The War of Two Queens: Chapter 25
The War of Two Queens (Blood And Ash Series Book 4)
Limp, dark waves fell forward, shielding most of Casteelâs face. All I could see was his mouthâlips peeled back, and fangs bared.
His growl vibrated from a chest that shouldnât have been so slender. The bones of his shoulders stood out as starkly as the twisted ones chaining him to the wall. Bonds I knew were made of the bones of long-dead deities. They hadnât been used to keep him chained. They did nothing to him.
The intent was to stop someone like me from breaking them.
Shadowstone shackles encircled his ankles, wristsâ¦and his throat. His throat. His actual, fucking throat. And his skinâgood gods, not an inch wasnât covered in thin, angry, red lines. Nowhere, from his collarbone to his breeches. The cloth along the calf of his right leg had been torn, revealing a jagged wound that looked too much like a Craven bite. The dirtied bandage on his left handâ¦
Gods.
Iâd thought I had prepared myself, but I truly wasnât ready. Seeing what had been done to him was a horrifying shock.
âCasteel,â I whispered, starting forward.
He launched to his feet, swiping out with curled fingers. I jerked to a stop, narrowly avoiding his reach as the chain at his neck snapped him back. His bare feet, dirty with dried blood, slipped over the damp stone. Somehow, he kept his balance. Fighting the bindings, the chains creaked as he threw his head back.
Oh, gods. His eyesâ¦
I could only see a thin strip of gold.
My gift came alive, spilling out from me in a way that hadnât happened in a long time. I connected to him, flinching as his emotions swamped me, coming in a dark, gnawing wave of painful hunger.
Bloodlust.
Heâd fallen into bloodlust. I knew in that moment that he had no idea who I was. All he sensed was my blood. Possibly even the Primal essence in that blood. I wasnât his Queen. His friend or wife. I wasnât his heartmate. I was nothing but food. But what cut deep and to the quick was that I knew he had no idea who he was.
My chest rose and fell rapidly as I tried to catch my breath. I wanted to scream. To cry.
Most of all, I wanted to burn the realm.
Those nearly black eyes darted to the opening, his growl growing louder, deeper.
âI wouldnât stand too close to him,â Callum advised. âHeâs like a rabid animal.â
My head jerked to the Revenant. Millicent stood behind him. âI will make sure you die,â I promised. âAnd it will hurt.â
âYou know,â he drawled, leaning against the stone as he crossed his arms and jerked his chin toward Casteel, âhe said the same thing.â
âThen Iâll make sure he has the pleasure of witnessing it.â
Callum chuckled. âSo giving of you.â
âYou have no idea.â I turned from him before I discovered how a Revenant survived decapitation.
Casteel was still staring at the Revenant. His focus had zeroed in on Callum, even though I was much closer to him. The way he fixated on the Revenant gave me hope that he wasnât completely lost.
That he was still in there, and I could reach himâremind him of who he was. Stop him before he became a thing instead of a person.
I sprang forward, clasping his arm. He swung his head to me, hissing. His skin was hotâtoo hot. And dry. Feverish. I stepped into him.
âShit,â Millicent exclaimed from the hall.
Casteel was like a viper. He went straight for my throat. But Iâd expected the move and caught him by the chin, holding his head back. The rough, short hairs on his jaw felt strange against my palm. He had lost some of his body mass, and I was strong, but his hunger gave him the strength of ten gods. My arm shook as I tapped into the essence, letting my gift roar to the surface.
Silvery-white light sparked across my vision and from my hands, washing over skin that shouldnât be so dull and hot. I channeled every happy memory I could into the touchâmemories of us in the cavern. When we stopped pretending. Us on our knees before Jasper, our rings clasped in our hands. The way heâd looked at me in that blue gown in Saionâs Cove. How heâd taken me in that garden, up against the wall. I funneled the energy into him, praying that healing his physical wounds would ease some of the pain of hunger, calming him enough for him to remember who he was. It would hopefully be a temporary fix, at least. Easing the knifeâs edge of hunger so he could feed without doing real and painful damage. Because he would now if I let him. And that would hurt him. It would kill a part of him.
A spasm ran through Casteelâs body. He went painfully rigid for a heartbeat, no longer pushing against my touch. Then he jerked away so fast, he completely broke free of my hold. I stumbled, nearly falling as he pressed back against the wall. The silvery glow faded from my hands, from him as he stood there, head bowed and chest heaving. The numerous, impossible-to-count cuts down his arms, across his chest, and on his stomach had faded to faint, pink marks. The candlelight didnât reach his lower body, and I couldnât see the wound on his leg now, but I imagined that it too had begun to heal. His hand, though⦠My abilities couldnât fix that.
Seconds stretched with the only sounds his ragged breathing and a muted, steady thump from above. Carriage wheels?
âCas?â
He shudderedâhis entire body and the chains moving. He lifted his head, and I saw that his faceâ¦it, too, was thinner. Like it had been in that first dream. The shadow of hair along his jaw and chin had darkened. Deeper hollows had formed under his cheeks and eyes.
But his eyesâ¦they opened, and they were still that stunning shade of gold. âPoppy.â
Casteel
She stood before me, a bright flame that had beaten back the red haze of bloodlust. She was here. Real.
My Queen.
My soul.
My savior.
Poppy.
This was no dream. Not a hallucination like the ones that had plagued me in the last hours and days. Poppy had said that she would come for me, and now she was here.
I pushed off the wall. The bone chains rattled, pulling tautly. The band tightened around my throat, but Poppy was already moving. Before I could take my next breath, she was in my arms. Somehow, I ended up on my ass, but she was still in my arms. Warm. Solid. Soft. Holding me tightly. Pressing her cheek against mine. I was filthy. I must stink. The floor of the cell was rank. None of that stopped her from pressing a quick kiss to my cheek, brow, and the bridge of my nose.
I didnât want any of this filth to touch her, but I couldnât bring myself to separate from her. Her touch. The feel of her in my arms. The faint scent of jasmine that I breathed in.
Her gift had snagged me from the edge of nothingness and pulled me back, but it was herâsimply herâwho kept me from spinning to that brink again. I sank my fingers into her braid, my flesh coming alive at the sensation of those strands against my skin.
Poppy wasâ¦gods, she was grounding in a way only she could be. Her mere presence gathered all those fragmented shards that had broken off and floated away, piecing them back together once more.
I shook as she smoothed her fingers through my hair and then moved her hands to my cheeks. She stilled against the rough patches of hair and the dampness there.
âItâs okay,â she whispered thickly, sweeping away the wetness with her thumb and then her lips. âItâs okay. Iâm here.â
Iâm here.
I stiffened, my fingers clenching her braid. She truly was here. In this cell with me. And we werenât alone. My eyes snapped open, and I searched the space for Kieran.
Golden Boy waited at the entrance with that fucking smirk on his face. The Handmaiden was with him. She wasnât smirking. She stood with her arms crossed, silent and still. Beyond them, in the shadows, other guards watched. Knights with their faces covered in black.
My entire body went cold. This was no rescue.
I tightened my arm around Poppyâs waist, shifting us as best I could with the damn chains. I could only get her body halfway shielded by mine.
I turned my head, pressing my mouth to the space by her ear. âWhat happened?â I spoke low, not taking my eyes off the entrance for one damn second.
âThey caught us outside Three Rivers.â
The kind of panic that had pierced my soul when Iâd seen that bolt protruding from her chest slammed into me now, kicking my sluggish heart into a gallop.
And Poppy sensed it. I knew she did.
She kissed my cheek with warm, soft lips. âItâs okay,â she repeated, petting the nape of my neck. âKieran and Reaver are with me. Theyâre safe.â
Reaver⦠It took me a moment to remember the draken, but the relief that came with knowing that she wasnât alone with these vipers was short-lived. âHave they hurt you?â
âDoes she look as if she has been harmed?â Callum interjected.
âDoes it look like Iâm talking to you?â I growled.
âIâm actually surprised to see you speaking at all,â the golden Rev replied. âYour Queen must be made of magic, considering that the last time I saw you, all you could do was foam at the mouth.â
Poppyâs head swiveled in the Revâs direction. âI changed my mind. I will kill you the first chance I get.â
The Rev chuckled. âNot nearly as giving as I thought you were.â
âHow about we make a deal?â I said to Poppy, easing my fingers from her braid. I drew them down the thick length of her hair. âWhoever gets to him first, gets the honor.â
âDeal,â she said.
âThreats are unnecessary,â came the voice I loathed most of all.
The Handmaiden stepped aside as the Blood Queen emerged from the shadows. My eyes narrowed at the sight of her, her body swathed in white. I pulled Poppy closer. I wouldâve tucked her inside my damn body if I could have.
âAnd they are also pointless,â Isbeth continued. âNone of you, not even my dear daughter, can kill my Revenants. Your draken remain with your armiesâwell, whatever is left of them.â
Poppy flinched, and the sight of that, the knowledge of the blow the Blood Queen had landed, nearly sent me straight to the edge again. Rage pooled in my empty gut.
âFuck you,â I spat.
âCharming,â Isbeth replied.
As the Blood Queen and I locked stares, it occurred to me that they must not know that Poppy had brought a draken with her. Isbeth knew Kieran. She never wouldâve met this Reaver. That alone should have raised suspicionsâ¦unless she had no knowledge that they could take mortal formâor she simply underestimated Poppy that much.
Very, very foolish of her.
I ducked my chin, hiding my smile against Poppyâs cheek.
She mustâve felt the rise of my lips because she turned her head back to mine, seeking the smile. Her mouth closed over mine in a kiss that wasnât tentative or innocent. It was one of strength. Of love. And the taste of her mouth shook every part of me. I didnât even know until then that only a kiss could do that.
Poppy lifted her head. âHe needs to feed,â she said, hands clasping my cheeks. âAnd he needs food and fresh, clean water.â She paused as I tensed. Her gaze flicked to the hip bath, and her chest rose with a sharp inhale. âTo drink.â
To drink.
Not to bathe.
She knew. Somehow, sheâd figured it out. Or Kieran had told her. Probably Kieran, but still, she remembered.
âHe has been given all those things,â the Blood Queen answered. âAnd as you can see, he has made no use of all that fresh water provided to him.â
Her eyes closed briefly. âHe has only been given enough to survive. He needs food. Real food. And he needsââ
âBlood. Which he has also been provided. If he hadnât, you wouldnât be sitting in his lap right now. Youâd be lying there with your throat torn open,â Isbeth stated.
What sheâd said was blunt. Cruel. But it was the truth. What little theyâd given me had pushed me to the edge. But without it? I would be gone.
Poppy moved her hand down, bringing her wrist close to my mouth. Even in the faint light, I saw the pale blue veins under her skin. My lips parted. Muscles tensed painfullyâ
âI did not give you permission to bleed for him.â The Blood Queenâs voice was closer, but I couldnât look away from that vein.
âI donât need your permission,â Poppy spat.
âI would have to disagree.â
Poppyâs head cut in her direction. âTry and stop me.â
There was a beat of silence. âAnd what? You bring this stone down on my head as you promised? If so, you will bring it down on all of us.â
âSo be it,â Poppy hissed.
âSheâll do it,â I said, curling my right hand around her arm, forcing my eyes away from her wrist. âAnd I kind of want to see her do it.â
Isbethâs lip curled. âYou would want something so idiotic.â
I smiled at her.
âWhatever.â Isbeth threw up a hand. âFeed him and get it over with. This whole scene is tiresome.â
Poppy twisted back to me, folding her hand around the nape of my neck. âFeed.â
My gaze dropped to that vein again. I hesitated, even as my stomach clenched. Her bloodâ¦it was powerful, and sheâd pulled me back from the edge before. But she needed her strength. I didnât know if she had learned if she needed to feed or not, and I wasnât about to ask that in our present company. I wouldnât risk her well-being.
I lowered my mouth to her wrist, dropping a kiss to that vein as I braced myself against the surge of need and hunger that rose. I didnât block the pain. I quieted it, knowing she would search for it. âI donât need to feed.â
âYes, you do.â Poppy dipped her head. âYou need blood.â
âYour touchâ¦it pulled me back. That was enough.â I lowered her wrist.
Her breath snagged. âCasââ
I groaned, feeling the sound of my name in a way she would likely find highly inappropriate given the situation. âItâs better that I donât.â
Poppyâs brows creased with frustration. âThen food. I want food brought in. Now.â
âFood will be brought to him,â Callum answered, and it took everything in me not to laugh. Stale bread? Moldy cheese. Yeah, food.
âThen go get it,â Poppy ordered. âNow.â
I fought another smile. Oh, how she fought for me. âMy Queen,â I whispered, trailing my fingers along the curve of her jaw. âSo demanding.â
âYes. That she is,â the Blood Queen stated coolly. âShe will also be leaving your embrace.â
âNo.â She curled her arm around my shoulders. âIâm not leaving him. I will stay right here with him.â
âThat was not a part of the deal. You promised that you would speak with me.â
âI promised to talk to you. I didnât agree to do so in any certain location,â Poppy shot back.
âYou have got to be kidding me,â Isbeth muttered. âYou expect me to stay down here?â
âI donât care what you do,â Poppy snapped.
âYou should. If you think I will allow you, my daughter, to stay down here, you are foolishly mistaken.â
âYou are holding a King here,â Poppy exclaimed, her eyes flashing. âThe man your daughter is married to.â
âOh, now you recognize yourself as my daughter?â Isbeth laughed, and the sound was like falling ice. âYou are testing my patience, Penellaphe.â
I knew what would happen. She wouldnât strike out at Poppy. The Blood Queen would go after someone else, just to inflict the kind of hurt that never really healed. I wouldnât allow that. And even though I didnât want Poppy out of my sight or my arms, I didnât want her down here in this hellish place either. I didnât want these walls, the smells, and the godsforsaken cold to join the nightmares that already plagued her.
âYou canât stay down here,â I told her, dragging my thumb across her lip. âI donât want that.â
âI do.â
âPoppy.â I held her gaze, hating the dampness I saw growing there. Hating it more than anything. âI canât have you down here.â
Her lower lip trembled as she whispered, âI donât want to leave you.â
âYou wonât.â I kissed her forehead. âYou never have. You never will.â
âMy daughter is obviously still desperately worried about you,â Isbeth spoke, derision dripping like syrup from her words. âI assured her that you were alive and wellââ
âWell?â Poppy repeated, and that one word caused every instinct I had to go on high alert. It was her voice. Iâd never heard it sound like that before. As if it were made of shadows and smoke.
The normally chatty Handmaiden unfolded her arms, her stare fixing on Poppy.
Poppy turned her attention back to me. Her hands slipped to my cheeks and then my shoulders. In the waning candlelight, her gaze moved over my face and then lowerâacross the numerous, now-faded cuts. Her hand slid down my left arm, tugging until her fingers reached the edge of the bandage. Her chest stilled.
A ripple of static hit the air, drawing a hiss from the golden Rev. Slowly, her eyes lifted to mine, and I saw itâthe glow behind her pupils. The power throbbed and then spread in thin streaks of silver across those beautiful green irises. The sight was fascinating. Stunning. That stubborn jaw of hers tightened. She didnât blink, and I knew that look. Fuck. Iâd been on the receiving end of it, right before she plunged a dagger into my chest.
I wished we were someplace else. Anywhere I could show her with my lips and tongue and every part of me just how incredibly intriguing that display of violent power was.
A shiver went through Poppyâa vibration that sent another ripple of energy through the cell as she looked over her shoulder. âYou have him chained and starved,â she said, and that voice⦠Golden Boy straightened. The skin around Isbethâs mouth puckered. They heard it, too. âYou have hurt him and kept him in a place not fit for even a Craven. Yet you say he is well?â
âHe would be in far better accommodations if he knew how to behave,â Isbeth remarked. âIf he showed even one iota of respect.â
That really pissed me off, but Poppyâs skin now had a faint sheen. A soft glow as if she were lit from within. Iâd seen it before. What I didnât remember was what I saw sliding and swirling under her cheek now. Shadows. She had shadows in her flesh.
âWhy would he, when dealing with someone so unworthy of respect?â Poppy questioned, and I blinked rapidly, swearing the temperature of the cell dropped by several degrees.
âCareful, daughter,â Isbeth warned. âI told you once before. I will only tolerate your disrespect to a point. You do not want to cross that line more than you already have.â
Poppy said nothing, and the shadows ceased their relentless churning under her skin. Everything about her became still once more, but I felt it under my hands and against me, building and ramping up. The thing under her flesh. Power. Pure, unfettered power. An ache settled in my upper jaw. Fuck. Her essence. I could feel it.
âYou are so very powerful, daughter. I feel it pressing against my skin. Itâs calling to everyone and everything in this chamber and beyond.â The Blood Queen bent slightly at the waist, her pale face expressionless. âYou have grown in the short time since we last saw each other. But you still havenât learned to quiet that temper of yours. If I were you, I would learn to do so quickly. Pull it back before itâs too late.â
There was no one in the entirety of the two kingdoms that I wanted to see dead more than the Blood Queen. No one. But Poppy needed to heed the warning. Isbeth was a cornered viper. She would strike when least expected, and she would do so in a way that would leave deep, unforgiving scars. She already had with Ian.
âPoppy,â I said quietly, and those fractured eyes latched on to mine. âGo.â
She shook her head fiercely, sending loose curls across her cheeks. âI canâtââ
âYou will.â I couldnât bear to see her strength cracking like this. Fuck. It hurt. But seeing her weather whatever blow the Blood Queen would deliver next if she continued disobeying her would kill me. âI love you, Poppy.â
She shook. âI love you.â
Tightening my arm around her, I hauled her close and kissed her. Our tongues tangled. Our hearts. I committed the feel and taste of her to memory to drown in them later. She was breathing just as hard as I was when our lips finally parted.
âFrom the first moment I saw you smile⦠And heard you laugh? Gods,â I rasped, and she shuddered, her beautiful eyes closing. âFrom the first time I saw you nock an arrow and fire without hesitation? Handle a dagger and fight beside another? Fight me? I was in awe. Iâm never not in awe of you. Iâm always utterly mesmerized. Iâll never stop being that. Always and forever.â
Poppy
Always and forever.
Those two words were the only things that allowed me to keep my temper in check as they escorted me back through the winding, endless network of tunnels. Barely. The trembling the rage had caused had ceased, but the anger hadnât lessened. How Casteel had been treated would haunt every breath I took, as would his choice not to feed.
Not a single part of me believed that my gift had been enough to stave off his hunger. Iâd felt it. The gnawing ache was far worse than what Iâd experienced or what Iâd felt from him in New Haven.
Heâd made the choice because he didnât want to potentially weaken me.
Gods, I didnât deserve him.
We stopped, and they removed the blindfold once we reached the vast hall beneath Wayfair.
The Blood Queen stood directly in front of me. I couldnât believe sheâd allowed me to see Casteel like that.
But I remembered that she was a coldhearted bitch.
âYouâre angry with me,â she stated as Millicent stepped to the side. Callum remained to my right, far too close for comfort. âWith how you believe Casteel has been treated.â
âI saw with my own eyes how heâs been treated.â
âIt couldâve been easier for him,â she said, the ruby crown glittering as she tilted her head. âHe made it harder for himself, especially when he killed one of my Handmaidens.â
My gaze flicked to where they stood silently. They each had the pale blue eyes of a Revenant, but not all had in the bedchamberâand neither had Coralena. âMy mother had brown eyes, yet you said she was a Revenant.â
âShe was not your mother. She was Ianâs, but not yours.â Tension bracketed her mouth. âAnd she did not have brown eyes. Hers were just like the others.â
âI remember themââ
âShe hid them, Penellaphe. With magic. Magic I lent her.â Just like sheâd lent the essence to Vessa. âAnd I did so, only because when you were little, her eyes scared you.â
Surprise rolled through me. Using the Primal essence for such a thing had never crossed my mind. âWhyâ¦why would her eyes scare me?â
âThat, I cannot answer.â
Iâd buried the memories of the Handmaidens so deeply that it had taken Alastir speaking of them to trigger any recollection. Had I somehow been able to sense what they were and that had caused my fear?
âI didnât want to hurt Casteel,â Isbeth announced, jerking me from my thoughts. âDoing so only serves to drive the wedge between us further. But you left me with no choice. You killed the King, Penellaphe. If I did nothing, it wouldâve been a sign of weakness to the Royals.â
The breath I exhaled felt like fire in my throat. Her words collided with my guilt. âWhat I did may have guided your actions, but it was still your hand. Youâre not absolved of responsibility, Isbeth. Just like how what happened to your son doesnât justify all youâve done since.â
Her nostrils flared as she stared at me. âIf I kill Casteel, you would do worse than I ever couldâve imagined. And if that day ever comes, judge me then for my actions.â
The wave of fury that swept through me was only cooled by the realization that she spoke the truth. That empty, cold part of me stirred. I didnât know what I would do, but it would be horrific, and I knew that.
That was why Iâd made Kieran make that promise.
I looked away, shaking my head. âWill you send food to Casteel? Fresh food?â I took a shaky breath. âPlease.â
âDo you think you deserve that?â Callum asked. âBetter yet, do you really think he does?â
Spinning around, Iâd already grasped the dagger at his hip by the time he registered that Iâd moved. I slammed the blade deep into his chest and into his heart.
A flicker of shock widened his eyes as he looked down at the hilt of the dagger.
âI wasnât speaking to you,â I snarled, letting go of the blade.
âDammit,â he muttered, blood trickling from the corner of his mouth. He toppled over like a pile of bricks, hitting the floor. The back of his head met the stone with a satisfyingly loud crack.
Millicent choked on what sounded like a laugh.
âYou just stabbed my Revenant.â Isbeth sighed.
âHeâll be fine, wonât he?â I faced her. âWill you please send fresh food and water to Casteel?â
âYes, but only because you asked nicely.â The Blood Queen flicked a glance at Callum. âGet him out of here.â
A Royal Knight stepped forward.
âNot you.â The Blood Queen threw a glare in Millicentâs direction. âSince you find this so amusing, you can be the one who cleans it up.â
âYes, my Queen.â Millicent stepped forward and gave such an elaborate bow it could only be a mockery.
The Blood Queenâs lips pressed together in a thin line as she watched the Handmaiden. The interaction between the two wasâ¦different.
Isbeth turned her attention back to me, her head tilted. The light cut across her face, revealing a thin strip of slightly deeper-colored skin at her hairline. Powder. She wore some sort of powder to make her skin paler. To help her blend in with the Ascended.
âHow have you kept your identity a secret from every Ascended?â I asked.
A brow arched. âDonât forget that vamprys were once mortal, Penellaphe. And while they have left many of those trappings behind, they still see only what they want to see. Because looking too closely at things often makes one uncomfortable. Unsure. Not even vamprys enjoy living like that. So, like those mortals upstairs,â she said, tilting her chin up, âand in all of Solis, theyâd rather be oblivious to what is right in front of them than feel doubt or fear.â
There was some truth to her words. I, myself, hadnât pried too deeply. It was terrifying to start peeling back the layers, but others had the courage. âAnd what happens to the Ascended who do look closely?â
âThey are dealt with,â she answered. âJust as anyone else would be.â
In other words, they were killed, as would be any Descenter. Disgust crowded my breath. âWhy lie, though? You could pretend to be a god to the people.â
The Blood Queen smiled. âWhy would I need to, when they already believe I am the closest thing to one?â
âBut youâre not. So, why? Do you fear that they would see you as you are? Nothing more than a false god?â
Her smile didnât waver. âMortals are easily influenced. They can be convinced of anything by nearly anyone. Take from them, then give them something or someone to blame, and even the most righteous will fall prey to that. Iâd rather have them believe that all Ascended are godlike. That way, there are many instead of a few that they will not question. One person cannot rule a kingdom and keep the masses in line,â she shared. âYou should know that, Penellaphe.â
âI know you shouldnât need to keep anyone in line or rule with lies.â
Isbeth laughed softly. âThat is a very optimistic way of looking at things, my child.â
The patronizing tone struck every nerve in my body. âYour rule is built on nothing but lies. You told the people in the Great Hall that the cities to the north and east had fallen. Do you really think they will not learn the truth?â
âThe truth doesnât matter.â
âHow can you believe that?â I shook my head. âThe truth matters, and it will be known. I took those cities without killing innocents. Those who called those places home still do. They either know Iâm not this Harbinger, or they will soon learn thatââ
âAnd you think that will happen here? In Masadonia? Pensdurth?â Her eyes searched mine. âThat you will be successful in this campaign when you, yourself, are lying?â
My hands curled into fists. âHow am I lying?â
âYou are the Harbinger,â she said. âYou just donât want to believe it.â
Anger pulsed through me, quickly followed by a surge of apprehension. I looked at the long shadowy corridor, inhaling deeply. The musty scent was familiar, wiggling an old memory free.
I crept through the silent halls, where only the Royal Ascended traveled when the sun rose, drawn by what Iâd seen the last time Iâd snuck where the Queen told me I should not go. But I liked it down here. Ian didnât, but no one looked at me strangely here.
Click. Click. Click.
Soft light seeped from the opening of the chamber as I pressed against a cold pillar, peeking around the corner. A cage sat in the middle of the chamber that looked nothing like the rest of Wayfair. The floor, walls, and even the ceiling were a shiny black, just like the Temple of Nyktos. Strange letters had been etched into the black stone, the symbols shaped nothing like those Iâd learned in my lessons. I reached one hand into the chamber, pressing my fingers against the rough carvings as I leaned around the pillar.
I shouldnât be down here. The Queen would be very mad, but I couldnât stop thinking about what prowled restlessly behind bleached-white bars, caged andâ¦helpless. That was what Iâd felt from the large, gray cave cat when Iâd first seen it with Ian. Helplessness. That was what Iâd felt when I could no longer hold on to Mommaâs slippery arm. But my gift didnât work on animals. The Queen and Priestess Janeah had said so.
The clicking of the animalâs claws ceased. Ears twitched as the wild catâs big head turned to where I peeked around the corner. Bright green eyes locked on to mine, piercing the veil that covered half my faceâ
âYour eyes are your fatherâs.â