The War of Two Queens: Chapter 27
The War of Two Queens (Blood And Ash Series Book 4)
Poppy
I paced the bedchamber the following afternoon, the meal one of the less-chatty Handmaidens had brought in devoured only because I couldnât afford to weaken.
Another white gown had been brought in with the food. Opting to wear what I had the day before, Iâd destroyed the gown with a spark of eather. I shouldnât have used the essence for such a childish thing, but the momentary joy it had brought was hard to regret.
Every so often, I sent the double doors a glare. I hadnât seen or heard from the Blood Queen since theyâd returned me to my chambers the evening before. Iâd stayed in this damn room, only because I didnât want to risk Kieranâs and Reaverâs safety in addition to Casteelâs.
Iâd checked in with Kieran through the notam, letting him know that both Casteel and I were okay. He was relieved, but through the connection, I knew he had his doubts about Casteel.
I had doubts, as well.
My touch wouldâve only brought him a few hours of reliefâif that. Maybe not even that long. All I could do was pray that heâd been given blood and food. That healing those injuries had given him a longer reprieve.
Iâd desperately tried to sleep. To reach Casteel. I hadnât been able to. The room was too quiet and too big. Too lonely and too familiar. Tooâ
I stopped myself.
None of that would help. What would, was focusing on what came next, which was what Iâd been turning over in my mind for hours. Our plan had been to get into the capital and free Casteel and my father. That was still the plan. Except weâd been technically captured, and I didnât know where my father was being kept if not here.
I would have to force Isbeth to tell me where he was when I came back for him.
I hated thatâutterly loathed the idea of leaving Ires behind. But I had to get Casteel out, and soon.
Because he was not well.
Iâd healed what injuries I could, but he was teetering on the edge of bloodlust and at risk of losing parts of himself. I couldnât allow that to happen.
Searching out Kieranâs unique imprint, I found the cedar-rich sensation.
Liessa?
A wry grin tugged at my lips. Donât call me that.
My Queen, instead?
I sighed. How about neither?
His chuckle tickled its way through me. Whatâs going on?
We need to get out of here.
There was a pause. What are you thinking?
We need to get to one of the Temples. Casteel has to be held somewhere near there. Underground. I paced by the window. We have the spell. Once we find the entrance to the tunnels, we can use it. Itâs what weâd need to do next that Iâm not so sure about.
Several moments of silence passed where I felt the woodsy sensation surrounding me. We can try the way we planned to get in.
Through the mines?
Yes. We can try to access them. Orâ¦
My heart thumped heavily. Theyâll expect that. There must be a better way.
Fight our way out.
I stopped at the window, staring across the capital. Iâm not sure thatâs a better option.
Fighting will be our only option no matter what, Kieran reasoned. Either through one of the gates or from inside the Rise and into the mines.
We hashed it out, going back and forth until Kieran decided. The quickest way is to go straight for the eastern gates. We have Reaver. We have you. We can fight.
I worried my lower lip. If we do thatâif I do thatâwe risk people seeing me as a demis. We risk the people believing the worst about us and fearing what is to come.
We do. There was another gulf of silence. But right now, we canât worry about that. Thatâs not our concern. Cas is. Getting the hell out of here is. And if that means taking down a part of the Rise, then we take it down, Poppy.
I closed my eyes. The essence in my chest thrummed.
We canât save everyone, Kieran reminded me. But we can save the ones we love.
A jolt ran through me. Iâd known when speaking with the generals that there was a chance our plans could crumble around us. That weâd need to take down the Rises. That there would be untold loss of life. That weâd become the monsters the people of Solis feared.
And that stood true now.
Kieran mustâve sensed my acceptance because his next words were: We just need a distraction.
A distraction. A big one that would give us time to make our way through Wayfair and to the Temples.
My eyes opened, and I focused on the black stone of the Rise, looming in the distance. I have an idea.
My patience was stretched to its limits as I sat on the thickly cushioned chair in the alcove of the main floor of the Great Hall. A dozen knights and Handmaidens lined the wall behind me.
The sun had just begun to set for the evening when the Blood Queen summoned my presence. And yet, here I sat as she mingled.
I scanned the packed floor, the faces of so many mortals blurring together as they chatted and vied for a few moments of her time. She moved among them, flanked by Millicent and another Handmaiden. Like a vibrant bird, ruby crown shining, she smiled graciously as the mortals bowed. She didnât wear white tonight. She, like Millicent, was draped in crimson.
I wasnât quite sure how the gown remained on her body. Or if the upper half was made of some sort of body paint. It was that tight and sleeveless, defying gravity. What neckline it had plunged to her navel, revealing far more than I ever wanted to see, consideringâwhether or not I wanted to admit itâshe was my mother. The lower part of the gown was looser, but I didnât dare look too long at the gossamer fabric. I didnât need that trauma in my life.
âYou look as if youâre enjoying yourself.â
At the sound of Malikâs voice, I stiffened even more. âIâm having the time of my life.â
There was a brief, rough chuckle as he brushed past my chair, sitting on one of the empty two that were on either side of me. âIâm sure you are.â
I said nothing for a few moments. âI have no idea why she summoned me to the Great Hall.â
âShe wanted you to see how loved she is,â Malik replied. âIn case the display in the Great Hall wasnât sufficient.â
Glancing over at him, I watched him lift a glass of red liquid to his lips. I couldnât be sure it was wine. He had spoken softly, but the knights and Handmaidens were close enough to have heard him. No one else was around. What Iâd felt from him the day before preyed on my mind as I returned my attention to the floor. âOf course, they love her. Theyâre the elite of Carsodonia. The wealthiest. As long as their lives are easy, they will love whoever sits on that throne.â
âTheyâre not the only ones. You saw that for yourself.â
I had. âOnly she gives Blessings with Atlantian blood.â I looked at him again. He shrugged. âSomething that cannot have any long-lasting effects.â
He took another drink.
âAnd she has them afraidââ
âOf you,â he spoke. âThe Harbinger.â
I forced a slow, even breath. âWhat she told the people yesterday was a lie. Those in Oak Ambler and the other cities havenât been abused. You, no matter what you think now, have to know that the Atlantiansâyour fatherâwould never have done what she claimed.â
Malik once more had no response.
âThe people here will eventually learn the truth,â I continued into the silence. âAnd I donât believe that every mortal in Carsodonia believes her to be a benevolent Queen. Nor do they support the Rite.â
Malik lowered his glass. âYouâd be right not to believe that.â
I watched him closely, opening my senses to him as he stared out over the floor. The cracks were still in those shields. âI saw Casteel yesterday.â
His face showed nothing, but I caught the sudden taste of sourness. Shame.
âHe wasnât in good shape.â I lowered my voice as I clasped the arms of the chair. âHe was nearly lost to bloodlust. Heâd been injured andââ
âI know.â His jaw was hard, and when he spoke, his voice was barely above a whisper. âI cleaned him up the best I could after the Queen sent you such a lovely gift.â
Malik had been to see him.
Casteel hadnât shared that, but there really hadnât been many opportunities for him to relay information. Someone had wrapped his hand. That had to mean something. That, and the raw agony I felt from Malik. What it meant exactly, I wasnât sure.
I leaned toward him, and the shoulders under the white shirt tensed. âYou know how to find him, then,â I whispered. âTell meââ
âCareful, Queen of Flesh and Fire,â Malik murmured with a brittle twist of his lips. âThat is a very dangerous road youâre embarking upon.â
âI know.â
His gaze slid to mine. âYou donât know much if you think I will answer that question.â
I tamped down the rising tide of anger. âI felt your pain. Tasted it.â
A muscle began ticking in his jaw. âThat was, by the way, very rude of you,â he said after a moment. âAnd it hurt.â
âYou lived.â
He gave a short huff of laughter. âYeah, I lived.â He took another drink. âThatâs what I do.â
The sardonic twist of his words had me studying his features. âWhy? Why are you here. With her? Itâs not because she opened your eyes to anything, let alone the truth. Sheâs not that persuasive.â
Malik said nothing as he stared ahead, but I saw his attention shift beyond the Blood Queen to the dark-haired Handmaiden. It was brief. I wouldâve missed it if I hadnât been watching him so closely.
âItâs her.â
His gaze shot to mine, and then his expression slipped into a half-grin. âThe Queen?â
âMillicent,â I said quietly.
He laughed again, another short burst of dry sound.
I sat back. âMaybe Iâll ask the Blood Queen if she thinks youâre here for her or for her Handmaiden.â
Slowly, Malik leaned across the small space between us. âAsk her that,ââthat lone dimple appearedââand I will wrap you in the bones of a deity and throw you into the godsdamn Stroud Sea.â
âThatâs a bit of an excessive threat,â I replied, as satisfaction surged through me. It was excessive. Which left very little reason as to why. He had to care. âItâs the kind of reaction Iâd have if you threatened Casteel.â
Malik looked at me.
I smiled. âExcept mine wouldnât involve deity bones or the sea. Nor would it be an empty threat.â
He finished off his drink. âNoted.â His gaze flicked to the floor. âShe comes.â
The Blood Queen approached. Malik rose. I didnât. Murmurs drifted from the floor as I stared up at her. Isbethâs features sharpened as she swept past me and lowered herself onto the chair on my other side. Only then did Malik sit. Dozens of eyes watched as Millicent remained in front of us, joined by the other Handmaidens. Their straight backs provided a rather impressive screen of privacy.
Someone handed the Blood Queen a glass of bubbling wine. She waited until the servant disappeared into the shadows before saying, âWeâre being watched, and they find your lack of respect toward a Queenâyour behaviorâto be disgraceful.â
âAnd if they knew the truth about you? About the things youâve done?â I asked, watching a young couple speak as they gazed up at the statue of what I had always assumed was Nyktos but apparently wasnât.
âI doubt that it would change much for most in this room,â she noted. âBut we know what theyâd do if they learned who you are.â
âA god and not a Harbinger.â
âOne and the same to many,â she murmured.
I stiffened. âPerhaps, but I am willing to prove to them that they have nothing to fear from me.â
âAnd how will you do that?â
âWell, I could start with not taking their children and using them as cattle,â I replied.
âWas Tawny used as cattle?â She gestured at the crowd with a jeweled hand. âOr any number of the Lords and Ladies in Wait in attendance tonight?â
âNo, they will just be turned into creatures who will then prey upon others with little remorse.â
Her dark gaze slid to mine. âOr they will cull the weak from the masses.â
My lip curled. âYou really believe that?â
âI know that.â She took a drink.
It took a lot to stop myself from knocking the crystal glass from her hand. âAnd the children taken during the last Rite? The ones that were hung beneath Redrock?â
âServing the gods.â
âLies,â I hissed. âAnd I cannot wait to see your face when all of those lies are exposed.â
She grinned as she looked out over the floor. âDo you think that I will allow your armies to lay siege to the capital like I have the other cities? Cities I donât even consider a loss?â She turned her head to me. âBecause theyâre not a loss. But what has happened in those cities will not occur here. If your armies arrive at the Rise, I will line those walls and gates with newborns. And whatever draken you have left, whatever armies still stand, will have to burn and cut through them.â
I could only stare as I slowly realized that she was serious. My fingers dug into the arms of the chair as the Primal essence throbbed deeply within me. A faint tremor ran through me as I stared at the statue, but I only saw those mortals on Oak Amblerâs gates and the ones beneath Redrock. Beside me, Malik stretched forward as Millicent turned slightly. The couple standing before the statue frowned as they looked down to where the freshly dropped night-blooming rose petalsâ¦vibrated.
That was me.
My anger.
I was doing that.
Briefly closing my eyes, I reined in my emotions, and it was a lot like all those times Iâd worn the veil and had been brought before Duke Teerman. When I had to just stand there and take whatever he dealt. It was also a lot like closing off my senses to others. Instead, I closed myself off from my emotions. Only when the eather had calmed in my chest did I reopen my eyes. The petals had settled on the floor.
âSmart,â the Blood Queen whispered as Malik relaxed. âI see you have learned to control that power to some extent.â
I forced my grip to loosen on the chair arms. âIs that what you wanted to talk to me about? How you will slaughter more children and innocent people?â
âIt will not be I who slaughters those mortals,â she stated. âIt will be the armies under your command who do.â Her stare was intense. I felt it tracking over every inch of my face. âOr it will simply be you who does it. So, if you want to avoid that, you will make sure your armies stand down.â
I cut my gaze in her direction. âNow weâre going to discuss the future of the kingdoms? Do you think I will negotiate with you when this is how you plan to proceed?â The words came out of me in a rush. âI wonât give you Atlantia. I wonât order my armies to retreat. And I wonât let you use innocent people as a shield.â
Her attention shifted to the Prince. âMalik, if you donât mind, I need to speak with my daughter in private.â
âOf course.â Malik rose, bowing as his eyes briefly met mine. He walked down the short set of wide steps, passing Millicent as he strolled onto the floor and was immediately swamped by smiling Ladies and Lords.
âThey are so very charmed by him,â the Blood Queen said. âHeâd have to beat them off with a stick if he wanted to.â
The Handmaiden looked away from Malik, her attention traveling farther across the Great Hall.
âDo you know what has kept me alive?â she asked after a couple of moments. âVengeance.â
âThat isâ¦entirely cliché,â I remarked.
Her laugh was soft and short. âBe that as it may, it is the truth. And I imagine the reason itâs become so cliché is because vengeance has kept many alive during the darkest moments of their lives. Moments that last years and decades. I will have it.â
âThe vast majority of Atlantians had nothing to do with what was done to you or your son,â I told her. âAnd yet, you think that controlling Atlantia will somehow give you that vengeance. It wonât.â
âI⦠I must admit something to you.â The Blood Queen angled her body toward mine. The scent of roses reached me. âI never really had any intention of ruling Atlantia. I donât need the kingdom. I donât even want it. I just want to see it burn. Ended. I want to see every Atlantian dead.â
Casteel
She will die in your armsâ¦
Millicentâs words kept cycling through my head. I hadnât slept since sheâd been here. I couldnât stop thinking about who she wasâwhat sheâd shared. I couldnât deny that she was Poppyâs sister. They looked too much alike. Hell, if the hair was the same color and Millicent had fewer freckles, they could almost pass as twins. And what she had said about Poppy? What sheâd said I needed to do?
I growled low in my throat.
Fuck that.
Even if Poppy were powerful enough to wreak the kind of havoc Millicent had warned of, she would never do it. That kind of evil wasnât in her.
Millicent might be Poppyâs sister, but I didnât trust her. And I didnât trust a damn thing that had come out of her mouth.
Footsteps echoed from in the hall, jerking my head up. Golden Boy entered. Alone. He carried no food or water with him.
âWhat in the hell do you want?â I snarled, my throat dry.
âI wanted to see how you were doing, Your Majesty.â
âBullshit.â
He smiled, his facial paint and clothing so damn golden that he shone like a bulb of light. âYouâre starting to lookâ¦not so well again.â
I didnât need this jackass pointing out what I already knew. Hunger gnawed at my insides, and I swore I saw his pulse thrumming in his neck.
But the Rev just stood there, staring.
âUnless youâre here to tell me about the weather,â I drawled, âyou can show yourself the fuck out.â
Callum chuckled. âImpressive.â
âMe?â I smirked. âI know.â
âYour arrogance,â he said, and a low rumble radiated from my chest as he stepped forward. His smile widened. âYouâre chained to a wall, starved and filthy, unable to do anything to aid your woman, and yet youâre still so arrogant.â
Another growl clawed its way up my throat. âShe doesnât need my aid.â
âI suppose not.â He touched his chest. âShe stabbed me yesterday. With my own dagger.â
A rough laugh left me. âThatâs my girl.â
âYou must be very proud of her.â He knelt slowly. âWeâll see how that changes.â
âItâll never change,â I swore, my jaw throbbing. âNo matter what.â
He studied me for a few moments. âLove. Such a strange emotion. Iâve seen it take the most powerful beings down,â he said. Millicentâs words knocked around in my head again. âIâve seen it give others unbelievable strength. But out of all the many, many years Iâve lived, Iâve only seen love stop death once.â
âIs that so?â
Callum nodded. âNyktos and his Consort.â
I stared at him. âYouâre that old?â
âIâm old enough to remember the way things used to be. Old enough to know when love is a strength or a weakness.â
âDonât really care.â
âYou should. Because itâs a weakness for you.â Those pale, unblinking eyes were unsettling as hell. âYou know how?â
My lips peeled back. âI bet youâre going to tell me.â
âYou shouldâve fed from her when you had the chance,â he said. âYouâre going to regret not doing that.â
âWrong.â Iâd never regret not jeopardizing Poppyâs safety. Never.
âWeâll see about that, too.â The Rev held my stare for a long moment and then moved.
He was quick. I jerked back at the sight of a glint of steel. There was nowhere to go. My reflexes were shitâ
Pain exploded in my chest, taking with it the air in my lungs in a fiery wave. A metallic taste immediately filled my mouth. I looked down to see a dagger deep in the center of my chest and red everywhere, coursing down my stomach.
I lifted my head, biting out, âMissed my heart, dumbass.â
âI know.â The Rev smiled, yanking the dagger free. I grunted. âTell me, Your Majesty. What happens to an Atlantian when thereâs no more blood coursing through their veins?â
The wound felt like it was on fire, but my insides were drenched in ice. My heart gave a sluggish lurch. Bloodlust. Complete and absolute. Thatâs what happened.
âI hear it makes one as monstrous as a Craven.â Rising, he lifted the dagger to his mouth and ran his tongue along the blood-soaked blade. âGood luck.â