tiberius weighed the fire iron in his hand as if deciding how he wanted to do this.
Evangeline could only take shallow breaths. She needed to buy more time for the antidote to work. She doubted begging would help, but maybe she could get him to talk without triggering a violent reaction. âThe last time I saw you, you said that when we met again, youâd tell me why you had disappeared.â
A bitter laugh.
Another drink.
Followed by another wince.
âI left after my brother and I fought about you,â Tiberius said grimly. âI told him you werenât the savior everyone claimed. I told him youâd be the death of him.â
âWhy would you think that?â
âAll that matters is, I was right.â The prince pointed the fire iron directly at Evangelineâs throat.
âNoâI didnât do this.â She rocked her chair, urgently hoping by some miracle it would fall hard enough to shatter the arms and legs and set her free. But the chair was too heavy. She couldnât even get the seat to budge. âI didnât kill your brotherââ
âI know,â Tiberius said. âIâve known it the whole time.â
âWhâwhatââ Evangeline sputtered. He was telling her what sheâd hoped to hear, but the young prince still looked as if he had no intention of letting her go. His freckled face was that of a stubborn soldier with an order he was determined to carry out.
âI donât understand,â she said. âIf you know Iâm innocent, why are you doing this?â
âItâs too dangerous to let you live.â Tiberius shook his head, expression determined, and yet Evangeline sensed he didnât get any pleasure from this.
He took another drag from the antidote bottle and then pulled down the neck of his striped doublet, revealing a dark black tattoo of a broken skeleton key. âDo you know what this is?â
Evangeline shook her head.
âThis is the symbol of the Protectorate.â
The Protectorate. She had heard the name before. But where? Her heart quickened as she tried to think. Then her heart stopped altogether as she remembered.
Apollo had told her about the Protectorate the night heâd shared the stories of the Valory Arch. Theyâd been in the first version of the story, where the Valors had made something horrible. Apollo had said the Protectorate was some sort of secret society responsible for protecting the broken pieces of the Valory Arch and making sure it would never be opened again.
Evangeline looked again at Tiberiusâs broken key tattoo. The Fortuna matriarch had worn a chain with a similar key around her neck. She must have been a member of the Protectorate as well, and as soon as sheâd suspected that Evangeline was the girl mentioned in the prophecy that kept the Valory Arch locked, the matriarch had tried to kill her.
Evangelineâs hope crashed and died.
Tiberius took another swig from the bottle in his hands. Even if the antidote worked and cured him of his artificial love for Marisol, Evangeline knew that she was never getting out of this room alive. Not if Tiberius believed she was part of a prophecy that once fulfilled would allow the Valory Arch to open and release the Valorsâ terrible creation into the world.
âIâm sorry, Evangeline.â Tiberiusâs voice hardened, and his hands gripped the fire iron tighter, knuckles turning white. âFrom the look on your face, Iâm assuming you know what the Protectorate is, so you know what I have to do and why.â
âNo,â Evangeline said. âI donât know how you can kill someone because of a story thatâs twisted by a curse. Your brother told me there are two different versions. In one, the Valoryââ
âIt doesnât matter which version of the story is true!â A muscle popped in his jaw. âThe Valory Arch can never be opened, which is why you have to die. I knew it as soon as I saw your hair. Youâre the prophesized key. You were born to open it.â Tiberius lifted the iron once again, bringing it dangerously close to her skin.
Evangelineâs breathing hitched.
She was running out of chances to talk him out of this.
Sweat beaded at his brow and dropped onto the broken glass near his boots. But she was looking at the other glassâthe almost-empty glass bottle in Tiberiusâs hand. Heâd nearly finished the antidote. It didnât seem as if the truth serum was breaking Marisolâs spell, but Evangeline wondered if the side effects of her potion were kicking in: fatigue, impaired decision-making and judgment, dizziness, the inability to tell a lie, and the urge to reveal any unspoken truths.
Tiberius was definitely experiencing the inability to tell a lie, or she doubted he would have told her he didnât believe she was guilty. Maybe if she pushed him enough, she could somehow lead him to confess the truth to his soldiers. Or she could finally get him to tell her what the entire prophecy was. Then maybe she could prove she wasnât the girl in it. Maybe it was just a coincidence that she sounded like this girl.
âAt least tell me what the Valory Arch prophecy says. If youâre going to kill me because you think it mentions me, donât I deserve to know the entire thing?â
Tiberius swished the blue remains of the bottle, appearing torn between drinking, talking, or ending all of this right now. But her theory about the antidoteâs side effects must have been correctâit appeared he couldnât stop himself from spilling secrets. After a moment, he began to recite:
âThis arch may only be unlocked with a key that has not yet been forged.
âConceived in the north, and born in the south, you will know this key, because she will be crowned in rose gold.
âShe will be both peasant and princess, a fugitive wrongly accused, and only her willing blood will open the arch.â
Evangeline sagged against her bonds. It was so short. And almost every piece of it fit her. She had heard the line about her being crowned in rose gold and being both peasant and princess from the Fortuna matriarch. It hadnât been true at the time, but now it was. She was also a fugitive wrongly accused, thanks to whoever had killed Apollo. She didnât know where sheâd been conceived; her parents had always joked that theyâd found her in a curiosity crate. Now she wondered if there was a reason why they had concealed the truthâif they had known about this prophecy. Had they seen her rose-gold hair and her origin as a sign that it could be true someday?
But there was one line of the prophecy that she could ensure never came to pass. She just had to convince Tiberius of this. âYou just said only my willing blood will open the arch, which means I have to want it open, and I donât.â
âDoesnât matter.â Tiberius gave her a bleak look. âMagic things always want to do that which they were created to do.â
âBut Iâm not a magic thing; Iâm just a girl with pink hair!â
âI wish that were true.â His voice was torn. âI donât want to kill you, Evangeline. But that arch must remain locked. The Valors had too much power. They werenât evil, but they did things they never should have done.â
He finished off the remnants of his drink, and this time, he pointed the iron at her heart.
âWait!â Evangeline cried. âCan I have a last request? I donât think Apollo would want you to murder me.â
âIâm sorry, I really am, but youâre not leaving this room alive.â
âIâm not asking you to spare me.â Her voice cracked. If this didnât work, these could be her last words. âIâm just asking you to call in your soldiers. Tell them my crimes, and then let one of them kill me. Your brother wouldnât want you to murder his wife.â
Tiberius frowned. But she could see another bout of indecision ghosting across his face. He sensed this was a bad idea, but his judgment was impaired from the antidote; he wasnât certain.
âPlease. Itâs my last request.â
Slowly, Tiberius lowered the poker.
The soldiers were called back in, but Tiberius didnât waste time with pleasantries.
âI need you to kill her.â He shoved the fire iron into the hand of the closest guard, a tall woman with a heavy braid and fury in her eyes.
âWait,â Evangeline breathed, hoping she hadnât just made a terrible miscalculation. âYou need to tell them my crimes first.â
âEvangeline Fox,â Tiberius ground out, âyou have been sentenced to death for the crime ofâ¦â His jaw seemed to stick. He opened and closed his mouth several times, but no words came out.
âYou canât say it, can you?â she asked. Her antidote might not have worked as exactly as sheâd hoped, but it was working. Additional effects of serum for truths may include ⦠the inability to tell a lie.
Evangeline could have cried with joy. Although Tiberius looked as if he really wanted to kill her now.
âWhat have you done?â He glowered at the empty bottle in his hands. âDid you poison me?â
âI gave you a truth serum, which is why you canât honestly say that I killed your brother. Ask him,â Evangeline begged the female guard with the iron. âAsk him who killed Apollo.â
âEnd this,â Tiberius ordered the guard. âSheâsheââ
The guard had lifted the iron, but she hesitated at the princeâs stammering.
âCanât you seeâsheâs fed me some sort of magic,â Tiberius growled, sweat beading on his brow. âSheâs obviouslyââ But he couldnât call her anything untrue.
âHe keeps breaking off because he canât lie,â Evangeline said, âand he knows that Iâm innocent. I had no reason or desire to kill ApolloâI was the person with nothing to gain and everything to lose, and Tiberius knows that.â
âSheâsâsheâsâsheâs telling the truthââ The princeâs face turned red. âEvangeline didnât kill my brother. I did.â